Part 3: Foz do IguaçuThe main drag through Foz is
Avenida Das Cataratas, going from the town, past hotels, a waterpark, more hotels, a chocolate and cachaça outlet store, the airport and a bus line that drops tourists and locals in front of the National Park entrance. The region has cattle pastures all over the place, and large churrascarias compete for tourist money with huge billboards and signage. At least two Rodízio style restaurants have live dancing performances for tourists to watch when they eat. Some tourists have uploaded videos of women in carnival costumes dancing onstage to save other people the time and money of going inside.

The only street food on Avenida Das Cataratas is by small time Coconut Juice vendors who set up their coolers of coconuts beside the road with a spread of stuff for sale like ponchos, potato chips, and hammocks for tourists. You can relax in a reclining chair and watch the busy street while a guy hacks apart a coconut with a machete:

The Tri-Fronteir Region is a center of Middle Eastern migration to South America, mostly from Lebanon but also from Syria and the Levant region. Brazil celebrated Roman Catholic holidays that the average American has never heard of, and these restaurants are open throughout the holidays. The cuisine is labeled
Comida Árabe Brasileira, and has its own local quirks. The signage had some cartoon Arabic faces that might not fly in another country, but picture menus were the norm and made ordering easier.

This sidewalk cafe under the school to learn English and Spanish says Brasa Burger on the sign, but its menu is for
Sabores do Brasil Conveniências. I couldn't pass the claim of "Best Schawarma in Foz" without checking this place out. I wound up choosing the
Beirut Sandwich, which was invented in Sao Paulo and found throughout Brazil.

It usually has rosbife on pão árabe with lettuce and zataar, always thin and wide. This version had schawarma beef and a garlic cheese sauce. This would have been better if the bread could hold up the sandwich, it was overloaded and the juices soaked through and couldn't be lifted. A very tasty sandwich nonetheless.
Casa da Esfiha Beirut
When visiting a cafe with Casa da Esfiha in the name, I thought it made sense to try the Esfiha. The picture in the menu made the decision a little bit easier.

Esfiha is a staple of Comida Árabe Brasileira and can be folded triangle shaped flatbread, or open face meat on flatbread, but always meat on bread at an affordable price. This portion of
Sfiha Balbakie looked better than it tasted, but was baked fresh and the lime juce on the cheap meat and spice mixture worked well:


One extra trip into town meant one more trip to a rotating cone of meat establishment,
Casa Da Esfiha Istambul. This chicken schawarma didn't knock me out, but the prices on the Comida Árabe Brasileira around town were rock bottom and decent schawarma with french fries is available at several places.
Prato De Schawarma, served atop pão árabe with tomato, pickles, lettuce, sour cream, and batatas fritas:

água de coco gelada
Avenida Das Cataratas
Sabores da Brasil Conveniências
Av. Brasil, 319, Centro. (R. Xavier da Silva)
Casa da Esfiha Beirut
Avenida Juscelino Kubitschek, 453
Casa da Esfiha Istambul
Avenida Juscelino Kubitschek, 409
Special Bonus: a trip to
Habib's
Habibs is the major Middle Eastern fast food outlet in Brazil, their wikipedia page has some particularly bad auto translation but there are over 300 locations and it could grow beyond Brazil someday. It was founded by a Paulista who had hired a Lebanese man only to learn he could cook. Its locations are busy everywhere and the prices are just ridiculously cheap. The esfiha starts at R0.69 and people order ten or twenty at a time. I ran inside one late at night to see what it was like. I didn't come to Brasil to try Kibe Crua at a place like this, or anywhere else for that matter. The
Prato Primavera looked good in the picture, with stuffed zuchini, grape leaves, and spinach wraps. What could possible go wrong?

This was kept in a steamer way too long, dripping wet meatloaf mixture everywhere, sauce was not hot sauce but just tomato sauce, about what I would expect for cheapest fast food in Brazil.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habib%27shttp://www.habibs.com.br/Green Billed Toucan is not impressed.