You are at a stall with a snack in your hand, and a string of melted cheese goes farther than it should. You lean in to take the first bite. You have already imagined it; no need to say anything more. That single cheese pull says everything.
Across the Middle East, cheese on street food is not a trend. It is a tradition that has been evolving for generations, and right now it is having its loudest, crunchiest, most unapologetic moment yet.
Long before cheese sauces showed up on loaded fries, the Middle East had its own dairy culture worth talking about.
Akkawi, a soft and stretchy white cheese from the Levant, has been tucked into warm flatbreads and pastries for centuries.
Halloumi holds its shape beautifully on a grill and has become a street staple from Beirut to Dubai. Jibneh Arabieh, a mild white cheese common in Egyptian cooking, turns up in sandwiches and breakfast spreads right across the Gulf.
What connects all of these cheeses is one quality: they are built for heat. They melt well, stretch generously, and make everything around them taste better. That is not a coincidence. It is exactly why they ended up in street food in the first place.
Something shifted in the region’s street food scene over the last decade.
The spice-forward, no-nonsense DNA of Egyptian cooking collided with the global love of loaded, cheesy, crunchy snacks. The result has been genuinely exciting.
Nowhere is this transformation more visible than in the rise of cheese-loaded potato dishes. Classic potato chips, crispy and golden and perfectly salted, have always had a loyal following on Middle Eastern menus. They are the reliable crowd-pleaser, the side dish that never lets anyone down.
But the new generation of cheese snacks takes that foundation and pushes it further.
Shawarmary’s Cheetos Cheese Potatoes are a perfect example of where Egyptian street food creativity goes when it is given room to play.
Crispy fries, topped with crunchy Cheetos and a generous pour of melted cheese sauce. It is a three-texture experience in one tray.
The fries give you the soft-crisp base. The Cheetos deliver a second, sharper crunch. The cheese sauce ties it all together in the most satisfying way possible.
It sounds simple. It tastes like something you will be thinking about on the drive home.
Their potato chips, available in small, medium and large, sit at the other end of the spectrum. No frills. Just properly done golden and salted chips. Sometimes that is exactly what you need alongside something rich and cheesy.
Food science has a clean answer for this one.
Fat carries flavor. The fat content in cheese amplifies the savory notes in potato, while the salt in cheese sharpens every other taste around it.
Add a crunchy element like Cheetos or crispy batter, and you have hit what food researchers call a textural bliss point. Your brain is receiving pleasure signals from taste, smell and touch at the same time.
It is also deeply comforting. Warm, cheesy, carb-rich food triggers dopamine. That is why these snacks are the first thing people reach for when they want something fun and grounding.
Your brain, it turns out, knows exactly what it is doing.
In Lebanon, cheese-stuffed kaak sesame bread is sold by street vendors who have been doing it the same way for decades.
In Egypt, toasted Egyptian sandwiches with spiced meat and melted cheese are a late-night institution.
In the UAE, where food cultures from across the world converge daily, you will find all of the above plus loaded fries with toppings that feel both global and completely at home.
What connects every version is the same instinct. Take something humble. Add cheese. Add texture. Make it impossible to walk away from.
The best cheese-based street snacks are not trying to be refined. They are trying to be memorable.
A tray of Cheetos-loaded cheese fries at Shawarmary is not pretending to be anything apart from what it is.
Loud, fun and deeply satisfying. In a city like Dubai, where food choices are almost overwhelming, that kind of honest indulgence stands out.
Sometimes the most confident thing a restaurant can do is know exactly what it is good at and commit to it fully.
Shawarmary does exactly that. And the cheese sauce does not hurt either.
