If you’re a plant-based foodie, it’s impossible to get bored in Portland. The popular Oregon city is, without a doubt, one of the best destinations in the US for vegan food. But while it can offer you vegan-friendly sports bars and food courts, it also has a wide range of delicious international cuisine available, too. From Swedish sweet treats to homestyle Japanese dishes, here’s where to find the best global bites in Rose City.

The best international vegan restaurants in Portland, Oregon

VegNews.CarinasVeganBakeryCarina’s Bakery

1Carina’s Bakery

A vegan oasis in the suburban community of Beaverton, Swedish American-owned Carina’s Bakery offers Scandinavian sweets such as drømmekage (Danish “dream cake”), savory smörgås (open-faced sandwiches), and the best-selling Scandinavian almond cakes.

Owner Carina Comer—who is legally blind—is committed to providing employment opportunities for disabled people. “When an MBA wasn’t enough to convince managers to look past my blind mobility cane and the perceived risk of having a blind person in their fast-paced kitchens, I decided it was time to pivot and see my dreams of opening a bakery come true,” Comer says. And that she did.

These days Comer spends her time delighting sweet-toothed Portlanders with everything from chocolate-hazelnut chokladnötkakor to semlor, a fluffy, cardamom-infused bun stuffed with marzipan and whipped coconut cream that comes with a great backstory. The buns “used to be a staple for Lent, when Swedes tried to comply with the religious edict to cut down and eat simply by just hiding their cream inside mundane looking bread,” Comer says.
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VegNews.EpifEpif

2Epif

Constructed around the massive limb of a catalpa tree in Portland’s hip and artsy Kerns neighborhood, Epif serves up plant-based small plates (think empanadas and stuffed peppers) along with a fantastic selection of cocktails made from pisco—Peru and Chile’s beloved spin on brandy—and housemade vegan honey.

While you’ll find plenty of Andean favorites on the menu, co-owner Nicolle Dirks stresses that while Epif draws its inspiration from the culinary traditions of Chile and Peru, it’s not a conventional South American spot. “That gives us a fair amount of freedom to create dishes that maintain the essence of traditional flavors and textures, but use different ingredients to make them vegan.”

This flexible approach has resulted in all sorts of original delights, from fried empanadas stuffed with vegan mozzarella to huancaína potatoes that swap out traditional queso fresco sauce in favor of a silky, cheesy cream.
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VegNews.MamaDutPortlandMama Đút

3Mama Đút

One of the newest additions to the Portland vegan restaurant scene, smack-dab in the middle of Buckman neighborhood, Mama Đút focuses on plant-based Vietnamese fare, from bánh mì to bao to occasional specials like bò tái chanh chay (lime-cured vegan beef carpaccio) and ube buns with vegan pork floss.

It all started by happenstance, when Thuy Pham, a Vietnamese American stylist who had to pause working due to pandemic-related shutdowns, started live-streaming cooking videos to Instagram. One particular video of her and her daughter trying out a vegan pork belly recipe resulted in countless requests from viewers who wanted to taste the concoction themselves.

“Within a week, I had so many orders to fulfill that I had to move into a commissary kitchen and start production on a larger scale,” she says. High demand for her flavors led to a series of pop-ups, and by November 2020, Pham opened her first brick-and-mortar. She hasn’t looked back since.
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VegNews.MirisataMirisata

4Mirisata

Just a 10-minute walk away from Mama Đút, another pandemic-era pop-up turned brick-and-mortar is serving up Sri Lankan favorites, such as string hoppers (rice noodle patties) and parippu vade (lentil fritters). Not only that, but Mirisata is also entirely worker-owned—the restaurant’s part-time, non-owner employees even formed a union in 2022.

“My dad is from Sri Lanka, so I grew up with this food,” says co-founding worker-owner Alex Felsinger. “We now have several other worker-owners who are Sri Lankan and bring their own family recipes to the restaurant.” While the Southeast Portland restaurant does plenty of renditions of Sri Lanka’s non-veg mainstays, such as kottu roti, which traditionally uses eggs, Felsinger points out that much of Sri Lankan fare is vegan-friendly, to begin with.

After all, jackfruit is Sri Lanka’s national fruit.
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VegNews.Obon ShokudoObon Shokudo

5Obon Shokudo

Sushi and ramen spots are easy to find across the US—tracking down homestyle Japanese cuisine? Not so much. Enter Obon Shokudo, a cozy spot in Portland’s industrious Central Eastside where you’ll find warming noodle soups, curry plates, and even a panko-crusted take on Oregon’s own invention, the humble tater tot.

“I grew up in the mountain village atmosphere of old Japan,” says co-owner Humiko Hozumi, who started Obon with her husband as a farmers’ market operation before expanding into a brick and mortar. “My family had a small farm. We grew shiitakes in the rear of our house, under centuries-old cedars. I’ve always wanted to do Japanese shojin cuisine,” she says, referring to the traditional vegetarian style of cooking that’s rooted in Zen Buddhism.

Fast-forward to today and Hozumi is transforming those same mushrooms into subtle shiitake dashi for the house curry udon and into grilled stars of open-faced sandwiches finished with smoky tofu misozuke, kale vinaigrette, and shichimi togarashi.
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