This place has everything middleastern you can think of. The place is clean and you can find about anything from spices to pastries. I usually go there to get bread, spice, cheese and halal meat. I wish they have a better selection for groceries. That way I can do all my shopping there. There prices are fair and might be cheaper than other store. I recommend this place.
Kristina M.
Place rating: 1 Dallas, TX
If you’re looking for a clean and civil shopping experience, make the drive to Richardson to Sara bakery or to the one off spring valley rd. the meat is a brownish color and the employees are either clueless or arrogant. Oh and they are also on the GHETTO next to a 7 $ eye brow threading place. Yuck!
Laura H.
Place rating: 4 Arlington, TX
Their grocery selection can’t be beat. I can always find the spices I need, no matter how obscure they are. Or if I don’t want to make it from scratch, I can enjoy dining in their amazing-tasting-yet-super-affordable café. Don’t skip their huge baklava servings — best in Arlington!
Solomon W.
Place rating: 4 Austin, TX
International Food Land may have just about the lamest name in the history of all ethnic grocery stores, but boy does it know how to do a deli for curious palates. And at a mighty affordable cost. I will admit that the smell of Indian(they are all similar, anyway – pardon my stereotyping) spices immediately triggers my curry-sense. I figure, at least in America, that everything coming out of the kitchen is gonna be naan, curried potatoes, or Tandoori chicken. Far from it! They are cranking out dips, a hefty variety of sweets and confections, and a fantastic looking bunch of flatbreads or something rather. I believe the«restaurant/deli» is called Aladdin Café – no joke. If you are at all interested in food from the East, not including the likes of orange chicken, but rather gyros of sorts and maybe some grape leaves and pita, than you have found your neighborhood market. Swing by for some homegrown fare, flown from foreign fates.