Antigua and Barbuda nominated for Best Emerging Caribbean Culinary Destination 2025

Antigua and Barbuda

Antigua and Barbuda has just been nominated as the Caribbean’ s Best Emerging Culinary Destination 2025 by the highly respected World Culinary Awards. And it’s no coincidence. For the past three years, the Antigua and Barbuda Tourism Authority (ABTA) has been actively working to reposition the country’s image, hitherto associated with its beaches, towards a narrative deeply rooted in gastronomy, terroir and cultural identity.

A World Culinary Awards nomination, a guarantee of credibility

This recognition pays tribute to the efforts of an entire ecosystem: from talented chefs to local producers, street-level artisans and decision-makers. Tourism Minister Charles Fernandez summed it up well: “This nomination is a reflection of our rich culinary heritage, and a celebration of the talents that make our national identity shine.”

Antigua and Barbuda
Antigua and Barbuda

Gastronomy Month : a pillar of culinary transformation

From traditional Restaurant Week to a full month of events

The heart of this transformation is the Gastronomy Month. This flagship program, launched by ABTA, has seen the former Restaurant Week evolve into a month-long series of immersive events. Each edition offers a deep dive into the cuisine of Antigua and Barbuda, far beyond a restaurant menu.

FAB Fest: an artistic and culinary showcase

FAB Fest (Food, Art and Beverage Festival) has become a must-attend signature event this month. It features the best chefs from both islands, creative mixologists, local artists and passionate producers. All in an atmosphere of culinary demonstrations, concerts, tastings and craft exhibitions.

Eat Like A Local: mapping authenticity

Another flagship initiative: Eat Like A Local. It’s an interactive digital map featuring certified vendors, street stalls and small addresses often unknown to tourists. The project encourages responsible, authentic exploration of the country, highlighting homemade dishes, grandma’s recipes and places frequented by locals.

Caribbean Food Forum: thinking the regional culinary future

Strategic thinking on food safety and innovation

Antigua and Barbuda isn’t just about cooking: the country is also thinking about the future. The Caribbean Food Forum, organized as part of the Gastronomy Month, brings together chefs, entrepreneurs, researchers and political leaders from across the Caribbean. Together, they are tackling the issues of food security, culinary innovation, know-how transfer and sustainable agriculture.

Antigua and Barbuda

From chefs to politicians: a transdisciplinary dialogue

This forum goes far beyond a simple demonstration. It creates a space for dialogue between professions, where a chef can discuss food legislation with a member of parliament, or a farmer with a researcher on the impact of climate change. This cross-fertilization of ideas makes Antigua and Barbuda the region’s culinary laboratory.

Antigua and Barbuda

An ambition driven by committed figures

Colin C. James: 365 beaches, 365 flavours

ABTA Managing Director Colin C. James sums up the country’s new slogan perfectly: “We’ve gone from 365 beaches to 365 flavors.” This transformation does not seek to erase the seaside image, but to add a layer of cultural and gustatory depth to it.

Shermain Jeremy: identity, pride and community

Heading up the coordination of Gastronomy Month, Shermain Jeremy is an essential figure. She insists: “What we’ve built goes beyond food. It’s about identity, pride and community.” For her, every street vendor, every mixologist, every artist contributes to this collective dynamic.

Antigua and Barbuda has established itself as a benchmark in the Caribbean culinary landscape. Antigua and Barbuda’s nomination as Best Emerging Culinary Destination in the Caribbean 2025 by the World Culinary Awards is a significant milestone in a collective, ambitious and deeply rooted project. Behind every dish served on these islands, there is a history, a memory, a know-how. And this richness deserves to be celebrated, shared… and savoured.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More articles from RK

Philippe Faure-Brac
NEWS
Tolotra

Philippe Faure-Brac at Habitation Clément: Martinique rum as seen by a great sommelier.

Philippe Faure-Brac had never visited Habitation Clément before. World’s Best Sommelier 1992, member of the Meilleurs Ouvriers de France with honorary status since 2015, he came to Martinique to look at rhum agricole from its very place of production: the cane, the cellars, the bottling and the tasting. A first visit to Habitation Clément At Habitation Clément, in Le François, this visit had a special significance. Philippe Faure-Brac was already familiar with Clément rums, their quality positioning and their universe. He had also contributed to the book Rhum Clément, une histoire de famille, bringing his insight into the house’s aromatic precision, balance and tradition of excellence. But he lacked the experience of the place. That of the light, the temperature, the atmosphere of the winery and the exchanges with the teams. “The first time in Martinique? I was going to say finally,” he confided, recalling that he had been hoping

Read More »
Boiling Lake
TOURISM
Tolotra

Boiling Lake: 92 °C, 63 m wide, the 2nd largest bubbling lake in the world

Just 8 kilometers east of Roseau, the capital of Dominica, it’s a three-hour walk from Laudat to Boiling Lake. Three hours of humid forest, desolate valley, soil-heated rocks and sulfurous fumes. At the end of the path, a 63-metre-wide pool. Inside, the water bubbles almost continuously, with temperatures measured up to 91.6°C at the edges. It’s the second largest bubbling lake in the world. A rare phenomenon in a UNESCO park The world’s first is Frying Pan Lake in New Zealand’s Waimangu Valley. But the Dominican Boiling Lake is in a class of its own. Firstly, because it can only be reached on foot, after a demanding hike. Secondly, because it is part of a national park that has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1997: Morne Trois Pitons National Park. This makes it one of the most singular geothermal phenomena protected in a world-renowned natural site. A flooded,

Read More »
Tourisme 3.0
TOURISM
Tolotra

Tourism 3.0: Jamaica wants to keep its tourist wealth

At the Montego Bay Convention Centre, the image speaks for itself. Local entrepreneurs showcase their products, hotel representatives circulate, meetings follow one another. Behind these rapid exchanges, one question weighs heavily: when tourism makes money, how much really stays in Jamaica? This is at the heart of Tourism 3.0, the new direction championed by Jamaica’s Minister of Tourism, Edmund Bartlett. At the Tourism Enhancement Fund’s 11th Speed Networking Event, he set out a clear ambition: to make tourism a more direct driver for Jamaican producers, artisans, manufacturers and suppliers. Tourism that no longer just wants to attract Jamaica knows how to welcome visitors. But the challenge is no longer just to fill hotels or increase arrivals. The real challenge is to retain more value in the territory. Edmund Bartlett has recognized a structural weakness: a large proportion of the goods and services consumed by the tourism industry are still imported.

Read More »

conTACT RK

we'd love to have your feedback on your experience so far

Join The List

Join our Richès Karayib community!  Sign up for our newsletter.

Want To Maximize Your Business Presence On Riches Karayib?

Complete the form to start the application