Antigua & Barbuda Culinary Month sets Antigua & Barbuda up for a simple cultural battle: the recognition of a specific cuisine, with its products, its chefs and its memory. In May 2026, Restaurant Week, guest chefs and several regional events will give the archipelago a wider stage than just tourism promotion.
Nina Compton, a strong signal for Antigua and Barbuda
When New Orleans-based St. Lucian chef Nina Compton, winner of the James Beard Award and star of Compère Lapin restaurant, sets foot in Antigua in May, it’s no courtesy visit. It’s a signal. The chef is part of the Antigua & Barbuda Culinary Month program, organized from May 1 to 31, 2026 by the Antigua and Barbuda Tourism Authority.
A Restaurant Week designed for visitors and residents alike
Antigua & Barbuda Culinary Month extends an already established Restaurant Week, but gives it a new scale. From May 3 to 17, over 50 local restaurants are offering fixed-price menus, structured around three levels: 25, 50 and 75 US dollars. This is an important detail. It shows that the event isn’t just for visitors. It also gives locals the chance to try out restaurants, flavours and places that, during the rest of the year, are sometimes absorbed by the logic of tourism.
A month also about the economy and transmission
The program moves forward in sequences: Restaurant Week, Caribbean Food Forum, collaborative dinners, FAB Fest, Puerto Rican barbecue, Caribbean evening with chefs, then the finale at Wild Tamarind Restaurant. On May 21, the Caribbean Food Forum brings together chefs, tourism professionals, hotel industry players and sustainability specialists to discuss food safety, culinary innovation and the future of gastronomic tourism. This is no technical detail. It’s a sign that Antigua & Barbuda Culinary Month also wants to talk about the economy, transmission and food sovereignty.
Invited chefs to broaden Caribbean dialogue
Against this backdrop, the guest chefs bring a regional flavour to the event. The official list includes Andi Oliver, Angel Barreto, Claude Lewis, Kareem Roberts, Kerth Gumbs, Suzanne Barr, Devan Rajkumar, Brigette Joseph, Nina Compton, Paul Carmichael, Tristen Epps, Donna-Lee Tapper and Osei “Picky” Blackett. This outside presence doesn’t erase the local cuisine. Rather, it places it in a broader conversation, between the English-speaking Caribbean, the diaspora, North America and Afrodiasporic influences.
International recognition for St John's
Antigua & Barbuda has a strong argument to make. St John’s, the archipelago’s capital, was honored in 2025 as the Caribbean’s Best Emerging Culinary City Destination at the World Culinary Awards. The award confirms a committed work around a culinary scene that seeks to be named for what it is: a cuisine of Antigua and Barbuda, not a mere variant of a too-general Caribbean imaginary.
A cuisine that is still too little exported
This clarification is essential. Jamaican, Cuban, Trinidadian and Puerto Rican cuisine is already widely circulated in restaurants, festivals and tourist reports. The cuisine of Antigua & Barbuda is less widely exported. Antigua & Barbuda Culinary Month aims to correct this lack of visibility by starting with the territory itself: its tables, its producers, its markets, its fruits, its family habits and its culinary memories.
The Antigua Black Pineapple, an agricultural and heritage symbol
The Antigua Black Pineapple occupies a special place here. This fruit, grown in the archipelago, is presented by the authorities as one of the country’s great agricultural symbols. The work submitted to the World Intellectual Property Organization points out that it is marketed as one of the sweetest pineapples in the world, that it is grown mainly in the south of the island and that it is one of the national emblems. Behind the taste, then, lies a question of protection, agricultural research and heritage value.
A useful lesson for the Caribbean
This is where Antigua & Barbuda Culinary Month becomes interesting for the Caribbean. Many territories have strong products, but few manage to give them a coherent place in an economic, tourism and cultural narrative. In Antigua, gastronomy is starting to become a positioning language. It speaks of restaurants, of course. It also speaks of local production, international recognition, diaspora and transmission.
A scene to be transformed into a lasting force
What happens next will probably depend on the ability to protect products, train talent and circulate this cuisine beyond the month of May. Antigua & Barbuda Culinary Month provides a stage. It now remains to be seen how this stage can become a lasting force for chefs, producers and the archipelago’s culinary memory.
📸 @AB Culinary Month
Antigua & Barbuda Culinary Month is a month dedicated to the gastronomy of Antigua and Barbuda. In May 2026, the event brings together Restaurant Week, guest chefs, culinary forums and local cuisine events.
Antigua & Barbuda Culinary Month 2026 runs from May 1 to 31, 2026. Restaurant Week, one of the highlights of the program, is scheduled from May 3 to 17.
Antigua and Barbuda uses its cuisine to promote its heritage, local products, chefs and cultural identity. The event also reinforces the archipelago’s place in Caribbean gastronomic tourism.