Colombian kitchen with arepas on coal grill, steam rising

Colombia · Culinary Expeditions

Eat Colombia
From the Soil Up.

Dawn markets in Bogotá. Finca kitchens in the coffee hills. Ceviche on Cartagena's walls at golden hour.

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Paloquemao MarketAjiaco BogotanoArepa de ChocloValle de CocoraBandeja PaisaCeviche de CamarónSancocho de GallinaAguapanela con QuesoAjí de Don CamiloArroz con CocoPosta Negra CartageneraChorizo SantarosanoPaloquemao MarketAjiaco BogotanoArepa de ChocloValle de CocoraBandeja PaisaCeviche de CamarónSancocho de GallinaAguapanela con QuesoAjí de Don CamiloArroz con CocoPosta Negra CartageneraChorizo Santarosano
Dawn · 4:30am

Bogotá · Day 1–2

Where the city
eats before it wakes.

Paloquemao market opens at 4:30am. We're there at 5. 900 stalls, every altitude of Colombia on a single floor. Arepas, ajiaco, exotic fruits you have no name for yet.

Colorful tropical fruits piled high at a Colombian market stall — pitahaya, curuba, feijoa

Paloquemao · 5:30am

"I booked this trip after reading three food memoirs about Colombia. The market at dawn was better than all of them combined."

Priya Mehta · Solo traveler · Mumbai
Portrait of elderly Colombian woman vendor smiling at a market stall surrounded by herbs

The herb vendors open before the sun

Midday · High Altitude

Eje Cafetero · Day 3–4

The kitchen
behind the harvest.

Finca kitchens where abuelas grind achiote on volcanic stone. Coffee drunk on the porch where it was grown. The bandeja paisa that made a chef quit his restaurant and stay.

Aerial view of emerald green coffee terraces on steep Andean hillsides, Valle de Cocora Colombia

Valle de Cocora · 1,900m

"The finca kitchen changed how I cook. I came home and threw out my non-stick pan."

Chef Marco Reyes · On sabbatical · Mexico City
Large pot of sancocho de gallina slow-cooking over open wood fire, steam rising, deep jungle background

Sancocho · 4 hours over open flame

Golden Hour · Sunset

Cartagena · Day 5–6

Ceviche on the walls
as the sea goes gold.

Shrimp cured in lime, coconut rice with a caramelized crust, posta negra black as night. The Caribbean coast cooks hotter, brighter, saucier. Afro-Colombian technique, four hundred years of flavor.

Aerial view of Cartagena old city walls at golden hour, Caribbean sea glowing orange in background

Las Murallas · 5:47pm

"We skipped the resort. Every meal on this trip was worth more than the hotel would have been."

James & Lucia Okonkwo · Couple · Lagos & London
Tropical fruits at Bazurto market Cartagena — mamey, níspero, caimito in baskets, Afro-Caribbean vendor

Bazurto Market · Where the coast feeds itself

Night · Bare Bulbs

Medellín · Day 7–8

Under bare bulbs
in a fondita.

Medellín at night: markets lit by bare bulbs, aguapanela poured into clay cups, empanadas from Gloria's stall. The city that rebuilt itself around food, culture, and a refusal to be defined by its past.

Warm-lit Medellín fondita interior at night — bare bulbs hanging, wooden tables, locals eating late

Fondita · El Poblado · 9pm

"I'm a chef. I thought I knew Colombian food. I knew nothing. This trip rewrote my menu."

Chef Sarah Kim · Restaurant owner · Portland
Beautifully plated modern Colombian tasting menu dish at upscale Medellín restaurant, micro herbs

Medellín's new wave · Traditional roots, modern hands

The Full Journey

8 days. 4 regions.
One Colombia.

Small groups of 8. A local chef-guide who grew up eating this food. No resort, no itinerary you could find yourself. Every meal earned.

March

2026

4 spots

Dry season · Perfect light

$3,890pp →

June

2026

6 spots

Harvest season · Coffee in bloom

$3,890pp →

September

2026

2 spots

Green season · Lush valleys

$3,590pp →

November

2026

6 spots

Dry season · Market festivals

$3,890pp →
See the Full Journey

No forms. No pressure. Just the full story.

8-day expedition · Small groups · Departing year-round