Our Experiences
Follow the smoke, the sizzle, and the smell. Eat like a local at the stalls and kitchens that never make the guidebooks.
Book This Tour See All ToursWhat to Expect
Africa's best food doesn't have a Michelin star — it has a charcoal grill, a grandmother behind it, and a queue of regulars who've been coming for twenty years. Our Street Food Tour takes you to those places.
Over 3–4 hours you'll taste your way through a rotating selection of dishes: grilled skewers, fermented drinks, deep-fried pastries, fresh tropical fruits, and stews that have been simmering since dawn. Your guide explains every dish — its name, its origin, and who makes it best.
⚠️ Please let us know about any dietary restrictions or allergies when booking. We accommodate vegetarian, vegan, and gluten-free diets with advance notice.
What You'll Taste
Every tour varies with the season and the market, but here's what a typical tour includes.
Marinated meats and vegetables cooked over open coals. The smell alone is worth the trip.
Rich, slow-cooked dishes served in bowls that make you lean in. Your guide tells you the story behind each one.
Freshly sliced papaya, pineapple, and whatever's in season — eaten standing, juice running down your fingers.
Fried dough, roasted groundnuts, spiced puffs. The kind of things you eat three of before you mean to.
Ginger juice, hibiscus tea, fermented sorghum drinks. We'll try them all and you can decide your favourite.
We always stop long enough to talk. You'll meet the women who've held these stalls for decades and kept these recipes alive.
Tour Route
We run morning and evening departures. The evening tour has a different energy — lit by charcoal fires and fairy lights.
We start where the action is thickest. Your guide introduces the market — its layout, its vendors, its rules — before the eating begins.
The first stop is always the grill section. Hot, fragrant, unmissable. Watch your skewer go from raw to perfect in minutes.
A stew that's been on the fire since 5am. Her daughter helps serve it. Her granddaughter plays nearby. Three generations, one recipe.
A short walk to the fruit sellers for freshly cut fruit and local drinks. Time to talk, compare notes, and rest your stomach slightly before round two.
The place with no sign, no menu, and a line of regulars. Your guide has been coming here for years. So has everyone else in this neighbourhood.
We end with something sweet — a fried pastry or sugarcane juice — and your guide sends you off with a printed list of every place you visited, so you can return alone.
Pricing
Dietary requirements? Tell us when booking.
Reserve Your Spot
Tell us your group size, any dietary restrictions, and whether you prefer a morning or evening tour.