Campeche is meant to be eaten slowly. Far from the bustle of other destinations, this walled city keeps one of the most singular — and least-told — cuisines in Mexico: a table that faces the Gulf, blends Maya roots with Caribbean echoes, and is served in markets, seafood houses and heritage-home courtyards. Here are the five reasons it deserves a culinary trip of its own.

1. A generous sea at the door

Campeche is one of the country's great fishing states, famed for its octopus and shrimp. That abundance shapes the whole cuisine: fish and shellfish are not one option among many but the centre of the table, fresh each day.

2. A regional cuisine with its own identity

It is often confused with Yucatecan food, but Campeche has its own accent. It shares achiote, sour orange and the Maya inheritance, yet its larder is marine and it absorbed influences from port trade and the Caribbean. Pan de cazón is its signature; few dishes sum up a place so well.

3. A market and street-food culture

The real Campeche cooking is lived in the street: the main market at dawn, the neighbourhood seafood houses, the stalls of panuchos, salbutes and codzitos. To eat here is also to get to know the city and its people.

Campeche antojitos at a street stall

Campeche antojitos: panuchos, salbutes and codzitos from the stalls.

4. A centuries-old dessert tradition

A legacy of convents and of the port, Campeche's pastry-making is a world apart: cocadas, candied fruits, dulce de ciricote, marquesitas and festival breads. The sweet shops of the centre are a visit in themselves.

Traditional Campeche sweets

Campeche's sweet tradition, a legacy of convents and cocadas.

5. Private gastronomy in a heritage home

The most memorable experience is not on a menu but at a table of your own. At Casonas MX, a local chef can cook the day's market in your courtyard, pairing regional produce with the calm of the walled city — a way to taste Campeche unhurried and uncrowded.

We design private meals with local chefs around your courtyard table.

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A private chef experience in Campeche

Private gastronomy: the day's market cooked at your table. · Photo: Gonzalo Origen

Go deeper

Begin with our guide to the ten essential seafood dishes, discover where to eat in the traditional neighbourhoods, and understand how the port and its maritime history also shaped its larder. When you are ready to stay, choose your heritage home.

Frequently asked questions

Why is Campeche a good food destination?

Because it brings together a generous sea, a regional cuisine with its own identity, a centuries-old dessert tradition and a very living market-and-street-food culture — all within a UNESCO World Heritage centre where you eat exceptionally well and without the crowds.

How is Campeche cuisine different from Yucatecan food?

Although they share Maya roots and ingredients such as achiote and sour orange, Campeche looks more to the sea: its larder is marine — cazón, octopus, shrimp — and it absorbed Caribbean and port-trade influences that set it apart.

What should you eat in Campeche?

Pan de cazón first of all, plus octopus, coconut shrimp, seafood cocktails and local antojitos like panuchos and codzitos. And, for dessert, the traditional Campeche sweets.

Where should you eat in Campeche?

From the main market and the neighbourhood seafood houses to restaurants in the historic centre. The most memorable option is a private meal with a local chef in a heritage home, around the courtyard table.

Is there a dessert tradition in Campeche?

Yes, a deeply rooted one. The sweet shops offer cocadas, candied fruits, dulce de ciricote, marquesitas and festival breads — a legacy of convents and of the port.