Taste Cartagena sits at the edges of the Caribbean—Cartagena de Indias, Bolívar, Colombia—where narrow streets of the Walled City open into sunlit plazas and the bohemian blocks of Getsemaní. On this 3.5-hour walking tour you'll eat more than a dozen local dishes and drinks, tracing culinary threads from street snacks to two sit-down restaurants. A local guide connects each bite to the city's colonial past, its Afro-Caribbean rhythms, and the produce of the nearby coast. Highlights include tastings of arepa de huevo, fresh exotic fruit, pandebono de guayaba, sweets from the Portal de los Dulces, and a specialty coffee tasting that marks the transition from street plates to sit-down flavors. You’ll stroll landmark plazas like Plaza Santo Domingo and the Camellón de los Mártires, where colonial facades and wrought-iron balconies frame slow, photogenic moments. The route covers roughly forty minutes of walking spread over cobbled streets and flat sidewalks, making it accessible for most travelers who can manage short strolls. The guide flags regional history as you move, linking dishes to colonial trade, African and indigenous influences, and Cartagena’s role as a Caribbean port city since the sixteenth century. What makes this walk special is the way flavors map onto place: fruit vendors who source from nearby coastal farms; street cooks preserving recipes like arepa de huevo; and two carefully chosen restaurants that illustrate how Cartagena plates evolve from snack to restaurant fare. Practical details: arrive on time—the tour allows a ten-minute grace period—bring a hat and water, and flag dietary needs when you book; gluten-free, lactose-free, and vegetarian requests can be accommodated but vegan menus are not available. It’s a compact, intensely local way to learn Cartagena’s streets by taste—good for travelers who prefer guided, small-group urban experiences and who want to connect food with place in a single morning or afternoon. Along the way you’ll notice the city’s material history: thick colonial walls, sun-bleached plaster, and the scent of citrus and fried dough that threads between plazas. Guides point out architectural details and market microcultures—fruit stalls that rotate seasonal produce, candy stalls piled with guava sweets, and coffee artisans who roast to order. Because much of the tour happens outdoors, plan for sun and humidity; sip water between tastings, and wear comfortable shoes for uneven cobbles. The tour’s mix of street food and restaurant stops makes it an efficient orientation to Cartagena’s flavors, especially for first-time visitors or repeat travelers looking for a refreshed view. Bookings are handled online via the provided referral link, and groups should note the modest walking involved. Taste Cartagena is not just a food crawl; it’s a focused cultural primer that uses flavor to tell the city’s story, one bite at a time.