Somewhere in Georgetown, in a working-class neighborhood most travelers once ignored, a small backyard changed the trajectory of Guyanese cuisine. It did not happen through marketing agencies or hotel chains. It started with a young man cooking food the way his family always had. Humans spend billions trying to manufacture authenticity. Delven Adams accidentally built it behind his childhood home.
Delven Adams and the Rise of Backyard Café

In the crowded West Ruimveldt neighborhood of Georgetown, a modest yard behind a family home became one of the most talked-about dining destinations in the Caribbean. The Backyard Café, created by Chef Delven Adams, has moved from local curiosity to international recognition. What began as a small community dining space now attracts diplomats, investors, travelers, and global food critics.
The recognition reached a new level when Time Magazine highlighted the restaurant as one of the places defining the modern culinary identity of Guyana.
The Beginning: Cooking From Home

Delven Adams did not start with investors, a large kitchen, or a hotel partnership. He started where many great chefs begin, at home.
The Backyard Café sits exactly where its name suggests, in the backyard of Adams’ childhood house in West Ruimveldt, Georgetown. The area is a working-class community. It was not designed for tourism or fine dining. That fact became part of its appeal.
The restaurant operates quietly. There is no flashy storefront. Reservations are required. Guests are asked in advance what protein they prefer: fish, chicken, lamb, or other options. Adams then builds the menu around what is available fresh in the markets that day.
This approach creates a seasonal, market-driven dining experience that reflects Guyana’s agricultural diversity.
Instead of a fixed menu, guests receive a culinary story about the country.
A Cuisine Built on Many Cultures
Guyana’s food tells the history of its people. The country’s population reflects centuries of migration shaped by colonial trade and labor systems.
Most Guyanese trace their ancestry to Africa or India. Both communities arrived during the colonial period under dramatically different circumstances but left a permanent mark on the culture and food. Indigenous Amerindian communities contribute techniques and ingredients that stretch back thousands of years.
Adams builds his dishes on this layered heritage.

One example often cited by visitors is pepperpot chicken prepared with cassareep, the dark cassava extract central to traditional Amerindian cooking. The dish also carries Caribbean influence through jerk seasoning and the heat of wiri wiri peppers. Warm spices such as cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves connect the dish to Indian culinary traditions.
The result is something uniquely Guyanese. No imported cuisine can reproduce it.
Learning from the World
Adams’ reputation expanded after collaborations and exposure through international culinary platforms, including work with celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay. Ramsay’s programs often highlight chefs who represent authentic local food traditions, and Adams’ work placed Guyana on that map.
The exposure did not transform Backyard Café into a corporate restaurant. Adams kept the format personal and small.
That decision preserved what diners value most. They experience the food inside a home environment, surrounded by Guyanese music, conversation, and hospitality.
Link to the Time Magazine article – The World’s Greatest Places of 2026 – Backyard Cafe, Georgetown, Guyana






