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    Restaurant in Cartagena, Colombia

    Celele

    940Pearl Points

    Book this for ingredient-driven Caribbean cooking.

    Celele, Restaurant in Cartagena

    About Celele

    Ranked #21 in South America by Opinionated About Dining (2025), Celele is Cartagena's most research-backed kitchen, building its menu from wild-harvested Caribbean coast ingredients documented through years of fieldwork. The a la carte format suits solo diners and couples equally, booking is easy, and the drinks flights — Colombian fruits, fermented spirits, regional craft beers — are worth ordering alongside the food.

    Verdict

    Celele is the right booking if you want to eat food that is genuinely specific to the Colombian Caribbean — not a generic Latin American tasting format, but a kitchen that has done the fieldwork. Ranked #21 on the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in South America list for 2025 (up from #28 in 2023), and a holder of the 2025 Sustainable Restaurant Award and the 2024 Terroir Award, this is one of the most credentialed tables in Cartagena. Book it for dinner on a weekday if you want the full experience without weekend crowd pressure. If you've already been once and stuck to the familiar proteins, come back for the dessert menu and the drinks flights — that's where the kitchen's sourcing philosophy becomes most legible on the plate.

    What Celele Does Better Than Its Peers

    The kitchen's technical advantage is ingredient specificity. Around 90 percent of products on the menu come from the Caribbean coast, with roughly 70 percent from wild harvests. That's not a marketing claim , it's the outcome of Proyecto Caribe Lab, years of documented fieldwork along the Colombian Caribbean coast that produced a catalogue of ingredients most Colombian restaurants have never used. The result is a menu that works with things like orejero (tree seeds processed into a sweet paste), guaimaro (maya nut), pomarrosa (malay apple with a flavour closer to rosewater than conventional fruit), and jumbalee (a wild fruit). For a returning diner, these are the ingredients worth seeking out. They won't appear on menus elsewhere in the city.

    The drinks program reinforces this logic rather than defaulting to standard wine pairings. Flights include regional craft beers, cocktails built around Colombian fruits, and fermented spirits , a coherent match for a menu built on wild and regional produce. If you skipped the drinks pairing on your first visit, it's worth ordering on your return.

    What to Order

    If you've already tried the broader menu, prioritise two things. On the savoury side, the squid and mussels dish , mussel broth reduction, plantain dumplings , shows the kitchen's ability to use coastal ingredients without overcomplicating the technique. The signature Celele de Cerdo, a confit pork terrine with preserved sweet peppers, Caribbean beans, cabbage, and pork broth, is the dish that leading communicates the restaurant's philosophy in a single plate.

    On dessert, the chocolate from La Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta with tropical dry forest crumble and borojó gel is the higher-stakes order. The yuca leaf and mambe (toasted coca leaf powder) cake served tiramisu-style with hibiscus leaf sorbet is the more unusual choice , worth trying if you want to understand the range of the kitchen's sourcing. Both are verified dishes from the restaurant's documented menu.

    Practical Details

    Celele is located in Getsemaní, Cartagena's most walkable creative neighbourhood, at Calle del Espíritu Santo, Cra. 10c #29-200. The restaurant is closed on Sundays. Tuesday hours are split (lunch 12–2 pm, dinner 6:30–11 pm); all other open days run 12–11 pm continuously. Booking difficulty is rated easy , this is not a table that requires weeks of advance planning, though arriving without a reservation on a busy Friday or Saturday is still a risk worth avoiding. Price range is not published in our database; budget accordingly and check directly with the restaurant. The Google rating sits at 4.6 across 2,346 reviews, which is a reliable signal of consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance.

    For timing: lunch on a weekday gives you the quietest version of the room and the full menu. Dinner on Thursday or Friday is the better call if atmosphere matters , Getsemaní has more energy on those evenings, and the neighbourhood is worth walking before or after your meal. For more on what else to eat and drink nearby, see our full Cartagena restaurants guide, our full Cartagena bars guide, and our full Cartagena experiences guide.

    If you're planning a wider Colombia itinerary, the modern Colombian format Celele operates in has strong counterparts elsewhere: El Chato and Leo in Bogotá are the most direct comparisons in terms of sourcing rigour and creative ambition, and Carmen in Medellín occupies a similar price-and-prestige tier. Debora in Bogotá, Harry Sasson, Domingo in Cali, and Manuel in Barranquilla round out the national context.

    Quick reference: Getsemaní, Cartagena | Closed Sunday | Easy to book | Google 4.6 (2,346 reviews) | OAD #21 South America 2025.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Celele good for solo dining?

    Yes. The a la carte format means you control the pace and portion count, which works well without a group to share across. Getsemaní is Cartagena's most walkable creative neighbourhood, so arriving and leaving alone is straightforward. Given the OAD #21 South America ranking for 2025, solo diners with an interest in Colombian Caribbean ingredients will get full value here.

    Can I eat at the bar at Celele?

    Bar seating details are not confirmed in the available venue data, so check the venue's official channels before planning a drop-in. What is documented: Celele runs a drinks programme that pairs regional craft beers, cocktails made with Colombian fruits, fermented spirits, and wines alongside the food menu, so the bar itself is a meaningful part of the experience.

    How far ahead should I book Celele?

    Book at least two to three weeks out for dinner, especially Thursday through Saturday. Celele holds an OAD Top 25 South America ranking, which draws destination diners from outside Cartagena, tightening availability during peak travel months. Lunch from Monday, Wednesday, or Thursday through Saturday tends to be slightly more accessible.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Celele?

    Dinner is the stronger format if you want to move slowly through the a la carte menu and pair dishes with the cocktail and beer programme. Lunch works if you are visiting Getsemaní during the day and want a focused two-course stop rather than a full evening. The kitchen runs the same menu across both services, so the food quality is consistent.

    Is Celele good for a special occasion?

    Yes, provided the occasion fits a food-forward, research-driven concept rather than a conventional celebration setting. Chef Jaime Rodríguez built the restaurant around years of fieldwork on the Caribbean coast documenting endangered recipes and ingredients, and that intent comes through in the menu. If the person you are celebrating cares about where food comes from, this is a strong choice in Cartagena.

    What are alternatives to Celele in Cartagena?

    For a more traditional and theatrical Colombian experience at scale, Andres Carne de Res is the volume option, though it is a fundamentally different format. Casa Pestagua offers colonial setting dining inside a boutique hotel if atmosphere is the priority. AniMare and 1621 The Restaurant are closer in tone for sit-down modern cooking, but neither matches Celele's documented sourcing depth or its OAD South America ranking.

    What should a first-timer know about Celele?

    The menu is built around ingredients most diners have never encountered: orejero tree seeds, guaimaro (maya nut), pomarrosa (malay apples with a rosewater flavour), and wild-harvested produce from the Colombian Caribbean. Around 90 percent of products on the menu come from the coast, with 70 percent from wild harvests. Come with curiosity for unfamiliar ingredients rather than expecting a known Colombian canon. The restaurant is closed Sundays.

    Location

    Calle del Espíritu Santo, Cra. 10c #29-200, Getsemaní, Cartagena de Indias, Bolívar, Colombia

    Cartagena, Colombia

    Compare Celele

    The Complete Picture: Celele and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    CeleleModern ColombianEasy
    Andres Carne de ResColombianUnknown
    AniMareColombian FusionUnknown
    Casa PestaguaColombian FusionUnknown
    1621 The RestaurantUnknown

    Comparing your options in Cartagena for this tier.

    Also Consider

    • Andres Carne de Res, Colombian, Colombian
    • AniMare, Colombian Fusion, Colombian Fusion
    • Casa Pestagua, Colombian Fusion, Colombian Fusion
    • 1621 The Restaurant, Notable alternative

    Among Cartagena's serious restaurants, Celele has the strongest credentials on paper: OAD #21 in South America for 2025, a Sustainable Restaurant Award, and a Terroir Award. If sourcing rigour and ingredient specificity matter to you, no other table in the city operates at this level of documented research. AniMare and Casa Pestagua both work in a Colombian Fusion format and are worth considering if you want a more polished, formal dining room, Casa Pestagua in particular suits special occasions where setting carries as much weight as the food.

    1621 The Restaurant is a reasonable alternative if you want Colombian cooking without Celele's avant-garde ingredient reach, think more recognisable flavour profiles and a slightly more conventional experience. For the same price tier with less creative risk, 1621 is the safer bet. Andres Carne de Res is a different proposition entirely: high-energy, large-group Colombian dining that competes on atmosphere and scale rather than kitchen precision. If you're travelling with four or more and want a memorable evening over a serious meal, Andres Carne de Res is the pick. If you're two people who want to eat something genuinely rare, book Celele.

    On booking difficulty, all four venues are accessible without extensive advance planning in Cartagena, the city hasn't yet reached the reservation scarcity of Bogotá's top tables like El Chato or Leo. Celele is rated easy to book. The decision between it and its Cartagena peers comes down to what you're optimising for: Celele for depth of culinary research, Casa Pestagua for formal occasion dining, AniMare for fusion creativity, and Andres Carne de Res for group energy.

    Hours

    Monday
    12–11 pm
    Tuesday
    12–2 pm, 6:30–11 pm
    Wednesday
    12–11 pm
    Thursday
    12–11 pm
    Friday
    12–11 pm
    Saturday
    12–11 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

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