Macau’s mix of Chinese and Portuguese food was the first fusion cuisine according to Unesco
- The city was named a Unesco City of Gastronomy in 2017, hailed for its mix of traditions that have influenced food from Japan to Brazil and Africa
There is no hyperbole in what some people might consider to be Macau’s unlikely claim to fame – even the scholarly gatekeepers at Unesco recognise the city as home to the world’s “first fusion cuisine”.
Its listing as a Creative City of Gastronomy cites a more familiar framing: “combining Eastern and Western culture”, which is thanks to its prime Pearl River Delta vantage, its over 400 years under Portuguese administration, and its influence in turn on the cuisines of Malaysia, Japan, Brazil and a number of port cities across Africa.
Many of Macau’s greatest hits will no doubt be familiar – or else you should be sure to try them on your next trip.
However, it takes more than a unique and charming local cuisine to earn a Creative City of Gastronomy status. It’s been nearly seven years since Unesco named Macau as a Creative City of Gastronomy, but what does that lofty designation actually mean?
To join the Unesco club, cities need to apply under its Creative Cities initiative – aside from gastronomy, categories include crafts and folk art, design, film, literature, the media arts and music. Macau made the cut in late 2017 after a two-year application process, pursued in line with the Macao Government Tourism Office’s (MGTO) strategy to develop the city as a “world centre of tourism and leisure”.