Eating in Kingston: Where the Musicians Eat
Kingston's food culture operates on two parallel tracks: the restaurant scene that caters to the middle class and visitors, and the cookshop culture that feeds the city's working population — including, historically, most of its musicians. The reggae traveler seeking authentic culinary experiences should prioritize the second track.
Cookshops: The Heart of Kingston Eating
A cookshop is a small, often informal establishment — sometimes a converted house, sometimes a roadside shack, sometimes a window cut into a wall — where a cook (usually a woman) prepares a daily menu of Jamaican staples. The food is served in styrofoam containers or on enamel plates. There is no printed menu — you eat what is available that day. Prices are low, portions are generous, and the food is the best you will eat in Jamaica.
Cookshops have always been the feeding stations of Jamaica's music industry. Studio musicians recording at Channel One on Maxfield Avenue ate at the cookshops on the surrounding streets. Engineers working late at King Tubby's studio in Waterhouse sent someone out for food from the neighborhood. The cookshop is not incidental to the reggae story — it is part of it. The music was made by people who ate this food, and the food was prepared by women who lived in the same communities that produced the music.
For the visitor, eating at a cookshop requires a small adjustment of expectations. Service is informal. Seating may be limited or nonexistent. The menu is whatever was cooked that day. But the food — properly prepared rice and peas, stew chicken, oxtail, curry goat, steamed fish, callaloo — will be among the most flavorful and authentic you have ever tasted. This is food cooked by people who have been making these dishes for generations.
Coronation Market
Coronation Market, in downtown Kingston near the waterfront, is Jamaica's largest and oldest market. Established in 1872, it is a sprawling, intense, overwhelmingly sensory experience. Vendors sell fresh produce — ackee, breadfruit, yams, dasheen, callaloo, scotch bonnet peppers, thyme, scallion — alongside prepared foods, spices, herbal remedies, and household goods. The market operates daily but is busiest on Saturdays, when rural vendors bring produce from across the island.
Coronation Market is not a tourist market. It is a working commercial space where Kingston feeds itself. Visitors should come prepared for heat, crowds, and a pace that does not accommodate leisurely browsing. Hire a local guide if you are unfamiliar with the area. Buy what interests you — the produce is superb and the prices are the lowest on the island. But most importantly, understand that you are entering a space that has functioned as Kingston's food hub for over 150 years.
The Patty: Jamaica's Street Food Icon
The Jamaican patty — a flaky, turmeric-yellow pastry filled with spiced beef, chicken, vegetable, or other fillings — is arguably Jamaica's most widely recognized street food. Patties are sold everywhere in Kingston, from dedicated patty shops like Tastee and Juici to corner stores and school canteens. The patty's origins reflect Jamaica's multicultural history: the pastry technique derives from British Cornish pasties, the spicing is African and Indian, and the turmeric-yellow crust is uniquely Jamaican.
The patty is eaten at all times of day and by all classes of Jamaican society. It is traditionally paired with coco bread — a soft, slightly sweet bread that is split open to receive the patty, creating a combination that is both filling and portable. For the reggae traveler, a beef patty in coco bread, purchased from a Tastee or Juici outlet and eaten standing on a Kingston sidewalk, is an essential cultural experience.
Devon House: Where Food Meets Heritage
Devon House, the restored 19th-century mansion on Hope Road in uptown Kingston, functions as both a historical site and a food destination. The grounds house several restaurants and food establishments, including Devon House I-Scream — widely considered to serve the best ice cream in Jamaica, with flavors like Devon Stout, grape nut, and coconut. The Grog Shoppe restaurant on the grounds serves traditional Jamaican cuisine in a more formal setting. Devon House itself, built in 1881 by George Stiebel (one of the first Black millionaires in the Caribbean), is a significant historical monument.