Oklahoma City’s culinary momentum earns national attention

Oklahoma City’s food scene continues to gain national attention, with recent recognition from travel platforms, industry awards and consumer rankings pointing to broader momentum across the metro’s dining landscape.
Earlier this year, global travel platform Skyscanner named Oklahoma City one of its “Hidden Culinary Gems” for 2026. The list highlights destinations with strong regional food traditions and nationally recognized restaurants that remain outside the usual food-city conversation, as more travelers plan trips around where and what they want to eat.
Skyscanner pointed to Oklahoma City’s mix of long-standing regional dishes and diverse independent restaurants as part of its appeal. From onion burgers and stockyards steaks to globally influenced menus found throughout the Asian District and across the metro’s Mexican food scene, the city’s dining culture reflects both tradition and evolution.
That travel recognition is part of a larger pattern.
This year, eight Oklahoma restaurants and chefs were named semifinalists on the James Beard Foundation’s 2026 awards list, one of the most respected measures of excellence in food and hospitality. Seven of the semifinalists are based in Oklahoma City, with one from Tulsa, spanning four categories that recognize chefs, restaurants, bars and hospitality leadership.
Oklahoma City semifinalists include Jeff Chanchaleune of Bar Sen, Zack Walters of Sedalia’s, Veronica Zelada of Cafe Kacao, and Nonesuch, which returned as a semifinalist in the Outstanding Restaurant category. Later Bye was recognized in the Best New Bar category, while Rachel Cope of 84 Hospitality earned a semifinalist nod for Outstanding Restaurateur.
Consumer platforms are reinforcing that momentum as well. The latest release of Yelp’s Top 100 U.S. Restaurants 2026 included two Oklahoma City-area restaurants among the highest-rated dining spots in the country. Cafe Kacao ranked No. 76, while Edmond-based Birdie’s by Chef Kevin Lee ranked No. 83.

Taken together, the recognitions suggest Oklahoma City’s culinary growth is no longer defined by a single dish or district. Instead, the city is earning attention from chefs, travelers and everyday diners alike, reinforcing its emergence as a place where food is an increasingly central part of the experience.


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