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Houston’s Top Chefs Unite for Spice Routes: The Cardamom Challenge, a New Festival Exploring the Global Journey of Cardamom

The chef-driven event at Ismaili Center, Houston pairs cardamom-inspired dishes from some of the city’s top culinary names with art exhibitions, architecture and garden tours, and more
Written By: author avatar Megha McSwain
author avatar Megha McSwain
Megha McSwain is the Texas Editor for DiningOut Magazine, managing editorial content for Houston and Dallas. Megha was born in Mumbai, India, and currently resides in Houston. She has a passion for reporting on food, restaurants, chefs, and travel, and has contributed to outlets like Food Network, Eater, InsideHook, Resy, Texas Monthly, and Texas Highways throughout her career. As a trusted member of the local media, Megha also appears as a regular guest on local lifestyle television shows, Great Day Houston on KHOU11, and Texas Today on NBC5.
The Ismaili Center, Houston, host of the upcoming Spice Routes: The Cardamom Challenge festival, pairs sweeping skyline views with serene gardens and striking geometric architecture design. | Photo by Iwan Baan
The Ismaili Center, Houston, host of the upcoming Spice Routes: The Cardamom Challenge festival, pairs sweeping skyline views with serene gardens and striking geometric architecture design. | Photo by Iwan Baan

Houston’s newest culinary festival is using a single spice to tell a global story.

On Sunday, June 7, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., the Ismaili Center, Houston (2323 Allen Pkwy.) will transform into a sprawling celebration of food, art and global culture for Spice Routes: The Cardamom Challenge, a new culinary festival built around one ancient spice that connects chefs, artists, and communities across continents.

Presented by Sysco Nourishing Neighbors and McCormick, and benefiting Urban Harvest, Spice Routes blends chef tastings, cultural programming, and friendly competition into one immersive experience. 

The festival arrives at a moment when Houston’s dining scene increasingly thrives on storytelling—not just through restaurants, but through the histories and migration patterns embedded within ingredients themselves. And few ingredients carry a passport quite like cardamom.

Native to South Asia but now woven into cuisines stretching from India and the Middle East to Scandinavia and Latin America, cardamom is both metaphor and centerpiece for the event, which will feature some of Houston’s most celebrated chefs reinterpreting the spice through sweet and savory bites.

The lineup reads like a snapshot of Houston’s culinary diversity. Participating chefs include Aaron Bludorn (Bludorn, Bar Bludorn, Navy Blue); Shawn Gawle (Camaraderie); Christian Hernandez (Barbacana); Suu Khin (Burmalicious by Suu); Micah Rideout (Savoir); Omar Pereney and Diana Nadira (Love Croissants); and Maham Qureshi (Shakkar), among others.

Each will create dishes exploring cardamom’s reach across cultures and cuisines, giving guests the chance to vote in a people’s choice competition while judges oversee a separate “Chopped”-style culinary showdown. The chef tastings will be complemented by a lineup of zero-proof cocktails and specialty drinks from partners including Cut Above Spirits, Tenfold Coffee Company, and Saint Arnold Brewing Company.

But the event is designed to be about more than food. Spice Routes doubles as the formal unveiling of the Ismaili Center’s permanent art collection. Guests will be invited to explore curated exhibitions and participate in architecture and garden tours inside the striking new cultural landmark.

The soaring geometric interiors of the Ismaili Center, Houston have helped establish the building as one of the city’s most striking new cultural landmarks. | Photo by Iwan Baan
The soaring geometric interiors of the Ismaili Center Houston have helped establish the building as one of the citys most striking new cultural landmarks | Photo by Iwan Baan

Since opening last year, the Ismaili Center has drawn admiration for its striking architecture and contemplative atmosphere. Designed by internationally acclaimed architect Farshid Moussavi, the structure has garnered national attention for its geometric forms, luminous interiors and serene gardens. The festival feels carefully curated to match that same sense of ambition

In addition to chef tastings and tours, attendees can browse “the Bazaar,” a marketplace featuring artisan vendors, specialty food makers, and cultural brands including Cacao & Cardamom, Soft & Salted, Vintage Allison, and Qamaria Yemeni Coffee Co. 

“Food creates a powerful entry point for connection,” said Rozina Mussani, Director of the Ismaili Center, Houston, in a press release. “Spice Routes reflects the Ismaili Center’s mission of bringing diverse communities together through shared cultural experiences that encourage dialogue, discovery, and mutual understanding.”

Cardamom may be the featured spice, but the broader focus is on movement: of people, traditions, flavors, and ideas.

For Urban Harvest, the nonprofit beneficiary known for its community gardens and food access initiatives across Houston, the partnership underscores how food-centered events increasingly intersect with conversations around sustainability, equity, and local agriculture.

“Houston’s food culture reflects the richness and diversity of the people who call this city home, and this event captures that spirit beautifully,” said Janna Roberson, Executive Director of Urban Harvest in a press release. “To see chefs interpreting a globally traveled ingredient like cardamom while bringing people together around food, learning, and community is especially meaningful, and we’re grateful to be part of an experience that supports Urban Harvest’s work across Houston.” 

Tickets are priced at $75 for adults and $25 for children ages 3 to 12, with free admission for children 2 and younger.

For a city that thrives on global flavor and cultural exchange, Spice Routes promises to be one of Houston’s most immersive culinary events of the summer.

Ismaili Center, Houston, 2323 Allen Pkwy., Houston, ismailicenter.org

author avatar
Megha McSwain Texas Managing Editor
Megha McSwain is the Texas Editor for DiningOut Magazine, managing editorial content for Houston and Dallas. Megha was born in Mumbai, India, and currently resides in Houston. She has a passion for reporting on food, restaurants, chefs, and travel, and has contributed to outlets like Food Network, Eater, InsideHook, Resy, Texas Monthly, and Texas Highways throughout her career. As a trusted member of the local media, Megha also appears as a regular guest on local lifestyle television shows, Great Day Houston on KHOU11, and Texas Today on NBC5.
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