Fatmata Binta is a Sierra Leonean chef, cultural advocate, humanitarian, and global culinary leader widely celebrated for redefining African gastronomy through storytelling, sustainability, and the preservation of Fulani food heritage. As the founder of Fulani Kitchen and the visionary behind Dine on a Mat, she has become one of Africa’s most internationally recognized culinary figures, using food as a bridge between culture, community, and social impact.
Born and raised in Freetown, Sierra Leone, to a Fulani family of Guinean descent, Chef Binta’s early life was deeply shaped by the traditions of the Fulani people, one of Africa’s largest nomadic communities. Her childhood experiences during Sierra Leone’s civil war profoundly influenced her understanding of food as a source of resilience, solidarity, and survival. She has often reflected on how communities came together during periods of scarcity, creating meals collectively from limited ingredients, experiences that later became foundational to her culinary philosophy.

Although she initially studied international relations, her passion for food and cultural preservation eventually led her into the culinary world. She later trained professionally at the Kenyan Culinary Institute and began building a culinary identity centered on Fulani traditions, indigenous African ingredients, and sustainable cooking practices. Her work combines classical culinary techniques with the authenticity of nomadic African food culture.
In 2018, Chef Binta launched Dine on a Mat, a nomadic pop up dining experience designed to immerse guests in Fulani culture through communal dining, storytelling, music, and ancestral ingredients such as fonio, baobab, and African spices. The initiative has traveled across Africa, Europe, and the United States, earning international recognition for introducing audiences to African nomadic cuisine while promoting conversations around sustainability, food security, and cultural preservation.
Her growing global influence reached a historic milestone in 2022 when she became the first African chef to win the prestigious Basque Culinary World Prize, one of the world’s leading honors recognizing chefs using gastronomy as a force for social transformation. She received the award for her work preserving Fulani culinary traditions and empowering rural women through sustainable food initiatives.

Chef Binta has also received international recognition through the Best Chef Rising Star Award (2021) and was later appointed as a Regional Goodwill Ambassador for Africa by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Through this role, she has championed climate resilient African grains such as fonio and advocated for sustainable agriculture and food systems across the continent.
Beyond cuisine, Chef Binta’s humanitarian work remains central to her mission. Through the Fulani Kitchen Foundation, she supports women and girls in rural Fulani communities by promoting food security, education, economic empowerment, and sustainable farming initiatives. The foundation works closely with women farmers cultivating fonio, helping transform indigenous African grains into economic opportunities for underserved communities across West Africa.
Her work has also positioned her among the leading voices advocating for African ingredients and culinary traditions within the global food industry. Through speaking engagements, international culinary festivals, partnerships, and media appearances, she continues to challenge stereotypes about African cuisine while elevating indigenous food systems on the world stage.
Looking ahead, Chef Fatmata Binta continues to expand her impact through gastronomy, sustainability advocacy, and cultural storytelling. By preserving Fulani traditions while redefining modern African cuisine, she has emerged as one of the most influential culinary voices shaping the future of global food culture.

