Padma Lakshmi returned to culinary television with the premiere of America's Culinary Cup on CBS on March 4, 2026, featuring 16 acclaimed professional chefs competing for a $1 million prize. The series, filmed on a Toronto soundstage designed to resemble a New York City penthouse, aims to refresh the competition genre with sports-like thrills and objective judging. Early episodes include quickfire challenges and large-scale cooking tasks, drawing comparisons to Bravo's Top Chef.
America's Culinary Cup debuted on CBS on March 4, 2026, airing Wednesdays following Survivor 50. Hosted by Padma Lakshmi, the show pits 16 professional chefs against each other in challenges based on 10 "culinary commandments," including meat, vegetables, sauces, innovation, and sustainability. The competitors hail from across the United States and boast impressive credentials, such as James Beard Award winners and nominees, Michelin-starred chefs, and Bocuse d'Or medalists.
Among the participants are Katie Button from Asheville, North Carolina, a James Beard winner; Rochelle Daniel from Flagstaff, Arizona, a James Beard nominee; Philip Tessier from Napa, California, a Bocuse d'Or silver medalist; and Buddha Lo from New York, New York, a two-time Top Chef winner and Michelin-starred chef. Other chefs include Russell Jackson, a James Beard nominee and Food Network Star finalist; Cara Stadler from Portland, Maine; Chris Morgan from McLean, Virginia, a Michelin-starred chef; Kim Alter from San Francisco, California; Emily Yuen; Malyna Si from Jackson, Wyoming; Diana Dávila from Chicago, Illinois; Matt Peters from Austin, Texas, a Bocuse d'Or gold medalist; Beverly Kim; Michael Diaz de Leon from Denver, Colorado; Sol Han; and Keith Corbin from Los Angeles, California.
Lakshmi described the series in its announcement as echoing "the thrill of sports and the American spirit as we cheer on our favorite chefs." Earlier this year, she told the Television Critics Association, "I thought that the genre was ready for a shakeup, for a refresh and for something new and different. And I wanted to be the one who did it."
The premiere episode opens with Lakshmi overlooking New York City from a helicopter, leading into a multi-level penthouse set with gleaming white marble and light wood floors, designed by James Pearse Connelly, known for Top Chef sets. Filming occurred in Toronto. Challenges in the first two episodes feature numerical scoring for objectivity, including a quickfire-style pairing task and cooking for 100 people under tents. The $1 million prize is described by CBS as the largest in culinary television history.
Reviews note similarities to Top Chef, with the show incorporating chef interactions and branded elements, though it introduces more structured judging. The series seeks to distinguish itself while competing directly with Bravo's Top Chef: Hopefully No Plantations This Time, premiering the following week.