There are three aims of this study, namely:
1. to examine the effect of culinary experience
quality on culinary experience satisfaction;
2. to examine the effect of culinary experience
satisfaction on overall destination experience
satisfaction;
3. to examine the effect of culinary experience
quality on the overall destination experience
satisfaction.
2 LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Culinary Tourism
According to Karim and Chi (2010), there has been
little consensus about a single definition that
describes food-related tourism. The terms food
tourism, gastronomy tourism, and culinary tourism
have been used interchangeably and scholars have
described the various terms inconsistently (Long,
2004, Ignatov and Smith, 2006, Mitchell and Hall,
2003). Wijaya et al., (2017) in their study interpreted
culinary tourism as a trip during which the local
food and beverages experience or consumption is
expressed in various food-related activities,
regardless of whether experiencing local food is or is
not the primary purpose for travel.
2.2 Culinary Experience Quality
Food is a basic sustenance for every tourist during
their travel. Regardless of whether culinary activity
becomes the main goal or merely satisfies the
hunger during the trip, a person's culinary
experience would shape the image of the enjoyable
culinary. One's culinary experience could affect the
overall experience of the visited destinations
(Ignatov and Smith, 2006).
Wijaya et al., (2013) propose a conceptual
framework of international visitors’ dining
experiences with local food, by examining the
experiences in the course of the pre-, during, and
post-dining stages. The pre-dining stage refers to
how international visitors foresee their engagement
with various aspects that may concern dining with
local food, as well as the prospect of associated
experience-based outcomes. The during-dining stage
relates to actual encounters with local food in tourist
the destination, as reflected in visitor perceptions of
the dining experience. Lastly, the post- dining stage
refers to visitors’ satisfaction and behavioral
intentions that emerge after the dining experience
has concluded. It is important to note that culinary
experience is subjective, which means the culinary
experience is influenced by the individual's own
experience (Sfandla and Björk, 2012).
Destination management organizations (DMOs)
could use culinary as a representative of cultural
experience, status, cultural identity, as well as how
to promote the tourist destinations (Horng and Tsai,
2012). Further, Silkes et al., (2013) noted that food
could show a unique and most memorable
experience for the whole trip.
According to Andersson and Mossberg (2004),
culinary experience is multi-dimensional. This
means the measurement of the quality of the
culinary experience can not be seen only from one
dimension of the food, but there are also other
dimensions especially in the context of a tourist
experience with a culinary region that has never
been visited previously. Review of the literature has
shown that there are three major dimensions to
measure the quality of culinary experience with local
food at a tourist destination. These dimensions are:
1) food dimension that relates to attributes of taste,
food authenticity and food uniqueness; 2) social
dimension that includes the extent of which tourists
could interact with the locals and experience the
hospitality and distinct culture of the host; and 3)
place and time dimension that refers to the physical
place where the eating experience with local food
take place, as well as when the eating experience
occurs (Hendijani et al., 2013, Peštek and
Činjarević, 2014, Wijaya et al., 2017).
2.3 Culinary Experience Satisfaction
Satisfaction is commonly viewed as an indicator of
quality of experience (Ryan, 2002). Ryan further
asserts that a satisfactory experience encompasses
congruence between expectations and performance,
while dissatisfaction is reflective of a gap between
expectations and the perceived quality of the tourism
culinary experience. In other words, satisfaction is
generated when consumers compare their initial
expectations with perception (Correia et al., 2008).
Satisfaction is not just about the joy of travel
experience, but also an evaluation that makes the
experience as good as it should be.
In line with the culinary experience dimensions
as described earlier, Björk and Kauppinen-Räisänen
(2014) in their study explain that tourist satisfaction
towards culinary experience could be measured
based on three aspects of: 1) what food or local
cuisine being served; 2) where the food is served;
and 3) how the food is served.