We all know how much local foods and libations can define our travel experiences. Here we share the planet's top culinary experiences. Eat, drink, and be chatty!
Cover photo: PxHere
We all know how much local foods and libations can define our travel experiences. Here we share the planet's top culinary experiences. Eat, drink, and be chatty!
Cover photo: PxHere
Photos: Timothy Leland, except where noted Visiting tiny Nevis - just 36 square miles - is treat enough, with its ravishing nature, pristine beaches, friendly, laid back locals and charming inns (including several in centuries-old former sugar plantations). But it´s also packed with 40 or so of some of the finest restaurants anywhere, with food from local farm-to-table and sea-to-table found on culturally diversified menus on a par to what you might find in some of the world´s culinary…
Read more…withlocals.com As a traveler, you get to explore the fascinating places, people, and cultures of the world - along with, inevitably, its many delicious cuisines. Everyone has to eat, and for many eating is a huge part of the travel experience - as well as a tasty way to gain a literally tasty insight to the destinations they visit. What´s more, most destinations have local tour operators which specialize in introducing visitors to the wonderful culinary experiences and heritage of their…
Read more…The beginning of spring sees the start of each year's Eastern Scheldt lobster season in the southernnmost province of The Netherlands, Zeeland. This world-famours lobster -- as well as the region's bounty of oysters, other crustaceans and fish from the waters of the North Sea -- make Zeeland and its fantastic restaurants a place of annual pilgrimage for lovers of good seafood.
Read more…California's second largest city is known for its seafood and Mexican cuisine (it is after all just 20 minutes from the border). But increasingly it's also home to a wide menu of world cuisine - including some you might not expect! Here are five tasty examples I came across recently: read post
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I never forget the first time I discovered it, it was love at first bite: in a a parador set in an ancient castle in the town of Salas, in Asturias (northern Spain). I'd ordered a grilled steak, and when I bit into it I practically swooned. I called the waitress over to inquire what sauce, what exotic marinade had the steak been steeped in. Her reply: sea salt. I've been an avid, not to say fanatical, user ever since, even if it means taking kelp supplements to replace the iodine that's added to table salt.
When I got home from that trip, I went to Delicias de España, a local Spanish grocery/restaurant that imports much of its goodies from Spain, and bought a container of Spanish sea salt (Bevia brand), coarse crystals of course. Every time I bite into one of those coarse crystals it's as if the heavens opened up on my tongue (yes, I know that sounds crazy, but try it). I truly can taste the full richness of the ocean.
Now, of course, I'm very curious to try pasta cooked in seawater. Wonder if any place in Miami does this...
Chef Fabrizio Aielli says they used to do it in Italy when he was a kid. He recommends half a pot of seawater and half fresh. Bring to boil and cook pasta 6 to 7 minutes. Then stir pasta into sauce and reheat. Recipe is attached. I tried it and it is delicious. The only salt in the dish is from the water.
More info and video link.