Deliciously decadent culinary tours
Tasty food holidays from Greece to Thailand
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Imagine meandering through a centuries-old market, following your nose to find the most fragrant spices. Or buying mangoes that weren’t imported from the other side of the globe, but the other side of town. If you’ve forgotten that olives actually come from hundred-year-old trees—and not jars—it may be just about time for a cooking tour.
Every great meal begins with the best ingredients, and the best ingredients are typically found locally—whether it’s in your hometown or abroad. Cooking tours allow chefs of all skill levels to immerse themselves in a foreign culture in a way that traditional tourism cannot.
"A country's identity often hinges on its cuisine and attendant traditions,” says AnneLise Sorensen, a travel writer and editor for Rough Guides. For Sorensen, and an increasing number of hungry tourists, breaking bread with locals is the ideal way to become acquainted with a new culture. "It’s the first step in going from foreigner to friend."
For Annemarie Colbin, founder of the Natural Gourmet Institute for Health and Culinary Arts in New York City and author of "Food and Healing," learning to cook traditional foods in their native environments leads to a greater understanding of where food actually comes from. On the Kea Artisanal cooking tour, for example, participants tour a goat farm on the Greek island of Kea to see exactly how feta cheese is made, and then share in a meal overlooking the Aegean Sea with the farmer and her family.
But a good cooking tour is more than just a lesson in food sourcing. Says Colbin, "Partaking in festive meals made with real local and seasonal foods, and with local rituals of appreciation, is good for your health because it is good for your soul." Unlike traditional culinary tours—which tend to focus on restaurant dining—these trips are hands-on. Travelers meet with everyone from local chefs with prized dishes to grandmothers willing to share their cherished recipes.
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The world's markets are traditional and historic places that can feel a bit intimidating to newcomers. As part of a culinary tour, you are provided with guides to help with both ingredient choice and navigation. After these long but fruitful excursions, travelers ultimately feel like natives. Most are invigorated, not exhausted, by the bustling sights, sounds and scents. It’s yet another way to unlock your inner chef and feel like a participant, not just an observer.
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inTrend On the Chocolate Lover's Paradise Tour, lucky guests are introduced to Belgium's sweet dark treasures. Organized by a native Belgian, Greta Inowlocki, the tour starts in Brussels, home of the Museum of Cocoa and Chocolate. |
One needn’t head overseas to learn something new about food. In the heart of Louisiana's Cajun country, Epiculinary’s four-day Cajun Country tour introduces both amateur and professional chefs to robust local dishes like jambalaya, boudin and gumbo. After a long day of cooking like a local in the hot kitchen, it’s time to dance the night away like a local to red-hot Zydeco music. A little further south, fans of Mexican food can go beyond burritos at La Cocina de Oaxaca’s cooking tour in the land that gave us mole sauces, made from chocolate, mexcal and other ingredients that vary from region to region—and even person to person.
Whether it’s your favorite dish or a strange and foreign food, learning how to prepare a region’s authentic cuisine has never been more rewarding. On each of the ten tours listed here, you’ll enjoy a well-seasoned mix of hands-on cooking, tastings, market trips and, of course, sightseeing. You’ll learn the basics, as well as the tricks that natives don’t typically share with outsiders. Your journey will be longer than a cooking show, but shorter than a formal culinary education—and you’ll end up with new skills and ideas to bring back home.
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