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Travel Resolutions for 2016

By Beer, Food, Taste Vacations, Wine No Comments

Let’s face it, even those with the best intentions find it hard to keep their New Year’s resolutions past the first few months of the year. This can sometimes be from a lack of detailed resolutions or resolutions that follow the same old patterns. Rather than the normal “I want to travel more this year,” try spicing things up by making more specific goals that can either add up to traveling more or at least make the most out of your travels.  Here’s a few ideas to get you started:

Focus on a culture’s signature dish.

Open your mind and your palate to new and exotic flavors this year.  When traveling, don’t try to find restaurants that have menus that are similar to those back home. Even if your travels keep you in the U.S., there are still opportunities to taste new cuisines.  Trying local cuisine will take you a few steps closer to understanding the culture of wherever you are visiting.

Unplug and actually relax.

Tech gadgets and travel apps can certainly make life on the road much easier, but they also can be blocking you from truly relaxing. Try to be more present and enjoy your surroundings.  You can always check your emails and post your travel photos to social media when you get back.

Be a tourist in your own town.

There may be times when you feel like you really need a vacation but either schedules or finances just won’t allow it.  Try being a tourist in your own town or region.  With a little research, you’ll be surprised at how much there is to do and see that is just a short drive (or even walk!) away.

Read an inspirational travel book.

Not quite sure where you want to travel to next? Grab an inspirational travel book to get the trip planning juices flowing. You’ll start to imagine yourself in new and exotic settings in no time. Check out Conde Nast’s 86 Greatest Travel Books of All Time and get reading!

Take that trip you’ve been talking about forever.

Bite the bullet and FINALLY take the trip you’ve talked about for years. Want to taste your way across Italy or explore the magnficent wines Argentina has to offer? Do it! And if it truly doesn’t fit into your 2016 schedule, you can resolve to plan out your itinerary for 2017 so that when December rolls around again, you’ll be starting to pack your bags and getting ready to check that trip of a lifetime off your bucket list.

No more half-hearted resolutions. Let’s make 2016 your best travel year yet!

Friends on a patio

Private Tours – Vacationing Your Way

By Beer, Food, Taste Vacations, Wine No Comments

Have you ever spent long hours researching the perfect vacation only to find out that the listed tour dates have passed, it doesn’t fit into your schedule or the trip is sold out? Skip the hassle and consider booking a private tour. It’s not hard to fall in love with traveling exclusively with your family or friends, selecting the perfect destination and choosing exactly when you’d like to go. And one of the best parts is that you don’t have to plan the entire trip yourself.  Working with a trip coordinator, you can decide on the general trip criteria and they’ll take care of the details of booking hotels, making dinner reservations, and securing activities.Chile & Argentina - Allan Wright

Private tours can also be a perfect way to celebrate a number of life’s milestones like birthdays, anniversaries, or retirement.  We’ve also seen them successfully used as a way to motivate a team at work by creating a business incentive trip for top performers.

All of our Taste Vacations trips can be booked as private tours – and we won’t charge you extra just because it isn’t part of our public group tours, unless you request additional customized options. We also don’t require you to have large groups in order to book a private tour, with a majority of our trips only requiring a minimum of 4 people.

Sonoma County Wine Tour: Minimum 4
Tuscany Food & Wine Tour: Minimum 4
Basque Country & Rioja (Spain) Food & Wine Tour: Minimum 4
Washington Wine Tour: Minimum 4
Peru Food Tour: Minimum 4
Chile & Argentina Wine Tour: Minimum 6
Belgium Beer Tour: Minimum 6
Kentucky Bourbon Tour: Minimum 8
Napa Wine Tour: Minimum 8

So what are you waiting for? Join us on a Taste Vacations private tour today.

 

 

Puglia Food Market

Best Food Region You’ve Ever Been To – A Taste Vacations Team Dish

By Food, Taste Vacations No Comments

Our team here at Taste Vacations has traveled all over, sampling some of the best (and on the flip side, probably some of the worst) food the world has to offer.  For this month’s Taste Vacations Team Dish, we wanted to know “What’s the best food region you’ve ever been to?”

Here’s what the team had to say:

Kerry Dopler Kerry Dopler

Kerala India, the city – Kochi, the restaurant -Dal Roti, the dish – Fish Molee. Aromas engage your senses as your boat harbors in the port, locals and tourist’s alike flock to one alley every day around noon, they stay well past sunset often mingling in line to help the time pass as your stomach growls. Smile after smile leaves the door, reminding you that it is worth the wait. And it was, every day. We extended our stay in Kochi to three weeks not because we loved the city or because the daily activities were so abundant and fun but because it was the best food I have ever had in my life. I will return one day hopefully with nothing more in mind than growing old and fat, but ever so happy.

Sarah Wolcott Sarah Wolcott

I am absolutely enthralled with Oregon’s food scene, currently.  And not just because I am an Oregonian!  Keep Portland Weird is the motto of the city and this transcribes just a little bit to the food scene.  It’s not a weird food scene but, rather, a food scene that pushes boundaries and encourages experimentation.  

We are so fortunate to have access to an amazing breadth of food products in the pacific NW and the chefs in Portland utilize the fresh bounty of the sea, produce from the Willamette Valley and southern Oregon and ranches in Eastern Oregon to their fullest advantage.  Salmon and steelhead from the rivers and the Pacific ocean during spring and fall. Cherries from the Gorge in early summer. Fresh blueberries, blackberries and filberts (aka hazelnuts) fill plates in the late summer.  

Dungeness crab that is such a sweet, sweet delicacy.  Grand taco trucks.  Hops from the Willamette Valley (and Yakima Valley in WA) go into our craft beer.  Pinot noir grapes plucked from some of the best pinot producing vineyards in the world.   Hipsters in skinny jeans and with tailored mustaches.  Ranchers with dirty boots and skin tanned by hours working in the hot eastern Oregon desert.  Salty commercial fisherman whose ocean hauls make me smile the most.  

The restaurants in Oregon (and not just in Portland) are thriving with creativity and access to amazing food products.  

Allan Wright headshot larger Allan Wright

I absolutely love the cuisine of Italy and could eat Italian food every day for the rest of my life. But in terms of cuisine that knocks your socks off, I feel the French produce meals that jump out as outstanding. It really doesn’t matter whether you are in Paris or an outlying region, it just depends on the restaurant, the chef, and what you order. I have been guiding our sister company, Zephyr Adventures’, Provence Biking, Wine, & Food tour frequently in recent years and so this region stands out to me now for its excellent cuisine using fresh ingredients. Plus, being down south in France, I get some of the Mediterranean garlic and olive oil-based dishes I love in Italy.

Reno Walsh Reno Walsh

Oaxaca, Mexico is one of my favorite places in the world. Not only is the food outstanding but the people are so kind and the culture is authentic. I’ve been to this part of Mexico and specifically Oaxaca City several times over the years, including one time when I first experienced La Noche de Rabanaos, the Night of the Radishes. During this event, people from throughout the countryside arrive in the city’s zocalo (town center or square) to exhibit their elaborate carvings of oversized radishes.

The last time I visited was for my honeymoon. My wife and I took a private cooking class during our time in the city. It started with a shopping trip to one of the city’s many farmers markets. Walking through the market is an experience on its own with so many unique things to see, touch, smell, taste and hear. Back at the home of the chef  we spent the day with (who is now a friend), we learned the secrets to Oaxaca’s molé, although we have never been able to duplicate it since.

We also made fresh Squash Blossom soup and fresh tamales using a recipe that had been passed down for generations in our chef’s family. That meal is something we often remember fondly. In fact, thinking about any meal in Oaxaca makes my mouth water. With so much of the food being produced in the surrounding countryside, almost everything you order is fresh and local. Something we learned during the most recent visit was the fact that dried peppers are considered a spice, so it’s okay to bring these back to the United States. Their peppers are unique and are a key ingredient in several of our favorite recipes. And, one can never return from this region of the world without some of Oaxaca’s authentic chocolate and maybe a bottle of Oaxaca’s delicious Mezcal. !Buen Provecho!

Taste Vacations in the New York Times

By Food, Taste Vacations No Comments

Taste Vacations was included in today’s New York Times travel section.

I would like to say we were “featured” in the paper but the article was just a few paragraphs. Still, the New York Times is one of the best locations for a tour company (or any company) to appear in print and we have already received information requests from all over the country from this one article.

The article focused on Taste Vacations’ food tours and the New York Times’ interest in this shows how hot food in general and food tourism in particular is right now. Cooking shows are immensely popular on television, eating local is a priority for many people, and food tourism – actually engaging with local producers while you are traveling – is also on the upswing.

Consider joining Taste Vacations’ 2015 food tours in Peru, the Basque country of Spain, or Tuscany in Italy!