Tag Archive | Italy

Top 10: Delicious dishes from around the world

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As Anthony Bordain would testify, one of the most exciting things about being lucky enough to travel the world is sampling truly authentic local food. Region to region, culinary traditions vary dramatically, reflecting the people, their passions, landscapes and cultures. Sampling the cuisine is one of the best ways to get an understanding of local life. Seek Retreat has compiled a list of some of the world’s most popular dishes from all corners of the world – places you’ll almost certainly want to venture after reading this. But just in case a world tour on your schedule right now, we’ve dug up some of the best authentic recipes to bring the flavors of the world to you. So ready your taste buds for some of the most exotic taste sensations on the planet and get cooking our Top 10: Signature Dishes from Around the World.

Compiled and written by Nicole Muyingo

13499884_m1) Spain: Paella
Having pawed over most of Spain’s favorite national recipes, I still couldn’t resist the beloved Paella. The culinary equivalent of ‘having it all’ – what could be better than your favorite meats paired with the freshest Mediterranean seafood? Paella can be a tricky, time-consuming dish to prepare, but put the time in and you’ll find it’s definitely worth the effort.

2) Brazil: Feijoada
Grab yourself a Caipirinha! It’s the perfect accompaniment to the rich flavors in this, Brazil’s most popular signature dish. Named after the Portuguese word feijão, meaning beans, this traditional peasant dish is a rich mélange of meats and beans, cooked low and slow in a flavorful broth. Feijoada is usually served with shredded kale or collard greens, streamed rice and an orange slice. Popular weekend fare in Brazil, it’s traditionally shared by friends at daylong gatherings that focus on heart-warming food and spicy gossip.

3) Italy: Fritto Misto
Seeking out the best homemade pizza and pasta while traveling in Italy is a must, but if you want to delve a little deeper into the culture try ordering the not-so-famous but just-as-delicious national favorite Fritto Misto. This iconic Venetian dish demands the freshest local catch so net yourself the best seafood in your area and get creative!

4) Egypt: Ful Medames
Famously described as the rich man’s breakfast, the shopkeeper’s lunch and the poor man’s supper, Ful Medames is Egypt’s national dish. This humble bean stew is in fact eaten by Egyptians from every walk of life, throughout the day and is said to date back to the time of the pharaohs.

 18534719_m5) Japan: Tuna Maki
With 45,000 sushi restaurants in Japan, sushi wins hands down as the most popular cuisine in the country. It may not seem like home-cooking to us but the Japanese are just as content rolling their own at home. You may think you need to lock yourself away with a sushi-making guru for months to master the art but it’s far easier to prepare than you may think. Most seaweed comes with instructions but we particularly liked this instructional video. Once you’ve learned the basic maki-making techniques, you can impress your friends with exotic rolls that taste as good as any Japanese restaurant they may frequent.

6) Jamaica: Jerk Chicken
Made with Scotch bonnet pepper, one of the hottest chilies in the world, Jerk Chicken is not for fainthearted. The Caribbean version of bbq. chicken, Jamaican Jerk’s other secret ingredient is pimento (allspice to you and me) which is indigenous to the island. It’s the plant’s berries that give the chicken its unmistakable flavor. The traditional version of the dish is also slow-smoked over a fire made from pimento wood, but we don’t expect you to try that at home. 

 7)  Mexico: Red Snapper Veracruzana
Who doesn’t love Mexico for its tacos, burritos and enchiladas? But when Mexicans from the south do ‘healthy’ their famous Red Snapper Veracruzana is their go-to dish. The name comes from its origin in the state of Veracruz, which is a long, narrow state stretching along the south of Mexico’s Gulf Coast. So, it’s perhaps not surprising that seafood figures prominently in this area’s cuisine.
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8) Russia: Borscht
Borscht plays a central role in Russia’s culinary heritage as well as many of the Eastern European nations. Hot or cold, vegetarian or most popularly with sausages, served hot, Borscht usually contains heavy starchy vegetables including potatoes and beets, carrots or peppers. For the authentic experience, serve it as an appetizer with dark rye bread. 

9) China: Yangzhou Fried Rice
Yangzhou Fried Rice is quick and easy to prepare, so grab your chopsticks and get ready to chow down one of Shanghai’s most popular dishes. It’s one of the most versatile dishes you can throw in a pan and have ready in minutes. Yangzhou Fried Rice can be paired with your favorite meats, fishes or vegetables and will literally be ready in a flash. 

10) Lebanon: Baba Ghanouj
In Syria and Lebanon, Baba Ghanouj is usually served as an appetizer or side dish but this ubiquitous delight is now served, as part of a Middle-Eastern mezza plate, all over the world. Baba is the word for “father” in Arabic and ghanouj means soft, wanting affection or cuddly. Some believe that the word Baba refers to the eggplant as the “father of vegetables,” and ghanouj to the fact that anyone lucky enough to taste it will be spoiled by its smooth, creamy goodness. What’s for sure is that it’s never better than when it’s freshly homemade. .

Source: seekretreat

Festivals of the world: where to go in August

 

Festivals are a living, dancing museum of cultures and traditions in an increasingly globalized world. There is no better place for travellers to understand a country than an event where it proudly celebrates its individuality, whether through music, camel races or monumental food fights.

The top festivities for August are listed below.

Crop Over

Location: National Stadium, Bridgetown, Barbados
Dates: first week in August
During Crop Over, Barbados, that jolly British part of the Caribbean, shows nothing resembling a stiff upper lip, and dissolves into three months of rum-soaked fun. The tradition began in 1780, when plantation workers celebrated the end of the cane harvest. The festival declined with the sugar industry, but was revived in 1974, for tourists as much as locals.

Þjóðhátíð (The People’s Feast)

Pin this imageHeimaey, Westmann Islands, Iceland‘Heimaey ‘by quinet. Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike

Location: Heimaey, Westmann Islands, Iceland
Dates: Verslunarmannahelgi (first weekend in August)
All over Iceland, bonfires are lit and vodka is shared to celebrate the ratification of the country’s constitution in 1874, but Heimaey hosts the mother of all parties. Some 10,000 people make like the local puffins and flock to the only inhabited Westmann island for a music festival on the edge of the world.

Esala Perahera (Tooth Festival)

Kandy, Sri Lanka. Esala Perahera (Tooth Festival). Elephant.

Location: Dalada Maligawa, Raja Vidiya, Kandy, Sri Lanka
Dates: ten days ending on the full moon in August
Legend has it that when Buddha was cremated in the 5th century BC, one of his followers took a tooth from the pyre. The holy canine was later smuggled to Sri Lanka, in the hair of an Orissan princess disguised as a Brahmin priest. King Megavanna was so happy to have the religious relic on his island that he had it paraded through the city for his subjects to marvel at. Read more.

Qi Xi (Seven Sisters Festival)

Pin this imageNathan road, Kowloon. Hong Kong. China. Neon. Street. Evening.

Nathan road, Kowloon’ by JoopDorresteijn. Creative Commons Attribution

Location: Lovers’ Rock, Bowen Rd, Wan Chai, Hong Kong, China
Date: seventh day of the seventh lunar month
Qi Xi is the Chinese equivalent of Valentine’s Night. In a tradition that pre-dates Christ (not to mention speed dating), single girls carry out tasks to impress potential lovers. Also called Night of the Skills, the event sees girls showing off their talents at domestic duties such as embroidery and melon carving. They throw a sewing needle into a bowl of water and, if it floats, that indicates the girl is an accomplished knitter.

Edinburgh International Festival

Image of dancers on the Royal Mile as part of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe (Image by Edinburgh’s Festivals)

Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Dates: last three weeks in August
There could be no better location for the world’s largest arts festival than the Scottish capital, where a castle looks down from its volcanic perch at Georgian townhouses and Gothic closes. The official reason for the three weeks of frenzy, which turn Edinburgh into a citywide performance artwork, is the highbrow festival of classical music, opera, theatre and dance. Read more.

La Pourcailhade (Pig Festival)

Pin this imageFrance, Hautes-Pyrénées, Catchet. Hikers. Mountains. Trekking. Trekkers.

France, Hautes-Pyrénées, Catchet’ by chakchouka. Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs

Location: Old Market, Trie Sur Baïse, Hautes-Pyrénées, France
Date: second Sunday in August
The smell of roast pork fills the air at this porcine celebration, which gives a boost to the declining pig-farming industry. In fact, it’s universally enjoyed, because it gives everyone an excuse to do an impression of a porker at the swill trough.

Chung Yuan (Hungry Ghost Festival)

Location: China
Date: fifteenth day of the seventh lunar month
For the Chinese, this is ‘Ghost Month’, a time when they are scared to leave their houses after dark. They believe the doors to the afterworld are thrown open and ghosts roam the land of the living, settling old scores or just scaring people.

Bumba Meu Boi

São Luís, Maranhão, Brazil. Festival. Bumba Meu Boi.

‘Bumba-Meu-Boi’ by michael_swanCreative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs

Location: São Luís, Maranhão, Brazil
Dates: late June to the second week of August
The second week in August is your last chance to catch this wild, folkloric festival. Derived from African, Indian and Portuguese influences that mingled in colonial times, the event revolves around the story of the ox’s death and resurrection. Accompanied by much heckling, a stream of street performers, many dressed as oxen or mythological creatures, tell the tale through song, dance, theatre and capoeira.

Il Palio

Pin this imageIl Campo, Siena, Tuscany, Italy

‘Piazza del Campo’ by razvan.orendovici. Creative Commons Attribution

Location: Il Campo, Siena, Tuscany, Italy
Dates: 2 July and 16 August
The Italians’ factional tendencies can be seen in all their swaggering glory at Il Palio, a bareback horse race that lasts for about a minute and a half. During the short dash around central piazza Il Campo, which is covered in packed dirt for the occasion, jockeys are allowed to do anything to their opponents other than tug their reins. The winning steed is often riderless.

Elvis Week

Memphis, Tennessee, USA. Graceland.

Location: Elvis Presley Blvd, Memphis, Tennessee, USA
Dates: one week around 16 August
On the anniversary of the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll’s death, Elvis impersonators converge on Memphis, Tennessee, where Presley ate his last peanut butter n’ jelly sandwich in 1977.

World Bog Snorkelling

Location: Llanwrtyd Wells, Powys, Wales
Date: August Bank Holiday weekend
Llanwrtyd Wells has supplemented the tourist magic of being Britain’s smallest town with a series of bonkers events, the daftest of which is bog snorkelling.

Mezinárodní Dudácký Festivalu (International Bagpipe Festival)

Pin this imageSouth Bohemia, Czech Republic. River. Town.‘Rožmberk ‘by dorena-wm. Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs

Location: Strakonice, Písecko, South Bohemia, Czech Republic
Dates: late August, held every two years
As well as Turkish fez hats, handguns and CZ Motorcyles, the Czech town of Strakonice is known for its dudy (bagpipes). Oh, General Patton also based himself here when the US army liberated parts of Bohemia in 1945. But more recently, the town has held a four-day festival devoted to the many forms of bagpipe blowing. You can get a sense of this variety at the stop-start opening procession, in which the enthusiastic players regularly pause for a toot, and take hours to cover the 1km to the castle.

Festival de Tango (Tango Festival)

Pin this imageTango. Dancing. Buenos Aires. Argentina.

‘Con pasión – tango’ by Ana_Cotta. Creative Commons Attribution

Location: Venues around Buenos Aires, Argentina
Dates: second half of August
Buenos Aires and tango are about as inseparable as, well, a pair of tango dancers. In celebration of its sultry and mysterious dance, the Argentine capital stages this annual festival, with events spread out across the city.

Famadihana (Turning of the Bones)

Location: Hauts plateaux (highlands), Madagascar
Dates: throughout winter (June to September)
Traditional Malagasay culture is rooted in respect for its ancestors, as the Merina people’s Famadihana exhumation ceremony bears testament to. The living family members gather at the clan’s tomb, where stone and mud are prised open and straw-wrapped ancestors passed out above bobbing, dancing heads.

Burning Man

Location: Black Rock Desert, Gerlach, Nevada
Dates: week prior to and including Labor Day weekend (first Monday in September)
Burning Man is more than a festival; it’s a utopian society that springs up on the cracked terrain of Nevada’s Black Rock Desert. The survivalist happening’s 10 principles include radical self-reliance, radical self-expression, communal effort and, above all, participation. These 10 hippy commandments lead to a 45,000-strong ‘city’ (the fifth largest in desolate Nevada), where inhibitions are left at the gates and freakery courses along the dusty streets. Read more.

La Tomatina (Tomato-throwing Festival)

Pin this imageBuñol, Valencia, Spain. La Tomatina (Tomato-throwing Festival)‘La Tomatina: In Uniform’ by dahon. Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs

Location: Plaza del Pueblo, Buñol, Valencia, Spain
Date: last Wednesday in August
Getting pelted with tomatoes may sound like a punishment reserved for medieval rogues in the stocks, but it’s all in the name of fun at La Tomatina. For one morning a year, the small town of Buñol in eastern Spain dissolves into the world’s greatest tomato fight.

Notting Hill Carnival

Notting Hill Carnival. London. England. Festival.

A dancer at Notting Hill Carnival 2009‘ by extrageographicCreative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike

Location: Ladbroke Grove, Notting Hill, London, England

Dates: last Sunday and Monday in August
The British capital’s top summer knees-up, a celebration of the local Caribbean community, has enlivened this part of town since the 1950s. During the end-of-August bank holiday, the neighbourhood featured in the Hugh Grant film Notting Hill explodes with reggae sound systems and Rastafarians smoking what one of Grant’s characters might call ‘wacky baccy’.

Source: lonelyplanet

Festivals are a living, dancing museum of cultures and traditions in an increasingly globalized world. There is no better place for travellers to understand a country than an event where it proudly celebrates its individuality, whether through music, camel races or monumental food fights.

The top festivities for August are listed below.

Crop Over

Location: National Stadium, Bridgetown, Barbados
Dates: first week in August
During Crop Over, Barbados, that jolly British part of the Caribbean, shows nothing resembling a stiff upper lip, and dissolves into three months of rum-soaked fun. The tradition began in 1780, when plantation workers celebrated the end of the cane harvest. The festival declined with the sugar industry, but was revived in 1974, for tourists as much as locals.

Þjóðhátíð (The People’s Feast)

Pin this imageHeimaey, Westmann Islands, Iceland‘Heimaey ‘by quinet. Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike

Location: Heimaey, Westmann Islands, Iceland
Dates: Verslunarmannahelgi (first weekend in August)
All over Iceland, bonfires are lit and vodka is shared to celebrate the ratification of the country’s constitution in 1874, but Heimaey hosts the mother of all parties. Some 10,000 people make like the local puffins and flock to the only inhabited Westmann island for a music festival on the edge of the world.

Esala Perahera (Tooth Festival)

Kandy, Sri Lanka. Esala Perahera (Tooth Festival). Elephant.

Location: Dalada Maligawa, Raja Vidiya, Kandy, Sri Lanka
Dates: ten days ending on the full moon in August
Legend has it that when Buddha was cremated in the 5th century BC, one of his followers took a tooth from the pyre. The holy canine was later smuggled to Sri Lanka, in the hair of an Orissan princess disguised as a Brahmin priest. King Megavanna was so happy to have the religious relic on his island that he had it paraded through the city for his subjects to marvel at. Read more.

Qi Xi (Seven Sisters Festival)

Pin this imageNathan road, Kowloon. Hong Kong. China. Neon. Street. Evening.

Nathan road, Kowloon’ by JoopDorresteijn. Creative Commons Attribution

Location: Lovers’ Rock, Bowen Rd, Wan Chai, Hong Kong, China
Date: seventh day of the seventh lunar month
Qi Xi is the Chinese equivalent of Valentine’s Night. In a tradition that pre-dates Christ (not to mention speed dating), single girls carry out tasks to impress potential lovers. Also called Night of the Skills, the event sees girls showing off their talents at domestic duties such as embroidery and melon carving. They throw a sewing needle into a bowl of water and, if it floats, that indicates the girl is an accomplished knitter.

Edinburgh International Festival

Image of dancers on the Royal Mile as part of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe (Image by Edinburgh’s Festivals)

Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Dates: last three weeks in August
There could be no better location for the world’s largest arts festival than the Scottish capital, where a castle looks down from its volcanic perch at Georgian townhouses and Gothic closes. The official reason for the three weeks of frenzy, which turn Edinburgh into a citywide performance artwork, is the highbrow festival of classical music, opera, theatre and dance. Read more.

La Pourcailhade (Pig Festival)

Pin this imageFrance, Hautes-Pyrénées, Catchet. Hikers. Mountains. Trekking. Trekkers.

France, Hautes-Pyrénées, Catchet’ by chakchouka. Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs

Location: Old Market, Trie Sur Baïse, Hautes-Pyrénées, France
Date: second Sunday in August
The smell of roast pork fills the air at this porcine celebration, which gives a boost to the declining pig-farming industry. In fact, it’s universally enjoyed, because it gives everyone an excuse to do an impression of a porker at the swill trough.

Chung Yuan (Hungry Ghost Festival)

Location: China
Date: fifteenth day of the seventh lunar month
For the Chinese, this is ‘Ghost Month’, a time when they are scared to leave their houses after dark. They believe the doors to the afterworld are thrown open and ghosts roam the land of the living, settling old scores or just scaring people.

Bumba Meu Boi

São Luís, Maranhão, Brazil. Festival. Bumba Meu Boi.

‘Bumba-Meu-Boi’ by michael_swanCreative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs

Location: São Luís, Maranhão, Brazil
Dates: late June to the second week of August
The second week in August is your last chance to catch this wild, folkloric festival. Derived from African, Indian and Portuguese influences that mingled in colonial times, the event revolves around the story of the ox’s death and resurrection. Accompanied by much heckling, a stream of street performers, many dressed as oxen or mythological creatures, tell the tale through song, dance, theatre and capoeira.

Il Palio

Pin this imageIl Campo, Siena, Tuscany, Italy

‘Piazza del Campo’ by razvan.orendovici. Creative Commons Attribution

Location: Il Campo, Siena, Tuscany, Italy
Dates: 2 July and 16 August
The Italians’ factional tendencies can be seen in all their swaggering glory at Il Palio, a bareback horse race that lasts for about a minute and a half. During the short dash around central piazza Il Campo, which is covered in packed dirt for the occasion, jockeys are allowed to do anything to their opponents other than tug their reins. The winning steed is often riderless.

Elvis Week

Memphis, Tennessee, USA. Graceland.

Location: Elvis Presley Blvd, Memphis, Tennessee, USA
Dates: one week around 16 August
On the anniversary of the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll’s death, Elvis impersonators converge on Memphis, Tennessee, where Presley ate his last peanut butter n’ jelly sandwich in 1977.

World Bog Snorkelling

Location: Llanwrtyd Wells, Powys, Wales
Date: August Bank Holiday weekend
Llanwrtyd Wells has supplemented the tourist magic of being Britain’s smallest town with a series of bonkers events, the daftest of which is bog snorkelling.

Mezinárodní Dudácký Festivalu (International Bagpipe Festival)

Pin this imageSouth Bohemia, Czech Republic. River. Town.‘Rožmberk ‘by dorena-wm. Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs

Location: Strakonice, Písecko, South Bohemia, Czech Republic
Dates: late August, held every two years
As well as Turkish fez hats, handguns and CZ Motorcyles, the Czech town of Strakonice is known for its dudy (bagpipes). Oh, General Patton also based himself here when the US army liberated parts of Bohemia in 1945. But more recently, the town has held a four-day festival devoted to the many forms of bagpipe blowing. You can get a sense of this variety at the stop-start opening procession, in which the enthusiastic players regularly pause for a toot, and take hours to cover the 1km to the castle.

Festival de Tango (Tango Festival)

Pin this imageTango. Dancing. Buenos Aires. Argentina.

‘Con pasión – tango’ by Ana_Cotta. Creative Commons Attribution

Location: Venues around Buenos Aires, Argentina
Dates: second half of August
Buenos Aires and tango are about as inseparable as, well, a pair of tango dancers. In celebration of its sultry and mysterious dance, the Argentine capital stages this annual festival, with events spread out across the city.

Famadihana (Turning of the Bones)

Location: Hauts plateaux (highlands), Madagascar
Dates: throughout winter (June to September)
Traditional Malagasay culture is rooted in respect for its ancestors, as the Merina people’s Famadihana exhumation ceremony bears testament to. The living family members gather at the clan’s tomb, where stone and mud are prised open and straw-wrapped ancestors passed out above bobbing, dancing heads.

Burning Man

Location: Black Rock Desert, Gerlach, Nevada
Dates: week prior to and including Labor Day weekend (first Monday in September)
Burning Man is more than a festival; it’s a utopian society that springs up on the cracked terrain of Nevada’s Black Rock Desert. The survivalist happening’s 10 principles include radical self-reliance, radical self-expression, communal effort and, above all, participation. These 10 hippy commandments lead to a 45,000-strong ‘city’ (the fifth largest in desolate Nevada), where inhibitions are left at the gates and freakery courses along the dusty streets. Read more.

La Tomatina (Tomato-throwing Festival)

Pin this imageBuñol, Valencia, Spain. La Tomatina (Tomato-throwing Festival)‘La Tomatina: In Uniform’ by dahon. Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs

Location: Plaza del Pueblo, Buñol, Valencia, Spain
Date: last Wednesday in August
Getting pelted with tomatoes may sound like a punishment reserved for medieval rogues in the stocks, but it’s all in the name of fun at La Tomatina. For one morning a year, the small town of Buñol in eastern Spain dissolves into the world’s greatest tomato fight.

Notting Hill Carnival

Notting Hill Carnival. London. England. Festival.

A dancer at Notting Hill Carnival 2009‘ by extrageographicCreative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike

Location: Ladbroke Grove, Notting Hill, London, England

Dates: last Sunday and Monday in August
The British capital’s top summer knees-up, a celebration of the local Caribbean community, has enlivened this part of town since the 1950s. During the end-of-August bank holiday, the neighbourhood featured in the Hugh Grant film Notting Hill explodes with reggae sound systems and Rastafarians smoking what one of Grant’s characters might call ‘wacky baccy’.

Source: lonelyplanet

https://vacationssunrise.wordpress.com/

https://vacationssunrise.wordpress.com/

Best value travel destinations for 2014

Greek Islands

View of Navagio Beach, also known as Shipwreck Cove, on Zakynthos Island. Image by Dave Porter Peterborough Uk / Photolibrary / Getty Images.

Greece has had a tough few years, with harsh austerity measures, soaring unemployment and demonstrations hitting the world’s headlines. For a place that thrives on tourists – whether the kind that parties on sunburnt islands or hoovers up ancient culture – this is bad news. But Greece still does what it’s done brilliantly for generations. What’s missing are visitor numbers from previous years, and prices have come down in an attempt to woo them back. Combined with the chance to explore Greece’s more popular sights with fewer visitors, this means that in 2014 it offers remarkable value.

Italy’s heel

Old fortified farmhouse in Puglia, Italy. Image by Michele Galli / E+ / Getty Images.

If you’ve ever rubbed shoulders with billionaires on the Amalfi Coast or spent the weekend in Venice, you’ll know that Italy can drain travel budgets. This year, look south. Italy’s heel has arguably the best beaches in the country, hilltop towns and ancient sights. But what makes Puglia, Basilicata and Calabria such good value is not just the financial side of being in this part of the country. It’s the fabulous food – cucina povera (poor man’s food), simple, tasty and cheap – and the relaxed pace of life even in peak season, coupled with good-value accommodation for all budgets.

Nicaragua

Howler monkeys are among Nicaragua's wildlife highlights. Image by Richie Diesterheft. CC BY 2.0.

Howler monkeys are among Nicaragua’s wildlife highlights. Image by Richie Diesterheft. CC BY 2.0.

Costa Rica is a delight, but it’s neither a secret nor really cheap. Nicaragua, though in the latter category, is fast making its name for more than simply saving a few dollars on the road. The country is an A-grade Central American attraction in itself, from brooding Volcán Concepción to the dreamlike experience of floating down the Río San Juan. True budget travellers trying to make it on US$20 a day (still possible here) may think twice about visiting the Corn Islands due to the cost of flying from the mainland, but Nicaragua does offer some of the cheapest beach living (and diving) in the Caribbean.

Bulgaria

The dazzling domes of Bulgaria's Rila Monastery. Image by Anita Isalska / Lonely Planet.

The dazzling domes of Bulgaria’s Rila Monastery. Image by Anita Isalska / Lonely Planet.

Especially in famous cities, costs in Eastern Europe have gone up with the crowds. This is one of the reasons to go to Bulgaria, still so puzzlingly underrated that few but travel geeks can name a city beyond the capital, Sofia – try Plovdiv or Varna. The latter is part of the Black Sea riviera that brings crowds and high prices in the summer. Elsewhere (including Sofia), transport, museums and the ubiquitous private rooms (look for ‘Zimmer frei’ signs) are quite reasonably priced. The most famous site, Rila Monastery, is free and offers simple rooms for pilgrims.

Portugal

Making a splash on one of Portugal's surf-friendly shores. Image by SayLuiiiis. CC BY-SA 2.0.

Making a splash on one of Portugal’s surf-friendly shores. Image by SayLuiiiis. CC BY-SA 2.0.

Each year the British Post Office surveys the prices in European holiday resorts. The most recent edition names Albufeira in the Algarve as the cheapest option for a summer family holiday. The Algarve in high summer may not be to everyone’s taste, but it shows that Portugal is great for the budget-conscious. There are excellent deals elsewhere too. Lisbon has wonderful coffee and sweet treats for a few euros, and you can ride cheap trams around to your heart’s content. Portugal is also, for Europeans, a superb place to surf without having to fork out the airfare to the sport’s traditional heartlands.

Fiji

Swimming in crystal-clear waters in Fiji. Image by Island Effects / E+ / Getty Images.

Swimming in crystal-clear waters in Fiji. Image by Island Effects / E+ / Getty Images.

A South Pacific island destination on a value travel list? Yes, Fiji may just be the most affordable slice of paradise. The Yasawas and the Mamanucas are home to the unusual phenomenon of island resorts aimed at backpackers. While it’s not as cheap as Southeast Asia, the value here is in bringing the South Pacific within reach of mid-range travellers. Combine some island-hopping by daily catamaran with public buses around Viti Levu, Fiji’s ‘mainland’, and get almost as much Polynesia as possible for not all of your money.

Mexico

El Castillo at Tulum, Mexico. Image by Aaron Logan. CC BY 2.0.

El Castillo at Tulum, Mexico. Image by Aaron Logan. CC BY 2.0.

Ignore the headlines about budget-busting resorts and savour the value of a visit to Mexico. Grab a good-value flight and try to avoid periods such as US school holidays. Travellers who explore off the established trail will find Mexico hugely rewarding. North of Puerto Vallarta, laid-back beach towns such as Chacala offer guesthouse rooms for US$40, and the relaxed ambience is its own reward. Good value can be had even in the tourist heartland of the Yucatán Peninsula. Cheap bus trips to Mérida and Tulum provide all the Mayan wonders you can muster at a fraction of the cost of Cancún-based tours. Look for cabañas, huts with a palm-thatched roof, most often found at beach destinations.

Karnataka, India

The intricate archways of the Maharaja Palace of Mysore. Image by Tuul / Robert Harding World Imagery / Getty Images.

The intricate archways of the Maharaja Palace of Mysore. Image by Tuul / Robert Harding World Imagery / Getty Images.

India still has lots to offer the budget traveller, though if you’ve been to Goa in high season you might doubt this. Over the European winter bargains can feel in short supply. While Goa devotees manage by travelling off-season or with package deals, it’s worth considering other options. Neighbouring Karnataka’s coast has serene beaches, fishing harbours and peaceful resorts, plus inland temple towns such as Hampi, one of South India’s most laid-back traveller hangouts. Best of all, lodgings are cheap and most temples and ruins are free. More upmarket places to stay are opening all the time, but you’ll find some rewarding budget travel here.

Palawan, the Philippines

A boat ride around dramatic limestone cliffs in Palawan. Image by Jerick Parrone. CC BY-SA 2.0.

A boat ride around dramatic limestone cliffs in Palawan. Image by Jerick Parrone. CC BY-SA 2.0.

Jungle rivers, limestone cliffs and awesome beaches – Palawan’s no secret, but it certainly rewards those who visit. This mix, combined with stand-out attractions such as Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park and the Bacuit Archipelago (all available at a competitive price), makes it a great-value pick for old Asia hands and novices alike. A journey on from Palawan leads to the Calamian Islands where apparently Alex Garland saw the strip of sand that inspired The Beach. Watch out for the May to October monsoon: it brings heavy rain, usually in the afternoon.

Ethiopia

Man emerging from a rock-hewn church in Lalibela. Image by Stuart Butler / Lonely Planet.

While you can’t get everywhere in Ethiopia on US$30 a day, you can see a huge amount of its highlights by taking great-value and time-saving flights along the country’s Historic Route. This astonishing journey includes the Lake Tana monasteries and the Blue Nile Falls, the rock-hewn wonders of Lalibela and much more. True, the budget goes out the window if you hire a vehicle and driver or join an organised tour – which you need in order to get the most out of the country’s wild west – but you can always save that for another visit. This is one slice of Africa that rewards the curious as well as the deep-pocketed. Budget hotels abound, but the best are newer properties.

Source: lonelyplanet.com
 
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34 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

Tonight I’ll have a beautiful dream and tomorrow I’ll wake up with a smile. These are 34 beautiful places I found in topdreamer. I know dreams come true. See you there!

Ashikaga Flower Park in Tochigi Japan

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

Fukuroda Falls, Ibaraki, Japan

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Amazing View of Genesee River, USA

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Emerald Pool at Subway – Zion National Park, Utah

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

The Big Hole, Kimberley in the Northern Cape, South Africa

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Elephant Foot Glacier, An astonishing geographical location on the east coast of Greenland

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Sunset – Norland Moor Halifax, England

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Secluded Beach, Furore, Amalfi, Italy

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Tee tunnel, Belgium

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Robina Park, Penang, Malaysia

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Upper Kanarra Falls, Kanarraville, Utah

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Burney Falls, State Park, California

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Antelope Canyon, Arizona

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Mossy Inlet, Iceland

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Glacier National Park, Montana

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

Sunflower Fields – Andalusia, Spain

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Blue Path – Keukenhof Gardens, Netherlands

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Seljalandsfoss Waterfall – Iceland

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  
Oregons Proxy Falls

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

White River Falls, Oregon

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Bluebonnet Field in Ellis County, Texas

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

Prskalo Waterfall, Serbia

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Valley of Ten Peaks

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  
 River in northern Portugal

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  
Solitude in the Olympics

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

Natural pool in Mexico

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Alps, Switzerland

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

Moss Bridges, Ireland

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Semonthong Waterfall, Lesotho, Africa

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Paris in bloom

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Night view with stars, Sequoia National Park, California

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Falls, Ibaraki, Japan

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Cherry Blossom Avenue, Germany

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

  

Bond Island, Thailand

35 Amazing Places In Our Amazing World

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