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The best countries for food lovers to visit

<p dir="ltr">When it comes to travelling, one of the best things about exploring a new place is sampling the local cuisine. </p> <p dir="ltr">From cafes adored by locals and the best of fine dining, to charming markets and unassuming but delicious street food, discovering a country’s culture through their food is one of the best ways to immerse yourself in all the world has to offer. </p> <p dir="ltr">According to TripAdvisor’s 2024 Traveller's Choice Awards, some cities are better than others for foodies, with their top ten list showcasing the best destinations for lovers of food. </p> <p dir="ltr">Coming in hot in the number one spot for foodies to visit is the city of Hanoi, situated in the north of Vietnam. </p> <p dir="ltr">With a plethora of street food, fresh markets, and hole-in-the-wall restaurants, you won't be leaving hungry in this popular tourist destination. </p> <p dir="ltr">The national dish of Vietnam, a noodle soup called Pho, is a speciality for visitors to fall in love with, and compare between the hundreds of restaurants that offer the delicious meal. </p> <p dir="ltr">Other foods to try there include banh mi, rice pancakes, and Bun cha, or Vietnamese meatballs.</p> <p dir="ltr">Check out the entire top 10 list of foodie destinations below. </p> <p dir="ltr">10. Phuket, Thailand </p> <p dir="ltr">9. Lisbon, Portugal </p> <p dir="ltr">8. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA</p> <p dir="ltr">7. Barcelona, Spain</p> <p dir="ltr">6. New Delhi, India </p> <p dir="ltr">5. Florence, Italy</p> <p dir="ltr">4. Cusco, Peru</p> <p dir="ltr">3. Crete, Greece</p> <p dir="ltr">2. Rome, Italy</p> <p dir="ltr" role="presentation">1. Hanoi, Vietnam</p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Image credits: Getty Images</em></p>

International Travel

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9 must-visit foodie destinations

<p><strong>Croatia </strong></p> <p>Perched at the crossroads between Italy, central Europe and the former Ottoman Empire, Croatia is a country with a complicated history – and a diverse culinary scene that makes it one of the world’s best food destinations. </p> <p>Inland, you’ll find that central European fare dominates, with a focus on meats, cheeses, noodles, beer and fruit spirits. Visit Istria, a Croatian-Italian bilingual region that borders Italy and Slovenia, for a strong local food scene that makes the most of the region’s excellent products: look for seafood, olive oil, mushrooms, truffles and prosciutto, washed down with wine and spirits.</p> <p><strong>Jamaica</strong></p> <p>Yes, they’ve got jerk chicken, Appleton Estates rum and Red Stripe beer, plus all the tropical fruit you can eat, but there’s so much more to explore in this Caribbean nation’s food scene, often featuring ingredients difficult to find elsewhere. For breakfast, try ackee – Jamaica’s national fruit – fried up with codfish for a surprisingly egg-like dish. </p> <p>Broaden your carnivorous horizons by sampling stewed goat or oxtail, perhaps served with some steamed callaloo, a Jamaican leafy green. And wash it all down with a ginger beer or a glass of sorrel, the local name for sweetened, often ginger-flavoured, bright-pink hibiscus tea.</p> <p><strong>Germany</strong></p> <p>Like nearby England, Germany has a reputation for stodgy food that isn’t really warranted. That said, you might want to plan for some hikes and bike rides to burn off the plentiful and flavourful strudels, pretzels, breads, sausages, noodles, potatoes, cakes and beer, though nowadays, there’s more than just sauerkraut to lighten things up: vegetarian and vegan options are showing up on menus across the country. </p> <p>Locavores will appreciate the country’s dedication to local food; visit during asparagus season and you’ll find special menus at many restaurants dedicated to the much-adored vegetable in both its green and white forms.</p> <p><strong>Peru</strong></p> <p>When a country’s children name “chef” as one of their primary “when I grow up” occupations, you know it takes food seriously. Peru’s cuisine begins with the quality of its ingredients: abundant seafood, meats and produce are found here, including many so-called superfoods that the world has only recently taken notice of, such as quinoa, amaranth, lucuma and maca. </p> <p>Combine this with its multicultural population – indigenous peoples plus immigrant Spanish, Chinese, Japanese and more – and you get a thriving local food scene with regional variations that is just waiting to be explored by visitors.</p> <p><strong>Myanmar</strong></p> <p>This southeast Asian country bordering China, India and Thailand continues to open up to the world after long political isolation, and food lovers are flocking there to experience the local cuisine, a cousin to Thai or Vietnamese food but distinguished by local ingredients Westerners might identify as Indian or Chinese. </p> <p>“[Myanmar is] a touchstone place as it connects India with China,” said Naomi Duguid, author of cookbook Burma: Rivers of Flavor, in an interview with the Kingston Whig-Standard. “The flavour base is different than Thai or Vietnamese. You’ll get the same hot, sour, salty, sweet taste but the dishes are simple and the flavour quite distinctly its own.”</p> <p><strong>Switzerland</strong></p> <p>We know Switzerland mostly for its chocolate and cheese, each of which is enough reason to visit. On the sweet side, you can take the Chocolate Train, tour the Lindt factory, even get a chocolate spa treatment; besides the classic fondue, dairy lovers will want to head to the northeastern Appenzeller region to try the spicy local cheese made from grass-fed raw milk. </p> <p>Other popular local dishes include bircher muesli, the tasty and healthy breakfast dish found everywhere on breakfast buffets; and Züri-Geschnetzeltes, a Zürich-style minced meat dish served with gravy and often alongside rösti, the hearty Swiss potato pancakes. Also sample the plentiful cakes and tortes topped with seasonal fruits such as rhubarb, red currants, raspberries and plums.</p> <p><strong>New Zealand</strong></p> <p>While New Zealand is globally renowned for its wine, but many are unaware that there’s a cuisine to match. Not only will you find high-quality, locally produced lamb and seafood – New Zealand is known for its mussels, oysters, whitebait and fish – but abundant local fruits as well, from the oft-exported kiwifruit, apples and citrus to less-known fruits passionfruit, tamarillo and feijoa, found atop pavlovas, flavouring yogurt or in desserts and baked goods. </p> <p>On the savoury side, watch for kumara (sweet potato), and balance out meals at some of New Zealand’s higher-end restaurants with fish and chips served in newspaper as you make your way around the country.</p> <p><strong>Sri Lanka</strong></p> <p>This island of tea and elephants sits off the southern tip of India and is home to a diversity of cultures, flora and fauna that belies its small size. Similar to southern India in terms of the ubiquity of rice and spicy curries, Sri Lankan cuisine is nonetheless that of an island, with plenty of foods featuring coconut and fish. </p> <p>Dishes to watch for include milk rice, or rice cooked in coconut milk; fried sweets made with ingredients such as coconut and rice flours, sesame seeds, cashews and local sweetener jaggery; and mallum, a salad made from shredded local greens, onion, chilli, fish and coconut.</p> <p><strong>Ireland</strong></p> <p>“We go to Ireland for the scenery and the people, but we don’t think to go for the food,” says former Reader’s Digest food editor Valerie Howes, who recently travelled to the emerald isle. “But we should,” she adds, noting that Ireland, like many countries, has seen a food renaissance of late, an inevitable and welcome product of the blending together of quality local produce, classic national dishes and a generation of chefs with skills acquired around the world. </p> <p>Ireland’s food and drink specialties include meat and seafood, cheese and bread, potatoes and butter, prepped with modern techniques and foraged ingredients such as sea vegetables, wild garlic, mushrooms, herbs and elderflowers.</p> <p><em>Image credits: Getty Images </em></p> <p><em>This article originally appeared on <a href="https://www.readersdigest.co.nz/travel/destinations/9-must-visit-foodie-destinations" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Reader's Digest</a>. </em></p>

International Travel

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Michelin impossible: Why this outback KFC restaurant is chasing the highest food honour

<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">A KFC restaurant in Alice Springs, Northern Territory is pushing for one of the highest international dining honours available: A Michelin Star.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Sam Edelman, who owns the Alice Springs KFC, told </span><a href="https://www.shutterstock.com/image-photo/bangkok-thailand-30-mg-price-2018-1044552979?src=mTnFWWy_AkbDyqiK7wAn_w-1-2&amp;studio=1"><span style="font-weight: 400;">Yahoo News Australia</span></a><span style="font-weight: 400;"> he runs the “most remote KFC in the world” and meets the criteria for the star.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;"> “My store serves people who travel from 500 to 1000km away,” Mr Edelman said.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“That’s part of the criteria - the food is worth a detour, worth a journey to enjoy.”</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Edelman came up with the idea after watching a documentary on Netflix.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">In order to get a Michelin star, the restaurant has to use quality products, have a “mastery of flavour and cooking techniques”, the chefs must have personality, it should be value for money and the food has to be consistent.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">However, the guide for the star has been met with criticism as people think it’s biased towards French cuisine and technique.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">In 2016, it awarded a star to a cheap Singapore street food outlet known for a braised chicken dish in a welcome break from tradition.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Edelman is hoping to get the attention of the Michelin judges to a variety of quality restaurants across Australia.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“It’s a bit of Michelin: Impossible, but let’s make it possible,” he said.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“As I say to my staff sometimes, ‘bucket, why not?’”</span></p>

International Travel

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How to see Hobart on any budget

<p>Tasmania is quickly becoming the foodie capital of Australia, as a wave of hotel development and direct flights from the Gold Coast and Adelaide make it easier to get to that end of Australia.</p> <p>For a city of 211,566, that’s not a bad thing at all.</p> <p>Destination Southern Tasmania chief executive Melinda Anderson says that Tasmania is full of unexpected discoveries.</p> <p>She told <a href="https://www.escape.com.au/australia/tasmania/hobart-tasmania-best-hotels-for-budget-midrange-luxury/news-story/eae76d82a42348697fc93f5e0e8b763e"><em>Escape</em></a><em>:</em></p> <p>“Foodies are flocking here, and drink producers are finding innovative ways to develop their craft. New eateries such as Atmosphere by Frogmore, Landscape, Pearl and Co and The Glasshouse are exciting new developments on Hobart’s waterfront.</p> <p>“Just a hop step and jump away you will find the Agrarian Kitchen and Eatery, and Fat Pig Farm showcasing our regional produce, not to mention award-winning distilleries including Grandvewe, Shene, Redlands and McHenry.”</p> <p>If your tastebuds are tempted, there are a few hotels available to suit your budget.</p> <p><strong>Affordable: Ibis Styles, Hobart</strong></p> <p>With 10 floors and 296 rooms to choose from, the Ibis Styles hotel in Hobart is bound to suit your needs. There’s an indoor pool, two saunas as well as an Asian restaurant within the hotel and as it’s located within the city, you’re never too far away from the action.</p> <p>A night here starts from $136.</p> <p><strong>Mid-range: The Old Woolstore Apartment Hotel</strong><a href="https://www.oldwoolstore.com.au/stay-in-hobart-cbd-v2.html"></a></p> <p>This four-star hotel is right within the centre of Hobart and just a six-minute walk from the Tasmanian Museum. You’ll feel right at home staying at a National Trust listed building that offers a balance of timeless charm and modern comfort.</p> <p>A night here starts from $263.</p> <p><strong>Luxury: Henry Jones Art Hotel</strong></p> <p>This five-star hotel is the first hotel in Australia to be completely dedicated to art. As it’s located within the Hunter Street precinct along Hobart, the hotel combines a modern feel with an industrial past.</p> <p>With 500 contemporary Tasmanian artworks along the hotel walls, the hotel is a mix of indulgence and discovery.</p> <p>A night here starts from $320.</p> <p>Scroll through the gallery to see what these hotels look like.</p> <p>Have you stayed in any of these hotels? Let us know in the comments.</p>

International Travel

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The new food revolution: How dining on a cruise just got better and cheaper

<p>Michelin-starred or celebrity chef-run restaurants are not hard to come by on a cruise anymore – because they’ve come to you.</p> <p>Cruising the ocean can, believe it or not, be where you find incredible food for reasonable prices. With dinner options that aren’t available on land and a range of food that will leave your wallets as well as your belly satisfied, maybe a cruise should be your next holiday destination if you’re a foodie.</p> <p>Here are some reasons why you should dine out on the seven seas, so your taste buds love you even more.</p> <p><strong>Michelin-starred choices </strong></p> <p>The exciting factors that are coming into play for cruise lines is their increasing range of food for affordable prices – and the best part is the quality is so good it’s award winning. At the restaurant Harmony which can be found on the Majestic Princess cruise ship, it’s one of the only restaurants off-shore that has a Michelin-starred menu and chef. In fact, Harmony, run by a former chef for Wing Lei – the first Chinese restaurant in North America that has a Michelin star – has created a list of food that appeases your cravings for Cantonese dishes as well as seafood, mouth-watering noodle dishes and soups. </p> <p><strong>Food is fun </strong></p> <p>As demands for more creative and delicious food on cruise lines increases – the more fun cruisers will see from restaurants and experimentative chefs. On one cruise line, dishes are presented on porcelain plates decorated with Sodamin’s Food Faces culinary pop art, produced by the French brand Bernardaud. This restaurant featured on Holland America’s cruise line headed by Rudi Sel De Mar and launched in 2016.</p> <p>24-hour pizza restaurants are proving popular as well for their ease and accessibility for cruise passengers.</p> <p><strong>All types of options for your cravings </strong></p> <p>One of the best factors of cruise food is there are endless options to satisfy all your cravings on board. If you’re feeling a craving for a plate of fresh sushi made to order, then carnival cruise lines have that for you. If fresh fruit with a side of yoghurt is calling your name after a great workout then head down to the breakfast bar on your cruise’s food hall level. The best part is, most of the food is free, delicious and fresh. What more could you ask for?</p> <p>What is the most memorable you’ve ever had on a cruise? Let us know in the comments below.</p>

Cruising

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A foodie’s guide to Melbourne

<p>I came, I saw, I ate. I mean, I ate a lot. Every day, I packed away the amount a whole family might eat in a week. Why wouldn't I? I was, after all, in Melbourne, a city blessed with beauty and brains but also, a very sizeable belly.</p> <p>I decided head for Victoria and spend a week exploring inner-city eateries, happy as a clam and hungry as a horse.</p> <p>Instead of shivering at home, I would saunter through sun-baked parks beside the Yarra River, under jacarandas and lemon-scented myrtles, on my way to lunch.</p> <p>A key question formed on the plane on the way over. How does a new venture gain a foothold in this hungry city? With so much good food available, in all styles and at every price point, it must be daunting for any restaurateur trying to take a bite of this crowded market.</p> <p>So, I would spend five days checking out the start-ups to see how they were getting on. I would taste their food and check their faces for signs of nervousness. And what better place to start than breakfast?</p> <p>High-end hustlers of the local cafe scene, Nathan Toleman, Sam Slattery, Ben Clark and Diamond Rozakeas have set up many of Melbourne's most famous eateries over the past decade, among them Liar Liar, Three Bags Full, Two Birds One Stone, Top Paddock and The Kettle Black.</p> <p>Their latest venture Higher Ground (650 Little Bourke St) opened last June, and the place starts feeding you before you even open your mouth.</p> <p>A former power station with brick walls rising 15 metres, rampant rambling plants and huge windows projecting shafts of light from the street, it's such a beautiful room, you can almost sustain yourself just by looking around.</p> <p>Things get even better once you have a shufty at the day menu – a mix of retooled brunch classics and small plate offerings with a strong undertow of Japan, Italy and the Middle East.</p> <p>The spiced cauliflower scrambled eggs are already famous city-wide, and the roasted mushrooms on polenta would have me swimming the Tasman for more. Unsurprisingly, the place was packed, its future assured by the fact that the venue was as special as the food.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="498" height="245" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/35469/image__498x245.jpg" alt="Image_ (194)"/></p> <p>To be reminded how much fine food flows around this town, one need look no further than the nearby Queen Victoria Market - a loud, pungent and crowded cathedral of calories, drawing worshippers from all over the city.</p> <p>Food markets get no better. The place is patchworked with vivid fruit and vege stalls alongside a massive meat and fish precinct, endless French, Greek and Italian deli alcoves, cheesemongers, wine and craft beer merchants.</p> <p>On the market's Elizabeth/ Therry St corner, another new venue has just set up shop. "It's early days" admitted the waiter at Pickett's Deli &amp; Rotisserie as he slapped a steaming, herby quarter roast chicken down in front of me. "We've only been going a month, but things are looking good."</p> <p>Home-cured bacon, spring lamb, an array of stuffed chicken and plump sausages, wild duck, thumping great lumps of beef- all the meaty goodness here passes through the rotisserie, often slow-roasting through the night to be served warm the following day.</p> <p>The place was rammed, a ruck of happy punters tucking into various roasted delights on a communal table running parallel to the counter. Others drifted in and out for cheeses, charcuterie, a lunch sandwich or takeaway roast beef roll.</p> <p>It's a more casual New York diner style eatery from Scott Pickett, best known for local fine dining joints ESP, Estelle Bistro and Saint Crispin. He chose the site for sentimental reasons: as a kid, Pickett used to stop into the Vic market with his old man for a grilled bratwurst after the footy.</p> <p>But what a risk, surely – opening here, 10m from the city's biggest food market, a place where all manner of delicious tucker can be eaten out of a brown paper bag for a fraction of the price.</p> <p>"That's one way of looking at it" said our waiter with the twitch of a frown. "But you could also say this place has huge foot traffic from people who already care about food." True. And certainly, my crispy, delicious chicken did not die in vain.</p> <p>The following night, an Uber dropped my famished family off at Meatworks Smokehouse and Grill (28-30 Ross St) in South Melbourne.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="498" height="245" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/35468/image__498x245.jpg" alt="Image_ (193)"/></p> <p>The guv'nor himself, Lindsay Jones-Evans, was working the floor, delivering plates of mussels, char-grilled octopus, and pulled beef brisket that had sat in the smoker overnight. Above his head, the concrete ceiling was a mass of curving bumpy folds, like the surface of a brain.</p> <p>"I designed this place, and built a lot of it" he said. "That concrete's like that because someone poured it on wrinkly plastic decades ago, when this place was built in the 1930s. It used to be a panel beaters' garage."</p> <p>The co-founder of famous Sydney joints Jones The Grocer and the Victoria Room, Jones-Evans had moved back to Melbourne after two decades away because the city's food scene was "looser, friendlier, less greedy".</p> <p>He had gone loose as a goose with the decor for this newest venture, which opened less than a year ago. From the roof hung an elaborate system of ropes, scaffolding and light fittings. In the corner, faux-Roman columns stood in a loose clump, like giant Pick-Up Sticks tossed against the wall.</p> <p>"I found those in India" he said. "Pretty good, eh?" Yes, mate, but not as good as the tucker, which was fragrant, smoky and tender, cooked on a giant wood-fired smoker also built by the boss.</p> <p>"We get a lot of locals in," said our waitress Shengnan Ren, who's Jones-Evans' wife and partner in crime. "But others are slowly finding us, too. Sometimes we're full; other times there's only five people here and I think- do you not know how good this food is?".</p> <p>She laughed, a little nervously, perhaps. "But starting somewhere new is always very hard. We've been going nearly a year now, and I think we are safe. We're doing OK."</p> <p>Not so our first port of call the following morning. "We've only been open a month," said Craig Tate with a sigh, his accent a rich Geordie burr. He and Richard Donovan, his best mate since they were nippers back in Newcastle, recently set up the Saint James (1376 Malvern Road) in the posh suburb of Malvern.</p> <p>"It's been tough. We're still finding our way, really." The flash location must help, surely. Just up the road are the multi-million dollar mansions of Toorack. When their private chefs have a day off, the owners must head out for poached eggs like everybody else.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="498" height="245" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/35471/image__498x245.jpg" alt="Image_ (196)"/></p> <p>But what's going to make them come here, rather than a favourite spot in the city? Tate and Donovan are hoping a play on their English heritage will be their point of difference.</p> <p>The menu includes Bubble and Squeak, Earl Grey pannacotta, a mixed grain porridge topped with rhubarb roasted in London Dry Gin.</p> <p>I order a fish finger butty with a crushed pea aioli. "I grew up on fish butties," offered Tate, who readily admitted to watching Geordie Shore when he felt homesick. "So hopefully people over here might like it, too."</p> <p>Mine was pretty average. The food was under seasoned, the presentation haphazard, the place almost empty. The Saint James felt like a venture without a strong idea of its target market, hoping a killer location might get them by despite so-so food.</p> <p>It was early days, but of all the places I visited, this was the one whose future seemed most precarious.</p> <p>When I finally die, quite possibly from over-eating, and ascend to my rightful place in heaven, I imagine it will look a lot like Milk The Cow, a fancy fromagerie in St Kilda (157 Fitzroy Street, St Kilda)</p> <p>Have mercy, sweet cheeses! For a curd-addict like me, this would make a perfect final resting place: a sleek, air-conditioned temple devoted to coagulated milk fat, stocked with 180 different cheeses, all expertly aged by cheesemonger Laura "Rain Man of Dairy" Lown, who once worked in London, supplying lumps of cheddar and caerphilly to the Queen.</p> <p>Yes, there's a fake grass wall and some udderly ridiculous lampshades made from old cow milkers, but never mind the decor- get a mouthful of that Manchego!</p> <p>A five metre cheese cabinet runs the length of the place, and you can order cheese flights matched with wine, beer, cider, whisky or sake, all delivered to your table by a knowledgeable soul who likes nothing better than to bang on about the livestock producing each cheese, the wild pasture herbs they ate, the monks who strained the curds through their rough linen socks, yada yada yada.</p> <p>I hoovered up delicious stinky-foot Eppoise, ancient Goada studded with popping calcium lactate crystals, a sharp blue Roquefort, gloriously creamy Ossau-Iraty sheep's cheese. Even my cocktail came garnished with a lump of Gorgonzola perched on the rim.</p> <p>The next night was my last, so I thought, bugger it: after a week spent patronising new places, I would check out a restaurant that had weathered Melbourne's viciously competitive food scene for decades.</p> <p>Donovan's (40 Jacka Blvd) sits wide and low on the beachside at St Kilda – a veteran establishment with 20 years in the game.</p> <p>A riot of tongue-in-groove wood, pale paintwork and French Provincial bric-a-brac one reviewer described as "a Cape Cod fantasy designed by Martha Stewart", this wouldn't normally be my sort of place.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="498" height="245" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/35470/image__498x245.jpg" alt="Image_ (195)"/></p> <p>There were women with big hair, fake breasts and evening gowns, looking like The Real Housewives of Melbourne. There were rich men in chambray shirts and boat shoes, letting loose the sorts of braying laughs that sound best in a boardroom.</p> <p>The food, however, was superb: a seafood-heavy mix of Italian, French and Spanish-leaning dishes the restaurant deems "modern Australian cuisine", though the food is really very traditional, the menu comprising subtle updates on classic soups, bisques, risottos and gratins, even Bombe Alaska, a dessert last widely enjoyed in the 1960s.</p> <p>The staff all seemed to be French or Italian, and congenitally elegant. I felt like a scruff, but a fortunate scruff, because the food was some of the best of the whole gluttonous trip.</p> <p>I ate course after delicious course, then took a stroll up St Kilda beach in the setting sun. Tomorrow, sadly, I was heading home, several kilos heavier.</p> <p>Would the weather have finally improved? Perhaps. But for now, I was warm and well-fed, a grateful diner in one of the world's greatest food cities, lumbering along the boardwalk in the orange evening light, full as a tick.</p> <p>Where’s your favourite place to eat in Melbourne?</p> <p><em>Written by Grant Smithies. First appeared on <a href="http://www.stuff.co.nz/" target="_blank"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Stuff.co.nz</span></strong></a>.</em></p>

International Travel

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5 cruises that are perfect for foodies

<p>If you think cruising just means eating at the buffet, think again.</p> <p><strong>1. APT, Southeast Asia</strong></p> <p>Australian celebrity chef Luke Nguyen is an ambassador for APT and personally hosts several cruises each year. Travelling along the Mekong through Vietnam and Cambodia or on the Irrawaddy through Myanmar, Luke will take passengers to visit local markets, host masterclasses and cook special dinners. It’s an authentic and delicious immersion into the local culture.</p> <p><strong>2. Azamara Club Cruises, Europe</strong></p> <p>In 2015 Azamara launched a new program called Cruise Global, Eat Local aimed at foodie cruisers. The line has carefully chosen the best restaurants for an authentic local dining experience in ports around Europe, including Santorini, Split, Barcelona, Marseille, Lisbon, Dublin, Istanbul and more. Guests can combine a sumptuous meal with a food-inspired excursion, like a visit to a local winery or producer.</p> <p><strong>3. Royal Caribbean</strong></p> <p>Some lines like to keep the gourmet delights onboard and Royal Caribbean’s fleet of megaliners offer more dining options at sea than any other line. Jamie Oliver’s flagship Jamie’s Italian satisfies the necessary celebrity chef element, but that’s just the start. The largest ships will have more than 20 onboard dining options, ranging from luxurious degustations with matching wines to fresh sushi bars or hot dogs by the pool. You never have to eat at the same restaurant twice.</p> <p><strong>4. Avalon Waterways, France</strong></p> <p>Where better to indulge in gourmet delights than France? Avalon Waterways offers a number of culinary-themed cruises along France’s rivers, which include excursions to local cheese makers, farms and wineries. Onboard, guests can enjoy special wine matching dinners hosted by a Master of Wine, regional specialties on the menu and chocolate or pastry tastings.</p> <p><strong>5. Silversea</strong></p> <p>Luxury small ship line Silversea has a partnership with Relais &amp; Chateaux, a global collection of hotels and restaurants recognised for their exceptional cuisine. The line runs a number of food and wine themed cruises around Europe, Asia, the USA and the Middle East that feature a mix of culinary excursions and special onboard activities. Join the chef for a tour of a local market before learning some new skills in the onboard cooking school, or just watch one of the master chefs at work while sipping on a perfectly matched glass of wine.</p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><a href="/travel/travel-tips/2016/06/7-tips-for-healthy-eating-while-travelling/"><strong><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;">7 tips for healthy eating while travelling</span></em></strong></a></p> <p><a href="/travel/cruising/2016/05/5-cruise-ship-buffets-you-have-to-see-to-believe/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>5 cruise ship buffets you have to see to believe</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><a href="/travel/cruising/2016/07/7-secrets-to-enjoying-food-on-a-cruise/"><strong><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;">7 secrets to enjoying food on a cruise</span></em></strong></a></p>

Cruising