There’s a reason why Oʻahu is nicknamed the Gathering Place – it’s the Hawaiian island that has everything.
06.04.2024 - 10:27 / cntraveler.com
This is part of Off Season Italy, a collection of guides highlighting the year-round appeal of Italy's most popular destinations, courtesy of our favorite local tastemakers. Read more here.
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“I like to call those who go to Puglia in April, May, September, or October, intelligent travelers,” says style director and editor, Gianluca Longo. “These are the people who know how to appreciate a place—they are not there looking for the clubs.” The Pugliese native heads back home from London regularly throughout the year, and unlike the traveling masses, always avoids July and August. But he is quick to point out that the summertime appeals of the popular Salento and Alberobello areas of this Southwest Italian region—the ocean, the food, and good weather—stretch across the year. “Umbrellas are still on the beach at the beginning of November,” he says. “Linguini and clams are still served oceanside at lunch.”
Describe Puglia beyond the summer.
In April and May, the landscape is heaven. The beach and almond trees bloom and the wheat fields are golden. There are sweet spring breezes. But in September and October, Salento has this golden light at dusk. In the village of Muro Leccese, there is a wonderful piazza that is west-facing, which is built of this local endemic stone. The entire square—and the stone—comes to life at sunset.
Taralli, a ring-shaped, crunchy, traditional Italian snack
Polignano a Mare's blue waters still stun in the off-season.
Do you have a favorite local dish during autumn?
In Salento, it has to be ciceri e tria, which is a chickpea and tomato dish. I always get it in the village of Taviano at a place called Corte degli Aranci, which is adorable because it is in a courtyard inside an old palace with loads of orange trees.
Where else do you eat?
I always love Nonna Rosa in Muro Luccese. It is wonderful and authentic, and not at all pretentious. Even meat eaters go vegetarian here because it is all so fresh and delicious. My recommendation is that you never skip anything here with eggplant. You could also just dine on the antipasto, which includes fish, veggies, bread, and taralli (a wheat-based snack) from Puglia. It is down a tiny street and very family-oriented.
Another favorite is La Cutura. It is inside a botanical garden and a complete gem. I love the cactus garden. The food here is so fresh—it all comes from less than a mile away—and it’s wonderful because you can spend the afternoon in the gardens!
Are there any towns that really come alive during this time?
The feste padronale are like block parties for
There’s a reason why Oʻahu is nicknamed the Gathering Place – it’s the Hawaiian island that has everything.
Norwegian Cruise Line has officially kicked off its European cruise season.
Traveling to Europe in the summer months is a rite of passage—steamy nights spent in the south of Spain, snoozy days on the most beautiful Greek islands, breezy afternoons sipping rosé on a terrace in the South of France. But as tourism levels continue to rise after a few quiet years, and peak-season temperatures climb from Italy to Croatia, is the appeal of a big European summer holiday dwindling?
This is part of Off Season Italy, a collection of guides highlighting the year-round appeal of Italy's most popular destinations, courtesy of our favorite local tastemakers. Read more here.
This is part of Off Season Italy, a collection of guides highlighting the year-round appeal of Italy's most popular destinations, courtesy of our favorite local tastemakers. Read more here.
This is part of Off Season Italy, a collection of guides highlighting the year-round appeal of Italy's most popular destinations, courtesy of our favorite local tastemakers. Read more here.
This is part of Off Season Italy, a collection of guides highlighting the year-round appeal of Italy's most popular destinations, courtesy of our favorite local tastemakers. Read more here.
This is part of Off Season Italy, a collection of guides highlighting the year-round appeal of Italy's most popular destinations, courtesy of our favorite local tastemakers. Read more here.
This is part of Off Season Italy, a collection of guides highlighting the year-round appeal of Italy's most popular destinations, courtesy of our favorite local tastemakers. Read more here.
This is part of Off Season Italy, a collection of guides highlighting the year-round appeal of Italy's most popular destinations, courtesy of our favorite local tastemakers. Read more here.
The delights of Italy are universal: clinking Negronis in Rome, spinning a Riva through Venice’s Grand Canal, island-hopping off the shores of Sicily, all interlaced with hefty doses of wine, mozzarella, and art. It’s this limitless allure that has travelers from all over the world descend on the boot with near insatiable fervency, and often all at the same time—at least that’s how it can feel when trying to claim an inch of the Amalfi’s rocky beachfront in July. But in arriving en masse, travelers risk muting the very thing they come to enjoy: the essence of the place, as conjured by the lifestyle that Italians pull off with aplomb.
Puglia, in southern Italy, is an excellent spot to pick if you’re looking for a vacation that is going to satisfy both parents and kids.