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Asia, Luxury Journeys, Uncategorized

A journey of a lifetime: unearthing Majestic Japan, with Luxury Gold

November 11, 2022 by Luxury Gold No Comments

Tokyo, Mount Fuji, the waterfalls of Oirase. Japan is a land of breathtaking natural beauty, where modernity and tradition sit side by side. If you are looking for your next journey of a lifetime, discover the delights that await on our Majestic Japan luxury tour.

Majestic Japan

We invite you to take the journey of a lifetime to Japan. See the majesty, curated for you with our 11-day Majestic Japan luxury guided tour. Explore Osaka and learn the delicate art of sushi making with a masterchef in Tokyo. Admire the geishas and Buddhist temples in Kyoto. Among the waterfalls and forests of Oirase, a rare invitation from a Sake brew master will share the secrets of his trade.

Ride the Bullet Train and cruise the sublime waters of Matsushima Bay. On a poignant visit to Hiroshima, meet with a survivor of the 1945 atomic bomb that changed the course of world history. From dramatic skylines to mountain views, stay in magnificent hotels and embark on the most tantalizing culinary journey you have ever experienced.

Discover this on: Majestic Japan

Meet a Saki brewmaster in Oirase

Oirase Gorge boasts some of the most picturesque surroundings you will have the delight to ever experience. The picturesque river valley in Northern Japan runs for 14km between Yakeyama and Nenokuchi, on the shore of Towada-ko (Lake Towada). Drawing visitors from far and wide, Oirase is one of Japan’s most-revered nature havens.

With an exclusive VIP invitation, meet a master brewer and discover the magic of sake. On a special guided brewery tour, learn the history and importance of this unique drink to Japanese culture. Entwined with many of the country’s traditions and customs, sake is inherent to the Japanese way of life, from the religious rites of thousands of years ago to the dinner table today.

Pay respects in Hiroshima

 

The name Hiroshima holds a pivotal and harrowing place in world history. Pay a somber visit to the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Peace Memorial Park and Museum, the only structure left standing after the first atomic bomb was dropped during World War II on August 6th, 1945. Here you will meet with a survivor who will openly share insights into this dark chapter in world history. A privileged and poignant encounter.

The geishas of Kyoto

Often referred to as Japan’s most beautiful city, Kyoto is packed full of temples, shrines and traditional gardens. Visit in March and April and the most spectacular display of cherry blossoms will greet you. Kyoto is also world famous for its Geishas, a fine art evolved over many centuries.

Travel to Japan with Luxury Gold and enjoy a performance by a Maiko, an apprentice geisha. Highly skilled entertainers and central to Kyoto culture, geishas are specializing in classical music, dance, conversation and games. Whilst the Maiko entertains, savor traditional Kyo-Kaiseki cuisine made of seasonal ingredients.

Read more: In 2022, why do we crave the golden era of travel more than aver before?

 The delicate art of sushi in Tokyo

The world’s most populous metropolis. A city where innovation meets tradition. Tokyo is known for its temples, bustling streets and cuisine. Highlights include the Senso-ji Buddhist Temple, the oldest and most-visited temple in Japan, Nakamise Street and Kappabashi, a local back-street known as Tokyo’s foodie hub.

We invite you to join an exclusive cooking class with a sushi masterchef to learn the delicate art of sushi making. Using the highest quality fish, discover why it takes ten years to become a Master Sushi Chef. Then savor a lunch of exquisite creations.

Read more: The world’s friendliest cities

Exceptional cuisine

 

Prepare for a culinary journey like no other. Honed over the centuries, the preparation of Japanese food is refined and elegant. Flavours are pure and delicate, celebrating the textures and colours of seasonal produce.

Travel to Japan and discover why Osaka is known as the kitchen of Japan. Stroll along Dotonbori Street with a Local Expert. Your taste buds will come alive as you sample specialties such as Takoyaki. This local favorite is made of wheat flour-based batter and is filled with minced or diced octopus. At the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Mount Fuji, enjoy spectacular views of one of the most recognisable landmarks of Japan as you enjoy lunch made of fresh, seasonal ingredients at a local restaurant. Meet the owner of a traditional Inn in Matsushima Bay to dine on local seafood and, at a traditional teahouse, prepare the perfect cup of Matcha Green Tea.

Read more: From London to Tokyo: Where to sample the world’s best street food

Exquisite hotels

@hoshinoresorts.official

A country famous for its architecture, stare-of-the-art technology and exceptional service, we have hand selected some of the most magnificent hotels for the ultimate in Japan luxury travel. The grand Imperial Hotel Tokyo has welcomed royalty, heads of state and celebrities for over 120 years. Stay within walking distance of Tokyo’s most iconic attractions and enjoy award-winning dining, flawless Japanese hospitality and five-star facilities. The luxurious Imperial Hotel Osaka places you along the Okawa River in the heart of vibrant Osaka, one of Japan’s best cherry-blossom-viewing locations.

More than an exceptional hotel, the Hotel Granvia Kyoto features over a thousand modern and traditional artworks by local, Kyoto-based artists. And the Hoshino Resorts Oirase Keiryu Hotel, exclusively situated on the banks of the Oirase Gorge, provides a stunning nature retreat.

Read more: 7 ways Luxury Gold makes your travel experience completely stress free

It you are looking for the ultimate vacation, why not book a luxury escape to Japan and make Majestic Japan your next journey of a lifetime?

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Australia, Cuisine, Luxury Journeys

The perfect Australian grape by wine expert, Nick Williams of Hungerford Hill

October 31, 2022 by Luxury Gold No Comments
Grapes at Hungerford Hill

Determining the best Australian grape is a quest many wine lovers are eager to embark on. Our Inspiring Australia journey will find you savoring every sip and acquaint you with different varietals within the Hunter Valley and beyond. After talking with Nick Williams, Cellar Door Manager of Hungerford Hill winery in the Hunter Valley, we’ve learned that the beauty of Australian wine is so much more than one perfect grape.    

Related Content: What to look for in a top-quality Pinot Noir, by wine expert Courtney Kingston 

Nick Williams of Hungerford Hill

@hungerfordhill

The Hunter Valley’s Australian grape 

The Hunter Valley, just a few hours’ drive from Sydney, is the oldest wine region in Australia. For almost 200 hundred years this warm climate wine region has been producing top Shiraz and Semillon enjoyed all over the world. In particular, the Hunter Valley boasts an aged Semillon and a medium bodied, earthy Australian Shiraz. What makes the Hunter so special? Nick explains, “You’ve got multiple generations working across multiple wineries over the years, sharing their knowledge travelling around the country and the world and then bringing that knowledge, that skill and those initiatives back into a wine region.”   

Hungerford Hill

@hungerfordhill

The future of the Hunter Valley 

With such a rich history, wine enthusiasts can’t help but wonder what’s next for the Hunter. “The Hunter Valley really is a region that is caught between traditional values and constantly innovating and redeveloping itself, Nick comments. “Everyone’s ready to give something a go in the Hunter but you always have to look at where you’ve come from.” From where and how vines are planted—such as planting vines higher off the ground—to new techniques to increase yield, there’s no shortage of experimentation.   

Climate change also requires adaptation. “The rise of alternative varietals and seeing different growers trying to push what they can grow…We need to look at what we can swap around, taking out some clones of Shiraz and putting in Tempranillo,” Nicks says. “Everyone’s doing something a little bit different. We currently have on tasting two different sorts of the same fruit from the same block. One is very sweet and the other is quite dry. It’s almost bone dry. They were only picked a few hours apart but it’s the natural residual sugar in them just makes them pop.” In fact, Hungerford Hill has something for everyone. 

Hungerford Hill vineyard

@hungerfordhill

Hungerford Hill 

This Australian winery is in a unique position to offer a breadth of varietals while embracing the grapes that the Hunter Valley is known for. “What we do at Hungerford Hill and what a lot of other but not all wineries in the Hunter are doing now is giving you a sample of what Australian wine can be…We are very fortunate in the Hunter Valley, where we are at Hungerford, to have a lot of different varietals but also to have a fairly broad wine philosophy: We make wine for people.” This philosophy embraces the ideology that wine is meant to be drunk. “It’s not to hide away it’s not to just give us a gift. It’s to crack open to pour a glass and to share with your friends your family your loved ones.”   

Most of Hungerford Hill’s wines are from the Hunter Valley, but they also bring in fruit from Tumbarumba, the snowy mountain region in the south of New South Wales, and the hilltops region in the middle of New South Wales. Bringing in grapes from wine regions differing in climate and soil offers guests the opportunity to find the best Australian grapes that they like. 

Winemaking at Hungerford Hill

@hungerfordhill

Food and wine tasting 

During your visit to Hungerford Hill you’ll enjoy an Epic Tasting Experience. You’ll explore how food and wine interact as you try six different wines paired with small plates from their onsite Muse Restaurant. While these specifically tailored pairings change seasonally, Nick shares a few favorites. You might try the classic pairing of the lemony notes of Semillon with seafood or Sangiovese and duck. Or, enjoy the winery’s full-bodied EPIC Shiraz paired with a sausage roll made with Wagyu Beef. With Hungerford Hill’s focus on the guests, your tasting will find you sampling some of the 40 wines that are open each day.  

Wine pairings

@hungerfordhill

Try something new 

Nick recognizes that wine drinkers have different tastes, and not just in varietals. “Sometimes you just need your security blanket of wine and then sometimes you might want to try and have a compromise wine with a friend.” He’s eager to give you freedom to stick with your favorite Australian grape as well as explore what Hungerford Hill has to offer on your tasting journey, from the Hunter Valley and beyond. 

Wine and snacks with friends

@hungerfordhill

The perfect Australian grape 

In short, what makes the perfect Australian grape? “The perfect Australian grape makes a wine that someone wants to drink.” Nick says. “It’s not something that you look at. It’s something which is fit for purpose, something which calls out to you, or calls out to the winemaker, which then transcends into the bottle.” 

@hungerfordhill

Discover your favorite Australian wine with us.

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Cuisine, Europe, Make Travel Matter

Tracey of Tracey’s Farmhouse on the benefits of eating what’s in season

October 24, 2022 by Luxury Gold No Comments

Eating what’s in season celebrates the best of what’s fresh as well as benefits your health and the environment. What is seasonal eating?  One of our Luxury Gold hosts who’s happy to answer that question and who lives, breathes—and cooks—this philosophy is Tracey of Tracey’s Farmhouse. We’d like to introduce you to Tracey and the warm, home-hosted meal and MAKE TRAVEL MATTER® Experience you can expect in her cottage on our Ultimate Ireland tour. As we celebrated World Food Day on October 16th, a chat with Tracey highlights why eating what’s in season is so important. 

Tracey of Tracey's Farmhouse Kitchen

@traceysfarmhousekitchen

The experience 

In Northern Ireland’s Strangford Lough just a half hour from Belfast, you can find Tracey stepping out of her 17th Century thatched cottage on the water’s edge to greet arriving guests. With an easy smile and the aim to “make the guests feel as much at home as I can,” Tracey extends a heartfelt welcome. Once inside Tracey’s cozy home, guests sit down to coffee, tea and Soda Bannock freshly baked.  

Sandwiches and dessert

@traceysfarmhousekitchen

After settling in, Tracey offers a 15–20-minute demonstration of how to make traditional Irish soda bread. With just two ingredients—buttermilk and flour—that aren’t weighed or measured, Tracey’s recipe is a testament to how a few fresh, local ingredients are all you need for a delicious dish. One or two guests lend a hand as Tracey cooks the bread on the griddle. Guests can also get involved in making lunch before the meal is shared. The fresh-off-the griddle bread is topped with butter “from a little farm down the road” that was even used for Harry and Megan’s wedding. Paired with the best of what’s in season, a meal at Tracey’s Farmhouse is a congenial feast celebrating the best of what’s good right here, right now.     

Irish Soda Bread

@traceysfarmhousekitchen

What guests love about it 

Beyond the fresh baked bread, local butter and hearty meal, Tracey comments that guests say, “we feel we’ve shared your home with you.” The family atmosphere is what makes the experience and what Tracey deliberately weaves into the visit. She takes guests down to her garden and gives them the opportunity to pick eggs and help with the hens. “They love the interaction with the animals,” she notes. A visit to Tracey’s Farmhouse is the type of authentic travel experience guests seek out but can be hard to find. Tracey provides this experience—while supporting seasonal eating. 

On the farm

@traceysfarmhousekitchen

Why Tracey cooks and eats seasonally 

Why is eating what’s in season important? “The taste alone,” Tracey explains. “When you eat broccoli and cauliflower that hasn’t been flown in, the ingredients sing for themselves. They don’t need a sauce or a sprinkling of herbs.” From garden vegetables to that delicious butter from down the road, Tracey says, “I try to work with what I have and … base my menu around what’s available.” Eating what’s in season also supports the local producers, shops and the environment. “Because it’s seasonal then those foods are locally obtained” and “you’re cutting out travel.”  

Tracey's land

@traceysfarmhousekitchen

Why eating seasonally is better for your health 

Those locally obtained foods do a lot for our health, too. Foods that require travel to get to their destination often need additives or processing. When you’re eating seasonally, “you don’t have all the preservatives or additives,” Tracey points out. Tracey’s two-ingredient Irish soda bread is a perfect example. Because of the fresh, local ingredients and absence of preservatives, it may only be good for two days. But those two days of enhanced fresh flavors are worth her while. In fact, from tarts and cakes to soups and salads, Tracey’s always cooking up something for herself and her guests. 

A meal at Tracey's

@traceysfarmhousekitchen

What Tracey’s eating now 

So, of course we had to ask Tracey what’s in season now. At the time of this conversation, an abundance of blackberries and black currents are keeping Tracey busy whipping up pies, tarts, crumbles and cakes of all kinds. For lunch and dinner fare, a bowl of homemade soup using vegetables from the garden accompanied by homemade bread is just right. Our mouths watering, we asked Tracey what’s good the rest of the year.  

Crumble for dessert

@traceysfarmhousekitchen

Fall 

As we move into cooler weather, you may be wondering what to eat in autumn. Tracey expects a good crop of Kohlrabi, cabbage and apples she’ll use in a crumble. Rhubarb is especially good in late summer and early fall as Tracey comments, “Your guests seem to love the idea of rhubarb.” 

Apples

@traceysfarmhousekitchen

Winter 

Winter in Northern Ireland brings chestnuts, Brussel sprouts and root vegetables that will make their way into savory tarts and soups. Deciding what to eat in winter can be as simple as digging a bit in the dirt to find that brightly colored carrot, beet or parsnip. 

Spring  

What to eat in spring is easily answered with a hearty crop of spring greens perfect for salads. The rhubarb that Luxury Gold guests have come to love also makes its first appearance in spring. 

Summer  

Tracey tackles what to eat in summer by cooking lighter fare from simple salads to tarts using vegetables from the garden. Some of her favorites are spinach, lettuce, tomatoes, beetroot leaves, nasturtium flower, radishes and red onion.  

Summer fruit

@traceysfarmhousekitchen

The mighty spud 

It may come as no surprise that in Northern Ireland potatoes are a favorite local staple all year long. Tracey has a particular spring favorite, the Comber Earlies. These small potatoes are so tasty on their own. All Tracey says you need to do is “wipe the soil off and steam with a little bit of salt with scallion or spring onions.” Sounds delicious to me, Tracey. We hope to see you at Tracey’s Farmhouse soon. 

Comber Earlies  

Where will your Britain and Ireland travels take you? 

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