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EJI's Yearly Calendar Sheds Light On America's Hidden History Of Racial Injustice
EJI's Yearly Calendar Sheds Light On America's Hidden History Of Racial Injustice

Black America Web

time12-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Black America Web

EJI's Yearly Calendar Sheds Light On America's Hidden History Of Racial Injustice

Source: Equal Justice Initiative / Photo courtesy of the Equal Justice Initiative The Equal Justice Initiative (EJI), a non-profit challenging racial and economic injustice, has created an eye-opening calendar filled with the untold stories of America's insidious racial inequality legacy. Spanning over two centuries—from the 1800s through the 2000s—the EJI's 'A History of Racial Injustice' calendar is a powerful digital tool designed to shed light on critical but often overlooked moments in American history. Each day, the virtual calendar highlights an event with historical significance, providing richly detailed narratives and easy sharing options to spark reflection and dialogue. For those seeking a tangible version, EJI's award-winning wall calendar serves as a valuable educational resource, ideal for classrooms, community centers, offices, and homes. Both formats aim to deepen public understanding of America's legacy of racial injustice and help chart a path toward truth and repair. Among this month's notable entries is the 2016 death of Philando Castile. On July 6, Mr. Castile was fatally shot during a routine traffic stop in Falcon Heights, Minnesota, by former law officer Jeronimo Yanez. Although Mr. Castile legally owned a firearm and calmly informed the officer he had it, he was shot multiple times at close range, with his fiancée and her four-year-old daughter in the car. The shooting sparked national outrage and added to the ongoing calls for police accountability and justice in the face of systemic violence against the Black community. Today, July 11, also marks the painful anniversary of another chapter in America's long resistance to racial equality. On this day in 1954, white residents in Indianola, Mississippi, formed the first White Citizens' Council, just weeks after the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision. While less openly violent than the Ku Klux Klan, these so-called 'Uptown KKK' groups used economic coercion, intimidation, and political power to prevent school desegregation and maintain white supremacy. The White Citizens' Councils were led by businessmen, pastors, and civic leaders who weaponized respectability and social standing to retaliate against those—Black or white—who supported integration. In South Carolina, 17 Black parents were fired or evicted after signing a pro-integration petition. In Mississippi, the Yazoo County council published the names of petition signers in a newspaper ad, leading to job loss, harassment, and the eventual collapse of the local NAACP chapter. Though the councils claimed to reject violence, their impact was devastating. Their tactics proved so effective that by the fall of 1960—six years after Brown —every Black child in the five Deep South states still attended segregated schools. Even by the 1964–65 school year, fewer than 3% of Black children in the South attended integrated schools. In states like Alabama and Mississippi, that number hovered below 1%. EJI's calendar invites us to engage with these stories, not as distant relics of the past, but as living truths that continue to shape our present. By confronting this history, we open the door to understanding, accountability, along with 'truth and reconciliation.' The EJI added in a statement, 'As a nation, we have not yet acknowledged our history of racial injustice, including the genocide of Native people, the legacy of slavery and racial terror, and the legally supported abuse of racial minorities. When we engage truthfully with our history, we are better equipped to address contemporary issues ranging from mass incarceration, immigration, and human rights to how we think and talk about cultural moments and icons.' Take a look at the EJI's ' A History of Racial Injustice' calendar here. SEE MORE: Activists Kick Off Criminal Justice Reform Festival In Philadelphia ​​The Legacy Of 'Good Trouble' SEE ALSO EJI's Yearly Calendar Sheds Light On America's Hidden History Of Racial Injustice was originally published on

37 Solutions To Personal Issues You Don't Wanna Discuss
37 Solutions To Personal Issues You Don't Wanna Discuss

Buzz Feed

time05-07-2025

  • Health
  • Buzz Feed

37 Solutions To Personal Issues You Don't Wanna Discuss

A lightweight gel cream from Nivea enriched with Q10, which can help improve your skin's firmness over time with regular use — in as little as two weeks, to be exact! This non-greasy, fast-absorbing formula will leave your parched skin feeling softer and more moisturized with each use. Many reviewers confirm they saw results in a matter of weeks! Good Molecules Yerba Mate Wake Up Eye Gel, better known as eyeball fuel so you no longer have to suffer through endless "you look tired" comments. This cult-fave beauty find can help reduce swelling and puffiness around the eyes with hyaluronic acid and caffeine. A surprisingly effective *and* affordable instant foot peeling spray if you want baby-soft footsies but don't have the time OR patience to go to the salon for a pricey pedicure. Just spray onto clean, dry feet and rub away dead skin. For an ~extra~ peeling effect, use an exfoliating mitt! Or this professional-grade callus-removing gel for downright mesmerizing results in a matter of minutes. It hydrates your skin so your feet are free of calluses *and* feel smooth as a baby's bottom. The best part? You won't have to pay for a less-than-pleasant visit to your manicurist. A collagen-infused butt mask to shake up your skincare game in ways you couldn't imagine. It adds much-needed moisture to dehydrated skin and leaves it feeling plump and refreshed. Your butt cheeks a lil' TLC sometimes too! Kojic Acid Dark Spot Remover Soap with truly magical results that'll leave your jaw on the floor. It uses hyaluronic acid, shea butter, vitamin E, and Castile olive oil to hydrate and soothe skin while minimizing dark spots, sun damage, and blemishes. Mielle's (TikTok-famous) Rosemary Mint strengthening oil, a biotin-infused formula to help strengthen hair, smooth split ends, and hydrate dry scalps. It promotes growth at the root and is perf for 3A–4C hair types. Reviewers swear by it for eyebrows, too! Or some sulfate-free Biotin shampoo, which contains botanical extracts that can help thicken and hydrate your hair if that's your preference. It also clarifies and removes product buildup! If you're not a fan of taking supplements and hoping it'll fix thinning hair, give this a try. A doctor-recommended Squatty Potty you'll never poop without after that first easy breezy BM, all thanks to a ~stool~. Changing your position while going #2 may prevent painful straining! And you won't even have to brave an in-person encounter. You're welcome. Gold Bond's firming neck and chest cream to give your skin a huge gulp of hydration while visibly improving its texture and elasticity. This fragrance-free formula is loaded with aloe, salicylic acid, and jojoba oil that'll help make your skin smoother and more supple! Reviewers are obsessed with how fast it works. Medicated, waterproof bandages so you no longer have to deal with that persistent growth that's been hanging around for an obscene amount of time. Apply the medicated pads like bandages and replace every 48 hours until it goes POOF! An exfoliating scrub mitt for achieving ~super smooth~ skin without harsh chemicals or rough dry brushes. Regular exfoliation is great for reducing other semi-embarrassing probs, like bumps and ingrown hairs. I Dew Care dry shampoo powder — it'll help revive limp, greasy hair and add some much-needed volume. This hypoallergenic powder absorbs oil, sweat, and dirt so locks stay fresh longer. No one will have a clue that you're extending time between washes when your hair looks THIS good. A quick-drying lotion you'll wonder how you ever survived without because it solves so many issues — I'm talking about thigh chafing, boob sweat, and other body areas that are prone to problematic rubbing and sweating. This fragrance-free formula turns into powder once applied to absorb wetness and minimize irritation so you can go about your day in peace. Bonus: It does all this *without* using aluminum or talc. Bravo! A fungal nail renewal treatment if you've been searching high and low for a solution to that funky toenail that's bugging you. This stuff helps treat fungal nail damage and may also help with the discoloration, thickness, and brittleness associated with it. Cosrx Snail Mucin 96% Power Repairing Essence because believe it or not, snails have the healing touch. It's no wonder so many reviewers love it for treating stubborn skin probs, like acne, inflammation, peeling, fine lines, and more. Btw, this refreshing formula can be used on all skin types! An earwax removal kit made with carbamide peroxide that can help draw out stubborn wax with ease. The results may make ya feel queasy, but you'll think twice about sticking cotton swabs in your ear again! If you regularly deal with clogged ears, this may be just what you need to end the suffering. A nose hair wax kit to quickly remove rogue nostril hairs *without* it ending in a face full of tears. It has everything you need to remove the hair and keep it gone for up to four weeks. I know it seems too good to be true, but dozens of reviewers swear this is the most painless option they've tried! Or this waterproof facial hair trimmer for anyone who can't stand stray hairs *anywhere* on their body but also wants a quick, painless solution that won't cost a fortune. Oh, and the best part? You can do it from the privacy of your own home! It's compact in size, so you can take it with you when you're on the go too. Mighty Patches, which are ~tiny but mighty~ and use hydrocolloid to help draw the gunk out of zits. These may also prevent you from picking your face, which lowers your chances of scarring. Stick one on at bedtime and behold the amazing results upon waking. Reviewers also love that you can hardly tell you're wearing one! A vegan ingrown hair oil when you're eager to relieve redness and irritation *without* having to endure an unpleasant conversation in the personal care aisle. It uses skin-softening jojoba seed oil and anti-inflammatory tea tree oil to help you kiss razor burn and ingrown hairs goodbye. A Briotech spray to calm angry, irritated skin with hypochlorous acid, which just so happens to be the same holy-grail ingredient used in the pricier Tower 28 SOS Daily Rescue Spray. Give yourself a spritz to help treat inflammation and reduce redness. It'll also strengthen the skin barrier, so think of it as a magical force field for your face! A reviewer-beloved anti-dandruff shampoo that'll help keep your hair free of those bothersome flakes you want so badly to be free of. Apply it to wet hair, lather it up, then rinse thoroughly. It's formulated with 1% ketoconazole to kill the fungus that causes dandruff! A set of tiny dermaplaning razors so you can eliminate stray hairs or peach fuzz *and* reduce your chances of missing a spot. They leave your skin feeling silky-smooth, which allows for super smooth, seamless makeup application! A stainless-steel blackhead spatula if you wish you could experience that post-facial glow a lil' more often without actually paying for a pricey facial — problem solved! This tool can help unclog pores via high-frequency vibrations. Each cycle lasts for five minutes before it automatically turns off. Bonus: Your skincare products will be better absorbed after using it! SweatBlock antiperspirant wipes when sweaty pits are ruining your day, every single day. Give your armpits a swipe before bed, wash them in the morning, and you could potentially enjoy up to seven days of bliss with less sweat. Plus, purchasing it online means you don't have to broadcast your sweaty pit problem to the world. A travel-size Poo-Pourri because once you've enjoyed the spray-before-you-go magic at home, you'll never wanna go anywhere without it. Now you don't have to awkwardly ask your friend if they have any air freshener spray after you go #2! Spray *before* you go and your worries will melt away. Hanalei Lip Treatment so you can finally repair your dehydrated, cracked lips that you once thought you'd suffer with forever. It uses a blend of Hawaiian kukui nut oil, antioxidant-rich agave, and grapeseed oils to moisturize and restore dry, damaged skin! A blackhead scrub stick to help target excess sebum and other impurities that might be clogging your precious pores. After cleansing, rub it on your face to exfoliate *and* eliminate stubborn blackheads and whiteheads! PanOxyl Antimicrobial Hydrating Acne Creamy Wash for anyone who's been dreaming of a world where the original formula would work on sensitive skin — your dream is now a reality! It's designed to *gently* clear up acne-causing bacteria and can be used on your WHOLE bod. It'll target existing breakouts and prevent future ones by lifting dirt from pores. A pair of stainless-steel tongue scrapers that can help kick stale breath and leave your mouth with a fresh, clean feeling. All that gunk living on the surface of your tongue = GONE! No one will be offering you an unsolicited stick of gum anytime soon. Plus, a top-rated, alcohol-free oral rinse, which will assist in the fight against bad breath for 24 hours and doesn't have a super strong taste that lingers OR burns. Put down the mints and pick up the rinse! Comfy period-proof underwear because who wants to keep spending money on pads/tampons and worrying about leaks? Reviewers find these to be way comfier than disposable products *and* they don't cost as much as leading brands. No long, off-putting stares from the cashier either! Silicone Kegel weights for taking charge of your health down there. It's great for Kegel newbies and can help with incontinence, especially if you've given birth recently. It's also ideal if you want more enjoyable *and* less painful sex. While there's nothing embarrassing about strengthening your pelvic floor, at least you'll solve the problem without having to discuss it out loud. Demora's foot exfoliation mask if you're ready to treat your feet to the gift of super smooth skin — no more rough calluses making you wildly uncomfortable. Put 'em on, get comfy for an hour, then get ready for the big reveal as you shed dead skin over the next few days. First Aid Beauty's KP Bump Eraser Body Scrub Exfoliant to leave you with the smooth, healthy skin you've always dreamed of. No more dry patches or bumps killing your mood! Reviewers with keratosis pilaris and other similar skin textures swear by it. A fast-acting extra-strength hemorrhoid cream when your butt is begging for mercy. You'll potentially get sweet relief in a tube without ever having to leave the comfort of your bed. Lidocaine helps numb the pain, and glycerin helps reduce friction. The anti-inflammatory ingredients help provide the quick, long-lasting relief your bum so desperately needs.

World's oldest restaurant in Madrid faces challenge as nearby tavern eyes Guinness record
World's oldest restaurant in Madrid faces challenge as nearby tavern eyes Guinness record

South China Morning Post

time13-06-2025

  • South China Morning Post

World's oldest restaurant in Madrid faces challenge as nearby tavern eyes Guinness record

In the heart of Spain's capital, Sobrino de Botín holds a coveted Guinness World Record as the world's oldest restaurant. Exactly 300 years after it opened its doors, Botín welcomes droves of daily visitors hungry for Castilian fare with a side of history. But on the outskirts of Madrid, far from the souvenir shops and tourist sites, a rustic tavern named Casa Pedro makes a bold claim. Its owners assert the establishment endured not just the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s and the Napoleonic invasion in the early 1800s, but even the War of Spanish Succession at the start of the 18th century – a lineage that would make Casa Pedro older than Botín and a strong contender for the title. 'It's really frustrating when you say, 'Yes, we've been around since 1702,' but … you can't prove it,' says manager and eighth-generation proprietor Irene Guiñales. 'If you look at the restaurant's logo, it says 'Casa Pedro, since 1702', so we said, 'Damn it, let's try to prove it.'' Irene Guiñales, owner and manager of Casa Pedro. Photo: AP Guiñales, 51, remembers her grandfather swearing by Casa Pedro's age, but she was aware that decades-old hearsay from a proud old-timer would not be enough to prove it. Her family hired a historian and has so far turned up documents dating the restaurant's operations to at least 1750.

The world's oldest restaurant faces a challenge from another Madrid tavern that says it's even older
The world's oldest restaurant faces a challenge from another Madrid tavern that says it's even older

Associated Press

time12-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Associated Press

The world's oldest restaurant faces a challenge from another Madrid tavern that says it's even older

MADRID (AP) — In the heart of Spain's capital, Sobrino de Botín holds a coveted Guinness World Record as the world's oldest restaurant. Exactly three hundred years after it opened its doors, Botín welcomes droves of daily visitors hungry for Castilian fare with a side of history. But on the outskirts of Madrid, far from the souvenir shops and tourist sites, a rustic tavern named Casa Pedro makes a bold claim. Its owners assert the establishment endured not just the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s and the Napoleonic invasion in the early 1800s, but even the War of Spanish Succession at the start of the 18th century — a lineage that would make Casa Pedro older than Botín and a strong contender for the title. 'It's really frustrating when you say, 'Yes, we've been around since 1702,' but ... you can't prove it,' said manager and eighth-generation proprietor Irene Guiñales. 'If you look at the restaurant's logo, it says 'Casa Pedro, since 1702,' so we said, 'Damn it, let's try to prove it.'' Guiñales, 51, remembers her grandfather swearing by Casa Pedro's age, but she was aware that decades-old hearsay from a proud old-timer wouldn't be enough to prove it. Her family hired a historian and has so far turned up documents dating the restaurant's operations to at least 1750. That puts them within striking distance of Botín's record. Clients and rivals Both taverns are family-owned. Both offer Castilian classics like stewed tripe and roast suckling pig. They are decorated with charming Spanish tiles, feature ceilings with exposed wooden beams and underground wine cellars. And both enjoy a rich, star-studded history. Botín's celebrated past includes a roster of literary patrons like Truman Capote, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Graham Greene. In his book 'The Sun Also Rises,' Ernest Hemingway described it as 'one of the best restaurants in the world.' While Casa Pedro may not have boasted the same artistic pedigree, it boasts its own VIPs. Its walls are adorned with decades-old photographs of former Spanish King Juan Carlos I dining in one of its many rooms. The current Spanish monarch, King Felipe VI dines there, too, albeit more inconspicuously than his father. But the similarities between the two hotspots end there. Casa Pedro was once a stop on the only road heading north from the Spanish capital toward France. Its clientele is largely local regulars, like David González and Mayte Villena, who for years have spent every Friday lunching at the tavern. 'It wouldn't change a thing for us,' Villena said about the restaurant someday securing the Guinness title. Botín, on the other hand, is a stone's throw from Madrid's famed Plaza Mayor, where any day of the week tour guides are herding groups around town — and often straight through the restaurant's front door. Antonio González, a third-generation proprietor of Botín, concedes that the Guinness accolade awarded in 1987 has helped business, but said the restaurant had enough history to draw visitors even before. 'It has a certain magic,' he said. Pretenders to the crown The question then becomes: How can either restaurant definitively claim the title? Guinness provides its specific guidelines for the superlative only to applicants, according to spokesperson Kylie Galloway, noting that it entails 'substantial evidence and documentation of the restaurant's operation over the years.' González said that Guinness required Botín show that it has continuously operated in the same location with the same name. The only time the restaurant closed was during the COVID-19 pandemic, as did Casa Pedro. That criteria would mean that restaurants that are even older — Paris' Le Procope, which says it was founded in 1686, or Beijing's Bianyifang, founded in 1416, or the 1673-established White Horse Tavern in Newport, Rhode Island — aren't eligible for the designation. La Campana, in Rome's historic center, claims over 500 years of operation, citing documents on its menu and in a self-published history. Its owners say they have compiled the requisite paperwork and plan to submit it to Guinness. A dream for Casa Pedro Guiñales and her husband couldn't consult archives from the former town of Fuencarral, now a Madrid neighborhood. Those papers went up in flames during the Spanish Civil War. Instead, they delved into Spanish national archives, where they found land registries of the area from the First Marquess of Ensenada (1743-1754) that showed the existence of a tavern, wine cellar and inn in the small town as of 1750. In their spare time, the couple continues to hunt for records proving that Casa Pedro indeed dates back to 1702, as is proclaimed on its walls, takeout bags and sugar packets. But even if they dig up the final documents and wrest the Guinness honor from Botín, Guiñales concedes that her restaurant's quiet location makes it unlikely to draw Botín's clientele in central Madrid. 'To think that we could reach that public would be incredible,' Guiñales said. 'It's a dream, but it's a dream.'

Charlotte Ivers: ‘My road trip through Spain's world-class vineyards'
Charlotte Ivers: ‘My road trip through Spain's world-class vineyards'

Times

time07-06-2025

  • Times

Charlotte Ivers: ‘My road trip through Spain's world-class vineyards'

There's a small strip of land along the Duero River known as the Golden Mile. As is the way of such convenient place names this is, of course, a lie. The golden mile is in fact nearly ten miles long. It's an inauspicious piece of land: parched earth, and the soil doesn't look up to growing much. Drive along the dusty road, and little collections of buildings — sun-bleached, ramshackle, seemingly hastily assembled — spring up on the horizon and disappear as soon as you reach them. There's something of the Western frontier to this place. Or maybe it's more like California during the gold rush, or those early Texas oil towns. But it isn't oil these pioneers are chasing. It's grapes. For a long time this little chunk of Castile and Leon was a destination only for those who knew what they were looking for, and what they were looking for was wine. Madrid to the south and San Sebastian to the north take care of the tourists in search of a bit of glamour and a Michelin-starred meal. Wine connoisseurs — importers, restaurateurs, buyers — come to the Golden Mile to cart back crates of red bottles of liquid gold. In recent years, however, the small Spanish hotel group Castilla Termal, which specialises in converting historic buildings into high-end spa destinations, has opened a five-star hotel in a restored 12th-century monastery. Suddenly, there's a reason for luxury travellers to come to this part of the world. Perhaps there always was: the vineyards here are world-class. If you're into tempranillo, this place is the ultimate pilgrimage site. But this was not an area designed for leisure visitors. It was a hard sell as a mini-break before this extravagant hotel and spa sprang up. Stuck onto the side of tiny San Bernardo, the bottom half of the monastery remains a historical site, and the Catholic church attached is still used by the hundred or so people who live in the village. There is a sense of staying in a living museum: a type of historic grandeur with which no billion-pound new-build could hope to compete. Most rooms are located on the first floor, reached by a walkway looking down into the cloisters below. There are only 79: all spacious, some cavernous, all decorated in an understated, modern manner. We are here as part of a package Castilla Termal has set up. The idea is that you spend three nights here at Monasterio de Valbuena, then two at another of its hotels in the slightly larger village of Brihuega (of which more later). On arrival, the first thing this entails is dinner at Converso: a restaurant set up in the hotel just a few months ago with the advice of Miguel Ángel de la Cruz, a renowned local chef who specialises in vegetarian and sustainable cooking. This restaurant is a clear statement of intent, in terms of sustainability and quality. The ingredients all come from the hotel's vegetable garden and, more impressively, the eggs come from its own hens. It is, quite clearly, Michelin bait. No doubt they will get their star soon: this is the best restaurant around by miles. The next day there's an almost infinite supply of vineyards to be getting on with. We visit Emilio Moro, one of the oldest and most notable vineyards nearby, for a tour, tasting and lunch. (During which the proprietors absolutely did not skimp on sharing their product. We rolled home.) Then there's an extremely pleasant day out to be had at Finca Villacreces, touring the vineyard on electric bikes to see the different terrains, before returning to base for tasting and snacks. In both cases, it is clear that these guys really live their wine; these are guides who can cater for everyone from the most serious of wine professionals to those who just fancy a few glasses of red and a look at the countryside. Back at the hotel the spa is the main event. The thermal pools, indoor and outdoor, contain more means of administering a water jet than you ever thought possible, whether you're standing, sitting or lying down. The best part, however, is the Chapel of San Pedro spa experience. Castilla Termal has painstakingly recreated the beautiful little chapel that sits off the side of the main church. Instead of worshippers, this one hosts a steam room, a sauna and a variety of Roman bath-style plunge pools of varying temperatures. It's a private space: you book your time and don't have to share with other guests. Once you've got over the vague sense of sacrilege and realise that a thunderbolt hasn't actually descended from the sky, it's wonderful. With its vaulted ceilings and pale stone walls, this is the spa you always imagine when plotting a relaxation day — but which never quite seems to manifest in the real world. The view from our vast bedroom window is quite remarkable. Looking out into the romantic garden we can see straight into the treetops. This view isn't hard to come by in this hotel; the rooms here circle the building, most facing outwards into the garden. The room is high-ceilinged and bright, with wood panels and the pale white stone of the original building. It's elegant and modern, yet understated. • 16 of the best vineyard hotels in Tuscany After three nights we drag ourselves away from the pools and head onwards to our next stop: driving a couple of hours east to Brihuega, a small town of fewer than 3,000 people just north of Madrid. Here Castilla Termal has another hotel, rising out of a hill in the centre of town in an old cloth factory. Again, this is a place you would never find on a standard tourist route. Again we find ourselves in the most remarkable building: circular, with a covered courtyard restaurant in the middle, at the centre of which is a vast indoor tree. Gardens in the romantic style surround the hotel, with views across the hills. It's a more casual dining situation here — a fresh, light, à la carte menu — and that's perhaps what we need after several days of red wine at lunch. And this time the town is big enough to sustain several restaurants and bars. Here we get the longed-for opportunity of every European holiday: to sit in a pretty town square with a small beer and some salty snacks. Except for the hotel, this is a locals' town. It only strikes me now that we didn't hear a single passer-by speaking English outside our hotel, quite a rare thing when combined with a luxury spa break. We enjoy our impeccably authentic tapas, negotiating the language barrier as we go, and then return again to the peace of the thermal spas (nearly identical to those in our last destination) and to the hotel's signature massage which, in homage to the building's origins, uses cloths to stretch out our limbs by pulling the fabric to extend or bend them gently. • 25 of the best vineyard hotels to visit in France As a day trip, the hotel team recommends we head an hour or so away, to Cogolludo, to meet quite a remarkable man named Yñigo Miguez del Olmo. Del Olmo has done the thing that every city worker threatens to do but never actually does: he has sacked off the corporate life to head to the hills, where he makes his own wine and has restored a quite remarkable 16th-century convent. Here he has created a makeshift museum, full of his collection of carved stone going back to Roman times. At 11.30am he uncorks several bottles of his wine made, to our excitement, from vines that emerged unscathed by the phylloxera that destroyed the vineyards of Europe in the 19th century. It is a thrillingly rare experience, made more delightful by del Olmo's general sense of joie de vivre. Soon, we are joined by his wife and baby daughter, and there is little wine left. We pour ourselves into the taxi home, utterly charmed by this rare show of hospitality and authenticity. These are the things that make this driving holiday such a remarkable find. So often, travel is a trade-off between luxury and authenticity. The problem with places off the beaten track is that they aren't well-equipped for high-end tourism. The problem with places well-equipped for high-end tourism is, well, they are full of high-end tourism. What a joy to find a means of experiencing the best of both. And it doesn't hurt that it's accompanied by vast rivers of red wine. Charlotte Ivers was a guest of the Luxury Holiday Company, which has five nights' B&B from £1,935pp on a Gastronomy & Wellness in Central Spain itinerary, including flights, car hire, spa treatments, a wine experience and some extra meals ( This article contains affiliate links that can earn us revenue By Richard Mellor Despite one of the main Camino de Santiago pilgrimage routes passing through its compact centre, Logroño remains wonderfully untouristy, aided by the absence of an airport (trains from Bilbao take two and a half hours). The capital of the winemaking Rioja region, it has an elegant old town where all 60-odd tapas joints have their own speciality — be it Juan y Pinchame's langoustine and pineapple skewers, Bar Ángel's fried mushrooms or Torres Gastrobar's legendary calamari-filled buns with lightly spiced bravas sauce. Logroño also does a fine line in bodegas — Franco-Españolas, just across the Ebro River from the old town, was once visited by Hemingway (tours £23; — and, best of all, is exceptionally affordable, even on a Saturday night on the main street, Calle del Laurel. Equally good value and just off that street is the chic Sercotel Calle Mayor hotel, inside a 400-year-old Room-only doubles from £75 ( Fly to Bilbao There's no doubting Girona's headline act. El Celler de Can Roca is the creation of the three Roca brothers — head chef Joan, pastry chef Jordi and sommelier Josep — and has three Michelin stars for its bravura takes on Catalan cuisine (15-course tasting menu, £270). It has topped charts of the world's best restaurants and spawned many sister establishments that are far easier to get into, including a natural wine bar, a comfort-food restaurant and a fancy ice cream parlour ( But this handsome, Catalan-speaking medieval city, 40 minutes by train from Barcelona, also has a raft of other great restaurants to try, including tiny BionBo, where each day's unique, wildly inventive menu might be themed to comedy, sport or music (six courses, £38; As for somewhere to stay, let's turn back to the Rocas: Jordi's Casa Cacao chocolate shop also includes 15 cosy bedrooms (and a rooftop terrace).Details B&B doubles from £219 ( Fly to Girona On the Mediterranean between Andalusia and Valencia, Murcia is a dream for vegetarians. Much produce hails from its surrounding, Moorish-era market gardens, while the local, lauded Torre Pacheco melons and Cieza peaches have protected geographical indication status. Delicious bomba rice and paprika made using ñora peppers are other staples, with zarangollo — scrambled eggs loaded with courgette and onion — paparajotes, a dessert involving batter-fried lemon leaves dusted in icing sugar, among the classic dishes. Far more ambitious takes on those await at Frases, down an alleyway near the grand, gothic-baroque cathedral. Awarded a Michelin star in November, this informal haunt champions a distinctly regional larder (five courses, £63; Nearby, past squares that throng on summer nights, is the simple, stylish Hotel B&B doubles from £74 ( Fly to Murcia Woody Allen's favourite Spanish city is a heartland for the produce of Spain's lush northwest. Most famously there's Asturian cider which, poured from a dramatic height to inject effervescence, can be tried in various old-school sidrerias along lively Calle Gascona, ideally in cahoots with platters of pixin (fried monkfish chunks) and tangy Cabrales cheese, Spain's stilton. You'll also find that, alongside good chorizo, in El Fontan market. Build up an appetite by roaming the student-filled old town, then consider sitting down to a staple plate of cachopo — two large, breaded beef or veal escalopes filled with ham and cheese. An atmospheric former 18th-century hospice, the Eurostars Hotel de la Reconquista serves nice breakfasts, but that doesn't mean you can't have a second one at the renowned Camilo de Blas pastry shop B&B doubles from £135 ( Fly to Oviedo Neighbouring Portugal, Extremadura is a low-profile region where good birdwatching, grand palaces and great galleries converge. Gastronomically minded visitors come chiefly for two of Spain's most sought-after foodstuffs: premier jamon iberico de bellota (Iberico ham from pigs fed on acorns) and gooey torta del Casar sheep's milk cheese. These anchor two of four food-focused driving routes — the others themed on olive oil and wine — that road-trippers might follow past quiet holm and cork oak pastures ( Otherwise, simply head for the beautiful city of Caceres, where storks nest in 12th-century walls and the sustainable, three-Michelin-starred Atrio draws foodies from as far as France for its avant-garde use of Extremaduran fare (19-course tasting menu, £236). The same old-town complex also contains 14 spacious, art-filled and spare contemporary bedrooms around a small B&B doubles from £463 ( Fly to Badajoz or Madrid

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