Looking for the ultimate winter sun destinations for food lovers? Want to make the most of the sunshine on an alfresco city break? Check out our pick of places to go, including where to stay, which restaurants to visit and what dishes you should try. For something a little chillier, check out our picks of the best ski destinations in Europe for a snowy getaway.

Advertisement

For more inspiration for travelling in the winter months, read our guides to where to visit in January and where to visit in February. Now discover Gurd Loyal's culinary hotspots and our top European city breaks.


Winter sun destinations for food lovers

The Caribbean – for beachside seafood suppers

The tropical climate of the Caribbean makes this cluster of islands with white sand beaches a go-to destination for winter sun. Friday night fish fries are where locals and tourists come together to drink rum, hang out, play dominos and eat fresh fish to a back drop of live music in the open air. Fresh fish, such as mahi-mahi, tuna and swordfish, are cooked in front of you over flames. In the Bahamas, Nassau’s colourful Arawak Cay harbour hosts a fish fry every night. Taste unique dishes that vary between each of the 700 islands of the Bahamas, such as conch salads and fritters, guava duffs and ‘cracked’ battered fish washed down with sky juice or local beers.

In Tobago, get your seafood fix from the Store Bay Ladies, who have been selling their homemade crab and dumplings at the idyllic turquoise bay of the same name for decades. Head to Miss Trim’s – set up by 86-year-old Miss Trim who recently passed the business on to her eighth child, Meisha – to enjoy blue-black crab in a blend of coconut milk and spices. Other iconic spots for curried crab include Scarborough’s Blue Crab, run by charming 80-year-old Alison and her husband Kenneth. Further up the north coast lies Castara, a small Caribbean beach town with a laid-back local culture. Marguarite’s, set back from the beach, is well known for its own take on curry crab and dumplings.

Where to stay: On Tobago’s north coast lies Castara, a friendly beach village with a laid-back culture. Born-and-bred locals Derek (aka Porridge) and Jeanelle Lopez welcome guests to their small eco boutique, Castara Retreats. The collection of treehouse lodges nestled into lush hillside rainforest are designed to soak up breathtaking views of the sun setting over the Caribbean Sea. Sun spills through intricately carved window frames into minimally decorated cedarwood suites, brightened with colour pops from handwoven fabrics on four-poster beds, local contemporary art and the flutter of resident hummingbirds.

At open-air multi-level restaurant, Caribbean Kitchen, you can sip on passion fruit mojito sundowners before trying the island’s fresh ingredients in dishes such as grilled red snapper with homemade salsa, lamb curry with coconut greens, and black bean and plantain fritters. Guests are also encouraged to mooch down to the village and join the community in daily food rituals. Mornings at local meeting hub Cheno’s Coffee Shop start with breakfasts of coconut bake, salt fish and tropical star fruit salads. Marguarite’s, set back from the beach, serves its own take on curried crab and dumplings, and the handful of beach bars regularly host live steel pan, soca and calypso music for barefoot dancing on the shore in the moonlight. Join a sea breeze fuelled yoga class in the retreat’s open-sided studio, spend the day unwinding on secluded golden sand beaches and hike through rainforest paths to the oldest protected waterfall in the western hemisphere.

Apartments from £141 per night, check availability at booking.com or castararetreats.com

Birdsong, Castara Retreats copy

Sri Lanka – for a tropical, sun-fuelled reset

Start the new year with a mood-boosting holiday to return nourished, rested and rejuvenated for the months ahead. Sri Lanka’s south coast boasts plenty of sunshine in the winter months, without much rain. Tropical fruits such as electrolyte-rich coconuts, pineapples and papaya are in abundance all year round, as are vibrant vegetarian curries that include plenty of turmeric and nourishing veg.

Where to stay: One of Sri Lanka’s luxury stars, Malabar Hill is located on an old cinnamon plantation just outside Weligama on the south coast. From its hilltop perch, the palatial-like hotel has expansive views looking back towards the Indian Ocean and further out to lush green paddy fields. The secluded villas, nestled in the jungle, are designed to make the most of the scenery, each boasting floor-to-ceiling glass windows, terraces and salt-water infinity pools.

Antique Rajasthani chests, mirrors and bedframes contrast contemporary brushed concrete walls to create luxurious cocoons for ultimate relaxation. Intricately carved arches give way to breathtaking viewpoints from open-air Hill House restaurant and bar in the ornate main building. A wide-ranging menu of excellent Sri Lankan, Indian and Southeast Asian dishes use the freshest ingredients from the market and surrounding waters. Options include sticky aubergine salad, crispy skin barramundi and prawn curry with kachumber salad, while the seafood platter of lobster, squid, prawns and fish is a real treat. Pre-order the traditional Sri Lankan lamprais – a selection of curries, fricadelle meatballs, ash plantain, shrimp paste, tangy aubergine moju, and rice wrapped and steamed in a banana leaf. The intricately prepared Sri Lankan breakfast begins with freshly cooked hoppers or coconut roti to pair with dhal curry and katta, seeni and coconut sambols, plus a choice of watermelon, papaya, pineapple or king coconut juices. Tailor-made excursions include water safaris, restaurant and café hopping in Galle Fort, and guided tours of the original cinnamon estate just across the valley.

Villas from £386 per night, check availability at booking.com, mrandmrssmith.com or malabarhillsrilanka.com

Malabar Hill

Mendoza, Argentina – for vineyard experiences in the sunshine

Mendoza valley, high up in the Andes, is Argentina's number one and biggest wine region. The vineyards in this area are known to be home to some of the highest altitude vines in the world, with Malbec being the most prevalent grape. During February and March's Fiesta de la Vendimia harvest festival, Mendoza city and its surrounding villages and vineyards come alive with colourful parades, food markets and open air concerts to celebrate the graft of workers in this stunning region of Argentina. Wineries open up for tours and tastings, there are unique pairing menus in restaurants, and tourists can join in grape picking and stomping in the vineyards.

Where to stay: Set in the foothills of the Andes, this sustainable-forward, 320-hectare estate embraces the outdoors with its minimalist design, natural reserves and outdoor activities. The contemporary hotel building is designed to reflect the surrounding landscapes – floor-to-ceiling windows and expansive terraces in the upper-floor rooms, cubist stand-alone suite structures set around the Andean water-filled lagoon and outdoor pools for taking in the mountain air.

Small touches of hospitality make Casa de Uco feel like home, from a glass of the estate’s wine and homemade alfajores to enjoy on arrival to bespoke cocktails tweaked to your tastes from the list curated by renowned Buenos Aires bartender Renato Giovannoni. An expansive organic kitchen garden provides bountiful produce for chefs to showcase the best of the Uco Valley and its terroir. Vibrant salads are a riot of textures – think pickled beets, pears, roquefort and fried walnuts. Argentinian beef classics are given contemporary flair – carpaccio in chermoula sauce, empanadas with chilli sauce and tomahawk steak with gratin onions.

The Uco Valley is a key part of Mendoza’s wine region and experiences among the 70 hectares of vines range from interactive tours and tastings to immersive wine-making workshops. You can even join the harvest, partake in grape stomping and reward yourself with vinotherapy treatments in the sleek spa. The estate is a playground to soak up the winter sun – cycle or ride horseback through the vines to secluded fireside dinners, tuck into a lavish picnic on a ‘wild deck’ in the on-site natural reserve or join chefs as they pluck ingredients from the kitchen garden and teach you asado skills as the sky turns pink and orange behind the mountains.

Doubles from £502 per night, check availability at booking.com, mrandmrssmith.com or casadeuco.com

Mirador-1 copy

Florida – for rooftop sunbathing and al fresco dining

Make the most of the Sunshine State's abundance of warm weather with alfresco eating and outdoorsy adventures. Choose an eclectic city break in Miami, that boasts everything from sandy beaches and swish cocktail bars to an artsy independent craft beer and restaurant scene amongst the colourful murals in Wynwood. Or stay in the heart of Little Havana to soak up the area's Cuban culture with morning cafecitos, El Sanguich's pork-stuffed toasted sandwiches and late-night cocktails at iconic bar Café La Trova.

Down in the Florida Keys, take in ocean views and breathtaking sunsets over seafood suppers on the vast deck of Key West institution, Louie’s Backyard. The town's picture-perfect, porch-fronted clapboard houses host plenty of restaurants with dining decks; tuck into key lime pie and Caribbean dishes in Blue Heaven’s vibrant backyard complete with live music and chickens mooching around.

Where to stay: If you're looking for a sunbathing bolthole in Miami, try Arlo Wynwood, complete with a mural-clad staircase leading to a funky tropical cocktail bar and terrace. The rooftop pool is the place to relax for classic Miami vibes; wiggle along to tunes on your sun lounger and sip refreshing mezcal cocktails or tuck into tuna poke bowls beneath candy-striped parasols. The ground floor restaurant is a collaboration with some of Miami’s best-known names, including chef Brad Kilgore and Broken Shaker’s Elad Zvi and Gabriel Orta.

Doubles from £329, check availability at booking.com

People on stools at La Sandwicherie Miami

Jordan – for street food and desert feasts beneath the stars

In the centre of the Levant, Jordan looks out across the Middle East, North Africa and the Mediterranean and all of these influences can be seen in the country’s food. The way to a country’s heart is through its stomach. At least, that’s the conclusion drawn by solo-friendly tour operator Intrepid, which expanded its range of foodie experiences in 2018 to provide more immersive trips. On Intrepid's six-day Jordan Real Food Adventure a local guide invites a small group to experience the country's cuisine. Sit outside a local falafel restaurant and soak up the late night bustle of an Arabic city. Amman really comes alive after dark, when the heat has dissipated and people are free to do their shopping, catch up on local gossip or, among the younger generation, congregate with friends to drink mint tea and share a shisha. As dinners go, sharing slow-cooked goat with Bedouin tribesmen under a star-filled sky in the Wadi Rum desert is unmissable. Guide Mohammed and his brothers cook a traditional ‘zarb’, an ancient method of cooking where they bury meat, vegetables and rice in a pit in the ground, add lots of embers, wrap it in blankets and bury it in sand. Other experiences include drinking sheep’s milk with local shepherds, preparing lamb mansaf with a family at Petra (before visiting the site itself) and whipping up your own dinner at Amman’s most innovative cookery school.

Where to stay: Intrepid's six-day Real Food Adventure includes accommodation in bedouin tents, boutique hotels and homestays.

Check rates and availability at intrepidtravel.com

Jordanian Food: What to Eat in Jordan

Cape Town – for an al fresco city break

UK winter is summer in South Africa, and that means platters of crayfish and local oysters, and glasses of local chenin blanc enjoyed by the water’s edge. At the V&A Waterfront, a shopping and dining complex, settle in for a magnificent view of the harbour and the mountain at waterside Harbour House and take your pick from a fine selection of seasonal seafood caught by the restaurant’s own trawler; in late December it’s all about crayfish. Fish and chips is a must in Cape Town. Take yours up a gear by ordering snoek, a large-boned member of the barracuda family. Eat it outdoors with the locals at no-fuss Fish on the Rocks in Hout Bay. Fish comes served with slap chips doused in vinegar and you’ll find the 25-minute drive from the city centre worth every bite. Book a historical walk in colourful Bo-kaap, an iconic area renowned for its commanding views over the city and its tight-knit, traditional Cape Malay community. The city’s numerous parks and Kirstenbosch National Botanical gardens are perfect for picnicking. For platters of the best Western Cape produce – think goat’s milk labneh, cumin-studded boerenkaas, chorizo, homemade pâtés, pickled South African peppadew peppers and spreads – head to Saucisse for supplies. The Saturday Neighbourgoods Market at the Old Biscuit Mill in Woodstock is a great place to pick up artisanal staples and vegetables if you’re self-catering (or food souvenir hunting). Many shoppers stay on for a street food brunch from one of its stalls, from steak sandwiches at Kitchen Cowboys to cultivated Saldanha Bay oysters from Mother Shuckers.

Where to stay: Boutique b&b Welgelegen is in prime position to mooch along trendy Kloof Street, that's bursting with coffee shops, restaurants and bars including quirky Kloof Street House. For a striking luxurious option, The Silo offers showstopping views from it's lofty spot occupying six-floors above the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa, plus a rooftop terrace and pool.

Doubles at The Silo from £848 per night, check availability at booking.com or mrandmrssmith.com

Cape Town South Africa, Table Mountain and tourists eat and drink under umbrellas on the waterfront

Athens – for a sunny European city break

During the winter months, Greece’s capital city offers plenty of blue sky days and mild temperatures. The lack of crowds means the Acropolis, and other ancient sites usually crammed with tourists, can be visited at a much more leisurely pace. Back down the hill in the city centre, walk through the cobbled streets with one of the many street food options – hearty gyros, crisp spanakopita and sweet, syrupy loukoumades. Grab a coffee to go from Samba Coffee Roasters and climb up Lycabettus Hill for magical orange-hued sunsets over the Acropolis, mountains and Aegean Sea. Duck into one of the city’s many tavernas (we loved no-menu cellar Diporto, deli-restaurant Karamanlidika and old-school fish spot Ouzeri Lesvos) for traditional Greek dishes such as homemade moussaka, fresh Greek salads and rice-stuffed vegetables, known as ‘gemista’.

Where to stay: Book one of the nine suites at intimate boutique hotel Monument to enjoy a made-to-order Greek breakfast on your private marble balcony with dazzling views of the Acropolis.

Suites from £227, check rates and availability at booking.com or mrandmrssmith.com

View of an ancient Greek street, Plaka district, Athens, Greece

Mexico – for winter wellness

Discover Mexico during the UK's winter months to make the most of sandy beaches, warm turquoise seas and vibrant cenotes. Graze a smorgasbord of street food in Mexico City; try chilli-chocolate mole poblano and pizza-like tlayudas in Oaxaca (Mexico’s culinary capital) and eat fresh-fish ceviche on the Yucatán. Carnival, Semana Santa and various feast days fall in UK winter season, so there are plenty of opportunities for food-fuelled festivities and social gatherings. Tacos are a way of life, and there’s nowhere this is more true than in Mexico City, where you can enjoy a variety for breakfast, lunch, dinner and at any time between.

Where to stay: Palmaïa, The House of AïA, offers a secluded sanctuary in Playa del Carmen, Mexico. With oceanfront suites, a jungle spa and five gourmet plant-based restaurants on-site, Palmaïa is truly a place to rest and rejuvenate in style. The all inclusive resort offers a daily schedule of activities from guided meditation to yoga, sound baths, full body workouts and even beachfront art classes. The approach to wellness is very personal so guests can decide how deeply they want to immerse themselves on any given day, whether that's reading a book by the water and grabbing a fresh vegan taco or waking up early for a sunrise yoga session, you get to decide.

Suites from £1.3k, check rates and availability at booking.com or thomascook.com

A basket of green peppers against a blue wall in Oaxaca Mexico

Tasmania – for waterfront festivities

The seasons are switched down under, so December and January celebrates Tasmania's “Taste of Summer” festival. It takes place on the waterfront in the dynamic capital of Hobart from 27 December to 6 January. Try the island’s abundance of oysters and celebrate the diverse cuisines available, from Vietnamese banh mi to Indonesian stuffed breads and Mexican street food. Tasmanian boutique vineyards will hold tastings alongside craft breweries, cider makers and whisky distilleries.

While you’re in town, hop around Hobart’s wine bars to try glasses of locally-grown riesling, chardonnay and cool-climate pinot noir, accompanied by Tasmanian cheeses. Follow the River Derwent up to The Agrarian Kitchen for a seasonal lunch or to take part in a field-to-fork cookery class. If you're staying for longer, take yourself on a self-guided tour through northern Tasmania’s Tasting Trail, strung together with artisan producers. Pick your own berries at The Berry Patch, tuck into hot smoked salmon from 41 Degrees South’s inland salmon ponds and treasure black truffles grown in the volcanic soil.

Where to stay: The glamorous design hotel MACq 01 on Hobart’s harbour has architectural pizzazz and an imaginative concept: each of the 114 rooms is named after an extraordinary character in Tasmania’s colourful history and guests can join complimentary door-to-door storytelling tours.

Doubles from £152, check rates and availability at booking.com or expedia.co.uk

Macq 01 Hotel and harbour Hobart Tasmania

Cyprus – for a diverse culinary escape

Often cited as one of Europe's best winter sun destinations, the Mediterranean island of Cyprus enjoys a hot climate for most of the year, and its position makes it a cultural and culinary melting pot. The impact of Turkish and Greek gastronomy is undeniable but it has its own distinct repertoire of recipes influenced by Eastern cuisines. The ingredients used in many Cypriot dishes can be traced back to Arabic and Asian cooking where spices such as sweet cinnamon, aniseed and cumin, and fresh produce such as jute mallow, okra and taro root provide the backbone to some of its unique dishes. The island boasts a coastline that delivers an abundance of fish and seafood, such as sea bass, bream and octopus. Home-grown produce includes wild asparagus, white courgettes and black-eyed beans. Bitter oranges and bergamots are preserved whole in jams, and citrus fruits are made into cordials (limonata), with the thickly sliced zests, along with walnuts and watermelon rinds made into spoon sweets (macun).

Read Meliz Burg's guide to Cypriot cuisine here.

People sitting at an outdoors cafe in Omodos village, Limassol District

New Orleans – for vibrant carnival vibes

Enjoy winter sun with a lively twist. New Orleans’ Mardi Gras carnival falls on March 4 in 2025, so visit the city to soak up the atmospheric anticipation in the air. While you’re there, tuck into Louisiana specialities at traditional haunts such as The Parkway Tavern for shrimp po’ boys, Willie Mae’s crispy fried chicken and Café du Monde’s sugar-coated beignets. For a break from the action, explore the grandeur of the quieter Garden District before a jazz and bloody mary-fuelled brunch of shrimp and grits, waffles or gumbo of the day at Atchafalaya. Just outside the French Quarter, the backyard party held each night at Bacchanal makes for one of the city’s great romantic spots. Enjoy wines from small producers and bowls of ceviche while listening to jazz under the night sky.

Where to stay: Stay at Catahoula Hotel and catch carnival sounds from the street below at the rooftop pisco sour bar.

Doubles from £92, check rates and availability at booking.com

New Orleans - Scene with jazz music in a big square

Zanzibar – for ultimate relaxation

Head to Zanibar for winter sun. Stone Town (the pretty old town area of the island’s capital, Zanzibar City) is worth exploring before you begin some holiday relaxation. Pop to Puzzle Coffee Shop for cold-brew coffees made with Tanzanian beans and Lukmaan restaurant for freshly grilled kingfish with a side of banana. 1001 Organic is a must-visit, a social enterprise working with 26 small-scale farmers in the forests of Pemba (the second largest island in the Zanzibar Archipelago) who then sell the spices in their small shop. Smell and taste before you buy, from sweet cinnamon, ginger-infused salt and floral black pepper.

Where to stay: Swim laps of the infinity pool, sip ginger lassis on the private beach and soak up calm vibes in the spice garden at Zuri, a luxury Zanzibar resort two hours from the capital. Zuri is a tranquil 55-bedroom beachside resort with a sustainable ethos and stylish design.

Guest rooms – suites, bungalows and villas – are scattered between cottages in a series of spice ‘villages’ dotted around the leafy 32-acre resort and connected by a network of pebbled paths. As you wind your way between cottage and beach you’ll find little alcoves to relax in, shaded by baobab trees and with just the swish of palm trees for company. A private sandy beach, strung with hammocks, is licked by the emerald waves of the Indian Ocean. Or, if you’d rather get active, do laps of the infinity pool, or push-ups at the outdoor jungle gym. Whether you’re in a bungalow, suite or villa you’re guaranteed luxury. An indoor-outdoor approach gives a real sense of outdoor living with private plant-shaded terraces and open-air showers. When it’s time to sleep, however, modern luxuries come into play. Not least the Evening Breeze system built into each bed, offering cold, cool and fresh temperatures that you can control with a remote.

Choose from three restaurants dotted around the resort, from beach bar Bahari to the main restaurant Ubudo. At breakfast, help yourself to bowls brimming with fresh-from-the-tree mango and passion fruit, or the dozen or so homemade varieties, made with local fruits, on the jam station (try tangy pineapple on slices of Madeira cake or sweet, sticky date on squidgy banana bread).

Bungalows from £760 per night, check availability at booking.com or mrandmrssmith.com

A bright blue infinity pool is surrounded by lush greenery

Images: Getty, Bob Thomas/Popperfoto via Getty Images, Hiran Thabrew, Peter Titmuss/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images, Fitopardo via Getty Images, MACq 01 hotel, Kirillm via Getty Images, Atlantide Phototravel via Getty Images

Advertisement

Words: Alex Crossley, Tracey Raye, Meliz Burg, Lucy Gillmore

Authors

Alex CrossleyDigital Editor

Comments, questions and tips

Choose the type of message you'd like to post

Choose the type of message you'd like to post
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement