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6 Trips Inspired by Your Favorite Authors

There are some authors that are forever tied to specific locations: Charles Dickens and London. Walt Whitman and Brooklyn. Ernest Hemingway and Cuba. And there’s no better way to pay tribute to these luminaries than by following in their footsteps—literally. Visit home towns, tour cities of inspiration, or walk the steps of fictional characters to breathe new life into these writers’ timeless words.

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John Steinbeck: Monterey, California

To capture a piece of John Steinbeck’s writing, head to California’s bayside town of Monterey. First stop: Cannery Row, formerly Ocean View Avenue, but renamed for Steinbeck’s 1945 novel. Then take a stroll down Main Street, noting buildings 201 and 247, which are featured in East of Eden. While in the area, take the 17-mile drive to Steinbeck’s birthplace, Salinas. Here you can visit the National Steinbeck Center, which houses first-edition books, interviews, and artifacts.

“Cannery Row in Monterey in California is a poem, a stink, a grating noise, a quality of light, a tone, a habit, a nostalgia, a dream.” —John Steinbeck, Cannery Row

Christopher Isherwood: Berlin

In 1930, novelist Christopher Isherwood settled into the Berlin neighborhood of Schöneberg. He immersed himself in the nightlife to write the novel Goodbye to Berlin, which was later adapted into the Tony Award-winning musical Cabaret. Although none of the bars from Isherwood’s era are still open, you can swing by retro cocktail bar Sally Bowles (named after his famous character) to get an idea of what he might have experienced. Isherwood would most likely still find comfort in today’s Berlin—a destination for creative, young people.

“Berlin is a skeleton which aches in the cold: it is my own skeleton aching.” —Christopher Isherwood, Goodbye to Berlin

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Mark Twain: Hannibal, Missouri

Mark Twain was able to tell the stories of the mighty Mississippi River and its people like no other author—no surprise, since he practically lived on the water for part of his life. As he wrote in Life on the Mississippi, “When I was a boy, there was but one permanent ambition among my comrades… to be a steam boatman,” and he eventually did serve as a steamboat pilot for two years in his twenties. A stop in the author’s hometown of Hannibal, Missouri will bring you to the Mark Twain Boyhood Home and Museum, and the Huckleberry Finn House, where the “real” Huck Finn (Tom Blankenship) grew up. From there you can take a steamboat tour on the river, and drive along Great River Road (a National Scenic Byway) which follows the river. Before leaving town, stop off at the Mark Twain Memorial Lighthouse for a panoramic view of both Hannibal and the great Mississippi.

Charles Dickens: London

Charles Dickens showed his affection for England’s capital by featuring the city in each of his novels. To fully immerse yourself in Dickens’s London, set off on foot, starting at the Charles Dickens Museum, his home-turned-museum where you can view a sampling of the 100,000-item collection that includes manuscripts, rare editions, and personal items. It was here that he completed The Pickwick Papers and wrote Oliver Twist and Nicholas Nickleby. Next set off for Marshalsea Prison, where Dickens’s father was imprisoned when Charles was a young boy—and the setting of Little Dorrit. Continue on to visit the Palace of Westminster, which appears in 14 novels. Your journey should now take you through Covent Garden, the main vegetable market in Dickensian London. Two plaques are dedicated to Dickens, the first marking the offices where he published his periodical All The Year Round, and the second where he worked as a child. Visit The Old Curiosity Shop, a 16th-century store constructed from the recycled wood of ships. Many consider the London landmark to be the inspiration for the novel The Old Curiosity Shop, with its crooked ceilings and uneven floorboards. Cap off your day by resting your feet at The George Inn, where Charles Dickens was a frequent visitor.

Walt Whitman: Brooklyn, New York

Walt Whitman spent time in Brooklyn throughout his life, including a stint as editor of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle from March 1846 until January 1848. Although the original Eagle building has long been torn down, a new building and plaque dedicated to Whitman now stands in its same spot in Brooklyn’s Dumbo neighborhood. During his time at the newspaper, Whitman was an avid supporter of Fort Greene Park, designed by the famed Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux (who also designed Central Park and Prospect Park). One of Whitman’s most famous poems, “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry,” was inspired by his travels between Manhattan and Brooklyn. Literature buffs should pay a visit to Brooklyn Bridge Park, featuring pier railings inscribed with lines from the poem.
“Cross from shore to shore, countless crowds of passengers! / Stand up, tall masts of Mannahatta! stand up, beautiful hills of Brooklyn!” —Walt Whitman, “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry”

Jon Krakauer: Alaska and Mount Everest

To fully understand Jon Krakauer and his sources of inspiration, it helps to have a sense of adventure. Take off for Alaska and visit the replica bus from the film adaptation of Into the Wild, found at 49th State Brewing. Just outside of Denali National Park, you will find endless trails for hiking and camping—but be safe, and report your location before going off alone, (learn from Chris McCandless, the subject of Into The Wild.) If that’s not enough thrill for you, you’ll need to put in plenty of training for the ultimate mountaineering expedition. Krakauer successfully climbed Mount Everest in 1996, and this would serve as his inspiration for Into Thin Air.

“It was titillating to brush up against the enigma of mortality, to steal a glimpse across its forbidden frontier. Climbing was a magnificent activity, I firmly believed, not in spite of the inherent perils, but precisely because of them.” —Jon Krakauer, Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mount Everest Disaster

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by MEG REINHARDT

Uncommonly elevated in Mexico City

Just because mezcal is served in a shot glass does not mean you should shoot it. Consider this a public service announcement from your correspondent, who has only himself to blame. True, I may have to rethink the intentions of a Mexican pal who watched me knock back shots of Oaxacan firewater last night as he took delicate hummingbird sips. At least, I tell myself, I did not eat the worm.

We had finished our feast at a no-name restaurant in the city center, my friend and I, stopping afterward at a bar specializing in the fermented agave liquor. Both of us were already happy by then, although not in the liquored-up sense.

It occurs to me now that my spirits are always uncommonly elevated in Mexico City, a place I began visiting with my family while still in my teens. Recently I have begun returning on a regular basis, drawn to this tumultuous and paradoxical city (it is also often tragic: after my most recent visit a powerful earthquake decimated swaths of it, leaving more than 200 dead) for reasons reducible to two elements: food and art. For a week in April, I set myself an ambitious program there of satisfying both belly and eye, alternating art consumption with meals at the dining spots where a generation of Mexican chefs is elbowing its way onto the global culinary scene.

I have an unusual advantage. Buzzy and overpopulated Mexico City may be, but during the days between Palm Sunday and Easter large numbers of its 22 million inhabitants decamp and the city hangs out a vacancy sign. As if at a stroke, the capital’s paralyzing traffic vanishes, the frenetic pace of street life slackens, hotel rates plummet. Suddenly, getting an 8:30 dinner reservation at hot restaurants is no big deal.

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For my initial night in town a hotelier friend suggests dinner at a spot exemplifying why the foodie press has flocked to Mexico City lately. With only seven tables, Sofia Garcia Osorio’s unnamed place (“What’s important is you and the experience, not the restaurant or me,” she says) can accommodate 28 diners at a time. Located on a sketchy side street near the Paseo de la Reforma—the broad avenue diagonally bisecting the city—this restaurant offers hopeful evidence that Mexico City’s faded center is making a much-touted and overdue comeback.

Despite its location between a defunct theater and a convenience store, Ms. Garcia Osorio’s place draws a stream of patrons from throughout the city. That many are unlikely to have set foot downtown before speaks to the contradictory nature of a city where wealth disparity often verges on the grotesque, the cheapness of human life colors daily existence with a hard brilliance, and the solemn beauty of a deep and ancient culture is largely obscured by the noisy soap opera of Mexico’s perennially corrupt politics.

As if in response to her country’s complexities, Garcia Osorio likes to keep things simple at her restaurant, turning out densely flavorful meals using the most basic of ingredients and means.

“Real food doesn’t need a lot of adornment,” she tells me by phone after my visit. “I don’t like menus that say, ‘Oh, this is a plate with blah-blah- blah.’ We try to leave out the explanation and let the flavor speak for itself.”

Cooking in cast-iron or clay comal pans and, where possible, without oil, Garcia Osorio renders subtle fare, like a moist organic saddle of rabbit in a smoky peanut mole, or a guacamole studded with nuggets of green tomato, frills of pipicha, and a mysterious ingredient that pops on the tongue like a piece of Freshen-up gum.
“What is that?” I ask my companion, as we duel for the dip with homemade tostadas.

“Oh, that?” he asks, nonchalantly shoveling in a bite. “Toasted grasshoppers.”

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Lalo – Mexico City

Class Insecta is, of course, the latest frontier of culinary exploration, and yet Mexican cuisine has exploited it for a millennium. Exactly how common and essential insects are to traditional cooking in this ancient capital becomes clear to me a few days after my inaugural meal, when I wake one groggy dawn at midweek to join the chef Eduardo “Lalo” García on a trip to the vast wholesale food market called La Merced.

Lalo – Mexico City

It was at La Merced that Lalo, whom many consider the best chef in the country, found his culinary purpose and soul. As a child of undocumented migrant workers, Lalo spent much of his childhood trailing his parents around the United States picking: citrus in Florida, Vidalia onions in Georgia, blueberries in Michigan, wild mushrooms on cold Pennsylvania nights. Finding stable work as a kitchen grunt in his teen years, Lalo’s work ethic and talent quickly attracted the attention of a series of mentors, who propelled him on an upward trajectory from dishwasher to busboy and eventually to garde-manger at Atlanta’s high-end Brasserie Le Coze.

Very likely he’d have remained in his adopted country had the United States government not sent him packing a decade or so ago. Deported to Mexico, he settled in the capital, working for several years before opening, first, the casual but refined Máximo Bistrot Local, then the French-inflected Havre 77, and finally a lively breakfast spot called Lalo!, famous for its chilaquiles, a sure-fire hangover cure.

Now, in the chilly lightless morning, I wait outside Máximo Bistrot Local for Lalo to saunter down the street from his nearby apartment, unlock his beat-up sedan, and drive us through the dark to the city’s eastern perimeter and a place less like a market than like a far-off galaxy.

At La Merced vast sheds covering hundreds of acres are crammed with every imaginable foodstuff . Here you can find countless types of chili; an entire pigskin deep-fried in a drum; buckets of grasshoppers sorted and alive or toasted and priced according to terroir. As many varieties of foods as there are at La Merced, there are at least that many overlapping realities. Nopal vendors, for instance, occupy a sector also favored by round-the-clock prostitutes. Shaving spines off cactus with the speed of magicians, the merchants stack the paddles, resembling lazy green tongues, into piles. Guys specializing in wild foraging reach under their tables as Lalo approaches, drawing out plastic-wrapped blister trays of mushrooms as furtively as if they were selling contraband and not chanterelles.

Fast-moving Lalo is easy to lose in the dim, crowded aisles, and so I trot behind him trying not to slosh the steaming café de olla he bought me all over myself. Processing through a lane seemingly upholstered with yellow squash blossoms, we arrive at an area where zucchini are piled high in baskets sorted by size. Each bears a hand-lettered sign raunchily advertising the seller’s wares. Later, in the car heading back to my hotel, Lalo and I debate which was choicest.
My favorite, I say, was a sign that read, in Spanish: how ya like my big one, sluts? Lalo, thoughtful, pauses and says: “I kind of liked the one that said, sit on this!”

Back by seven o’clock, I grab a catnap and a bite of breakfast before trekking the short distance through Chapultepec Park to the Museo Nacional de Antropología in time to be there before its doors are unlocked. Said to be the most visited museum in Mexico, this monumental structure opened in 1964 and was designed by a team led by the architect Pedro Ramírez Vázquez. It is certainly the most visited by me. No matter how often I experience it, the freshness of Vázquez’s conception never stales: Its regionally organized collections are displayed in themed exhibition halls, which surround an open-air courtyard shaded by an immense concrete umbrella fountain that rains down on the plaza and refreshes the air. Despite the hordes that reliably descend on the place, it is pretty easy to find an empty gallery—as I do today, bypassing halls dedicated to the death-obsessed Aztecs for another dedicated to the enigmatic peoples of Mexico’s eastern coast.
If little is known with certainty about the Olmecs, there is less still to ratify the origins of a small sculpture I’ve come to see, hardly more than a knick-knack compared with the colossal basalt heads that are the postcard of Olmec artistic achievement, and yet monumental despite its modest scale.

Dynamic, sexy, curiously depicted in a seated position, the sculpture was supposedly discovered in 1933 by a farmer near the Uxpanapa River in the state of Veracruz and is known as The Wrestler, though it might just as plausibly represent a ballplayer or a shaman or even a god.
That some skeptics insist it is a 20th-century fake improves my opinion of it, since like so much else in Mexican art and politics and literature and culture The Wrestler invites and equally resists interpretation. This truth in turn underscores a conclusion I arrived at long ago about this country: If you are not at home with paradox, Mexico is not the place for you.

Museo Jumex

Leaving the anthropology museum, I dart across the Paseo de la Reforma to another section of Chapultepec Park to tick off my next agenda item: the Museo de Arte Moderno’s “Monstruosismos” exhibit, which examines the prevalent duality of beauty and monstrosity in Mexican art. In a typical demonstration of Mexico City’s embarrassment of artistic riches, two other fine subsidiary exhibitions (on Sigmar Polke and Jean Arp) are running concurrently at the museum. I whip through the Polke and skip the Arp because I’ve got other stops to make—at the Museo Jumex ’s sawtooth David Chipperfield building; at a “contemporary art church” run by the creative art collective Biquini Wax; at the Museo Tamayo ’s installation of cloud paintings by the British artist Tacita Dean, works whose imagery was inspired by the skies over Los Angeles (a city that, it seems worth remembering, was once part of Mexico).

Museo- Tamayo

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Also, there is lunch.

During any other week the ride from my hotel in tony Polanco to the working-class Azcapotzalco neighborhood would take an hour. Now I’m whisked there in 20 minutes by one of the city’s cheap and plentiful Ubers, deposited in front of an unpromising squat storefront whose windows are covered with black-out shades.

Founded in 1957 by María Elena Lugo Zermeño, Nicos is a durable institution rediscovered in recent years by both local chefs and the ever-adventurous Japanese. Just over a decade ago its kitchen was taken over by the owner’s son Gerardo Vázquez Lugo, who, though he refreshed the menu to embrace Slow Food precepts, left largely unaltered the recipes of his mother’s solid and deeply traditional homemade fare.
The unfussy atmosphere of Nicos seems almost as time arrested. The white-shirted waiters are methodical and brisk, powering rolling carts to tableside, where they toss Caesar salads or sauté dishes like the one I’d come seeking—escamoles, or Aztec caviar.
These edible ant larvae, harvested from beneath the roots of the maguey cactus, have been considered a delicacy since pre-Hispanic times; references to them appear in the Florentine Codex, a compendious 16th-century ethnographic treatise on Mesoamerica by a Spanish Franciscan friar, who omitted mention of their crunchy texture and nutty flavor, a taste greatly magnified when escamoles are pan-fried in quantities of butter sufficient to stop your heart.
Paying up at the cashier, I summon another Uber for a quick dash to the historic center, my destination the 16th-century Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso.
This austere stone complex constructed by the Jesuits is often said to be the birthplace of the Mexican muralism movement. Yet it isn’t priests or painters I think of on my visit but a famous urbanist who once remarked of old buildings that what they need are new uses.

Repurposed in the 1990s as an arts and cultural center, San Ildefonso is a testament to that notion. And few places seem more conducive to the display of contemporary art than this structure, whose arcaded cloisters and bare vaulted chapels make it a particularly suitable backdrop for the German photographer Candida Höfer’s portraits of landmark buildings throughout Mexico, monumental images that strike me as almost more metaphysical than architectural depictions, portals to other worlds.

After an hour here I walk into the bright sun and make for the nearby zócalo and the city’s main cathedral, where bell ringers are chiming the hour. It is Maundy Thursday. After today, the city begins in earnest to pull down its shutters, a fact I accounted for in my planning by booking into a hotel that has elements about it of a museum gallery.

Camino Real Polanco México

Critics snipe that the Camino Real Polanco México has degenerated over the decades into a soulless convention and business-travel factory. And at over 700 rooms it is hard to discount this complaint. Yet, especially during Holy Week, this elegant resort hotel—designed in a Mexican vernacular style by Ricardo Legorreta and opened in time for the 1968 Olympics—again becomes the civilized oasis I remember from when I was young.
The excitement has hardly faded from those days of turning off Calzada General Mariano Escobedo and passing through an opening in a large magenta screen wall sculptured by the German-Mexican artist Mathias Goeritz, into a forecourt centering on Isamu Noguchi’s roiling “eternal movement” fountain. And while some of the important art commissioned when the Camino Real was first built was sold off when the hotel changed owners in 2000, a great deal remains.

Camino Real Polanco México

Gone is Alexander Calder’s untitled abstract spider, auctioned at Christie’s New York for $5,831,500 in 2003. But Rufino Tamayo’s wall-size mural Man Facing Infinity remains, as do Goeritz’s masterful Abstract in Gold and Pedro Friedeberg’s wackadoodle 16 Riddles of a Hindu Astronaut.
Freed from any further ambitions, I spend my penultimate day in the city reading on the balcony of a suite overlooking the pool and walled garden, my only venture off property being lunch at a restaurant I’d never have gotten into at any other time.

Pujol Restaurant – Mexico City

The place is Pujol, of course, the most celebrated restaurant in Mexico City, and newly reopened on a residential side street in nearby Polanco. It was almost a year ago that the chef, Enrique Olvera, abruptly shuttered its predecessor after 17 years, deciding the time had come for a shift in philosophy and change of address.

The white-tablecloth primness of the old Pujol had come to feel out of step for a chef who wanted a new canvas for presenting what the New York Times termed his “playfully elevated street food.” “I realized with Cosme that I like restaurants that are fun,’’ Mr. Olvera said, referring to his popular spot in New York’s Flatiron District. To that end he commissioned the architect Javier Sánchez to design an airy and low-slung bungalow and set it behind a perimeter fence and garden. If Sánchez’s mellow design evokes Southern California as much as it refers to the complex city that surrounds it, the kitchen leaves no question as to where you are.

Pujol Restaurant – Mexico City

Food at Pujol is prepared in a kitchen with no burners or sauté pans, most dishes seared on a wood grill and finished in an oven to preserve the familiarly Mexican savor of smoke. Tortillas are toasted on a comal. A brick oven pit is used for slow-cooked preparations, like the fork-tender lamb barbacoa served as part of a course on what Mr. Olvera terms a taco omakase menu.

Taking my place alongside some regulars at an 11-seat counter, I sit back for a meal that arrives— sushi-bar style—in successive courses, with dishes presented so briskly I barely manage to scratch out notes on what I’ve been served.

There is a Lilliputian ear of corn slathered in coffee mayonnaise and dusted with powdered chicatana ants. There are infladitas, pulled corn tortillas with caviar and crème fraîche. There is a mini-tlayuda, or Oaxacan masa cake served with refritos, white Oaxacan cheese, and herbs. There is a taco of raw sea bass on a corn tortilla drizzled with a puree of cilantro, jalapeño, ginger, and xpelon beans. There are tacos of pork belly, of waygu beef, of barbecued lamb.

“I recommend you take a little taste of every sauce first to see how much you can handle,” says a friendly server whose elaborate mane of dreads is caught up in a bright bandanna. Along the same lines, she improvises a drink pairing for each course, beginning with a can of Tecate served with a wedge of lime.

The meal ranges on for hours, and the drinks keep coming: a Chenin blanc, a xoconoxtle margarita, a tamarind agua fresca garnished with a salt of ground maguey worms, a garnet Palo Cortado sherry, and a red wine whose label I forget.
I am wiser by now and limit myself to judicious sips. When offered a generous pour of a 12-year-old mezcal by the server, I mention my recent firewater mishap and ask for the check.

“Mezcal,” I say as I pay up, “is a mistake you only make once.”

GUY TREBAY

The philosophy in Norway seems to be: If you must build something, build it with style.

Stigrøra (top of Trollstigen) and the architecture of the facilities for visitors are spectacular. The philosophy in Norway seems to be: If you must build something, build it with style. And Lindås
and Watery sunset in this small village in Nordhordland district in Hordaland counts as a watery morning

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Los Jameos Del Agua – Punta De Mujeres, Spain

Los Jameos Del Agua on Lanzarote found a champion in locally born architect, César Manrique.

Manrique was a dedicated protector and champion of the unique geology of the island and lobbied successfully for strict building regulations to protect it from those horrible high rises that blight so many warm weather destinations in Europe.

Consequently, the vast majority of buildings on the island are tasteful low-slung whitewashed structures which create a great contrast with the surrounding environment. That along with a famous Grand Canaria #architect Fernando Navarro, who built this three story family home in the centre of Las Palmas in the 1800s.

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The Azores may be reminiscent of the British Isles but the architecture is all #Portugal.

The landscape of the Azores may be reminiscent of the British Isles but the architecture is all #Portugal.

Though they’re sparsely populated and feel quite remote and isolated feeling, the islands are actually only two hours by plane from mainland Portugal and four from the east coast of USA. Years ago flights between #Barbados and the UK had to stop here to refuel.

Vila Franca do Campo, Azores and Nordeste, Azores

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Man Sues Airline for Serving Sparkling Wine Instead of Champagne

There are frivolous lawsuits, and then there’s this. Earlier this year, a Quebec man named Daniel Macduff booked an outgoing flight to Cuba on Canadian airline Sunwing. As part of its package, Sunwing promised a complimentary on-board Champagne toast, per the BBC. Like any good connoisseur of bubbly, Daniel Macduff knows that for a sparkling wine to be labeled “Champagne,” it must be produced in Champagne, France. But Champagne from Champagne Daniel Macduff did not receive. Instead, he was served a “sparkling wine” of more humble origins that could not, in good faith, be called Champagne.
And so, he sued.

The class-action lawsuit now has the support of around 1,600 other presumably outraged Champagne purists, who have signed on as potential plaintiffs, the National Post reports. According to the paper, Macduff’s lawyer says the suit is less about the discernible differences in terroir of Champagne versus that of its impostors than it is about false advertising.
“You have to go beyond the pettiness of the [wine cost] per head,” he said Tuesday, according to the Post. “What’s important is you’re trying to lure consumers by marketing something, and you’re not giving them that something… It’s a dishonest practice.”

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How to Tip in 25 Countries Around the World

There are 196 countries in the world and they all have different tipping practices. Should you leave your spare change? Tack on 20 percent? Leave a few Euros on the table? Gratuities around the globe can be a real head-scratcher. Don’t wait until you’ve already ordered and plowed through your tapas in Madrid or devoured your flat white and lamington in Sydney to figure out whether or not you should leave a tip. Instead, do a little pre-mealtime research—this guide can help.

A good rule of thumb no matter where you are is to try and pay your tip in cash. When you tip on your credit card, that kindly server who didn’t charge you the split plate fee, may not see all of your generous tip. Plus, some restaurants may not be equipped to accept gratuities via credit cards. Instead, hand a cash tip directly to the server. Also, be sure to tip in the currency of the country you are visiting. Dollars may be worth more, but they aren’t necessarily a server’s currency of choice.

Here’s a handy guide to tipping etiquette by country according to Trip Advisor’s 25 most popular places in the world.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
After you’ve cleaned the last dot of chimichurri off of your plate, ordered the dulce de leche, and asked for the check, remember that it is customary to add a 10-15 percent tip, according to Trip Advisor. Gratuities should be made in cash whenever possible.

Sydney, Australia
Wait staff in Australia are paid a livable wage, so they don’t need customers to prop up their paychecks. That means, they don’t expect tips, but according to Australia’s Traveller site, you can if you want to. If you receive excellent service, there’s no harm in rounding up the bill or leaving a few extra dollars. Same goes for taxis: Tips are not expected, but always appreciated.

Prague, Czech Republic
If you’ve just finished your coffee and cake at Café Slav or polished off your sandwich at Grand Café Orient, according to Prague’s national travel site, your next step should always be to check the bill to see if service was included. If not, tip between 10 and 15 percent. Tips are not expected, but are becoming standard—especially in tourist areas. In taxis, there’s no need to tip on a flat fare that was agreed upon in advance. Otherwise, round up or add 10 percent to the bill.

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Dubai, UAE
Before you pay the bill in Dubai, check to see if service charge has been added. According to Business Insider, a 10 percent service charge is typical at hotels, restaurants, and bars.

Paris, France
As anyone who studied high school French knows, the words “service compris” mean that service is included. That phrase appears on most restaurant bills in France, meaning you don’t need to tip. However, most people leave change or round up a little on the bill. As any French 101 student can also tell you, the French word for “tip” is “pourboire,” which literally translates to “to have a drink.” As The Guardian points out, French waiters are paid a minimal wage and your tips let them have money for a few glasses of Pernod or vin blanc.

Rome, Italy
Tips are not expected in Italy, but are seen as magna and who doesn’t want to seem generous? Typically leave a few Euros on the table, but not more than 10 percent of the total. Before you tip, though, scan the bill to see if the restaurant has already charged you for service typically listed as “coperto,” or a cover charge, which is common in restaurants in tourist areas, according to The Guardian.

Tokyo, Japan
For the most part, the Japanese keep it simple—don’t tip whether you’re at a restaurant, bar, or ramen shop. Good service is simply part of Japanese life. That said, according to Rocket News 24, there is an alternate (and somewhat complicated) tipping system in Japan that involves some advanced level protocol where staff at ryokens are given a small sum in advance of service. Try at your own risk!

Marrakech, Morocco
The streets of Marrakech are filled with restaurants offering steaming pastillas, bowls of b’ssara, delicate briouate, and the little deep fried potato balls known as makouda. Try them all and when you pay the bill, tack on an additional 5-10 percent to your restaurant bill to give your servers, according to Business Insider. They also mention that hotel porters should get $1 a bag and to round up the fare for taxi drivers.

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Playa del Carmen, Mexico
Whether you want to blame NAFTA or tourists, when it comes to tipping, Mexico has fallen under the sway of the U.S. It’s now customary to leave about 10-15 percent of the bill at restaurants. At bars and casual road side taco stands, you can get away with less, but as Thrillist notes, it’s worth keeping in mind that the minimum wage is under $5/day, so it can’t hurt to be generous.

Related: Playa del Carmen Travel Guide

Barcelona, Spain
Service is typically included in restaurant bills in Spain, and there’s no need to leave an additional tip. However, if the service is particularly good or you’re feeling generous, add 10 percent to the bill in a high-end establishment, or simply leave your change or round up to the nearest Euro in more casual spots. In bars, there’s no need to tip at all.

Cape Town, South Africa
Like in much of the world, diners taking advantage of Cape Town’s vibrant food scene typically add a 10-15 percent tip to their restaurant bills. According to South Africa’s national website, hotel porters usually receive R10 to R20 per bag (that averages to about $1 a bag) and it’s customary to round-up the fare for taxi drivers.

Bangkok, Thailand
It’s not necessary to tip in restaurants Thailand, however like in much of the world, it’s customary to leave a few baht on the table. That said, tips are always appreciated and happily accepted. According to Trip Advisor, give a few baht to porters and round up the fare in taxis.

London, United Kingdom
After a meal in England, Scotland, Wales, or Ireland, the first order of business is to inspect the bill to see if service has already been included. If not, add between 10 and 15 percent to the bill (or more if the service is particularly good) according to The Guardian. There’s no need to tip in pubs, though, so if you are feeling skint, as the Brits say, stick to picking up lunch in a bar.

Hong Kong, China
Tipping has never been part of life in China. Whether you’re eating fried buns from a street vendor in Shanghai or dining in style at Heritage in Beijing’s Wanda Plaza, tipping is simply not necessary. However, as NPR notes, there is a quirky new tipping trend taking hold at hip restaurants that might mean gratuities are in China’s future.

Lisbon, Portugal
Lisbon Guide says that guest should tip around five percent at coffee shops and 10 percent in restaurants, basically leaving more when there has been more service. (So, if you’re dining at Lisbon standouts Belcanto or A Travessa, tip on the higher end of the scale.) If you’re in a tourist-heavy area, check the bill to see if service has already been added. No need to tip cab drivers, but it’s always appreciated if you round up the fare.

Hanoi, Vietnam
Whether you’ve just polished off a plate of housemade tofu at Cuc Gach Quan in Ho Chi Minh City or grabbing a cup of coffee at Hanoi’s Café Nang, be prepared to tip. Leave five to 10 percent on your restaurant bill, according to Business Insider. There’s no need to tip hotel porters or taxi drivers, but feel free to leave change.

Istanbul, Turkey
Tips (or bahşiş in Turkish) are not necessary in inexpensive establishments around Istanbul, but they are always appreciated. In higher end spots or restaurants in tourist-heavy areas like Sultanahmet (the Old City), tips of about 10 or 15 percent are expected. Turkey Travel Planner warns that you usually cannot include the tip on a credit card charge. Instead, hand your server their tip in cash (Turkish lira, not American dollars).

New York City
While New York City feels like a world unto itself, it’s (still) part of the United States. That means that whether you’re dining at a Thai restaurant in Queens, an Italian joint in Staten Island, eating Pakistani food in Hell’s Kitchen, or downing Hong Kong-style dumplings in Chinatown, you’ll still need to tip 15-20 percent on your bill, as per custom. As for taxi drivers, the new credit card payment systems in cabs make it hard to pay less than 15 percent.

Budapest, Hungary
Like much of the world, it’s typical to tack on 10-15 percent to your bill for good service. Restaurants in busy areas of the city tend to include service on their bills, though, so it’s always worth checking. According to Visit Budapest’s website, it’s recommended to tip both gas station attendants and public washroom attendants between 100-200 Forint, which is equivalent to 33-66 U.S. cents.

St. Petersburg, Russia
Tipping in Russia has always been optional, but appreciated. As the country becomes more Westernized, it’s slowly becoming more expected, at least according to the Moscow Times. Most people leave a 10 to 15 percent tip at sit-down restaurants, while coffee or a quick sandwich at a café might merit rounding up the bill. Remember that all tips must be in cash, as credit cards aren’t set up to include tips.

Kathmandu, Nepal
As more visitors make their way to Nepal, tipping has become more common. According to Visit Nepal, tips “should only reward good work” and visitors are encouraged to skip the tip with in-town taxi drivers and “any service person you’ve bargained with.” As for restaurants, it’s worth checking to see if the restaurant has included a 10 percent service fee in the bill. If not, Who To Tip recommends leaving 5-10 percent for good service.

Ubud, Indonesia
Tipping is not customary in Indonesia, but as visitors from around the world flock to the island-nation, tipping has become more common (but still not expected). Some restaurants include a 10 percent service charge on the bill, if not patrons can add 10 percent of their own. Taxi fare gets rounded up and porters get around $1 a bag, according to Business Insider.

Amsterdam, The Netherlands
In Amsterdam, there’s a law stating that restaurants must include a service charge in the price of the meal, which does away with all of this frustrating tipping politics. According to Amsterdam’s visitor site, most people leave a small tip (or fooi, in Dutch) of five or 10 percent for good service at a good restaurant, while snacks or coffees merit just a few coins on the table. Similarly, taxis include tips in their rates, but most people still round up.

Siem Reap, Cambodia
While tips of any size are always welcome, according to Tourism Cambodia, a dollar or two is the norm. That said, the website shares “no one will frown even if you don’t leave anything on the tray.”

Cuzco, Peru
In tourist-filled towns like Cuzco and big cities like Lima, tipping is becoming customary. According to the Only Peru Guide, it’s typical to add an extra 10-15 percent to a bill at a hotel bar like Sumaq Machu Picchu or at a high-end restaurant in Lima. You’re safe leaving a few Soles on the table at a mom and pop spot. That said, a few extra Soles can go a long way and make the difference for a struggling restaurant—if you can afford more, the tips will be truly appreciated.

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MELISSA LOCKER

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