Tag Archives: arequipa

Our best of Peru

Most amazing train ride: Front seat on the train to the Sacred Valley. (on the way home, there was a fashion show on the train…)

Most dazzling monastery: Santa Catalina, Arequipa limaarequipaconvent.jpg

Best old world/Inca village with most intense cobble stoned lanes: Ollantaytambo 

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Most bizarre landscape: the salt pans of Salinas and terraced circles of Moray

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Best religious site with skulls and boxes of (human) bones: San Francisco Monasterio in Lima

Best church: That’s a tough one, in Cusco – the Cathedral and the Iglesia de Compania de Jesus and the church in San Blas. or the Iglesia de la Compagnia in Arequipa.

The Cathedral in Arequipa

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Best market: Also a hard call. Pisac, Arequipa (below) and Cusco are strong contenders

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Best folk art: Artesanias Las Pallas in Lima’s Barranco neighborhood

Best contemporary crafts gallery: Dedalo in Lima’s Barranco neighborhood

Best quality Andean Textiles: Centro de Textiles Tradicionales del Cuzco, on Av. El Sol or Shop of the Weavers of the Southern Andes on Tullumayo in Cusco.

Best hidden museum: Museo de Arte Popular, Cusco

Most spectacular site/ruins: Machu Picchu, hands down

Grandest plaza: Toss up between Cusco and Arequipa

Best service at a hotel: Apu Lodge, Ollantaytambo 

Best art at a hotel: Second Home Peru, in Lima (below)

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Most ancient-feeling hotel: La Casa de Melgar, Arequipa

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Best hotel to bring earplugs: Ninos Hotel in Cusco, lovely courtyard but carries sound especially people wandering through at 5:30 a.m.

Best sight for sore eyes: Our son.

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Monasterio Santa Catalina in Arequipa

Wow! We were blown away by this sprawling, spectacular 16th century monastery. Talk about a visual feast. One beautiful sight after another. The monastery is sort of a self contained mini walled in city with one vaulted “cell” after another for the cloistered nuns, who as I understand it were usually girls from well to do families who lived much better than your everyday nun. Their quarters were often spacious and the thick stone vaulted walls painted in startling hues of red, blue, ochre, and burnt orange. They had their own kitchens and servant quarters. Granted the beds looked a bit spartan. They also had gorgeous cloisters to gather, with painted murals every where and flowers and cactus plants. There were narrow brick or tiled lanes bordered by stone residences. I don’t know how true to life the restoration was but seemed pretty nice. I got some decorating ideas, including some fabulous wall color ideas. of course it will be hard in Iowa to replicate the
monastery’s view from on high of a snow capped volcano.

As my husband noted, some museums grab me more than others. Grand cathedrals and museums full of old paintings tend to bore me quickly.But give me an old house or monastery where I can wander through the rooms and see how people live and I am wide awake. I also love folk art and the kind of melodramatic Spanish art thAt filled the monasterio. There was also a very cool video in a side gallery of contemporary Andean male dancers doing some crazy moves while holding onto a pair of what looked like very sharp scissors. MUST read up on that.

At the public mercado (you knew I would find that right?) we marveled at the astonishing selection of potatoes (Peru is the home of the potato) and produce. Our stomaches are a bit iffy today so we ate lightly. Although we did get a little paper cone with five Dulces (sweets) …tiny crispy cones filled with creamy caramel. Here are some photos of our hotel and the monastery.

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Exploring lima with Noah

Several highlights yesterday including sunshine for the first time in two days. As our son said, when the sun shines it feels like you are in the tropics. All the colors are suddenly vivid. We wandered around Barranco for awhile, spending time and money in a fantastic folk art gallery run by a woman originally from Wales. Her pretty old house is packed with weavings, ceramics, textiles, silver jewelry, sculpture from all over Peru. (I will unearth the card to duly record the name of the shop.)

Next stop, our son’s college campus Pontifica Catholica Universidad (sp?) a very modern campus of concrete high rises, where we sat in briefly on Prof. Diaz’s class on Peruvian culture, not that we could understand much, due to our feeble Spanish comprehension. Another crazed taxi ride got us to the grand colonial section downtown where we had a ham sandwich in a famous old place El Cordano with scuffed floors, worn wooden counters, lots of old photos. Tourists occasionally popped their heads in to take pictures. It is that kind of place. Catacombs full of boxes of skulls and femurs and arm bones was the takeaway memory from our tour of the amazing Monisterio de San Francisco, which also had a fantastic old library, moorish vaulted architecture with miles from Seville, Spain. Well worth a visit. The cathedral de Lima was also impressive. Then it was time for a pisco sour, the Peruvian cocktail, which we had at the Hotel Bolivar patio overlooking the crazy evening traffic in Plaza San Martin.

Dinner was a splurge to celebrate our son’s 21st birthday (a little early) at the famous Astrid & Garçon. and yes, I did try their famous cuy, which I would have eaten more of if I didn’t know what it was (guinea pig). it was well disguised, unlike the whole deep-fried version served to our son awhile ago and photographed to frighten the relatives back home. This cuy was slices of meat with crispy skin that did indeed look and taste a bit like chicken. it was served with small blue corn pancakes, a hoisin-tasting sauce and a coleslaw type of garnish. Delicious. Other highlights, ceviche served three ways, suckling pork leg, a light delicately seasoned seafood soup, a carrot cake unlike any I have ever seen or tasted with long white meringue straws, pink foam, a mint ice cream, a dense rectangle of moist carrot cake. A work of art really. Very pricy but we did get a lot including two amuse bouchesand a tray full of little sweets (jellies, macaroons, truffles, warm caramel between two little discs of shortbread.) Reminded me of a fancy meal we had once in Burgundy. Only problem was we were too full to really enjoy.

Right now we are at the airport in Lima, having just learned that our flight to Arequipq is delayed an hour. This after we dutifully left for the airport 3 hours ahead of time. We were warned that the morning rush hour traffic would be bad, and so it was much of the time but our champion driver, from our hotel, the fabulous Second Home Peru got us here in 45 minutes, as promised. lots of long lines to wait in, so the 2 hour in-advance airport arrival was probably wise…except now we have another hour to wait..

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Best Peru restaurants and a Boston-led food tour of Peru!

Pachacamac.jpg the temple of Pachacamac

I met the head chef at Taranta, a wonderful Peruvian restaurant in Boston’s North End and he had lots of suggestions for our upcoming trip to Peru, in part because he leads what looks like  fantastic food tour of Peru. (for more info see: http://www.tarantarist.com/adventures/)

At his restaurant I had some Cusqueña beer (brewed near Cusco, I believe) which was excellent.

These are the restaurants he recommended (and I’ve made reservations at several!)

Lima:
– Mercado
– Central
– FIESTA
– Cala
– La Mar
– Las Brujas de Cachiche
– Malabar
– Astrid y Gaston
Cusco
– La Cicciolina
– Pacha Papa
– Limo
Ollantaytambo
– El Huacatay

– In Arequipa, we need to try these dishes: Rocoto Pelleno (stuffed red peppers made with a fiery hot pepper called rocoto – not the bland red bell pepper) and Chupe de Camarones (Shrimp and Potato Chowder.)

– In Cusco, he said we’ll receive coca leaves when we arrive on the plane and should use them right away to try to avoid altitude sickness. It’s a big no-no to spit out the leaf onto the ground but okay to spit it out discretely into your hand.

– In Urubamba in the Sacred Vally, at El Huacatay  restaurant he said we should say hi to the chef Pio who is his friend.

– He recommended the north of Peru including Trujillo area.

– A good day trip from Lima: the temple of Pachacamac, an archaeological site 40 km southeast of Lima, Peru in the Valley of the Lurín River. Wikipedia reports that most of the common buildings and temples were built c. 800-1450 CE, shortly before the arrival and conquest by the Inca Empire.

–  For info on Inca terracing (a farming method) he suggested looking up a National Geographic on the topic. The technology is called Borai (?)

– He also recommended a Peruvian restaurant in London – Lima London!

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