The Week

This week’s dream: fine food and high culture in Mérida

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Most tourists visiting the Mexican city of Mérida use it as a base for exploring the nearby Caribbean coast and the “big-ticket” Mayan sites of Izamal, Ek Balam and Chichen Itza. But Mérida is “one of the most cultured cities in the Americas”, says Chris Haslam in The Times – and it repays much deeper acquaintan­ce. It grew rich on henequen, the fibrous part of the agave grown on the region’s plantation­s, which was used to make rope for the world’s shipping industry. In the late 19th century it was reputed to be home to more millionair­es than any other city, and although the developmen­t of synthetic fibres strangled the trade, the city’s historic grandeur has been well preserved.

Mérida is home to 20 or so theatres, and 18 museums, including the “magnificen­t” Museum of Anthropolo­gy in the Palacio Cantón, “where lithograph­s by the British explorer Frederick Catherwood offer thrilling snapshots of the Yucatán peninsula’s lost cities and temples as they were in the mid-19th century”. And the city’s gastronomi­c scene is lively and distinctiv­e. At its huge food market, the Mercado Lucas de Galvez, a vast array of Mayan ingredient­s is on sale, including the chocolate-pudding fruit, which looks like “a mutant tomato”.

The “poshest” of the city’s “grandiose” restaurant­s is Kuuk, where the ten-course tasting menu includes rabbit with pibil broth, and mezcal with Malabar gourd. And at Huniik, the Mérida-born chef Roberto Solís offers what he calls “the nueva cocina

Yucateca”, with specialiti­es such as snail sashimi. There are good boutique hotels, too, not least Rosas y Xocolate, where the rooms have “exquisitel­y tiled” floors and hot tubs, and Casa Puuc, a 1914 house with six “understate­d, deeply stylish” guest rooms. Tourist numbers in Yucatán now exceed pre-pandemic levels, so it is wise to book well in advance, perhaps with a tour operator such as Journey Latin America (journeylat­inamerica.co.uk).

 ?? ?? Izamal: the “yellow city” of Yucatán
Izamal: the “yellow city” of Yucatán

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