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Market to Kitchen Dinner

Highlights

  • Delve into the world of Jaipur cuisine
  • Select ingredients at Jaipur's bustling markets
  • Eat with a local family in their kitchen
From £58 pp
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What you'll do

Throw yourself into the market life of Jaipur and learn everything about the authentic, local cuisine on this food tour that takes you from one essential institution to another. Understanding food is a huge part of truly understanding Indian culture, and this all-encompassing private tour will ensure you've fully experienced the Jaipur food scene as the locals do.

Indian markets are unlike any shopping experience in the world. On this tour we’ll pick you up from a prearranged meeting point and help you dive headfirst into the manically bustling Jaipur markets, bubbling with noise and energy. You’ll get a unique, authentic view of local life in Jaipur. You’ll see where the locals shop, socialise, eat, commute, in the whirl of chaotic energy that just seems to work.

Get ready to be overwhelmed by vivid colours, fragrant scents, and noise from determined hawkers, bargaining shoppers, honking buses. Then, under the direction of your local guide, throw yourself into the bustling lanes and the thick action.

Your guide will show you all the best spots to buy local, authentic components required to make a delicious home-cooked meal, steer you through the spice and vegetable markets for the best deals, the finest ingredients and the local’s secrets, and then lead you to the kitchen of a local family, so that you can transform your purchases into a stunning, authentic meal.

You’ll be shown the rich traditions of the art form that is Indian cooking. All the tips, the tricks and the best practices that the locals would use, as conversation flows and incredible smells waft through the kitchen. You’ll learn all about the heritage of Jaipur cuisine, about all its specialities and its most famous dishes, as well as the culture of the city in general.

Finally, you’ll be able to enjoy a mouth-watering meal, made from local ingredients, with a local family in a local kitchen, with the rest of the group. If this isn’t the most authentic way to enjoy Indian cuisine, we don’t know what is.

What's included

Included

  • Market visit & grocery
  • Indian cooking lesson
  • Lunch / dinner with the host
  • Souvenir
Your local host

Shailendra Singh

I’ve been in the travel industry for 18 years, and although I’m an economics graduate I was bitten by the travel bug and have led tour groups in many different parts of the world, from many different nationalities.

I’ve led tours across India and many different parts of the subcontinent, and in doing so have learned so much about India as a country and a destination. It also taught me a huge amount about how other nationalities feel about other countries, and all of this together has helped me in my current role in curating experiences that are truly memorable.

What inspired you to work in the travel industry?

My family used to take us on big vacations, exploring new areas almost every month and thi... Read All

I’ve been in the travel industry for 18 years, and although I’m an economics graduate I was bitten by the travel bug and have led tour groups in many different parts of the world, from many different nationalities.

I’ve led tours across India and many different parts of the subcontinent, and in doing so have learned so much about India as a country and a destination. It also taught me a huge amount about how other nationalities feel about other countries, and all of this together has helped me in my current role in curating experiences that are truly memorable.

What inspired you to work in the travel industry?

My family used to take us on big vacations, exploring new areas almost every month and this is what really got me bitten by the bug.

When seeing India you realise the diversity in culture, in cuisine and in people is just so huge, and the people are still very emotive and really value human emotions and human connections. It is this sense we endeavour to get across in our tours.

If you had to choose one, what would be your favourite place in India?

Of all the places I have been to if I had to choose a favourite place it would be Uttarakhand. A hill state in the Himalayas, there aren’t too many tourists and it has such a well-preserved culture, it is a piece of real India. Of course in the Himalayas, there are so many hikes and the scenery is so beautiful.

What makes HI Tours different?

Our tours are made different by the very fact that we have a real emphasis on experiencing a destination, rather than just seeing it, to the extent that we actually have a separate experience division.

We are very keen on sustainability and all our experiences have a focus on the right practices and social sustainability. Our ticket sizes aren’t huge, we’re more about bringing value to customers and communities rather than just about making money.

All our experiences are more about people rather than places, as this helps customers really connect and understand the place they’re visiting.

All this is reflected in Hi Tours as a company. We are medium-sized and family-run, and we focus on giving our business to smaller places, which not only gives our customers more authentic experiences but helps to give back to communities.

What do you love most about Delhi?

Delhi is a place with an amazing history, it’s the only city that has been established and raised to the ground seven times, so the version of Delhi you see today is actually in its 8th state! It is the gateway to all cultures in India, Hinduism, Islam, and this results in amazing vibrancy and amazing stories.

In many ways, it is a ‘mini-India’. It keeps evolving, it keeps bouncing back, it’s chaotic, but makes it through everything and just seems to work.

What are the ‘must-sees’? Where would you take a first-time visitor?

You have to see the obvious places, the Taj Mahal, Parliament Street, but the best ways to introduce a newcomer to India is by taking them on an experience where they really learn about the people and the culture of Delhi.

Having someone that can connect what you are seeing to the history of Delhi and how it has come about is so important. Seeing the other side to what normal tourists see really helps you get an idea of what a place its really like.

When you cycle round the back of the Taj, you see the people who live there and what they experience day-to-day. The inside view is so important to really experience a place.

What makes sustainable travel important to you?

It’s high time we make travel more sustainable. If people are going to travel, it has to be as sustainable as possible now. The idea of sustainable travel is not only for ecology but for communities also. Money can seep down to the lowest level, it’s a cycle and tourism can be used as a great tool for getting benefits to the poorest communities.

It’s also an opportunity for us as a business. We have been working with our partners for more than two decades now, so there is an understanding of mutual trust between us and the communities. People recognise the efforts we make to give back to the community, and that has helped us carve out a niche in Delhi of really authentic experiences.

Location

Pick up and drop off points will be arranged on a case by case basis.

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