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New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Butter, but Even Better
Welcome to the T List, a newsletter from the editors of T Magazine. Each week, we share things we're eating, wearing, listening to or coveting now. Sign up here to find us in your inbox every Wednesday, along with monthly travel and beauty guides, and the latest stories from our print issues. And you can always reach us at tmagazine@ Stay Here A Farm Hotel Opens on the Swedish Island of Gotland By Anton Nilsson On the southern tip of Gotland, a Swedish island in the Baltic Sea, a stylish new hotel is serving extravagant dinners made with local produce. Sibbjäns, which opened earlier this month, is an 1870s farm that was restored and expanded to accommodate nine modern hotel rooms and 13 more rustic farmstead quarters with shared bathrooms. New buildings were constructed using traditional methods to match the old structures: limestone was stacked by hand and beams were hewed by broadax. 'When the time came to lay the roof, almost a hundred people from the community came and helped thatch it with sedge harvested down by the sea,' says the Sibbjäns co-owner Jonas Nordlander. The hotel bar overlooks a natural pool, and guests can borrow bicycles to explore the surrounding wooded trails. The property's working farm provides most of the vegetables, herbs and meat used at the restaurant (a set menu might include ricotta and broad bean-filled agnolotti and grilled lamb with leeks). To Swedes, Gotland is known as a holiday destination, famous for its long stretches of beaches with limestone sea stacks, annual medieval festival and summertime party scene in the island's largest town, Visby. Others who've heard of the place might know it as the region in which director Ingmar Bergman lived, worked and died. (The smaller island of Fårö, located just off the northern end of Gotland, hosts an annual Bergman festival in his memory.) Visby, which is surrounded by a largely intact 13th-century defensive wall, is accessible by flight or ferry from the Swedish mainland. From there, Sibbjäns is about an hour's drive south. From about $280 a night, Eat Here Ari's, a New All-Day Restaurant in Berlin, Is Inspired by the American Diner By Gisela Williams While the Berlin-based Peruvian chef Arianna Plevisani was working at Olafur Eliasson's studio kitchen and the restaurant at the art-filled Château Royal hotel in Mitte, she was dreaming about founding her own place. Growing up in Lima with restaurateur parents, Plevisani attended an American school. 'I always coveted food like Doritos and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches I didn't get at home,' she says. She's channeled those cravings into Ari's, an American luncheonette with Peruvian influences that opened earlier this month in a former mechanics garage hidden in a back courtyard in Berlin's Kreuzkölln neighborhood. Inside, salmon-hued banquettes and red concrete floors brighten up the white-walled space. Highlights from Plevisani's menu include the spicy green goddess salad (an iceberg wedge drizzled with a creamy tarragon dressing and Plevisani's homemade crispy chili), as well as the Lima Kreuzburger, a smash burger served with ají amarillo sauce and shoestring fries. Among the drinks are a spicy mezcalita and, true to her diner inspiration, free refills of American-style brewed coffee. See This An Exhibition of South Asian Artists in Jaipur's City Palace By Sarah Khan Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
No Annual Fee? No Problem: Citi Now Lets More Cardholders Transfer ThankYou Points
Editorial Note: We earn a commission from partner links on Forbes Advisor. Commissions do not affect our editors' opinions or evaluations. Citi, a Forbes Advisor partner, just made a big move for travelers who want valuable travel perks without paying an annual fee. Now, holders of no-annual-fee Citi cards like the Citi Double Cash® Card * and Citi Strata℠ Card can transfer their ThankYou® Points to almost all of Citi's airline and hotel partners. This update gives you more options for flights and hotel stays without the annual cost of a premium travel card. Your weekly grocery hauls and Friday night dinners at your favorite spot can quietly build points toward your next getaway, thanks to these no-annual-fee cards. Earn 30,000 bonus Points after spending $1,000 in the first 3 months of account opening Credit Score ranges are based on FICO® credit scoring. This is just one scoring method and a credit card issuer may use another method when considering your application. These are provided as guidelines only and approval is not guaranteed. Credit cards often offer a points transfer system , allowing cardholders to transfer the rewards earned using their cards to airline frequent flyer or hotel loyalty programs. Citi's ThankYou Points program works the same way, letting users convert their rewards into various travel currencies. Before this change, your options to transfer ThankYou Points were limited if you had a no-annual-fee Citi card. You could only move points to a few partners— JetBlue TrueBlue , Wyndham Rewards and Choice Privileges Rewards . Even then, the transfer rates weren't favorable, and cardholders received less value per point in comparison to the transfer rates offered on Citi's premium travel cards. Now, no-annual-fee cardholders can transfer points to almost all of Citi's airline and hotel partners. The transfer rates still aren't as generous as the premium cards, but for the occasional traveler, it's a flexible redemption option made available for extra cost. As of writing, Citi's no-annual-fee cards, such as the Citi Double Cash® Card * and Citi Strata℠ Card, allow cardholders to transfer their points to the following airline and hotel partners: Airline Partners Aeromexico Rewards (1,000:700) Air France-KLM Flying Blue (1,000:700) Avianca Lifemiles (1,000:700) Cathay Pacific Asia Miles (1,000:700) Emirates Skywards (1,000:560) Etihad Airways Guest Rewards (1,000:700) EVA Air Infinity MileageLands (1,000:700) JetBlue TrueBlue: (1,000:700) Qantas Frequent Flyer (1,000:700) Qatar Airways Privilege Club (1,000:700) Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer (1,000:700) Thai Air Royal Orchid Plus (1,000:700) Turkish Airlines Miles&Smiles (1,000:700) Virgin Atlantic Flying Club (1,000:700) Hotel Partners Retail Partner Here's the deal: With no-annual-fee Citi credit cards , you get slightly less value when you transfer points to airlines or hotels than with the issuer's premium cards. For example, when transferring your ThankYou Points to programs like Cathay Pacific Asia Miles , Air France-KLM Flying Blue and Avianca LifeMiles , 1,000 ThankYou Points gets you 700 miles in the respective program if you hold a no-annual-fee Citi card. If you hold a premium card, the transfer rate is 1:1 for those same partners, meaning 1,000 ThankYou Points equals 1,000 miles when transferred to a partner. These are just three examples; The transfer rates vary depending on the partner you are transferring to. However, the transfer ratio is lower for no-annual-fee cardholders. This might sound like a bummer, but it's a tradeoff given you're not paying an annual fee. For casual travelers or those new to points and miles, it still offers more flexibility in using your points without an extra cost. If you want to maximize your ThankYou Points, a little strategy goes a long way. Before transferring, check that your preferred airline or hotel has award availability—once you move points, you can't get them back. If you have multiple Citi cards, you can pool your points to hit the amount you need for a specific redemption. And don't forget that transfer ratios differ depending on the card. If you travel often, a premium card might make more sense in the long run. Find the best travel credit card for your travel needs. Citi just opened the door for no-annual-fee cardholders to transfer points to more airlines and hotels. While the transfer rates aren't quite as strong as those offered by Citi's premium cards, having more redemption options means you've got a better shot at snagging solid travel deals. Whether planning a quick summer trip close to home or dreaming of a big international getaway, the expanded ThankYou Rewards program makes it easier to turn those plans into reality, without stretching your budget.

Condé Nast Traveler
2 hours ago
- Condé Nast Traveler
My Favorite Airbnb: A Panoramic Penthouse in a Medieval Tuscan Town
In a country with as much rich and easily accessible history as Italy, it can be hard to know where to start. Early this summer, my girlfriend and I planned a week-long Italian jaunt, beginning in Rome and winding our way up to Verona, with a stop in the medieval city of Siena to see the Palio—a famed, centuries-old biannual horse race. In search of a window into a different (less crowded) side of Italy's history, I took to perusing Airbnb listings in Pitigliano, a southern Tuscan town a Pisan friend had recommended. I stumbled across the Attico Panoramico Nell'antico Borgo—a panoramic penthouse in the ancient city. Lying halfway between Rome and Florence, this apartment was supposedly in one of the most beautiful spots in the region. Looking at photos had me giddy with excitement, but nothing could have prepared me for the sight that opened up before me as our tiny rented Fiat whipped around the hairpin turns of the Tuscan hills and Pitigliano came into view. While the archaeological record shows evidence of a pre-Roman Etruscan town on the same site, the current incarnation of Pitigliano has existed since around the 11th century, when it quickly rose to prominence as a regional cultural and political capital. Known as the 'Citta del Tufo' in reference to the ubiquitous volcanic tuff stone used in its construction, Pitigliano is perhaps the quintessential Tuscan hilltop town: a labyrinth of clifftop walls, towers, houses, and churches that could easily have been ripped from the background of a Bellini painting. After parking outside the city walls—no cars allowed in the centro storico—we traversed the ancient stone bridge that led to the old city, which is perched on top of a rocky outcropping (a strategic decision dating back to the days when the town regularly found itself at war with its neighbors). Despite (or perhaps because of) its imposing defensive exterior, the inside of the town is peaceful; its tiny size concealing a seemingly endless maze of winding alleys and idyllic squares, strewn with marble fountains, pots of flowers, and stray cats. The Airbnb's exterior Courtesy Airbnb The wooden staircase in the Airbnb Courtesy Airbnb After picking our way through the stone streets to the central Piazza della Repubblica, we spotted the ancient stone building we were to call home. Inside, under the huge beams of the gabled ceiling, the apartment seemed as labyrinthine and storied as the town itself, with each of its cozy rooms containing a treasure trove of tasteful, eclectic decor, from original oil paintings to Etruscan-style pottery. Small, quirky, and full of life, it's the kind of space that could easily feel cramped or cluttered if it weren't so thoughtfully designed at every turn. A wealth of south-facing windows filled the home with warm Tuscan sunlight, from the delightfully spacious king bedroom (there's also a charming daybed in the adjoining room that sleeps a third traveler) to the compact but attractive kitchen. As pleasant as the interiors were, we spent most of our time at the highlight of the penthouse: its two (two!) clay-tiled terraces. Stepping outside, I understood why they called it the 'panoramic penthouse', with views across the entire town and down into the forested ravine below.