
Travel The World With Food: These Brands Take You Away
Traveling through food is a topic I've written on before and something I'm especially passionate about. I can't always jump on a plane or get in my car to explore a new destination or revisit one I've already been to, but I can always experience it by sampling some of its local culinary delights.
I can 'travel' to far-flung locales worldwide, hop all over the U.S., and even stay closer to my New York home by experiencing small, independent brands in the Tri-State area.
My latest travel through food exploration has me going across the river to New Jersey, hitting the American South, Italy, Holland, California, and beyond. My tasty journey, which is satisfying in more ways than one, follows.
Supermarket Italy
An aged salami from Supermarket Italy.
Don't let the name fool you. Although Supermarket Italy sells the best of the best all things Italian- that means olive oils, hard to find candies and other sweets, sauces, pastas, and more- the site is treasure trove of culinary finds from all over the globe. You can find more than 6,000 products from France, Greece, and beyond.
Wrights of Howth
When I asked my Irish in-the-know friend Siobhan Byrne Learat, who lives in Dublin and runs the luxury travel company Adams & Butler, the best way for people to get a taste of Ireland, she immediately replied, 'Wrights of Howth.' The brand has been around since 1893 and became famous for its delicious organic, oak-smoked salmon. Today, Wrights of Howth has expanded its lineup to include a selection of the top Irish food brands presented in beautiful hampers. Yet, according to Siobhan, the smoked salmon is, hands down, the way to go.
La Tienda
La Tienda's Bestsellers Gift Box
Owned and run by Jonathan Harris, La Tienda brings Spanish food to life with its broad selection of products from around Spain. That means kits for everything you need to make paella, chorizos, Ibérico ham, traditional sweets like Turrón, made with Marcona almonds and wildflower honey, olive oils, sherry vinegars, cheeses, and a whole lot more! As the name suggests, the bestsellers box features the most popular of the bunch—a cheese flight, mini chorizos, serrano ham, olives, and even gazpacho.
Cheeses from FrieslandCampina
Based in Paramus, New Jersey, FrieslandCampina bills itself as the world's largest Gouda maker. The company is also one of the largest importers of speciality cheeses from all over the world. You can find their decadant cheeses at grocery stores around the country.
The company's new 12-month-aged gouda cheese.
The brand just debuted a variety called A Dutch Masterpiece Rembrandt 12-month PDO- a gouda made from Dutch milk- specfically from North Holland- and aged for a year. The flavor is distinct, with a hint of caramel. This hard cheese is a keeper.
Ivy's Reserve Salted Farmhouse Butter
If you ask me, there is no better indulgence than salted European butter. I'm partial to English dairy and recently discovered Ivy's Reserve. Created by Ivy Clothier in the 1930s, its made in small batches and delicious, creamy, smooth, and rich. A dab makes any dish and my morning toast that much butter. You can find it at Whole Foods or order it online. I suggest buying multiple blocks at a time.
Ivy's Reserve Salted Farmhouse Butter
Bang Cookies
An assortment of Bang Cookies bestsellers.
There are cookies, and then there are cookies from the Jersey City-based brand Bang. There's no junk in these ones- they're baked to order with organic ingredients and made with pure butter, eggs, and high-quality vanilla extract, nuts, and chocolates. You don't have to visit their stores to get your fix. The bakery ships anywhere in the country, and the only problem you're going to have is deciding what flavors to go with. Sea salt chocolate chip, triple chocolate, s'mores, and oatmeal raisin are just a few of the choices. I also love the cookie cakes for birthdays and other special occasions.
Nut Butters from Big Spoon Roasters
Find your way to the American South by trying the range of nut butters from Big Spoon Roasters. This small, independent brand from Hillsborough, North Carolina sources its nuts locally and handcrafts each batch to order.
Carrot Cake nut butter from Big Spoon Roasters.
Each flavor is better than the next- bourbon pecan peanut butter, chocolate sea salt almond butter, cashew butter with coconut nectar, and my favorite- the carrot cake almond and walnut butter, crafted with the highest quality nuts, maple syrup, cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice, and sea salt.
Enzo's Table Olive Oils
The Signature Selection from Enzo.
Get a taste of California's ever-growing olive oil scene by picking up the five-set sampler from Enzo. The Ricchiuti family owns this brand and looks to their farm in central California's San Joaquin Valley to grow the organic olives for its expressions. The set gives you a chance to sample a range, including the basil and clementine-infused varieties and the delicate and bold expressions. There's also a balsamic vinegar included, which is great in a salad dressing or to drizzle over mozzarella or strawberries.
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Travel + Leisure
15 minutes ago
- Travel + Leisure
This Is the Best Hiking City in the U.S.—and It's Not Denver or Portland
Cities aren't typically considered top destinations for hiking, but the best hikes aren't necessarily always in the backcountry. In fact, sometimes you can catch the most thrilling views from the densest of urban landscapes, and take in stunning landscapes and cityscapes at the same time. And a new report from the footwear commerce site SportsShoes set out to find out which cities were the best for hikers. For its report, SportsShoes analyzed hiking trail data from 180 of the most popular tourist cities in the world. It took into account the number of trails in each place, how popular they are, and the average reviews of each trail, using data from AllTrails. After evaluating all the numbers, one U.S. city beat out the domestic competition. With 119 hikes that are both highly popular and easily accessible, San Francisco, was named the top hiking city in the U.S. and the third best in the world—and it's no wonder. The Golden City has many can't-miss hikes, including the Dipsea Trail, Lands End Trail, and the Mount Sutro Loop. There are so many options in the city that, regardless of your skill and experience level, you'll be able to find a hike in San Francisco that suits your abilities. Plus, odds are, there will be a scenic view at the end. "From exploring Alcatraz Island to catching the sunrise over the Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco is packed with iconic sights," SportsShoes wrote in its report. "... The wilderness behind San Francisco's University Campus is touted as a stunning section of the city to explore, and the Golden Gate Park—the third most visited park in the U.S.—features tons of trails, as well as Botanical and Japanese Tea Gardens. According to All Trails, the top five hiking trails in San Francisco are the Lands End Trail, the San Francisco Crosstown Trail, Seal Rocks Beach, the California Coastal Trail, and the Batteries to Bluff Trail. The longest trail in the city is the Ferry Building to Mount Tamalpais Cycle Route, which is 59.5 miles long. Since San Francisco is so condensed, it's the perfect place to pair an outdoor adventure with the benefits of city living. You could follow up a hike with fine dining, a museum visit, or even take time to explore the Bay Area's unique neighborhoods, like the Mission District. But there are plenty of other great cities for outdoor adventure in the U.S. According to SportsShoes, other great destinations for hiking in the country include: Los Angeles, California Portland, Oregon Las Vegas, Nevada Nashville, Tennessee Seattle, Washington Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Washington D.C. Boston, Massachusetts


CNN
21 minutes ago
- CNN
Chase Sapphire Reserve is making big changes, including a $795 annual price hike
CNN Underscored reviews financial products based on their overall value. We may receive a commission through our affiliate partners if you apply and are approved for a product, but our reporting is always independent and objective. This may impact how links appear on this site. This site does not include all financial companies or all available financial offers. Terms apply to American Express benefits and offers. Enrollment may be required for select American Express benefits and offers. Visit to learn more. The Chase Sapphire Reserve® card, one of the most popular high-end travel rewards credit cards, is getting a makeover, and it will have a much higher annual fee to go with it. Chase just announced that, beginning June 23, 2025, cardholders will have to pay a fee of $795 per year instead of the current $550 annual fee. That's a 44.5% hike, vaulting the Sapphire Reserve ahead of the competing The Platinum Card® by American Express, which has an annual fee of $695. Cardholders will get a slew of new benefits for that increased annual fee, but one of the most attractive features of the Chase Sapphire Reserve is going away. The card will now earn just 1 point per dollar spent on general travel purchases, in exchange for higher earnings on flights and hotels. That change is sure to irk cardholders using the Sapphire Reserve as their go-to card for everyday travel expenses. Here's a look at what's changing and what's staying the same, as well as possible alternatives now that the hiked annual fee and changed earnings may make the Chase Sapphire Reserve less attractive to some. The annual fee hike goes into effect on June 23. If you apply for and are approved for the Chase Sapphire Reserve card before that date, you will be charged the current fee of $550. Existing cardholders will be charged the higher annual fee beginning Oct. 26, so if you already have the card and your anniversary date falls before that day, you will still pay the current, lower fee. The annual fee to add an authorized user is also going up on the same dates, from $75 to $195. That's an increase of 160%. Instead of earning 3x points per dollar on all travel expenses, the card will now earn up to 8x points on some travel categories, but only 1x on general travel, including mass transit, vacation bookings like Airbnb and cruises. The good news is that the Chase Sapphire Reserve card will now offer increased points earnings on flights booked through Chase Travel, as well as flights and hotels booked directly. Hotels booked through Chase Travel: Now earns 8x (previously 10x) Hotels booked directly: Now earns 4x (previously 3x), after using the $300 travel credit Flights booked through Chase Travel: Now earns 8x (previously 5x) Flights booked directly with airlines: Now earns 4x (previously 3x), after using the $300 travel credit Rental cars booked through Chase Travel: Now earns 8x (previously 10x) All other travel, including vacation rentals and mass transit: Now earns 1x (previously 3x) It will also continue to earn 3x on dining, 5x on eligible Lyft rides and 10x on eligible Peloton purchases. Like in its current incarnation, the revamped Sapphire Reserve offers credits that help offset the annual fee. In exchange for a much higher fee, there are a host of new credits. $500 annual statement credit for stays booked on The Edit, a collection of luxury hotels and resorts curated by Chase (split into two biannual credits of $250) $300 annual credit at Sapphire Reserve Exclusive Tables, which can be booked on OpenTable (split into two $150 biannual credits, activation required) $300 annually in monthly DoorDash promotions (a $5 restaurant promo and two $10 promos on everyday essentials each month, activation required by Dec. 31, 2027) $300 annual statement credit for concert and event tickets purchased on StubHub or Viagogo (split into two $150 biannual credits, activation required) $250 annual statement credit for Apple TV+ and Apple Music subscriptions (one-time activation per each service required, on or the Chase mobile app) $120 in annual Lyft credits, up to $10 monthly (through Sept. 30, 2027) $120 in annual statement credits toward Peloton memberships, $10 monthly (through Dec. 31, 2027) Complimentary DashPass membership with DoorDash, worth $120 (activation required, by Dec. 31, 2027) The $300 annual travel credit, applied automatically to all purchases in the travel category and resetting each year on the anniversary date, is unchanged. Unlike the travel credit, the new credits aren't applied automatically, and maximizing them requires some work on your part. They are also geared more toward lifestyle purchases rather than travel. That said, if you can utilize all of the credits to their maximum, that's the equivalent of more than $2,300, which would offset the annual fee by almost three times. A travel benefit that's being added to the Chase Sapphire Reserve is automatic Platinum elite status with IHG One Rewards, the loyalty program of hotel chain IHG, which includes brands such as Holiday Inn, Intercontinental and Crowne Plaza. Platinum is the second-highest of IHG's four elite levels and gets you, among other perks, 60% bonus points on IHG stays, a welcome amenity of points or a drink/snack, early check-in if available and guaranteed room availability within 72 hours. IHG Platinum status also includes Five Star status with Hertz, which would otherwise require spending $2,400 on car rentals in a year. Five Star status gets you complimentary one-car-class upgrades when available and 25% bonus points on all Hertz rentals. After spending $75,000 on the Chase Sapphire Reserve in a calendar year, cardholders will have access to the following additional perks: IHG One Rewards Diamond status, the highest elite level in the IHG One Rewards program Southwest Airlines A-List status $500 Southwest Airlines credit (when booked through Chase Travel) $250 credit for The Shops at Chase, an online shopping portal for cardmembers featuring brands such as Bang & Olufsen, Breitling, Cuisinart, Dyson, Ray-Ban, Samsonite, Sony and Tumi While these are attractive perks, the threshold to unlock them is very high. Some of the benefits that have made the Chase Sapphire Reserve one of the most popular travel cards at the high end of the credit-card market remain, including the benefits listed below. $100 application fee credit every four years for Global Entry, TSA PreCheck or Nexus (note that the application fee for Global Entry recently increased to $120) Access to Chase Sapphire Lounges at US airports with up to two guests and complimentary Priority Pass Select membership (activation required), allowing access to more than 1,200 airport lounges worldwide Trip cancellation/interruption insurance, trip delay reimbursement, lost luggage reimbursement, baggage delay insurance, rental car protection, travel accident insurance and emergency evacuation assistance for trips booked with the card The Chase Sapphire Reserve may not be the card for people who don't plan to use the numerous credits that can more offset the steep annual fee, which will be raised from $550 to $795 starting June 23. There are, however, other cards that offer travel benefits and could be an alternative. A less expensive choice within the Chase credit card ecosystem is the Chase Sapphire Preferred, with an annual fee of $95. For that much more palatable cost, the Preferred still earns 3x points on dining and 2x on all travel, making it more attractive for travel expenses that aren't flights, hotels or Lyft rides. The Capital One Venture X Rewards Credit Card, with an annual fee of $395, earns 10x on hotels and rental cars and 5x on flights booked through Capital One Travel. It also offers the same annual travel credit as the Chase Sapphire Reserve — $300 — when booking through Capital One. Crucially for many travelers, it also offers complimentary airline lounge access, both at Capital One's own airport lounges and Priority Pass lounges. And with an annual fee of $695, the American Express Platinum Card currently sits alongside the Chase Sapphire Reserve at the top of the market — and is suddenly the cheaper to hold of the two. It offers many similar benefits to the Sapphire Reserve, a slew of statement credits and access to the American Express Membership Rewards ecosystem of transferable points. It also earns 5x points for flights booked directly with airlines or with American Express Travel, up to $500,000 on these purchases per calendar year and earns 5x points on prepaid hotels booked with American Express Travel. It also has the most comprehensive lounge access, including Priority Pass lounges, American Express Centurion lounges and Delta Sky Club (when flying eligible Delta flights, subject to visit limits). The following FAQs have been answered by CNN Underscored senior money editor and credit card expert Alberto Riva. Is the annual fee for the Chase Sapphire Reserve card increasing? Is the annual fee for the Chase Sapphire Reserve card increasing? Yes, the annual fee is increasing from $550 to $795 on June 23, 2025. Will the Chase Sapphire Reserve card still have dining credits? Will the Chase Sapphire Reserve card still have dining credits? The Chase Sapphire Reserve card will continue to earn 3x on dining worldwide. Will the Chase Sapphire Reserve card have a $10 monthly Lyft credit? Will the Chase Sapphire Reserve card have a $10 monthly Lyft credit? Yes, the Chase Sapphire Reserve will have up to $120 in annual Lyft credits, up to $10 monthly (through Sept. 30, 2027). CNN Underscored's team of expert editors and contributors carefully reviews credit cards, travel rewards and loyalty programs to help readers navigate changes and make informed financial decisions. For this story on the Chase Sapphire Reserve updates, credit card expert Alberto Riva applied his years of industry knowledge to ensure every detail is accurate and actionable. Our recommendations are grounded in real-world value — not hype — and backed by thorough analysis, expert insight and a commitment to clarity and transparency. Editorial disclaimer: Opinions expressed here are the author's alone, not those of any bank, credit card issuer, hotel, airline, or other entity. This content has not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of the entities included within the post.


CNET
36 minutes ago
- CNET
JetBlue Is Slashing Flights and Cutting Costs. Here's What Travelers Should Know
JetBlue is tightening its belt: The airline on Tuesday announced a round of cost-cutting measures, including fewer routes and reduced spending. JetBlue says it's scaling back its flight schedule and reducing services to several US states and major metropolitan airports, such as John F. Kennedy International Airport. That means fewer options for travelers in and out of cities where the airline had been aggressively expanding, such as New York, Boston and Fort Lauderdale. The company is also trimming overhead by combining some leadership roles and slowing hiring as it looks to get back on firmer financial ground after a tough year marked by higher costs and a failed merger with Spirit Airlines. Just last month, JetBlue announced a partnership with United Airlines to strengthen its position in the market, enhance its loyalty program for travelers and expand its flight network. This is just one more step in JetBlue's plan to stay competitive as domestic travel slows down. JetBlue didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. Read more: Southwest Airlines Says You Can't Use Portable Chargers Inside Your Bags What this means for travelers So, what does this mean for you? If you've booked a JetBlue flight for later this year, or were hoping to score a last-minute deal, you may find fewer seats available or face longer layovers caused by reduced route frequency. JetBlue's popular Mint business class and no-frills Blue Basic fares aren't going away completely but travelers could see tighter availability and less flexibility as the airline prioritizes its most profitable routes. Since launching its JetForward turnaround plan last year, JetBlue has pulled out of 15 cities and cut more than 50 routes. Among the notable exits are major markets such as Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI), El Dorado International Airport (BOG) in Bogotá, Colombia, and Charlotte Douglas International Airport (CLT). JetBlue cut numerous routes in 2024, such as Los Angeles to Miami and New York/JFK to Detroit but it has also pulled out of the following airports entirely: Hollywood Burbank Airport (BUR) in California Palm Springs International Airport (PSP) in California Tallahassee International Airport (TLH) in Florida Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport (MSP) in Minnesota Charlotte Douglas International Airport (CLT) in North Carolina San Antonio International Airport (SAT) in Texas Pointe-à-Pitre International Airport (PTP) in Guadeloupe, France What JetBlue will cut next is not yet clear. The company says it's making these changes to stay competitive long term. But for everyday travelers, it could mean fewer nonstop options and a trickier time finding budget-friendly flights, especially during holiday seasons and peak travel windows. If you're flying JetBlue in the coming months, double-check your reservation details and keep an eye out for schedule changes. And if your go-to airport is one JetBlue is pulling back from, it may be time to start comparison shopping with other carriers. For more travel-related articles, explore these travel essentials you need for every vacation and then take a look at this travel checklist. You should also read about the new Real ID requirement for getting through airport security.