Travel
Be a Road Scholar this Summer
If you’re looking for a different kind of vacation this summer try becoming a Road Scholar.
Road Scholar has been offering educational experiences since 1975 and they’ve made connections with educators and other local “insiders” all around the world, creating learning opportunities that show you the world in a way that just can’t be done on your own or on a “tour.” Much more than a tour, it’s a learning adventure. Here are some of their most popular programs:
Cuba Today – Delve into the rich history and heritage of Cuba. In the heart of Havana and Cienfuegos, meet members of the local communities to discuss their lives and cultural traditions. Meet face-to-face with community leaders, local residents, artists, and intellectuals to discuss Cuba today and explore local landmarks that are significant to Cuba’s cultural heritage. Meet with members of a local musical group in Cienfuegos and learn about their careers as musicians.
450 Years of History (St Augustine, Florida) – Explore St. Augustine’s role in the shaping of America throughout 450 years. Examine the city’s rich tapestry through lectures by local experts and historians, live music, professional costumed re-enactments and expert-led field trips. Observe architecture of the Spanish, British and Venetian Renaissance periods. Journey from the pre-European era to the conquerors and the present.
A Tale of Two Cities (London and Paris)- Both historic capital cities boast world-class museums and instantly recognizable landmarks and buzz with commerce, politics, education and culture. But it’s what separates them that makes them most intriguing: the languages, the aesthetics, the food, the attitudes.
Compare these world-class cities for yourself on this journey that combines field trips led by top-notch Road Scholar experts and abundant time for independent discoveries.
Art & Entertainment
Museum Dining and the Cultural Experience
There was a time when eating at a museum meant grabbing a coffee, a wrapped sandwich, or a pastry before heading back into the galleries. It was convenient, but rarely memorable. The restaurant was the pause between the art, not part of the experience itself.
That is changing.
Across the world, museums and cultural institutions are rethinking what it means to spend time with art. Visitors are no longer being asked to simply look, leave, and move on. They are being invited to linger. To have dinner after the galleries close. To meet friends before a performance. To sit with a glass of wine, talk about what they have just seen, and let the experience extend beyond the walls of the exhibition.
In that shift, food is becoming more than an amenity. It is becoming part of the cultural programming.
The connection makes sense. A great museum visit asks people to slow down and notice. So does a great meal. Both rely on composition, memory, detail, and feeling. Both can be playful, serious, beautiful, surprising, or rooted in place. When they work together, the result can turn a simple afternoon into a fuller experience.
It is a trend showing up in major cities and smaller cultural destinations alike. In Lisbon, the Museu de Arte Contemporânea Armando Martins, known as MACAM, has drawn attention for pairing its galleries with Contemporâneo Food & Wine Restaurant, where visitors can dine in a setting tied to the museum’s sculpture garden. In Spain, the Museum of Málaga is now home to Blossom, a Michelin-starred restaurant from chef Emi Schobert. At the Fenix museum in Rotterdam, O Anatolian Café brings Turkish flavors into a museum dedicated to migration. In Atlanta, the Woodruff Arts Center has opened Elise, a restaurant designed to extend the arts experience beyond the stage and gallery. In Sydney, the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia’s Canvas uses a seasonal chef-in-residence model, giving the museum restaurant its own evolving creative identity.
What these places share is a belief that the cultural experience does not have to end at the gallery door.
That idea feels especially natural in Napa Valley, where taste and place have always been closely linked. Wine made Napa famous, but the region’s deeper appeal has always been about craft: the vineyard, the meal, the design of a room, the care of a table, the way a landscape changes in the light. Visitors come for wine, but they often leave remembering the whole composition.

In St. Helena, Napa Valley Museum of Art & Culture, known as The MAC, and neighboring Under-Study fit beautifully into this wider movement. Together, they offer a Wine Country version of the museum-and-dining experience: art next door to food, cultural programming alongside culinary imagination, and a sense that Napa’s future is becoming more layered than the familiar tasting-room itinerary.
The MAC gives visitors a cultural anchor in St. Helena, expanding the idea of what a Napa day can include. As part of Napa Valley Museum’s growing presence across the region, it positions art, history, and design within the flow of Wine Country travel. For locals, it adds a place to gather around exhibitions and ideas. For day-trippers, it offers a thoughtful stop along Highway 29. For repeat visitors, it gives Napa another dimension.
Under-Study adds the culinary counterpoint. The café and gathering place occupies a space with its own rich Napa Valley history. It was once home to Dean & DeLuca, opened in St. Helena by food and wine entrepreneur Leslie Rudd, founder of PRESS and Rudd Estate, bringing a taste of New York’s iconic gourmet market to Wine Country.
Today, under the leadership of Samantha Rudd, Chef Partner Philip Tessier, and Managing Partner Justin Williams, Under-Study has reimagined the space as a modern, colorful culinary playground where creativity, tradition, and innovation meet. Located alongside The MAC, it gives museum visitors an added reason to make the stop, whether for coffee, a bite, a longer meal, or simply a chance to let the museum experience continue in a different form.
The pairing works because it does not feel forced. Napa already teaches visitors how to pay attention. Wine asks them to think about soil, weather, time, and craft. Food asks them to think about ingredients, technique, season, and place. Art asks them to think about color, form, story, and emotion. At their best, all three are part of the same language.
That is why museum dining feels less like a novelty and more like a natural evolution. Cultural institutions are recognizing that people want experiences with texture. They want places where they can look, taste, talk, and stay a little longer. They want the day to have rhythm.
For destinations, this matters. A restaurant can make a museum more welcoming. A museum can give a meal more context. Together, they can create a reason to visit that is not only about seeing one exhibition or booking one reservation, but about experiencing a place more fully.
Napa Valley is well suited for that kind of experience. The region will always be known for wine, and rightly so. But food, art, design, and culture are becoming increasingly central to how visitors understand the valley. A day in Napa can now include a museum visit, a thoughtful meal, a walk through town, a tasting, and a deeper connection to the people and ideas shaping the region.
The best museum restaurants are not just places to eat. They are invitations to linger. They make culture more social, more sensory, and more accessible. They remind us that art does not live only on walls, and a great meal is not only about what is on the plate.
Sometimes the most memorable part of a cultural outing happens in the space between the gallery and the table.
Art & Entertainment
More Than Wine: New Reasons to Visit Napa
For Bay Area travelers, Napa Valley has always been one of the easiest ways to feel like you have escaped without going very far. From San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose, Sacramento, Santa Rosa, and the surrounding communities, the drive is manageable, the scenery is beautiful, and the payoff is immediate. You can leave in the morning, spend the day among vineyards, restaurants, shops, and country roads, and still be home by evening.
For many visitors, wine is the main attraction. That is unlikely to change. Napa Valley remains one of the most famous wine regions in the world. But more and more, day-trippers are looking for experiences that add something extra to the trip. They want art, design, history, film, music, and a stronger sense of place.
That is where Napa Valley Museum comes in.
With two locations, Napa Valley Museum Yountville and Napa Valley Museum of Art & Culture, known as The MAC, the Museum is helping expand what a Napa day trip can be. It gives visitors a way to experience the valley through creativity, not just hospitality. For Bay Area day-trippers, it can make a familiar destination feel new again.
A Different Kind of Napa Day
A great Napa day does not have to be built only around tastings and reservations. It can start with coffee and a scenic drive, continue with a museum visit in Yountville or St. Helena, and then move into lunch, shopping, wine tasting, or a relaxed walk through town.
The Museum fits naturally into that kind of itinerary. It is flexible, accessible, and easy to pair with the rest of the day. For couples, it can add a thoughtful cultural stop before dinner. For families, it offers something engaging that does not revolve around wine. For visitors staying in San Francisco, it provides another reason to spend the day in the valley.
A visit to The MAC also comes with an added culinary bonus: Under-Study, the neighboring café and gathering place located in a space with its own rich Napa Valley food history. The site was once home to Dean & DeLuca, opened in St. Helena by food and wine entrepreneur Leslie Rudd, founder of PRESS and Rudd Estate, bringing a taste of New York’s iconic gourmet market to Wine Country. Today, under the leadership of Samantha Rudd, Chef Partner Philip Tessier, and Managing Partner Justin Williams, Under-Study has reimagined the space as a modern, colorful culinary playground where creativity, tradition, and innovation meet. For Museum visitors, it adds another layer to the experience, making a trip to The MAC not only a cultural stop, but also an opportunity to enjoy the kind of food, design, and hospitality that continue to define Napa’s evolving sense of place.

It also gives the Napa experience more texture. The region is known around the world for wine and food, but it is also shaped by history, landscape, craftsmanship, design, and creativity. Napa Valley Museum brings those layers forward in a way that is easy for visitors to enjoy.
Two Locations, More to Explore
Napa Valley Museum now operates across two distinct locations. Napa Valley Museum Yountville, known as NVMY, is located at 55 Presidents Circle in Yountville. The Museum’s newer flagship location, Napa Valley Museum of Art & Culture, The MAC, is located at 607 St. Helena Highway in St. Helena.
Together, the two locations create a broader cultural map of the valley. Visitors can choose one museum based on their plans for the day, or build both into a larger Napa outing. For anyone driving through Wine Country, the Museum’s presence in both Yountville and St. Helena makes it easy to add art and culture without going far out of the way.
Current Exhibitions Worth Adding to the Day

This summer, the Museum’s exhibitions offer two very different reasons to visit.
At The MAC in St. Helena, The Wyeths: Three Generations | Works from the Bank of America Collection is on view through September 13, 2026. The exhibition explores the artistic legacy of N.C., Andrew, and Jamie Wyeth, three generations of one of America’s most recognizable artistic families.
Presented alongside it is My Andy: Photographs by Victoria Wyeth, a companion exhibition created by Napa Valley Museum. Through Victoria Wyeth’s photographs of her grandfather, Andrew Wyeth, visitors get a more personal view of the artist’s private world, daily life, and creative presence.
At Napa Valley Museum Yountville, Mary Blair: Mid-Century Magic celebrates the influential artist and designer whose work helped shape the visual style of beloved Disney films and attractions. Colorful, nostalgic, and accessible, the exhibition is a natural fit for families, Disney fans, design lovers, and anyone drawn to mid-century imagination.
Summer Events Add to the Fun
The Museum is also adding summer programming that gives day-trippers even more reason to plan a visit.
On Friday, July 3, 2026, Napa Valley Museum Yountville will present a special Independence Day Weekend edition of Friday Night Films with A Hard Day’s Night, the classic Beatles film directed by Richard Lester. The screening takes place inside Mary Blair: Mid-Century Magic, with exhibition admission included in the ticket.
The pairing is a fun one. The film was released in 1964, the same year Walt Disney unveiled Mary Blair’s “it’s a small world” at the New York World’s Fair. Together, the screening and exhibition offer a lively snapshot of mid-1960s music, film, design, and pop culture.
Later in the summer, Victoria Wyeth will appear at The MAC from August 7 to 9 during the Wyeth exhibitions. Her visit gives guests the opportunity to experience the work with added personal context from someone directly connected to the family story.
A Fuller Wine Country Experience
For Bay Area hotels, tour operators, luxury transportation companies, and travel planners, Napa Valley Museum offers a natural addition to a day-trip itinerary. It gives guests something meaningful to do between tastings, or a cultural anchor for those who want a more rounded Wine Country experience.
For visitors, the appeal is simple. The Museum makes the day feel fuller.
Napa Valley will always be known for wine, and that is part of its magic. But for Bay Area day-trippers looking for something more, Napa Valley Museum offers another way to experience the valley: through art, culture, history, film, and imagination.
For tickets, hours, and full event details, visit napavalleymuseum.org.
Food & Drink
San Sebastián: A Culinary Paradise on the Basque Coast
For travelers from the United States craving sun drenched coasts, rich culture, and incredible food, San Sebastián delivers on every front. Nestled on the coast of northern Spain, this Basque city combines stunning sea views and charming historic quarters with one of the densest and most creative food cultures in Europe. With tiny pintxo bars around every corner and Michelin starred restaurants that stand among the world’s best, San Sebastián offers a gastronomic escape unlike any other.
Whether you are a seasoned foodie or someone simply looking to combine beach, culture, and delicious meals, San Sebastián makes for a perfect getaway.
Why San Sebastián is Known as a Foodie Capital
Pintxos culture defines the city’s rhythm. Pintxos, the Basque version of tapas, are more than snacks here. They are a ritual, a way to taste your way through narrow historic streets from bar to bar. Small bites of creative, fresh, and often seafood heavy dishes served with local wines or cider make everyday dining a joyful experience.
Unmatched culinary prestige. San Sebastián boasts one of the highest concentrations of Michelin starred restaurants per capita worldwide. Some of the most iconic names in gastronomy, including Arzak, Akelarre, and Martín Berasategui (just outside the city), deliver tasting menus that blend Basque tradition with global creativity.
Sea meets land: fresh produce and seafood. The city’s coastal location means seafood stars on many menus: think salt cod dishes, hake cheeks, shellfish, and local catches. Inland and nearby farmland help supply fresh produce, herbs, and cheeses so that Basque cuisine stays deeply rooted in the land and sea.
In San Sebastián, food feels like more than sustenance. It feels like culture, ritual, and celebration.
What to Eat: Iconic Pintxos and Local Dishes
When you are in San Sebastián, there are flavors you simply cannot miss. Here are some of the staples and local specialties that make the city a food lover’s dream:
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Gilda: A classic pintxo of anchovy, olive, and guindilla pepper, salty, sharp, and perfectly balanced.
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Salt cod dishes (such as bacalao al pil pil): Traditional Basque cod prepared in olive oil and garlic, often silky and deeply flavorful.
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Seafood specialties such as hake cheeks, squid, crab, and shellfish: Fresh local seafood that showcases the bounty of the Bay of Biscay.
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Grilled meats (such as a Basque steak or txuleta): For land lovers, hearty, well prepared meats, often with simple yet bold seasoning and excellent produce based sides.
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Local cider or Basque wines such as txakoli: Crisp, refreshing, and often the perfect match for seafood or pintxos.
Where to Eat: Pintxo Bars, Old Town, and Michelin Magic
Pintxo Bars and Old Town (Parte Vieja)
The narrow, winding streets of the Old Town (Parte Vieja) are the heartbeat of San Sebastián’s food scene. Here you will find countless pintxo bars, each with its own specialty and personality. A night spent “pintxo hopping” with locals and travelers alike offers a slice of the city’s most authentic flavor.
Some popular bars and favorites among visitors and locals include:
La Cuchara de San Telmo, known for inventive small plates and an intimate atmosphere.
Gandarias, a classic spot for perfectly grilled meats and traditional pintxos.
Hidden gems around lively alleys, where part of the charm is simply exploring and sampling whatever looks good.
Pintxo culture encourages spontaneity: order a drink, choose a couple of pintxos, eat, then walk to the next bar. It is casual, social, fun, and often budget friendly.
Michelin Starred and Fine Dining Restaurants
When you want to elevate your evening beyond pintxos, San Sebastián delivers. The city and the broader Basque region are home to world renowned restaurants that blend Basque tradition with culinary innovation.
Expect avant garde tasting menus, seasonal ingredients, and service that reflects centuries of gastronomic refinement. If you decide to try high end dining, book months in advance, especially during peak travel times.
Beyond Food: Sea, Beach, and Basque Culture
San Sebastián offers more than just incredible meals. It is also a beautiful seaside city, combining gourmet dining with coastal charm:
Its beaches and ocean views are among the most attractive in northern Spain, offering a balance of surf, sand, and stroll worthy promenades.
The city’s walkable scale lets you explore Old Town, seaside promenades, and modern neighborhoods all in one day.
Local markets and produce stalls provide a look into the region’s ingredients: fresh fish, seafood, local vegetables, cheeses, and wines all reflect Basque heritage and the quality of its lands and waters.
For Americans, San Sebastián offers a rare combination: Mediterranean style coast, European culture, and food that rivals, and often surpasses, many of the world’s famous culinary capitals.
Tips for U.S. Travelers Visiting San Sebastián
Plan ahead: for pintxo hopping, spontaneity works. For fine dining or Michelin starred meals, book well in advance.
Mix and match: alternate casual bar hopping nights with one or two upscale meals to taste the full range of what the city offers.
Allow time to wander: part of San Sebastián’s charm is discovering bars or restaurants by chance. Leave space for spontaneous detours.
Try local drinks: pair meals with Basque wines or cider, especially when enjoying seafood or pintxos.
Combine food with coastline: daytime walks on promenades or beach visits followed by evening meals and tapas make for a balanced and memorable trip.
A City for Food Lovers and Sea Lovers: San Sebastián Awaits
If you are dreaming of a Europe trip that brings together beautiful coastline, rich culture, and some of the best food in the world, San Sebastián should rank high on your list. Whether you wander from pintxo bar to pintxo bar or indulge in a refined tasting menu, the flavors, warmth, and spirit of the Basque coast deliver both satisfaction and delight.
For American travelers ready to trade routine for indulgence, San Sebastián offers an irresistible invitation: come hungry, come curious, stay for the food, the sea, and the magic.
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