Estados Unidos
From NYC Broadway to Chicago's food scene, the best of American cities — already pinned.
Guias
Todos os guias
Architecture, Steakhouses, and Cocktail
Chicago's world-famous skyline by foot, its legendary steakhouses, and a cocktail bar scene that invented the mixology renaissance
Best Hidden Local Cafe Guide
Begin your San Francisco café exploration on Haight Street, where Café Réveille serves up its famous breakfast burrito alongside expertly crafted espressos. From the vibrant murals of the Mission District to the foggy shores of the Outer Sunset, discover the city's intimate coffee nooks and dynamic roasteries. Unravel the stories behind fresh kouign-amanns and snow-frothed Plovers. Wander past Union Square’s bustling sidewalks to find a hidden espresso bar, or watch bakers at work in a sunlit kitchen in the Mission. If you stray from the usual well-trodden paths, you might just stumble upon a quiet French café or an old-school Italian spot echoing with operatic tunes. These are places many visitors overlook yet leave a lasting impression.
Best Hidden Local Chicago Food Guide
Start your culinary adventure on Randolph Street in the West Loop. Here, small plate powerhouse Girl & the Goat crafts bold flavors with global inspiration. Head to the South Side for Ricobene's legendary breaded steak sandwiches. In Lincoln Park, Pequod's caramelized crust deep dish pizza is a local favorite. Finish with a sweet note at Margie's Candies, where vintage ice cream sundaes are served in a nostalgic setting. Throughout the city, discover lesser-known delights like goat birria tacos in Archer Heights or no-ketchup hot dogs in River Grove. This guide unveils Chicago's local food scene beyond the usual deep dish and hot dogs, showcasing spots most visitors overlook.
Mission, North Beach, and Japantown
A local circuit through San Francisco's most character-rich neighborhoods: taquerias and murals in the Mission, Beat-era cafes and Italian delis in North Beach, and Japanese ramen and udon in Japantown
Best Hidden NYC Broadway Local Guide
Step beyond the neon glare of Times Square into the intricate mix of Broadway, where the true magic of New York City pulses in hidden corners and unassuming eateries. Wander through the vibrant hum of Hell’s Kitchen or the storied lanes of the East Village, where actors and dreamers converge over late-night meals. In Jackson Heights, the air is rich with the aroma of spices, while in Bushwick, street art radiates alongside the tangy scent of wood-fired pizza. Every neighborhood tells its own story, offering unexpected encounters with the city's bohemian spirit. Beyond the marquee lights, you'll uncover a New York that tourists seldom see, a city that thrives in its quiet alleys and bustling canteens, waiting to be discovered by those who seek its authentic heart.
LA: Taco Crawl, Cafes & Sunset Views
Los Angeles is a city that reveals itself one taco at a time, from the smoky al pastor spit turning outside a Boyle Heights truck at midnight to the braised short rib folded into a hand-pressed tortilla in East LA. The Eastside's coffee culture is equally infectious — Silver Lake and Echo Park bristle with specialty roasters and sunlit cafes where screenwriters nurse pour-overs and murals bleed color onto every wall. As the afternoon light turns golden and cinematic, the city's legendary viewpoints deliver the payoff: the Pacific igniting orange from Mulholland, the grid of lights spreading to infinity from the Getty terrace, Griffith Observatory glowing against a violet sky. This is an LA day lived the way locals live it — unhurried, delicious, and backlit by one of the great sunsets on earth. Buckle up for tacos before noon, cortados by afternoon, and a view that will make you understand why everyone came here in the first place.
Ultimate NYC in 4 Days
New York City is not a destination — it's a collision of worlds, compressed into five boroughs and a thousand neighborhoods. Over four days you'll walk the bridge that stitched Brooklyn to Manhattan, eat smoked fish on the Lower East Side, ride the subway to Bushwick for wood-fired pizza, and end in Harlem for soul food that has been feeding the city for over a century. This guide doesn't chase landmarks for their own sake; it chases the feeling of the city — the steam rising from grates, the noise, the smell of roasting nuts on a cold corner, and the strange quiet that settles over the High Line at dusk.