Best Camera and Lens for Travel and Food Photography

Best Camera and Lens for Travel and Food Photography. Pork Skewers, Road 60, Siem Reap, Cambodia. Copyright © 2022 Terence Carter / Grantourismo. All Rights Reserved.

Best camera and lens for travel and food photography? I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve been asked what’s my favourite camera and lens combination for shooting travel and food. Impossible to say before now, I’m relieved to let you know that I’ve finally found a camera and lens combination that I can thoroughly recommend.

It’s been a tough question to answer until now, because when you’re a professional you might be commissioned to do a story that covers everything from wide vistas of a volcano and close-up sports action, such as surfing, to portraits of people and the overhead food spreads that are so fashionable at the moment. And all of this might just be for one story.

I’ve been shooting professionally since I studied photography on film cameras at uni in the 1990s, but it’s only now that I’ve finally found the perfect set-up that I can confidently recommend. It’s a Nikon D500 camera body and a Nikon AF-S DX NIKKOR 17-55mm f/2.8G IF-ED Zoom Lens with Auto Focus for Nikon DSLR Cameras.

And here’s why I think it’s the best camera and lens for travel and food photography.

Best Camera and Lens for Travel and Food Photography

For a professional photographer, carrying lenses that cover a range from 12mm to 600mm is just part of the deal that comes with accepting feature length magazine commissions. To carry at least five or six lenses as I did on a recent trip to Georgetown, Penang, is what allows me to get the coverage that the editors are looking for to tell a story.

Just before this recent trip, however, as I was testing and cleaning my gear, I noticed that my current main camera, a Nikon D600 stopped auto-focussing. When trying to get focus the lens would endlessly ‘hunt’, going through the full focus range of the lens but never locking focus. With no time to get the camera repaired, I knew I had to quickly purchase another camera.

Choosing the Right Camera Body

I’ve been keeping up with the latest camera releases and have tried many of the new mirrorless cameras such as the offerings from Sony and Fuji. They might be great for hobbyists, those without tight deadlines, and those getting paid to use these camera systems, however, they weren’t great for me.

The focus speed, low battery life, and getting them to work with my current flash system in a hurry ruled those cameras out. Not to mention that I have a pretty serious investment in Nikon lenses. Without this, perhaps compromising with one of the above systems might have been acceptable.

Best Camera and Lens for Travel and Food Photography. Pork Skewers, Road 60, Siem Reap, Cambodia. Copyright © 2022 Terence Carter / Grantourismo. All Rights Reserved.

There were really only two viable options available to me – ordering the Nikon D750 FX-format Digital SLR Camera Body or the Nikon D500.

The D750 is a full-frame camera – like my D600 and my sole remaining D700, but the D500 is a crop sensor camera, like my old workhorse, the Nikon D2x. Nikon calls the full-frame cameras ‘FX’ while the crop sensor cameras are designated ‘DX’.

The fact that the D500 had much of the same innards as the recently released flagship Nikon D5, as well as some ongoing reported issues with the D750, put the D500 at the top of the wish-list.

That I also had some video commissions, and that the video specifications of the D500 were pretty decent – and significantly better than the D750 – made my choice even easier.

My local camera store here in Siem Reap managed to get me the camera with a few hours to spare, leaving just enough time to get the camera set up and batteries charged.

Road-Testing My New Camera and Lens Combination

During the next 10 days in Georgetown on assignment, I used the D500 exclusively with just one lens most of the time, the Nikon AF-S NIKKOR 17-55mm f/2.8G ED DX. In fact, my statistics in Adobe Lightroom tell me that I used it for over 90% of my photos.

With that single camera and lens combination I was able to cover everything from Georgetown Festival events and formal portraits of local characters to hotel shoots and close-ups of street food and restaurant dishes.

Back home in Siem Reap, it was the only lens I took out to shoot at our local eat street, Road 60, on Sunday.

Best Camera and Lens for Travel and Food Photography. Pork Skewers, Road 60, Siem Reap, Cambodia. Copyright © 2022 Terence Carter / Grantourismo. All Rights Reserved.

It was while editing those images yesterday that it struck me that this just could be the best camera and lens for travel and food photography.

And that got me thinking: with the D500 getting rave reviews (the highest score ever on well-respected Digital Photography Review) and the 17-55 mm f/2.8 being the best lens Nikon has produced for its ‘DX’ crop sensor cameras, could this be the best travel and food camera and lens combination for a serious photographer? I think it is.

Best Travel and Food Camera and Lens Combination for Serious Photographers

I think this could be the best travel and food camera and lens combination for a serious photographer and here’s why…

Firstly, the D500 camera is built like a tank. It has the fastest focus of any camera I’ve ever used, it can shoot 10 frames a second, and it takes great video. The rear screen is touch sensitive so you can use it like an iPhone to scroll and pinch and zoom on images, as well as focus. And the screen also tilts, which is great for those overhead food photos.

The camera also has wi-fi and Bluetooth connectivity, which should translate to being able to control the camera from a smartphone, as well as send images to it and ‘stamp’ the images with the GPS co-ordinates taken from the phone.

However, I can’t test that yet because Nikon have not yet released the app for Apple’s iOS operating system for iPhones. It should be great if it works – making sending images directly from the camera to the phone and posting on social media a breeze. Admittedly, the fact it’s been delayed for so long doesn’t bode well. Note: The result is it’s virtually unusable.

The 17-55 mm lens, introduced in 2003, is made in Japan and also built like a tank, weighing in at 26.505 oz. (751.45g). The camera weighs virtually the same so that’s only 1.5 kilos to carry around. That’s not too bad considering the quality of the images that this combination is capable of.

While Nikon have a ‘kit’ lens (sold with the camera if you so desire), the Nikon 16-80mm ED VR, I think that a second-hand 17-55 mm lens is the way to go if your priority is fast-focus and sharp images. While the 16-80mm ED VR retails at around a ridiculous US$1,000, a good condition used 17-55 mm goes for around US$650 – and that’s a bargain for pro glass.

What Makes The Lens Perfect for Travel and Food?

So what makes this 17-55 mm lens so great for travel and food?

Firstly, for travel, it’s wide enough for most photos you’ll take of monuments as tall as cathedrals or as wide as Angkor Wat.

At the wide end of the lens it’s great for full body portraits. At the 55mm end of the lens, it’s the perfect focal length for a headshot portrait and using the lens at 2.8 aperture gives that nice creamy out of focus background. For general street shooting, the lens has the perfect sweet spot at around 35mm.

Best Camera and Lens for Travel and Food Photography. Pork Skewers, Road 60, Siem Reap, Cambodia. Copyright © 2022 Terence Carter / Grantourismo. All Rights Reserved.

For food, the wide end is perfect for those oh-so-popular overhead shots, wide enough to cover a whole table or zooming in a little, a single plate. When zooming to 55mm, the lens can focus very close for those shots where you want to only focus on the key ingredient of a dish. The 2.8 aperture is perfect for food shots. Many cheaper lenses have a minimum f-stop of f4.

The best bit, though, is that matched with the D500, this lens is so freaking fast to focus! It’s just a joy to walk around with.

The fact that the lens was first introduced in 2003 and still can’t be beaten by any other zoom that Nikon has made is why I always tell people to buy quality glass first, camera body second. I bought my version of this lens in 2004 and its been mounted on a Nikon D70, D80, D2x, and now back in service on the D500 some 12 years later.

Best Camera and Lens for Travel and Food Photography

I suspect this lens will still work well on the Nikon D500s or whatever the replacement for the D500 will be called. However, for right now and for the next couple of years, I think this is the best camera and lens for travel and food photography.

And it’s by far the best combination for serious travel and food photos, if you set to limit yourself to one camera and one lens. I’ll never leave home without it.

If you’d like to learn more about the best camera and lens for travel and food photography and a whole lot ot other stuff about shooting food and travel photography on the road, come join Lara and I in Cambodia on one of our Travel and Food Writing and Photography Retreats. We host scheduled small group trips in the low season and private trips on request throughout the year. More details on the previous link, as well as on our Siem Reap Retreats and Tours site.

Do you shoot travel and/or food? What do you think is the best camera and lens for travel and food photography and why in your experience?

Remote Cambodian Archaeological Sites to Explore on Your Cambodia Trip

Remote Cambodian Archaeological Sites Not to Be Missed on Your Cambodia Trip. Inside the main temple of the Preah Khan of Kompong Svay temple group. Copyright © 2022 Terence Carter / Grantourismo. All Rights Reserved.

Remote Cambodian archaeological sites you must explore on your Cambodia trip are a short drive, easy day trip or adventurous overnight excursion from Siem Reap and include everything from sprawling Preah Khan Kompong Svay and pre-Angkorian Sambor Prei Kuk to mountain-top Preah Vihear and the fortress temple Banteay Chhmar. Dislike crowds? Perfect. You’ll be blissfully alone.

If you’ve been inspired by the exciting archaeological discoveries in Cambodia of the last decade, then don’t miss the opportunity to discover these remote Cambodian archaeological sites that are either a short drive from Siem Reap, a comfortable day trip away, or a fairly adventurous overnight excursion, but easily visited with a driver and guide.

Know that whatever you choose to do, there’s every chance that you’ll be blissfully alone when exploring these more remote Cambodian temples. Angkor Wat and surrounding Angkor Archaeological Park dominate most visitors’ attention (and rightly so, the Angkor temples are breathtaking), but comparatively very few travellers venture to these lesser-visited Cambodian archaeological sites.

Yet few things capture the imagination like the notion of ‘lost cities’ and the opportunity to have an Indian Jones-like experience, if the response to our stories in The Guardian and on CNN on Cambodia’s vast medieval cities hidden beneath the jungle are any indication. Read this post for more on the discovery of those epic new urban landscapes in Cambodia.

If the news had you dreaming of an adventurous holiday to Cambodia, then you’ll pleased to know that these more remote Cambodian archaeological sites, that have been secreting away entire cities below the surface of their forest floors, can easily be visited. While they might be far-flung, they’re not difficult to reach, and the temples that are a tad challenging to get to are worth the effort.

Scramble these lesser visited Cambodian temple cities and you’ll certainly be avoiding the crowds. At off-the-beaten-track temples such as Preah Khan Kompong Svay, Sambor Prei Kuk, Preah Vihear, and Banteay Chhmar you’ll be hard pressed to bump into another visitor for much of the year, and every during high season you’ll be lucky to see a dozen people at any of those sites.

Beng Mealea and Koh Ker are the most popular due to their proximity to Siem Reap. They’re the only two temples where you might be exploring the site with a tour group, but, in our experience, they bewilderingly don’t stay long. You’ll need to plan those visits so you’re at those temple sites at the crack of dawn or close to dusk if you want them to yourself.

As some of the more off-the-beaten-track archaeological sites in Cambodia are in a more ruinous state than others, the beauty is often to be found in the atmosphere, the setting, and the intricate details rather than the elegance and grandeur that you experience at temples such as Angkor Wat and Bayon.

Note: Since we first published this guide to Cambodia’s remote temple sites in 2013, we’ve added a regularly updated ‘what’s new’ section for the archaeological sites following the new findings that resulted from the 2015 airborne laser scanning survey, and then further discoveries. Those findings have  upended many theories about the development and decline of Angkor, which has led to a re-writing of the history books.

Remote Cambodian Archaeological Sites to Explore on Your Cambodia Trip

This guide to the lesser-visited Cambodian temples is based on our first-hand experience visiting the temples and interviewing archaeologists and historians for stories on the new temple discoveries of the last decade.

Preah Khan Kompong Svay Temple

If you really want to soak up some history in solitude, then don’t miss the majestic albeit dilapidated site of 11th century Preah Khan Kompong Svay, not to be confused with Preah Khan at Angkor Archaeological Park. The long drive here, the immense size of the site, and its location in untamed forest make the temple seem incredibly isolated.

You can also reach Preah Khan Kompong Svay (or Prasat Bakan as locals call it) via Beng Mealea on a road which follows an ancient highway, complete with centuries-old bridges, which makes the experience special. In poor condition when we visited, the road may be impassable during the monsoon season, when a much more comfortable route from Siem Reap is via National Highway 6 and Kompong Kdei.

Like many Cambodian temples, Preah Khan Kompong Svay started out as a Hindu temple-city that was later re-consecrated to Mahayana Buddhism during the late 12th and early 13th centuries. At 22 square kilometres it was the largest complex ever built during the Angkorian period, four times the size of Angkor Wat.

Its direct connection to Angkor by a major road, fitted out with infrastructure, suggests it played an important role in the empire, probably facilitating the supply of iron to the capital, according to archaeologist Mitch Hendrickson.

Historians believe that the temple-city served as the home of King Suryavarman II, as well as the future king, Jayavarman VII, who led his army to defeat the Chams before moving the capital to Angkor in 1181.

Highlights include Prasat Prah Stung, pictured above, a tumbledown temple sanctuary containing a serene face tower like those at the Bayon, a reasonably well-preserved eastern gopura (entrance), a dilapidated dharmasala (rest house for pilgrims), and the central temple and towers.

What you won’t see are the many sculptures and art works that were discovered by Louis Delaporte and the Mekong Exploration Commission in the 1870s. They were hauled off to Paris, where they’re now on show at the Guimet Museum. Others were looted by the Khmer Rouge.

What’s New at Preah Khan Kompong Svay Temple

Archaeologist Dr Mitch Hendrickson, who we met at Preah Khan Kompong Svay to interview for a story on the ancient highways, told me that the survey findings for the site, which revealed a “full-blown community layout” were so “truly remarkable” that it was “arguably the ‘jewel in the crown’ of this mission”.

While the discovery of an urban grid layout inside the main temple enclosure wasn’t surprising, he said “the grid actually also continues and then suddenly fades away before reaching the massive fourth enclosure wall”. The data also revealed “weird, geometric features” like those found near Angkor Wat.

Guide to Preah Khan Kompong Svay Temple

When to go: Dry season is best due to the road, which easily damages after rain.
Distance from Siem Reap: Around 156kms or 187 kms, depending on the route you take.
Nearest town: Ta Seng village, 4kms from the temple site. While it offers little in the way of visitor facilities, if you’re stuck the village chief can arrange a home-stay and something to eat and drink, probably in his house. Kompong Thom is around 90 kms away.
How to get there: Depending on the time you have available, you could do a tour or hire a driver and car, and perhaps take a guide from Siem Reap or Kompong Thom. Scoll to the end of the post for details. If you take the NR6 from Siem Reap via Kompong Kdei, it’s 156kms and an approximately 3.5 hour journey, but if you go via Beng Mealea it’s 187kms and can take up to 4 hours depending on the state of the road.
Where to stay: See our guide to Siem Reap boutique hotels for our recommendations if you’re going to base yourself in the provincial capital. In Kompong Thom, Sambor Village Hotel on the riverside has a serene swimming pool in leafy gardens, clean comfortable rooms, and a good restaurant.
Where to eat: Take a picnic lunch or see what the locals are cooking.

Sambor Prei Kuk Temple

The late 6th to early 7th century pre-Angkorian complex of Sambor Prei Kuk quickly became one of my favourites of the remote Cambodian archaeological sites after we visited for the first time early this year. Dedicated to Shiva, Isanapura, as it was called, was a capital city of the pre-Angkor kingdom of Zhenla (Chenla).

Built by King Isanavarman I, it was a royal city and the centre of power for at least four kings. Inscriptions, artefacts, statues, and objects found at the site suggest it was still important during the Angkor Empire, particularly in the 10th century, and then again in the late Angkor period.

One of the things that makes a visit special is the architecture, sculpture and art, which are in a very different style to what you will see at Angkor. Labelled the Sambor Prei Kuk style, which covers 600-650 AD, an archaeologist we met at the site said that its assimilation of Indian cultural influences marked an important stage in the development of Khmer arts and the Angkor styles.

The ancient city is divided into two zones, the city zone and the temple zone, and the main monuments are located in the temple zone spread across three groups: Prasat Sambor (northern group), Prasat Tao (central group) and Prasat Yeai Poeun (southern group). It’s a sprawling site, so allow at two to three hours.

While it’s always best to do the sights early in the morning or late afternoon – for photography as much as for self-preservation; it’s scorching hot in the middle of the day – Sambor Prei Kuk is set amidst towering forest, making it possible to find some shade if you find yourself here in the sweltering midday heat. There was some intensive restoration work underway when we visited, which was fascinating to watch and provided a good excuse to stay put for a while.

Highlights include octagonal brick shrines featuring enchanting carvings of ‘flying palaces’ on their exterior walls and door frames, lintels and pedestals decorated with unique motifs and patterns. Inside the shrines are pedestals (which would have held lingas) and replicas of elegant statues, including Duruga, consort to the god Shiva, and Harihara (in the northern group of temples).

There are handsome roaring guardian lions with intricately detailed manes at Prasat Tao (in the central group) and (in the southern group) a small shrine near the central sanctuary dedicated to Shiva, decorated with small figures that to me are very Greek looking, while one figure appears to be Persian.

What’s New at Sambor Prei Kuk

“I have often wondered what the mound field was at the eastern end of the Eastern Baray. Now these mound fields are popping up all over the place, including Ishanapura. What are they? The provincial road linking Isanapura and Preah Khan of Kompong Svay. What date is it?” Professor Charles Higham, the pre‐eminent archaeologist of mainland Southeast Asia, said when I interviewed him for our stories on recent discoveries.

Professor Higham said that he thought the research outlining the findings was “the most exciting paper I can recall reading”. Higham was especially excited about the “new and vital information on the complexity of pre-Angkorian Isanapura (Sambor Prei Kuk)”. That’s reason enough to explore the temple for me.

Guide to Sambor Prei Kuk Temple

Distance from Siem Reap: 170kms, or around 2.5 hours.
Nearest town: Kompong Thom, on the NH6 which connects Siem Reap and Phnom Penh
How to get there: Depending on the time you have available, you could hire a driver and car or do a tour from Siem Reap, or travel to Kompong Thom and hire a local tuk tuk driver.
Where to stay: Sambor Village Hotel on the riverside at Kompong Thom has a serene swimming pool in leafy gardens, clean comfortable rooms, and a good restaurant.
Where to eat: Stalls at the visitor complex beside the ticket gate sell fresh coconuts, cold drinks, noodle soups, fried rice and the like. Kompong Thom also has an excellent evening market.
What to read: There’s not much on Sambor Prei Kuk in the key archaeological handbooks you’ll see in Siem Reap but Michel Petrotchenko’s excellent Focusing on the Angkor Temples: The Guidebook has a couple of pages on it. See if the Tourism Service Office has a thin booklet titled the Sambor Prei Kuk Conservation Project when you get to the site.

Preah Vihear Temple

Breathtakingly situated atop a 547 metre-high cliff and offering panoramic vistas of the surrounding countryside, the 800-metre long, UNESCO World Heritage listed temple of Preah Vihear sprawls elegantly across an escarpment in the Dangrek mountain range. The temple’s dramatic location, breezy arcades, and beautifully carved lintels combine to make this one of the most pleasurable of the remote Cambodian archaeological sites to explore.

An excursion here starts out as something of an adventure, from the long journey and bumpy drive up the mountain to the interactions you’ll no doubt have a Cambodian soldier (or two) keen to bum a few cigarettes off you in exchange for photo of him poised with his Norinco, a Chinese-made version of the Russian AK-47.

Do take cigarettes or other gifts for any soldiers who offer to guide you around and get you close to the border. Some of these poor blokes have been stationed here with their families (as you’ll see from the modest homes built into the hillside on your drive up) since the first 2008 territorial dispute with Thailand over ownership of the site.

While the situation was resolved in November 2013, when the International Court of Justice in The Hague confirmed that the temple did indeed belong to Cambodia (which the IJC had already ruled in 1962), the Thais still have soldiers stationed just across the border – which is so close that you can see the soldiers through the jungle, doing everything from cooking to hanging out their washing on the other side of the stream that forms the border.

Dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva, Preah Vihear means ‘sacred temple or monastery’ and it’s thought that the location had been a sacred site since the 8th century. While some parts of the temple date to the 10th century when Koh Ker was empire’s capital, there are also architectural elements in the Banteay Srei style, dating to the late 10th century.

It’s believed that most of the temple was constructed during the reign of kings Suryavarman I (1006-1050) and Suryavarman II (1113–1150). The latter period is brought to life in inscriptions at the site, which give accounts of sacred rituals and festivals featuring elephants, white parasols and golden bowls.

Located on a narrow promontory, the temple’s design was determined by the terrain. You’ll need to climb some 200 steps to the lowest gopura, and then ascend two fairly steep inclines, flanked by naga balustrades, to the final gopura and entrance to some well-preserved galleries, and above this a courtyard complex of buildings and a long colonnaded hall.

The impressiveness of the overall site can detract from the detail, so make sure you allow plenty of time to admire the prettily decorated cornices, pediment borders, lintels, and reliefs.

What’s New at Preah Vihear Temple

Preah Vihear wasn’t included in the airborne Lidar surveys we covered, however, there have been excavations at the ground since the 2013 dispute settlement, which have covered ancient ironworks.

Guide to Preah Vihear Temple

Distance from Siem Reap: 210kms
Nearest town: Anlong Veng, a former Khmer Rouge stronghold, however, you don’t need to stay here.
How to get there: Hire a driver and car and take a guide from Siem Reap. Preah Vihear can also be combined with visits to Koh Ker and Beng Mealea into a really enjoyable 2-day itinerary. Extend it to 3-4 days and you can also visit Sambor Prei Kuk and Preah Khan Kompong Svay.
Where to stay: Preah Vihear Boutique Hotel in Sra Em Village, 27kms away from the temple, is a comfortable mid-range hotel with a swimming pool. There are also home-stays nearby.
Where to eat: There’s a good restaurant at the hotel and a small village market a 10-minute stroll away.

Banteay Chhmar Temple

This is another favourite temple of mine when it comes to remote Cambodian archaeological sites. This late 12th century royal temple and garrison-city was the second monument of King Jayavarman VII. A large site, it’s far bigger in size than his Bayon temple in the walled capital, Angkor Thom.

The highlights of Banteay Chhmar are the extensive galleries of elaborate bas-reliefs depicting vivid scenes from battles, mythology and daily life, which stretch along the never-ending temple walls. A stroll around the exterior site is a history lesson if you experience it with a knowledgeable guide or a good guidebook in hand.

Dr Peter D Sharrock from London University’s School of Oriental & African Studies, who specialises in Banteay Chhmar, told me that he believed that Banteay Chhmar’s important role was linked to medicine. Jayavarman VII built 102 hospitals around his empire, which he supplied with medical staff and medicine.

Dr Sharrock said the medicine would have come from medicinal herbs, minerals and animal parts from the nearby Dangrek Mountains. Sharrock believes Banteay Chhmar would have been a major “medical gathering, blessing and distribution centre”, as the bas-reliefs also appear to confirm.

Other highlights, among many, include balustrades bearing nagas on the bridges over the moat; the atmospheric setting itself with its towering trees dripping in beehives; and beatific Bayon-style smiling face towers. There was thought to be about 50 in Banteay Chhmar, 59 at the Bayon, and one at Preah Khan of Kompong Svay.

While it’s a magnificent site and one of the most enjoyable of all the remote Cambodian archaeological sites, part of the joy of visiting Banteay Chhmar is the chance to experience everyday life from your base at a community homestay in the surrounding villages.

What’s New at Banteay Chhmar Temple

At Banteay Chhmar, one of our favourite temple ruins of the remote Cambodian archaeological sites, the recent lidar survey raised more questions than it provided answers. “Lidar now shows clear data for the first time of dense populations settled in an around all ancient Khmer temples – except Banteay Chhmar,” Dr Sharrock told me.

“So why was Banteay Chhmar a lightly-populated anomaly? Possibly the city was incomplete,” Dr Sharrock suggested. “A big water system running from the Dangrek hills was constructed for a large city. Careful groundwork following up the lidar data may provide the answer.”

Guide to Banteay Chhmar Temple

Distance from Siem Reap: 161kms north of Siem Reap near the Thai border.
Nearest town: Villages skirt the temple complex of Banteay Chhmar, which will be within walking distance of your homestay (see below).
How to get there and around: Hire a driver and car or do tours with a local guide; both can be booked on the Visit Banteay Chhmar Community Based Tourism website. You can also organise your own car and driver from Siem Reap, then do local tours when you arrive.
Where to stay: Book a village homestay in a traditional timber house with local families on the website above.
Where to eat: There’s a lovely little morning market where you’ll find delicious nom banh chok among other things. Candlelit sundown meals by the temple walls can also be arranged through the community based tourism organisation, which also runs a basic eatery, where breakfast is held.
What to read: Peter D Sharrock’s Banteay Chhmar, Garrison-Temple of the Khmer Empire is a must-read, detailing not only the history but also providing information on the restoration and guided tour of the temple.

Last Updated 21 October 2025

Have you travelled around Cambodia? What are your favourites of the remote Cambodian archaeological sites?

Cambodian Cuisine, Asia’s Most Misunderstood and Under-appreciated Cuisine

Cambodian Cuisine, Asia’s Most Misunderstood and Under-appreciated Cuisine. Street food in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Copyright © 2022 Terence Carter / Grantourismo. All Rights Reserved.

Cambodian cuisine must be Asia’s most misunderstood and under-appreciated cuisine. Come discover Cambodian cuisine with us on one of our Cambodia Culinary Tours or Travel and Food Writing and Photography Retreats, which we host throughout the year, every year.

Join us in Siem Reap and Battambang on a delicious journey to discover Cambodian cuisine, Asia’s most misunderstood and most under-appreciated cuisine. We host 9- and 10-day trips and retreats every year, based out of Siem Reap with a few days in Battambang. While nine and ten days might seem like a long time, at the end of our trips participants always tell us that they wished they’d stayed longer.

UPDATED September 2017: Click through to this post for dates and prices for our 2017 and 2018 Cambodia Culinary Tours and Travel and Food Writing and Photography Retreats and to read testimonials from previous participants.

Also check out our Instagram feed for images from the experiences and we now have a dedicated Siem Reap Retreats and Tours website as well.

If you’re not a regular reader and are not sure why you should come discover Cambodian cuisine with us, you can learn more about us here. In short, we’re a veteran travel/food writer and photographer team who have lived abroad for 18 years and travelled to over 80 countries. We’re based in Siem Reap, where we’ve been researching and writing a Cambodia cookbook for several years. We have a handful of degrees between us and have both taught at university level. I’ve taught writing, filmmaking and media studies; Terence taught photography and design.

Our work and travel and food writing and photography has been published in National Geographic Traveller (USA & UK), Australian Gourmet Traveller, Delicious, Feast, SBS Food, The Guardian, The Telegraph, The Independent, Wanderlust, Sunday Times Travel Magazine, Conde Nast Traveller China, Get Lost, International Travel, Travel+Leisure Southeast Asia, DestinAsian, AFAR, CNN Travel, and scores of in-flight and hotel magazines.

Discover Cambodian Cuisine on our Cambodia Culinary Tours and Travel and Food Writing and Photography Retreats

On both trips you’ll do a lot of eating, tasting and a little cooking as you discover Cambodian cuisine and learn about the country’s culinary culture and culture, from Royal Khmer Cuisine to Cambodian street food.

The main difference between the trips is that participants on our Travel and Food Writing and Photography Retreats are focused on honing their creative skills, whether that be in travel and/or food writing or photography or both, and developing culinary travel stories as they discover Cambodian cuisine.

Those joining us on our Cambodia Culinary Tour are primarily here to get a taste of the local cuisine and culture and an insight into the history and everyday life, as they explore the countryside and villages, and experience the stupendous temples of Angkor Archaeological Park, including Angkor Wat, and more remote temples such as Banteay Srei and Beng Mealea,

We’ve created 9-day and 10-day trips crammed with mouthwatering experiences and meals, and enriching activities, aimed at enabling you to fully experience Cambodian cuisine in a way that you wouldn’t otherwise be able to.

We’ve structured the itineraries in such a way so that participants on the Cambodia Culinary Tours will have some downtime that they can use to relax by the pool, enjoy a massage or some pampering at a spa, go shopping, or do whatever they please. Those doing our Retreats will no doubt wish to use this time to write and take photos.

Next Retreats and Tours

UPDATED September 2017 Next up: a range of early to late 2017 and 2018 creative retreats and culinary tours. Following requests from readers, we are currently scheduling extra dates, as well as an intensive 3-day monsoon writing and photography retreat, a second Vietnam Culinary Tour and a new Thailand Culinary Tour. Dates coming soon!

Making an Enquiry or Booking

To make a booking or learn more email us at lara@grantourismotravels.com for a full itinerary, price list, and payment information. To book your place, a US$500 non-refundable deposit is required.

Media and Blogger Affiliate Programme

If you are a food/travel blogger and would like to be part of our affiliate programme or if you’d like to write about our Cambodia Culinary Tour and need a media release and hi-res images, please email us on the address above.

Sponsors and Candidates

We are offering one sponsored spot to young Cambodians on our Cambodia Travel and Food Writing and Photography Retreat and Cambodia Culinary Tour. If you’d like to nominate a Cambodian candidate for these or future retreats and tours, or you’re a business or individual who’d like to sponsor a place, please email us on the same address above.

Updated: September 2017

Best Melbourne Museums for Learning About the History and Culture of the City

ACMI museum exhibition — David Bowie Is. Photo Credit: Mark Gambino. Best Melbourne Museums for Learning About the History and Culture of the City.

A priority for us on trips back to Australia is soaking up as much culture as we can. After we’ve caught up on the newest restaurants, we can be found in museums and galleries catching up on the latest exhibitions. Some of the best museums are in Melbourne, so here’s our best Melbourne museums.

Melbournians like to think that Melbourne is Australia’s cultural capital, yet all of the country’s major cities boast world-class museums and galleries. Let’s not forget Sydney is home to the Opera House, the wonderful Art Gallery of NSW, and the country’s best theatre and dance companies. Canberra, Adelaide, Perth, and Darwin also have impressive museums.

Still, Victoria’s capital is home to some compelling educational and cultural spaces – we especially loved ACMI, where we saw the David Bowie show last week, and the engaging Immigration Museum.

Here’s our guide to the best Melbourne museums.

Best Melbourne Museums for Absorbing the History and Culture of the City

The Melbourne Museum

A museum of history, the natural environment, ethnography, and culture all in one, this is easily of the best Melbourne museums and is a must for families. Home to the Bunjilaka Aboriginal Cultural Centre, the First Peoples exhibition is reason enough to visit, for its excellent introduction to Aboriginal languages, interactive celebration of identity told through stories handed down from generation to generation, and the wonderful section Many Nations, which has almost 500 artefacts and a hands-on activity area for kids. Like most Australian museums, tickets are expensive for foreign visitors at $14 for adults, however, a bonus is that children enter for free.

Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI)

Located at Federation Square, the excellent Australian Centre for the Moving Image or ACMI is another of the best Melbourne museums, hosting temporary shows, such as Bowie, which we saw last week, but it’s also home to a fantastic permanent exhibition on the history and development of Australian cinema, television, and digital culture. They also offer a fascinating programme of film screenings, performances, discussion panels, and creative workshops. The permanent exhibition is free to enter and can easily consume a couple of enjoyable hours, which is great news for those in Melbourne on a budget. However, the touring shows like Bowie are expensive and can get terribly crowded, so are best booked ahead, online – reserve tickets for the morning slots to avoid the families with strollers.

Immigration Museum

This compact museum to Melbourne’s history of immigration and multicultural community is located in the old Customs House and is arguably one of the best Melbourne museums.  Displays use a combination of personal stories, mementoes, family photos, archival images, historical documents, video, and interactive media to explore the journeys and lives of refugees and immigrants who settled in Victoria, and the contributions they have made to Australian culture and society. My Russian grandparents and mother were European refugees who spent their early months in Australia in a displacement camp, so I have a personal interest in immigration history, however, a visit here for anyone is timely considering the state of the world at the moment, the refugee crisis in Europe, and the Australian government’s appalling treatment of refugees and the embarrassing horror that is the detention camp on Nauru. Make sure to save time for the Discovery Centre on the ground floor, where you can track your family’s migration history.

Chinese Museum

The Chinese were some of Australia’s earliest immigrants, arriving as far back as the colonial period, during the Gold Rush, and again in recent years as students, professionals, and tourists. The Chinese-Australian community has left an indelible mark on the country’s development, landscape, society, culture, and cuisine and is another of the best Melbourne museums. Every Australian capital city has a Chinatown, every town a Chinese restaurant, and almost every home a wok. The permanent exhibition at this petite museum in Melbourne’s Chinatown examines Australia’s Chinese heritage and its profound influence, while temporary shows might celebrate Chinese art or explore aspects of history, such as the current exhibition Queensland Dragon: Chinese in the North – a century ago Chinese migrants comprised 30 percent of that state’s population.

More Heritage Museums

If you like the sound of the Immigration Museum and Chinese Museum, you might also enjoy a few more of the best Melbourne museums for exploring the city’s multicultural history: the Hellenic Museum covers Melbourne’s Greek heritage, which dates to the colonial period (some Greeks arrived as convicts, others as early settlers and gold miners); the Jewish Museum examines Melbourne’s Jewish roots, the diverse background of Jews in Australia, and contribution of Jewish culture; and the Museo Italiano, which charts the history of early Italian-Australians, with a virtual experience covering the journey that many of the immigrants made and the impact of Italian culture on Australians. After a visit here, you’ll understand our obsession with drinking good coffee.

A Slow Swan River Wine Cruise to Swan Valley Wine Region

Swan Valley Wine Tasting Cruise Experience. Sandalford Estate Winery. Perth, Western Australia. Copyright © 2022 Terence Carter / Grantourismo. All Rights Reserved.

The Swan River is everywhere you look in Perth, Australia, so at some stage you need to get out on the water. If you’re a wine lover you’ll want a taste of the Swan Valley and a Swan River wine cruise is one way of sampling Western Australia’s oldest wine region.

When most people think of Western Australian wine, the Margaret River wine region is the first that comes to mind. Yet right on Perth’s doorstep, just a 25-minute drive from the city centre, the picturesque Swan Valley is the oldest wine region in Western Australia, having celebrated 180 years of wine making in 2014.

It’s strange how we often ignore the things in our backyard. We’ve rented apartments in Fremantle a few times over the years while writing up Perth and Western Australia guidebooks yet we whizzed through the Swan Valley ticking stuff off. My mother also lived in nearby Midland, home to a fantastic weekly farmer’s market where Swan Valley producers sold their beautiful fruit and veg.

While a Fremantle cruise is a must-do, on our recent Western Australia trip we were determined to get a taste of the Swan Valley wine region and as we were staying at Adina apartments, just a block from Barrack Street Jetty, we decided to take the slow route and try the Swan River wine cruise.

Our Slow Swan River Cruise to the Swan Valley Wine Region

The Swan River wine cruise isn’t the only way to reach the Swan Valley. You can also do wine tours by bus or you can self-drive. If you’re going by road then you need to get to Guildford, the departure point for exploring this delicious food and wine region.

Historic Guildford

Just down the road from Midland, where my Mum lived, is historic Guildford, where the wide streets are lined with gracious colonial buildings and grand old pubs. If you’re going to do a bus tour, this is where most depart from, so take the train from Perth CBD to Guildford on the Midland line.

The gateway to the Swan Valley, Guilford was one of the first three towns established, along with Perth and Fremantle, when the Swan River area was colonised in 1829. While Perth was the administrative heart of the new colony and Fremantle was the port, Guildford was the market town and the Swan Valley the colony’s fruit bowl.

Now, Guildford’s leafy streets are peppered with heritage-listed buildings housing antique stores, craft shops, art galleries, quaint cafés and restaurants, and those wonderful old pubs with their pretty, wrap-around, wrought-iron balconies. And in the old courthouse, there’s the excellent Swan Valley Visitor Centre (corner Meadow Street and Swan Street; +61 8 9207 8899).  The friendly tourist office should be your first point of call if you’re self-driving to pick up a Swan Valley Food and Wine Trail map.

Swan Valley Food and Wine Trail

If you’re driving, follow the sign-posted Swan Valley Food and Wine Trail. This 32-kilometre loop takes you through picturesque countryside with its lush vineyards, fruit orchards and farms, to 150 points of interest, many offering complimentary tastings.

Stops include some 40 winery cellar doors; distilleries and microbreweries; 90 cafés and restaurants; roadside stalls overflowing with fresh local produce; artisanal bakers, olive oil producers and cheese makers; workshops specialising in handmade chocolate, truffles, nougat, fudge, and ice-cream; and providores selling relishes, pickles, preserves, and dried fruits.

The valley’s Mediterranean climate and fertile soil are responsible for the terrific fresh local produce. Make sure you drop by at least one farmer’s gate, especially if you’re staying in an apartment and doing some cooking, or you’re planning on putting together a picnic hamper.

Buying straight from the source means it’s as fresh as it’s going to get because you’re eating just-picked produce straight from the farm, garden, orchards, or vines. That’s not the case with supermarkets where a lot of ‘fresh’ produce has been in a freezer for weeks or months, which changes the flavour.

What you find at the farm gates obviously depends on the season in which you’re visiting, but do look out for things like plump asparagus, vine-ripened tomatoes that really taste like tomatoes, luscious strawberries, and sweet watermelons.

Don’t miss sampling the crisp, juicy table grapes – which have been grown in the Valley since 1829! – from one of the 150 growers who are producing some 20 varieties. You’ll find different grapes available from December through to April, including the seedless Flame, Dawn and Crimson; the seeded Red Globe, Sultana, Perlette, Italia, and the Ribier, a big black meaty variety that’s a favourite of locals.

Make sure to visit the Cheese Barrel, located at Olive Farm Wines, the oldest winery in the Swan Valley, where you can sample award-winning Western Australian cheeses and imported cheeses from around the world. There is also a selection of cheese boards to buy which have been designed to match Olive Farm Wines. You can also create your own cheese boards. There’s also a resident cheese-maker who offers cheese-making classes, but these must be booked ahead.

Another essential stop is the House of Honey, home to the Sticky Spoon Café, an apiary where you can see bees making honey, and The Honey Shop, where you can do tastings of their raw, pure, unpasteurised Jarrah Honey. This comes from the native Jarrah tree, which is unique to the state. Western Australian honey is intense in flavour due to the type of tree and wildflower species found there, and Jarrah Honey is no exception, boasting a full bodied, nutty, malt flavour that’s loved by beekeepers.

The Swan Valley Food and Wine Trail map also has ideas for you to create your own delicious experiences, from picnics between the vines or by the river to self-guided craft beer tasting tours.

The Swan Valley wineries that can be visited range from small, generations-old, family-owned businesses still operated by the grandkids of the European migrants (most from Italy and Croatia) who planted their vines in the early 20th century to big, slick operations with hundreds of acres of vines, cutting edge technology, and sleek cellar doors.

Many wineries have cellar doors that you can drop into and chat to the staff, and possibly the winemaker, sample the wines, buy some bottles, and even do a hands-on activity, from a wine appreciation class to a blend-your-own experience.

Some wineries can be visited by appointment and all that might mean is a quick phone call to let them know you’re coming. These wineries are generally very small and artisanal, which means the winemaker probably does everything, might also be the owner or partner, and will probably be on a tractor when you call. So do buy some bottles because you’re taking him/her away from his work.

If your idea of visiting wine country involves visiting numerous cellar doors and tasting dozens or even scores of wines, then the last thing you want to do in Australia is self-drive – unless you have a designated driver.

The Swan River Wine Cruise

A Swan River wine cruise not only takes away the worry of driving under the influence, it gives you a taste of the Swan Valley wine region while allowing you to experience the tranquil Swan River on the way there and back.

There are a number of guided Swan Valley wine tours, some of which involve taking a cruise in one direction and a bus in the other. The advantage of these is that they visit several wineries. Some also take in microbreweries and cider houses, as well as food producers.

We liked the idea of travelling there and back by water and experiencing the river in both the morning and late afternoon light, so we opted instead for one of Captain Cook Cruises Swan River wine cruises instead.

The disadvantage of doing the cruise in both directions of course is that while you do get to do a guided wine tasting on board on the way there (served with a cheese plate), and get to sip more wine and bubbly, which are generously poured on the return journey, you only get to visit one winery. However, it is a rather special winery: Sandalford Estate.

Like all Perth cruises and ferries, the Swan River wine cruise departs from Barrack Street Jerry, handily just a couple of blocks from the centre of the Perth CBD and the apartment we were staying in.

It’s a slow, leisurely cruise that winds its way along the still Swan River – which the indigenous Noongar people call the Derbarl Yerrigan – snaking its way to the sleepy upper reaches of the Swan Valley.

The Noongar believe that in the Dreamtime a snake-like creature called the Wagyl or Waugal meandered over the land, carving out creeks, rivers and lakes as he went, thus creating the Swan River. As the boat twists and turns along the waterway you’ll be thinking that makes a lot of sense.

While the lower reaches of the Swan River are wide and deep, the upper reaches are narrow and shallow, bringing the single-deck boat quite near to shore so you get a close insight into the everyday life of the people on the river.

Most of the seating on the boat is indoors so make sure you snag a spot in the sunny outside area at the front of the boat. On the day we did the cruise, most people bewilderingly stayed indoors on the way there, but on the return trip everyone wanted a place in the sun.

This tranquil section of the Swan River couldn’t be more different to the lake-like expanse that skirts the Perth CBD, and the busy estuary between the city and Fremantle and river mouth, which is always abuzz with activity.

On shore, in the morning, we saw locals walking their dogs along slender sandy beaches, fishermen throw in a line from rickety piers, and retired riverside residents reading the newspaper from a wooden bench by the water.

On the water, during our return journey in the late afternoon, we passed a few kayakers, paddle-boarders, a couple of leisure cruisers, and kids learning to sail a catamaran.

We also spotted plenty of birdlife, including pelicans, herons, cormorants, ducks, pink and grey galahs, rainbow lorikeets, the rare red-tailed black cockatoos, and Perth’s eponymous black swans.

But the highlight for everyone was a playful bottlenose dolphin, which we stopped to watch for a while. Our captain, who gave an interesting running commentary throughout the journey, said it was unusual to see them so far up river, however, he did say that there was abundant marine life beneath the surface of the water, including scores of fish species – bream, flatheads, leatherjackets, and herrings – as well as bull sharks and rays, and delicious blue manna crabs and freshwater prawns.

The cruise was an eye-opener. There were riverside sports-fields and race tracks, quiet residential areas with comfortable houses with big established gardens that backed onto the river, picturesque parks and green spaces with shady picnic tables, wetlands alive with the chatter of birdlife, and, as we neared the wine-growing region, historic cottages and colonial villas, and vineyards with buds that had just begun to burst.

I, for one, had no idea how much of the riverside was public land and how much of it was there to be enjoyed by Perth locals. I wondered how many people know these parks and reserves are there. I also didn’t realise how many Perth residents were so lucky to have this quiet section of the river in their backyard.

Sandalford Estate Winery Tour

When the boat eventually arrived at Sandalford Estate, our group was met by a guide at the wharf, from where it was a 5-minute stroll from the dock to the winery.

Our visit began with an introductory video covering the history of the winery to the present day. The Swan Valley wine region is the second oldest wine region in Australia, after the Hunter Valley, celebrating its 180-year old birthday last year, and Sandalford Wines, established on the banks of the Swan River in 1840, is one of Australia’s oldest wineries.

Its birth began with the first harvest by botanist Thomas Waters, who in 1829 arrived with cuttings and vines in barrels of soil from South African wineries, including the revered Constantia vineyard, and planted on a lovely riverbank site that became the first winery, Olive Farm. Waters produced his first wine in 1832 and by 1834 it was recognised as the first commercial vintage.

Olive Farm is currently owned by winemaker Anthony Yuricich, whose family have made handcrafted wines there for four generations. His ancestors were part of the wave of early 20th century immigrants from Southern Italy and Croatia who settled in the Swan Valley and have really made it what it is today.

Sandalford Estate, despite its size and scale of production, is also a family owned winery. There are two vineyards, the Swan Valley one visited and another 40-year old vineyard in the Wilyabrup region of Margaret River. In 1991, brothers Garry and Peter Prendiville and Peter’s wife Debra bought the winery and have been at the helm ever since in very hands-on roles – Debra, for instance, was responsible for the design of the cellar, restaurant and wine tasting area – and have worked hard to make it one of the most sustainable wineries in Australia.

After watching the video, we did a behind the scenes tour to see the operations of the winery. As we strolled across suspended overhead walkways our guide described the wine-making process from vine to bottle, beginning with the weighing, crushing and pressing of the grapes in the vintage shed through to the maturation of the wine in French and American Oak barrels stacked to the roof.

Sandalford has a capacity to produce almost one million litres, which it can keep in 600 square metres of underground storage, which we didn’t get to see, but see what I mean about size and scale.

Sandalford Wine Tasting of Swan Valley Wines

After the winery tour the fun really began with a guided wine tasting, followed by a three-course lunch of modern Australian cooking using local produce. The tasting took the form of a beginner-level Wine Appreciation 101 class, with an introduction to how to taste wine and critique wine (tasting forms were provided), as well as an overview of typical Swan Valley styles and the grapes grown at Sandalford.

The Swan Valley is distinguished by a reliably warm and dry climate, making it ideal for growing Verdelho, Chenin Blanc, Shiraz, and Cabernet grape varietals. The long dry summers also allow for extra ripening time on the vine and the high sugar levels needed to make its wonderful late harvest and dessert wines.

In fact, some of the earliest plantings in the valley were Verdelho, Muscat and Pedro Ximinez to make fortified wines. Having made these heady wines for four generations, the region has developed a strong reputation for producing rich, concentrated fortified wines that are considered some of Australia’s best.

The Swan Valley’s dry, fruit-driven Verdelho grapes produce complex aromatic wines, and the grape is also used to make a sweet liqueur. The Chenin Blanc grown in the valley tends to develop ripe fruit flavours and ages well in the bottle, producing an easy-to-drink drop. The area’s wooded Chardonnays are distinguished by their nuttiness and complexity, while the unwooded Chardonnays exhibit tropical fruits and citrus flavours.

It’s the big reds, however, that are considered the kings of grapes in the Swan. Shiraz in the region gets used for wine, as well as vintage ports and liqueurs. The best Swan Valley Shiraz tends to have a lot of structure and depth, and exhibits a full spectrum of ripe to dried fruits and silky tannins, while the deep plum-coloured Cabernets boast generous fruits, spice, and substantial albeit soft tannins.

While the region’s winemaking is distinguished by old iconic Australian grape varietals like Chardonnay, Shiraz and Cabernet, our guide ensured us that the wines coming out of the Swan Valley are increasingly sophisticated and have the elegance and finesse that’s in fashion.

After lunch and an opportunity to taste the glasses we enjoyed tasting most with our meal, we were shown the gift shop and cellar door, for a further tasting and spot of shopping.

Sandalford produces five ranges of wine, from the entry-level Element and Winemakers series, and mid-tier Margaret River range, made from fruit that didn’t make it to the next level Estate Reserve series, to the super premium Prendiville Reserve collections.

It was possible to try all ranges but we opted to sample the outstanding Prendivilles, as well as some stickies, including a sublime Botrytis Semillon, which we ended up buying and is safely tucked away.

I have to say that the cellar door gift shop is impressive with one of the biggest selections of glassware and wine accessories I’ve seen, including all kinds of quirky gadgets to keep your wine glasses cool and stable at Aussie picnics and barbecues. I was disappointed we were travelling so I couldn’t get to do some Christmas shopping.

How to book the Swan Valley Swan River Wine Cruise

Bookings for the full-day Swan Valley Swan River Wine Cruise we did can be made online. The price included complimentary tea, coffee and cake to start, soon followed by wine and cheese tastings on the boat; the Sandalford guided tour, tastings, lunch, and more tastings; and live entertainment on the boat on the way back (I’ll let that remain a surprise). It cost A$165 for Adults and A$121 for children (infants free).

How to book the Sandalford Experience if you drive

If you make your own way to the winery, the Sandalford tour and tasting costs A$16 per person and lasts around 75 minutes. The winery also offers a Wine Blending experience, where you learn to blend then have your blend judged by Sandalford’s experts, and a Winemaker for a Day package that essentially rolls all of that together – the tour, blending experience, tasting, and lunch. Advance booking essential for all experiences. Email: cellar@sandalford.com

Swan Valley
www.swanvalley.com.au

Captain Cook Cruises
www.captaincookcruises.com.au

Sandalford Estate
www.sandalford.com