Tuscany doesn't require much justification. The landscapes, the wine, the food... What makes this particular trip work is how it's structured. Each day brings a new destination, a new table, a new thing to taste or learn. You're never just passing through. You're digging in.
Highlights
This is for you if you:
This may not be for you if:
You arrive in Montecatini and meet your tour director and travel companions over a welcome dinner. From there, the week unfolds through some of Tuscany's most rewarding corners — the birthplace of Leonardo da Vinci, the Chianti Valley's vine-covered hillsides, the medieval walls of Lucca, the storybook village of Bolgheri with its cypress-lined avenue and celebrated Super Tuscan reds.
The midweek cooking class is the centrepiece — a hands-on afternoon at a rustic farmhouse, picking ingredients from the orchard, learning Italian techniques, and sitting down to eat what you made. There's even a master chef prize if your team pulls ahead. The dessert and cake-baking class back at the hotel on day seven is a quieter, sweeter finish to the week.
Leaving will be the hardest part.
Most people visit Tuscany. This trip lets you taste it.
The cooking lesson, the farm dinner, the bread-making visit, the wine estate lunch — these aren't add-ons. They're the itinerary. There's something about learning to make pasta in a Tuscan farmhouse, with a glass of local wine nearby, that no amount of restaurant dining quite replaces.
For a solo traveller, a guided trip like this also removes the particular awkwardness of navigating new places entirely alone. You're travelling independently, but you're never actually on your own.
You’ll benefit from: