JOURNEYS

A Culinary Journey to Belgium

The light blue facade of restaurant eten & drinken from the road. A man inside wears a striped shirt and leans in to sip his drink

PHOTO BY KRISTAPS GRUNDSTEINS

If you’re the sort of traveler who believes the best way to explore a culture is through its cuisine, Belgium is your sort of destination. Culinary riches here run the gamut, from traditional favorites like mussels and frites to Michelin-starred restaurants helmed by some of the world’s top chefs. Sure, you can find two of the country’s iconic flavors—chocolate and beer—all over the globe, but they taste even better in a Belgian café, surrounded by gorgeous architecture and welcoming locals.

This six-day itinerary focuses on two cities perfect for any traveling gourmand: Brussels and Bruges. But your culinary adventure begins even before you arrive. Cross the Atlantic in Brussels Airlines’ Business Class and you’ll enjoy a meal created by a Michelin-starred chef, along with fine wines and Belgian beers.

Plus, if your ultimate destination is somewhere else that Brussels Airlines flies to, you can take advantage of the Belgium Stop Over program, which lets you make a pit stop in Belgium from one to five days and includes free access to museums and sites throughout Belgium.

Cocktal in a glass

TRIP HIGHLIGHT

The Cocktail Scene

Belgium is deservedly famous for its award-winning beers, but there’s a lot of buzz now around handcrafted cocktails. When in Brussels, make time to visit popular lounges like Pharmacie Anglaise and Life is Beautiful.
Brussels Airlines

TRIP DESIGNER

Brussels Airlines

Brussels Airlines, a member of Lufthansa Group and the Star Alliance, is the Belgian airline that offers the widest choice of flights to and from the de facto capital of the European Union: Brussels. The company has more than 3,500 employees and 50 aircraft operating some 300 flights daily, connecting Brussels with more than 90 European and African destinations, as well as three destinations in North America (New York JFK, Washington D.C., and Toronto). Long-haul flights feature an all-new Business Class—complete with full flatbeds and state-of-the-art inflight entertainment—as well as a brand-new Economy Class with ergonomic seats and individual inflight entertainment touchscreens. There’s never been a better time to experience why Brussels Airlines is truly a boutique hotel in the air.
An airplane seat folded out to make a bed. A pair of headphones hangs on the cubby wall next to a water bottle in a holder.

DAY 1Fly to Belgium

Get a taste of Belgium before you even land in Europe, by flying on an airline with a decidedly Belgian attitude and style. Brussels Airlines recently revamped its entire long-haul fleet, with new cabins inspired by Victor Horta and Belgian Art Nouveau.

The design is just your first sign that you’re becoming a part of the Belgian landscape. Settle into your Business Class seat and discover this boutique hotel in the sky. Enjoy 15.6” HD television screens and noise-canceling headphones. Adjust the reading light and the stylish lamp in your space to create an ambience that’s truly hotel-like. The entire way, you’ll enjoy the personalized service of Brussels Airlines’ staff.

This is also when you’ll begin your immersion in Belgium’s culinary scene. First, choose from a curated selection of wines, Belgian beers, and Laurent Perrier Champagne. Enjoy the walk-up bar, which pays tribute to Belgium with its illuminated dome inspired by the glass ceiling of Antwerp’s Central Station. Then prepare yourself for gustatory delights. Every year, the airline collaborates with a different Michelin-starred chef as part of its unique gastronomy program. In 2019, Thierry Theys of the two-Michelin-star restaurant Nuance, in the town of Duffel, is creating seasonal menus with dishes like beef cheek à l’orange and crispy duck salad.

End your meal with some Neuhaus chocolates, then recline your six-foot-long fully-flat bed, made for one or two people—you can even customize the softness of the seat cushion. You’ll arrive in Brussels rested and ready to explore the city.
Two well-kempt customers eat pastries outside a shop. Two customers order at the counter behind a window labeled "Maison Dandoy: Spectaculoos Speculoos."

PHOTO BY NORALÍ EMILIO

DAY 2Arrive in Brussels

Belgium’s stately capital city, Brussels, offers a wide range of premium hotels. Choose from intimate inns near the Grand Place to five-star hotels like the Rocco Forte Hotel Amigo and two Sofitel properties. Explore all your options with Brussels Airlines’ Hotel Booking service.

Follow your nose to your first stop, the Belgian Chocolate Village—one of the world’s largest museums devoted to chocolate. Audio guides (in English, if your French and Flemish are rusty) explain every step in transforming raw cacao beans into chocolate bars and candies. A greenhouse includes cacao plants and some of the other ingredients used to make chocolate, like ginger, pepper, and vanilla. Afterwards, take a walk through the Sablon district, home to some of Belgium’s most celebrated chocolatiers, including Patrick Roger, Pierre Marcolini, and Wittamer.

In the afternoon, visit the Brussels City Museum, on the Grand Place. Get a historical overview, then peek inside the kitchens and dining rooms of Belgian homes over the centuries by checking out the collection of decorative objects, silverware, pewterware, and porcelain.

After a day learning about Brussels’s history and its chocolate-making traditions, you deserve a cocktail. While beer reigns supreme in this country, a new and exciting cocktail scene has emerged in recent years. Let the mixologists at Life is Beautiful and Pharmacie Anglaise pour you one of their signature handcrafted creations, made with ingredients like house-blended rum or horseradish-infused vodka.

Then it’s time for dinner, perhaps on the Tram Experience. You’ll enjoy a six- or seven-course gourmet meal as you admire the city’s illuminated landmarks in this unique mobile restaurant. More conventional restaurants are no less dramatic, especially at one of the 18 Michelin-starred hotspots. Choose from options like Comme Chez Soi, a long-established favorite where you might spot royalty and celebrities dining at a nearby table; or more recent newcomers like Bon-Bon, where you can watch chef Christophe Hardiquest overseeing his team of cooks in the open kitchen.
A low bowl filled with mussels. A larger, oblong bowl holds more in the background.

DAY 3Explore More of Brussels

Gear up for a beer-themed day. Start the morning at brewery-turned-museum WIELS Contemporary Art Centre. The 1930s industrial building is a destination in its own right; it also houses temporary exhibitions by some of the world’s most interesting young artists.

Sated on culture, satisfy some other senses with one of Belgium’s most famous dishes—steamed mussels. The Art Deco La Taverne du Passage has been serving mussels and other bistro favorites since 1930. Or head to Friture René, a family-owned and -run restaurant that serves Belgian favorites in a casual setting.

In the afternoon, set off on a self-guided walking tour with a lot of hops—beer hops, that is. The Capital of Beer is a journey past places, both historical and contemporary, that are important to Brussels’ award-winning beers. Explore some 650 Belgian of them at the Biertempel store, then enjoy a glass at La Fleur en Papier Doré, a favorite bar of Belgian surrealist artists in the 1920s.

Continue the theme this evening with visits to Delirium, famous for its encyclopedic selection of beers (more than 2,000 of them) both on draft and in bottles, and Au Daringman, one of the city’s traditional “brown” bars. Refuel on pub fare like meatballs or frites as you continue your exploration of the city’s taverns.
A cathedral's spire reflects in a canal lined by houses on a cloudy day.

PHOTO BY LIBBY PENNER

DAY 4Arrive in Bruges

Travel this morning from Belgium’s capital to one of its most charming gems—the city of Bruges. Its historic center, a UNESCO World Heritage site, makes for a great place to stay. Crisscrossed by a network of canals, the area features medieval architecture meticulously preserved and restored. Choose from traditional canal-side inns to trendy boutique properties: Brussels Airlines’ Hotel Booking service will lead you to the property that best suits you.

After getting settled, start your exploration with a visit to Markt Square—the city’s traditional commercial heart and the site of a market since 958. These days, market days take place on Wednesdays, when you can browse the cheeses and produce brought in by area farmers and pick up some food gifts like jams and honeys for friends back home. Yet any day of the week, the square’s medieval buildings—like the iconic Belfry—create a picturesque scene.

Chocolate is a countrywide specialty, of course, and Bruges has its own chocolate museum, Choco-Story, that you’ll visit this afternoon. Along with learning the history of cacao cultivation and the process of making chocolates, you’ll find free samples throughout the museum, as well as live demonstrations by chocolatiers. Later, check out some of the city’s top chocolate stores. Chocolate Line and Dumon are known for their creative and unusual approaches to making chocolates, with colorful coatings and unusual ingredients.

This evening, enjoy a dinner of traditional Belgian fare with a gourmet spin. Bistro Bruut, located on one of the city’s canals, features upscale bistro fare made with local produce and served in creative but never fussy presentations. Assiette Blanche, another favorite in the historic heart of Bruges, serves Belgo-Franco cuisine in an inviting wood-paneled dining room.
A woman with her hair tied in a bun uses tongs to grab a pastry from a display rack. A man with a knitted scarf watches her from outside.

PHOTO BY FRANKY VAN BEVER

DAY 5Explore More of Bruges

Start this morning with a visit to the Groeninge Museum, where the Flemish still lifes of tables laden with fruit and fish may spur anticipation of your next meal. The museum’s collection spans the medieval to modern eras, though it’s especially well known for its 18th- and 19th-century works.

After seeing the catch of the day on canvases, check out the real thing at Vismarkt—the fish market—located in a stately 1821-era covered arcade. Perusing the bounty of the North Sea will help prepare you for lunch at Visscherie, one of the city’s best seafood restaurants.

In the afternoon, head to a more interactive museum: the Belgian Beer Experience. This hands-on museum lets you smell and touch the ingredients used to make beer while you learn about the beer-brewing traditions of the country’s abbeys. And what experience would be complete without some sampling? You’ll find 16 different beers on tap, from pale ales to dark stouts.

This evening, celebrate your last night in Belgium with a meal to remember. Choose from one of Bruges’s top restaurants, like the Michelin-starred Bartholomeus, where the four- and five-course menus are paired with sweeping views of the sea.
People walk through a quiet but cozy town square.

PHOTO BY ALI NUREDINI

DAY 6Return Home

Make your way back to Brussels this morning. Stop at the Galeries Royales to buy some last-minute presents before heading to the airport to catch your flight back home or continue on to your next stop if you’re visiting on Brussels Airlines’ Belgium Stop Over program.

Either way, speed your way through check-in, with expedited service for Business Class passengers. Then be sure to enjoy some time in The Loft, the airline’s Business Class lounge. This gorgeously designed space features walls hung with contemporary art, a luxury spa, and nap rooms. Of course, this is also another chance to enjoy some delicious Belgian food and drinks, including coffee roasted by Rombouts and chocolates by Neuhaus. Then board your boutique hotel in the air for another memorable meal from a Michelin-starred chef and sublime service, all in the supremely comfortable surroundings of Brussels Airlines.
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