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The Patio at Bodega Tradicion, Jerez de la Frontera, Andalucia, Spain.

Yadid Levy

Jerez de la Frontera

Stand down, all other claimants. Jerez, as most savvy Hispanophiles know, is ´¡²Ô»å²¹±ô³Ü³¦Ã­²¹. It just doesn’t broadcast it in the way that Seville and Granada do. Jerez is the capital of Andalucian horse culture, stop one on the famed Sherry Triangle and – cue protestations from Cádiz and Seville – the cradle of Spanish flamenco. The bulería (flamenco songs), Jerez’ jokey, tongue-in-cheek antidote to Seville’s tragic soleá, was first concocted in the legendary Roma barrios of Santiago and San Miguel. But Jerez is also a vibrant modern Andalucian city, where fashion brands live in old palaces and stylishly outfitted businesspeople sit down to distinctly contemporary cuisine between glasses of fino at bubbly tabancos (simple taverns serving sherry).


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Latest stories from Jerez de la Frontera

A white boat moored on a beach, with a jetty to the left and a stone structure to the right; out to sea is a dramatic peaked island.

Beaches

The spirit of southern Spain: reasons to visit Andalucia

Sep 27, 2019 • 6 min read

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