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Little Havana is Miami’s most colorful, vibrant and characteristic neighborhood, and the closest many people can ever get to Cuba itself. Want to dive into this unique concentration of Cuban and Hispanic culture? Here’s how.

Immerse yourself in Cuban culture at Viernes Culturales.

Ocho Calle (8th Street) has always been at the heart of Miami’s Cuban community – Little Havana centers around it. On the last Friday of every month, its hosts a street fair called Viernes Culturales (Cultural Fridays) between 14th and 17th avenues. With dancing, dominos games, cigar rollers, Cuban cafecitos, mojitos, artists and live music, Viernes Culturales is like a crash course in Cuban culture. Free walking tours, led by famed Miami historian Dr. Paul George, leave from the Tower Theater at 7pm during the festival.

Feast.

Little Havana’s got loads of charming restaurants and hole-in-the-wall joints serving up classic Cuban dishes like ‘congri’ (black beans and white rice), ‘sandweech Cubano’ (pressed ham sandwich) and lechon asado (slow roasted pork).

Learn how to dance, Cuban style.

Latin America has a rich tradition of dancing. So it should come as no surprise that Little Havana, a neighborhood with a population that’s 98 percent Hispanic, takes dancing pretty seriously. Try your hand, or should we say feet, at Afro-Cuban folkloric dance, salsa, merengue, tango or flamenco.

Watch veteranos slap fichas in Domino Park.

Every day dozens of the neighborhood’s old boys descend on Maximo Gomez Park – known better as ‘Domino Park’ – to play passionate and animated games of dominos and chess. Just watching can offer a real flavor of the community. There’s a delightful rhythmic quality to their games and discussions – the cool slap of the fichas (tiles), the knock of a fist when a turn has to be passed, the click and shuffle of the pack in preparation – all comprise a backing track to the players’ lyrical comments about the game and the latest neighborhood gossip.

Buy a cigar in Calle Ocho.

Calle Ocho is the place to buy a cigar in America. More than that, it’s possible to watch them being crafted at one of the handful of factories nearby – a rare treat since most of the world’s cigar production takes place behind the closed doors of ‘free trade zones’. Don’t miss El Credito Cigar Factory, home of the world-famous non-Cuban La Gloria Cubana cigar.

Honorable mention: Every March, Calle Ocho hosts a giant street party. Known as the Calle Ocho Festival, it attracts upwards if a million visitors each year.

Written by insider city guide series Hg2 | A Hedonist’s guide to…

(Image: wallyg)

About the author

Brett AckroydBrett hopes to one day reach the shores of far-flung Tristan da Cunha, the most remote of all the inhabited archipelagos on Earth…as to what he’ll do when he gets there, he hasn’t a clue. Over the last 10 years, London, New York, Cape Town and Pondicherry have all proudly been referred to as home. Now it’s Copenhagen’s turn, where he lends his travel expertise to momondo.com.

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