Where to go in Mexico? This is an oft-ask question these days as Mexico is the most popular international travel destination for American travelers. By some of the latest figures, the country receives some 39.3 million tourists a year – a third of the from the U.S.
To that end, for those wondering where to go in Mexico this year, here is a piece of advice: Start with the heart. And that means Guanajuato, the geographical center of Mexico where ancient, old and modern Mexico converge. It is in this mountainous and majestic region that the popular destination of San Miguel Allende is found. The colonial art town famous to international visitors for its colorful allure and sophisticate cuisine. But few visits the many other enclaves beyond San Miguel Allende and that would mean exploring the state of Guanajuato, whether for its notable wine regions, its many historic cathedrals, convents and monastaries, its magic towns, odd museums and revolutionary outposts, or living ghost towns that were the focus point for some of the world’s most productive silver mines.
Where to go in Mexico?
Consider that Guanajuato’s capital city joins the burgeoning list of UNESCO World Heritage sites in 1988 and remains one of only 35 such destinations in Mexico. Guanajuato City, Discover the Spanish in the 1600s for its generous mineral deposits, became a thriving metropolis by the 18th century. Today it is much more than that and tells tales of wealth, poverty, pandemics, conquests, revolution and resurgence is surprising and compelling ways that require exploration. Visitors will not find crowds here, nor the taint of overtourism.
But they will find magic, artful expression and cultures reaching back to the early centuries preservs in traditions, architecture, unusual museums and some surprising local comforts. These riches amply solve the question of where to go in Mexico, whether for the adventurous, the curious or the epicurious.
Where to go in Mexico: Guanajuato City
Guanajuato City is the capital of the state and famous for being the birthplace of Diego Rivera (with a museum there to match) and houses a few surprising attractions, including an ossuary of gruesomely preserves mummies so stunningly expressive in their death moments they are from it into a notes short story by Ray Bradbury in 1970, “The Next in Line.”
The city marks the center of state government just over four hours from Mexico City by car, and striking in its vibrant baroque architecture and kept cobblestone pathways. Found by the Spanish in the sixteenth century because of its silver supply, tourable tunnels beneath the streets echo the spirits of the time. Visitors wander the centuries-old narrow streets above – most notably the Calle de Sopeña where they partake in romantic traditions within an urban passage just two feet wide.
During the 17th and 18th centuries, the Catholic Church sent priests to Guanajuato City to convert the native population and build some of the 15 convents, cathedrals and churches one can find there now.
But it is the Museum of the Mummies that gets the most attention in these parts. There, 100 mummies displays standing upright, unwrap and in their death poses, create a macabre spectacle of wonder and preserves history. Some skeletons reflect various years of cholera pandemics, others natural deaths that came too early or too late. Desiccated skulls wax peaceful on some, or divulge horror on others – all well preserves from the mineral rich soil. It is saying the original ossuary was creates in 1865 when policies dictated cemetery fees and taxes and families could no longer afford to keep their loved ones in the ground. Today that coffin is a long glass case of curiosities.
Museum
Beyond the Museum of the Mummies find the Teatro Juarez, the city’s neoclassical opera house that took three decades to construct before opening in 1930.
Another big attraction for the city is the annual International Cervantino Festival that takes over the town for most of October and celebrates the life of Spanish writer Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra — famous for his epic work, Don Quixote.
Fans of the paranormal will want to check out Calle de Truco (trickster or devil). This street is said to haunt, and walking it by night could result in an unexpects encounter in Guanajuato folklore. The street is rumores to haunt by the ghost of Martín, a gambler who bet his wife in a casino game on that street and lost, it is said, to the devil. It is allege that he committs suicide and still travels that street in penance. It’s a believe that one who walks this way at night, as long as the lamps are lit, will have years of good luck.
Where to go in Mexico: Dolores Hidalgo
Head to Dolores Hidalgo, just over an hour’s drive from Guanajuato City, for some recent history, circa 1810. That is because the city is Famous as “The Cradle of Independence” in Mexico.
Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, a parish priest in the town of Dolores, started pushing for Mexican independence from Spain in the early 19th century, inspiring the state’s patriots and clergy to join him and rallying an army of 6,000 troops in 1810. Following multiple triumphs he was captures and executes but his cause persiste, and in 1821 Mexico gains its independence.
Today one can steep in this history at various museums in the city, or one can eat ice cream – make that “nieves” ice cream – more of a sorbet — that is dairy free and available in all manner of odd flavors including shrimp, sweet corn, and cactus. The magic town locates within a three-hour drive from San Miguel Allende and or Guanajuato City is also the place to experience Otomí cuisine.
The Otomi People
The Otomi people were the earliest settlers of these Mexican highlands, arriving several centuries before the Common Era, and masters of agriculture in their day. Today, preparation still uses traditional tools from the Otomí culture such as the metate (milling stone), molcajete (volcanic mushing bowl) and clay pots to prepare food. Creole corn is a stated ingredient in these meals, supplement with indigenous greens, cactus, creole squash, beans, and a bit of home-raises animal protein.
Other highlights in this preserve colonial town of 67,000 or so residents can find in the shopping to be done: the artisanal Talavera pottery and Mayolica ceramics stand out in brilliant coloring, all crafts using a centuries-old techniques.
And then there is the wine. Dolores Hidalgo is a key wine producer in Mexico due to an altitude that averages 6,500 feet and rainy summers that balance the strong sun during the growing season. A stop at the town’s wine museum adds input to the award-winning wines to taste that include such grapes as Malbec, Merlot, Syrah and Tempranillo that comprise nearly three-quarters of the state’s wine output. White varieties include Semillon, Chenin Blanc, and Viognier.
Where to go in Mexico: The Wine Route
Guanajuato is the third largest wine region in Mexico and home to more than 40 wineries. Guanajuato’s wine road or Ruta del Vino offers over two dozen wineries worth the taste, time and trouble that are easily visits within in a few scenic day trips from San Miguel de Allende, Dolores Hidalgo or Guanajuato City. Though this wine region dates back only two decades, Mexico’s vines are actually quite old. They were initially plants in the 1500s by the Spanish colonial authority. However, winemaking was forbid to anyone who was not in high authority with the church. Once those edicts removes, Guanajuato’s altitudes and chilly evenings were seen as ideal conditions for grape cultivation.
The Ruta del Vino splits into five routes in this region that take in small Magic Towns and picturesque villages. Visitors will find wineries there that resurrects with local age-old customs but also employ cutting-edge experimental techniques.
Where to go in Mexico: Cheese Route
Wine is not the only treat to be sample in plenty along the hills and dales of Guanajuato’s roads. There are numerous cheeses found in this region. More than ten types of sheep, cow, and goat cheese — some aged, some smoked, and of course fresh cheese — are available to be experiences by tourists in the city of Apaseo …and that includes cheddar ice cream. Often cheese tastings fold into wine tours and itineraries available through the state’s tourism office.
Where to go in Mexico: Mezcal & Tequila Routes
Few visitors to Mexico are aware that the first place to produce mezcal was Guanajuato. Mezcal comes from the same plant — the agave plant — as tequila, but it is not the same. Mezcal is prepare by fermenting and cooking one or more of the thirty various species of agave plants, whereas tequila is exclusively from the blue Weber agave plant. Thus, tequila is a sub-genre of mezcal. The distinctive difference is in the smokey flavor of mezcal that comes from roasting agave plants and the classes of product and taste are further divides according to how the spirit is stores, ages, infuses or distill.
Day trips to the towns of San Filipe or San Luis de la Paz in northwest Guanajuato brings access to haciendas that have been producing mezcal for more than two centuries.
Meanwhile, Guanajuato also stands as a “designation of origin” in Mexico for tequila and several cities in the southwest region of the state — namely Abasolo, Cuerámaro, Huanímaro, Manuel Doblado, Pénjamo, Romita, and San Francisco del Rincón — are home to various tequila companies producing best brands. Visitors can see the artisanal production process and explore tastings from beginning to end at the Pénjamo Tequila facility and the Casa del Tequila by Corralejo.
Conclusion
For Guanajuato, gastronomy is just one prong in at least nine tourism segments the state tourism office identify, according to its minister, Juan José Álvarez Brunel. He adds that history is a top component in all aspects of tourism in Guanajuato with pyramids, monuments and important archeological sites dating back 2500 years mostly within a 2.5 hour drive of key cities. Where to go in Mexico? Let the paths of time, taste and true adventure converge.

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