Oaxaca
Bespoke
Excursion
Mole, Mezcal, and More. Six nights with private audiences at the workshops, distilleries, and tables that define this city.

Oaxaca is the cultural capital of Mexico, and the Bespoke Excursion is the trip we design for travelers who want to meet it on those terms. Six nights, one carefully chosen boutique hotel, and a custom-curated week of private encounters with the master alebrijero in San Martín Tilcajete, the master weaver in Teotitlán del Valle, the maestro mezcalero in Santiago Matatlán, the chef who knows Central de Abastos the way most people know their kitchen. Each day is designed individually around the traveler. No groups, no mini-buses, no fixed schedule. Just access.
Four chapters of a single week.
Arrival and departure are designed too — private transfers, the right hotel courtyard at sunset, a final coffee before OAX. The week’s bookends are quiet on purpose.

The Ancient City
Monte Albán at first light, with a private archaeologist who has spent decades on this mountaintop. The Zapotec capital before the tour buses arrive — the carved ball court, the danzantes, the astronomical alignments.
Followed by a curated private walk through the Jardín Etnobotánico at Santo Domingo. Hundreds of cacti and plant species, the Sierra Norte at the wall, the late-afternoon light.

The Artisans
San Martín Tilcajete, with a private workshop at the studios of one of the founding families of the alebrije craft — you carve and paint your own piece, learning the color and the symbolism from the people who shaped both.
A Velas Tradicionales workshop for beeswax candles made the way the saints’ processions have demanded them for four hundred years. And a full day in Teotitlán del Valle: a private audience with one of the village’s most accomplished weavers — wool, cochineal, indigo, brazilwood, pomegranate, the dye garden, time at the loom with the master, not a demonstrator. Lunch at Tlamanalli.

The Table
A morning at Central de Abastos with one of Oaxaca’s most respected chefs — the dry chile aisle, the mole paste vendors, the chocolatieres, the grasshoppers, the tianguis pace.
From the market, retreat to a private outdoor kitchen for the day’s masterclass: the slow, layered construction of an authentic Oaxacan mole, and pressed tortillas from heirloom corn. Pinnacle restaurants by night — the city’s defining tables, booked in advance, the chefs in residence.

The Mezcal Trail
A sommelier-led mezcal safari to Santiago Matatlán — the small denomination-of-origin town that quietly produces the soul of the spirit.
Hidden palenques the tourist trade hasn’t found. Espadín, tobalá, tepeztate, madrecuixe — and the masters who have spent a lifetime understanding the difference. Tastings paired with conversation, not commentary.
One hotel, six nights. Your pick.
No. 01
Quinta Real Oaxaca
The former Convento de Santa Catalina de Siena, occupying a full city block in the historic center. Stone arcades, Baroque fountains, a cloister courtyard, a small pool in what was once the priory garden.
Best for: Travelers who want history in the architecture itself.
Trade-off: Rooms vary widely; not all are equally updated.

No. 02
Hotel Escondido Oaxaca
Grupo Habita’s 2023 Oaxaca property. Minimalist contemporary design in a restored colonial shell, rooftop terrace with cathedral views, small intimate bar, design-forward but warm.
Best for: Travelers who know Grupo Habita’s aesthetic.
Trade-off: Newest of the four — fewer years of operational track record.
No. 03
Casa Antonieta
Sixteen rooms in a restored 19th-century townhouse. Personal service, dramatic central courtyard, on-site café and small bar, walking distance to everything in Centro.
Best for: A residential, less hotel-feeling stay.
Trade-off: Limited amenities (no pool, small fitness).
No. 04
Hotel Sin Nombre
A white-on-white minimalist design hotel in Centro Histórico, by a Mexican architectural firm. Rooftop terrace, small swimming pool, deeply spare aesthetic.
Best for: Travelers who consume hotels as design objects.
Trade-off: The minimalism is the point — some will find it cold rather than calm.
A curated table, every night.

Origen
Chef Rodolfo Castellanos. Refined Oaxacan, James Beard semifinalist. The farewell dinner candidate.
Casa Oaxaca el Restaurante
Chef Alejandro Ruiz, the originator of modern Oaxacan haute cuisine. Iconic, still excellent.
Pitiona
Chef José Manuel Baños. Contemporary Oaxacan tasting menus, intimate.
Levadura de Olla
Chef Thalía Barrios García. Indigenous rural Oaxacan, rapidly emerging internationally.
Los Danzantes
Long-running classic; one of the city’s serious mezcal programs.
Catedral
Elegant, central, classic Oaxacan dishes done right.
La Olla
Chef Pilar Cabrera, host of the cooking masterclass on Day 6.
Las Quince Letras
A long-running classic for traditional Oaxacan dishes.
In Situ
The scholarly mezcal bar. Ulises Torrentera wrote a definitive book.
Mezcaloteca
By appointment only — curated deep tasting program.
Sabina Sabe
Mezcal cocktails, livelier room.
Itanoní
Heirloom-corn tortillas and antojitos. Breakfast.
Boulenc
Bakery and café in Centro. The bread is excellent.
Tlamanalli (Teotitlán)
Paired with Day 4’s weaving immersion.
A romantic dinner. A sunset experience. A private celebration on the right night. A milestone moment marked the way you’ll want to remember it.
Each signature trip can be designed for two. We shape the moments to the occasion — and discuss the specifics by phone.