The most popular item at Beatriz, a popular bakery in Pamplona’s central city, are the mini chocolate croissants, or garroticos. (Terri Colby/For Tribune Newspapers, Chicago Tribune)
Whether drinking where Hemingway drank or eating desserts to die for, there’s more to Pamplona than running bulls.
Asuncion Gomez Tellechea rings up a box of garroticos, a mini chocolate croissant, at Beatriz. (Terri Colby/For Tribune Newspapers, Chicago Tribune)
Felipe Oyarzabal Ibarra pours locally made cider into a glass for tourists outside Amaiurko Errota. (Terri Colby/For Tribune Newspapers, Chicago Tribune)
Cafe society is alive and well in Pamplona, especially on the city’s Plaza del Castillo. (Terri Colby/For Tribune Newspapers, Chicago Tribune)
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In Pamplona at the Michelin-starred Rodero, an amuse bouche of hake ceviche with piquillo peppers is a refreshing start to an elaborate feast. (Terri Colby/For Tribune Newspapers, Chicago Tribune)
Tender white asparagus is one of the jewels of early spring in Spain’s Navarre region. (Terri Colby/For Tribune Newspapers, Chicago Tribune)
Writer Ernest Hemingway at a bullfight in Pamplona, Spain, in the 1950s. (AFP/Getty Images)