Plock (Mazovian cathedral town) ★ 4.0
Plock, 100km northwest on a high bend of the Vistula, is one of Poland's oldest towns with a Romanesque cathedral. The riverside bistros along Tumskie Hill plate Mazovian regional Polish and river-caught fish.
Kazimierz Dolny, 130km south on the Vistula, is a Renaissance trading town surrounded by limestone cliffs. The koguty rooster sourdough loaves are the local signature, baked in the Slomianski and Sarzynski bakeries.
Plock, 100km northwest on a high bend of the Vistula, is one of Poland's oldest towns with a Romanesque cathedral. The riverside bistros along Tumskie Hill plate Mazovian regional Polish and river-caught fish.
Lublin, 170km southeast of Warsaw, is the eastern Polish food capital. The cebularz onion-poppyseed flatbread is the city's signature, with EU Protected Geographical Indication status, sold from kiosks across the Old Town.
Zelazowa Wola, 50km west of Warsaw and Frederic Chopin's birthplace, sits among Mazovian farmland. Country inns along the route plate mushroom pierogi, regional sausage and the cherry-and-vodka tradition.
Lodz, 130km southwest of Warsaw, is the textile capital that rebuilt itself as a post-industrial food destination. The Manufaktura complex and OFF Piotrkowska courtyard host the country's best food-hall scene outside Warsaw.