Little Havana beats to its own rhythm. On Calle Ocho, family-run ventanitas have been serving café cubano through small windows for decades, domino tiles click at Domino Park from sunrise to sunset, and the smell of hand-rolled cigars drifts out of workshops where master rollers still practise their craft the old-world way. This is one of America's most storied neighbourhoods, officially recognised as a National Treasure, and it's where this tour makes its home for three hours.
The tour opens at the Bay of Pigs Monument in Cuban Memorial Boulevard Park, where the stories of exile, resilience, and community-building that shaped this place come alive before the first bite. From there, a traditional Cuban bakery sets the tone: flaky guava pastelitos and golden ham croquetas, the kind of food that has anchored neighbourhood life here for generations.
A working cigar factory comes next, where you watch master rollers shape leaves with the same unhurried precision their predecessors brought from Havana. A stop at a Guayabera store gives a feel for the linen-and-sunshine aesthetic that defines Miami Cuban style, before a traditional Cuban coffee delivers the spark that locals run on every single morning.
The heart of the tour is a perfectly pressed Cuban sandwich alongside crispy mariquitas, eaten while your guide traces how this stretch of Miami transformed from a quiet suburb into a cultural landmark recognised the world over. That storey leads into a sit-down traditional Cuban meal, a full spread of island cooking at its most honest and generous.
Still to come is the Secret Dish, a surprise your guide reveals only on the day, sitting right at the crossing point between old Havana tradition and Miami's creative, forward-looking energy.
The tour closes at Domino Park, where regulars hold court under the shade and the tiles keep clicking. It's the most genuine last image Little Havana could offer.