“How many fish markets is it reasonable to visit on our honeymoon?” I asked my husband-to-be. “Three or four,” he answered, and I nodded. “A day,” he continued. This is why I married him. It’s also why we spent the first morning of our honeymoon, a mere 36 hours after our wedding, wandering the fish souk in Dubai.
Fish markets make an exciting travel stop for food lovers because they offer a glimpse into the local food culture and a peek at the everyday routines of the local food industry. If you have a strangely-timed layover (there’s not much else to do at six in the morning) or a weird case of jetlag (still awake at 5:15 a.m.?), the market’s early-morning hours may actually be convenient.
With the exception of Tsukiji in Tokyo, Tekka Center in Singapore, and more consumer-oriented fish markets such as Seattle’s Pike Place Market, few fish markets are huge tourist draws. In Dubai, the vendors are friendly and excited that you are interested in their fish, even if you’re more likely to snap a photo than to purchase any actual seafood.