Alsace: Medieval Markets and Mountain Escape
Alsace feels less like France than anywhere else in France. Half-timbered houses, German place names, local dialects closer to German than French, and a particular approach to food and wine mark it as a border region with its own identity. That's partially its appeal and partially a caveat. The tourism infrastructure here has crystallised around Christmas markets and half-timbered villages to a degree that can feel stage-managed. That said, step away from the main high streets and explore the side alleys, the vineyards, and the foothills, and you find something genuinely distinctive. The food is hearty and unusual by French standards. The wine (Rieslings, Alsatian whites) is very good and often underrated. The landscapes shift from flat wine plains to genuine mountains within kilometres. It's a region that rewards curiosity and repays exploring beyond the postcard images.
What Makes Alsace Special
- Food that's genuinely different. Choucroute, tarte flambée, and coq au riesling aren't fancy; they're honest, hearty food rooted in local tradition. Restaurants serve portions that refuse to be minimalist.
- Wine route and vineyards embedded in daily life rather than isolated. You can walk from villages directly into vineyard landscapes. Wineries are family-run and unpretentious. The wines (especially Rieslings and Gewürztraminers) are very good and cost half what similar quality costs elsewhere.
- Mountain terrain accessible within 30 minutes of towns. The Vosges mountains aren't Alp-scale, but they offer genuine hiking, forests, and views that open suddenly. The escarpment between plain and mountain creates dramatic landscape.
- Genuinely distinct culture and language. You'll see road signs in Alsatian dialect alongside French. This isn't heritage tourism imposed from above; it's lived culture. The attitude toward outsiders is friendlier here than in more insular French regions.
Top Towns & Resorts in Alsace
Colmar
Colmar is Alsace's main draw: a medieval walled town with canals, half-timbered buildings, and a market square that genuinely resembles the tourism posters. It's beautiful, but that beauty comes with tourism intensity. July-August sees genuine crowds, particularly around the market square and main shopping streets. December brings Christmas market chaos. That said, Colmar's scale is manageable compared to larger cities, and the side streets offer authentic character. The town is a genuine place where people live and work; it hasn't been entirely hollowed out by tourism. The Unterlinden Museum houses a genuinely important religious artwork. Staying in Colmar itself can be touristy, but it's a very good day-trip base and genuinely worth exploring on foot.
Strasbourg
Alsace's regional capital and significantly larger than Colmar, Strasbourg is a major city (population 280,000) with substantial medieval character. The cathedral is genuinely impressive. The Grande Île (old town) has pleasant canals and half-timbered streets. However, it functions as a city first and a tourism destination second, which is both good (you experience authentic urban life) and occasionally frustrating (finding a parking spot in December can be nightmarish). Christmas markets here are genuinely enormous and genuinely crowded. It's worth visiting, but maybe not as a base for a relaxing week unless you're actively interested in city culture. The EU parliament meets here, which adds a modern dimension to the medieval architecture.
Eguisheim
A small wine village in the foothills, Eguisheim has concentric rings of houses around the central square with surrounding vineyards climbing the slopes. It gets touristy but remains small enough that it doesn't feel overwhelmed. The village is walkable end-to-end in 15 minutes, so you need to decide if that scale appeals or bores you. There are wine tasting rooms, restaurants, and a weekly market. The surrounding countryside is very good for hiking and exploring on foot. It's a complete village experience: small enough to feel intimate, large enough to have functional amenities. Accommodation is reasonably priced compared to Colmar.
Riquewihr
Riquewihr is a walled village with significant tourist infrastructure (galleries, craft shops, wine bars) oriented explicitly toward visitors. It's postcard-attractive and commercially slick. If you want village character served directly, this delivers. If you want to feel like you're discovering something, it might feel too packaged. The village is tiny and crowded in summer. The surrounding vineyards are very good, and wine tastings are easy to arrange. It's worth a day visit but probably not worth basing yourself there; the focus on tourism can feel relentless.
Kaysersberg
Kaysersberg sits where the mountains meet the plain, so the setting is dramatic in a way flat villages aren't. The town is genuinely beautiful: castle ruins overlook half-timbered streets, and the River Weiss runs through the centre. It's larger than Eguisheim or Riquewihr but smaller than Colmar, offering scale that feels balanced. Wine bars and restaurants are good without being trendy. The surrounding hiking is very good: trails lead directly up into the Vosges. Kaysersberg is one of the few Alsatian villages that maintains character while genuinely functioning as a place people live, not just somewhere tourists visit.