Made in Spain Podcast Por Made in Spain arte de portada

Made in Spain

Made in Spain

De: Made in Spain
Escúchala gratis

Whether you’re an expat chasing the dream, a traveller inspired by European elegance or a foodie seeking the perfect paella, Made in Spain is your insider’s guide to all things chic, cultural and quintessentially Spanish.


Join hosts Nalini Sharma and Laura Senior García for a glamorous mix of travel, food, fashion and the rich cultural narratives that make Spain a global icon of style and sophistication.


Nalini is a former Canadian TV presenter, who has previously covered red carpet and live events, and major news stories. She channels the same wit and curiosity to the Made in Spain podcast, offering sharp, unscripted takes on everything from Spanish traditions to expat surprises.


Laura, a seasoned leadership coach and global traveler, shares her deep, first-hand knowledge of Spain—not just as her birthplace, but as a country she continues to rediscover. With a British father and Spanish mother, she considers herself a global citizen with deep roots in Spain. Her insights connect Spain’s rich past with its modern evolution, offering a unique and personal perspective on life, culture, and luxury in Spain today.


Every episode of Made in Spain explores the country’s hidden gems and exclusive experiences, but it’s more than just a guide—it’s a conversation.


The show’s Slice of Life segment gives listeners an unfiltered peek into Nalini and Laura’s daily experiences – the joys, frustrations, and unexpected moments that make life in Spain, and beyond, full of surprises. Sometimes, it’s about the reality of settling into a new country – at other times, it’s about their travels, funny mishaps, or behind-the-scenes stories from researching the podcast. No matter the topic, listeners feel like they are right there with them, stepping into their world.


© 2026 Made in Spain
Arte Ciencias Sociales Comida y Vino Diseño y Artes Decorativas Escritos y Comentarios sobre Viajes
Episodios
  • 33. Part 2: Trinidad Carnival Survival Guide
    Mar 31 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Crossing the stage at dawn. Dancing for 12+ hours. Costumes you choose months ahead. Trinidad Carnival sounds like a party, but the lived reality is a full-body, full-logistics adventure, and we’re telling you what we wish we’d known before we landed in Port of Spain.

    We start with the journey from Spain, including the messy parts: route planning, time zone tactics, and the moment a train strike and an electric Uber nearly made us miss our flight. From there, we get into how Trinidad Carnival actually works on the ground, from picking a band and section to understanding what “playing mas” means. We played with Hearts (Bacchanal In Bloom, Wild Bloom) and talk through costume timing, deposits, delivery, and why hotels and packages need to be booked shockingly early.

    Then we break down the two-day rhythm: Monday wear vs Tuesday wear, why stockings are basically non-negotiable, and how professional Carnival makeup becomes part of the production. We also share the real survival checklist: shoes, hydration, sunscreen, sleep, safety, and how the parade flow works with music trucks, moving drinks carts, lunch stops, and crowd management. If you’ve ever wondered whether you could do it, we answer honestly and we even debate how we’d do Carnival differently next time.

    We also share a special giveaway with a boutique “museum hotel” in Pátzcuaro, Mexico, plus our take on Road March controversy, soca culture, and where Carnival lives outside Trinidad. If you enjoy this peek into living Carnival, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave us a review so more travellers find it.

    Más Menos
    53 m
  • 32. Part 1: Carnival In Port Of Spain, Trinidad
    Mar 17 2026

    Send a text

    Port of Spain flips a switch when Carnival season hits, and suddenly the city isn’t just hosting a festival, it’s showing you what identity feels like when it’s sung, danced, and defended in public. We’ve just come back from Trinidad and Tobago, and this first part of our two-part Carnival series is our debrief on what surprised us most: the pace of the capital, the warmth of the people, and the sense that even outsiders get pulled into something that feels generational.

    We trace the roots of Trinidad Carnival through colonial history and cultural remixing, from French masquerade traditions to Canboulay and the pushback against suppression that helped shape modern street culture. That context changes how you hear everything, especially soca music. Once we understood soca as the high-tempo evolution of calypso built for the road, it made sense why it’s everywhere, why artists grind all season, and why Road March matters so much.

    Then we get practical and very honest about the Carnival ecosystem: fetes like Hyatt Lime, ticket access, day parties, cooler party culture, and why waking up at 3am for Soca Street somehow becomes a highlight. We also share a few slice-of-life details that taste like Trinidad to us, from Crix crackers to salted prunes steeped in tequila, plus our giveaway with a boutique museum hotel in Patzcuaro, Mexico.

    If you’re curious about Trinidad Carnival, Port of Spain travel, soca culture, and what it really feels like on the ground, hit play, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave us a review. What part of Carnival would you want to try first?

    Más Menos
    58 m
  • 31. Buying property in Spain - Sunshine Is Free; Mistakes Are Expensive
    Mar 3 2026

    Send a text

    Dreaming of a home in Spain but unsure what’s real and what’s just sunshine? We pull back the curtain on the Costa Blanca North market and walk you through the parts most foreigners never see: why many listings start overpriced, how verbal offers actually work, and the legal power of a well-written arras contract. With luxury broker Darcy Maxim as our guide, we map the stretch from Denia to Alicante, show how different nearby towns feel in daily life, and explain why a great agent becomes your researcher, negotiator, and project manager in a system that isn’t built like the US or UK.

    We get practical fast. Inspections aren’t standard in Spain, so we break down how to commission your own and what to test, from electrics and HVAC to humidity and roofs. We talk furniture inventories, because deals often wobble over “personal items,” and we outline a clear sequence from shortlisting and viewings to negotiation, deposit, and the notary. Expect a formal closing: assigned seats, a full deed reading, identity checks, and verified funds. It’s slower, yes, but designed to keep the transaction clean.

    If you’re investing, we cover where returns still make sense and how to match budget to strategy. With around €500k, consider off-plan new builds with 10–20 percent uplift at delivery or a sea-view refurb with bright, Mediterranean finishes. At €1.5m, scarcity, views, and walkability lead, with rentals strong if you follow evolving local rules. We also share hard-won lessons from rental horror stories and why platform protection matters. Love Spain for the lifestyle, but buy with discipline: test towns at night, question the price, and never sign blind.

    Enjoyed the conversation? Follow, rate, and share the show, and tell us your target budget and biggest question about buying in Spain so we can help in a future episode.

    Más Menos
    37 m
Todavía no hay opiniones