Atlas Mountains: Berber Souk and Home Cooking with a Berber Family
- Private, Semi Group
Shop for fresh ingredients at Asni’s authentic Saturday souk, then drive into the High Atlas to cook a traditional Berber meal with a local family near Imlil. A day that moves from market stalls to mountain terrace — with your hands in the food the whole way.
Destination
Atlas Mountains
Interests
Duration
8–9 hours
Transport Mode
AC minivan, AC 4x4
Included
- Hotel pickup and drop-off in Marrakech
- AC vehicle with driver
- Local guide throughout the day
- Guided souk visit with ingredient shopping
- Hands-on cooking session at family home
- Full Berber lunch (tagine, bread, salads, fruit)
- Mint tea and welcome refreshments
- Short guided village walk near Imlil
Excluded
- Personal purchases at the souk
- Tips (not required)
- Drinks beyond water and tea
Thing To Do
Atlas Mountain Experiences
Not suitable for
- Wheelchair users (village paths not accessible)
- Severe mobility limitations (short uphill walk to family home)
- Children under 3 (long day with mountain drive)
Reasons to book this tour
Browse Asni’s authentic Saturday souk alongside locals and choose the ingredients for your own mountain meal.
Cook a tagine and bake tafarnout bread with a Berber family in their home near Imlil, guided by the women of the household.
Eat a full homemade lunch on a terrace with views of Mount Toubkal and the High Atlas peaks.
Walk through irrigated orchards and stone-path villages in the Imlil valley after your meal.
Drive through the dramatic Moulay Brahim Gorges on one of the most scenic mountain routes from Marrakech.
A day designed for depth over speed — one market, one kitchen, one valley, no rushing.
What you can expect






Into the mountains, through the gorges
You leave Marrakech heading south, watching the city give way to dry plains and then the first folds of the Atlas. The road passes through Tahanaout and the dramatic Moulay Brahim Gorges, where rocky cliffs rise sharply on both sides of the valley.
Your guide sets the context as you go — pointing out the landscape, explaining the villages, and preparing you for the market ahead. The drive is roughly an hour and a half, and the scenery keeps your attention from the start.
Shopping like a local at Asni’s Saturday souk
The weekly market in Asni is not a tourist souk. It is where families from the surrounding mountain villages come to buy and sell — fresh vegetables, herbs, spices, live animals, household goods, and seasonal produce stacked on blankets and carts.
With your guide, you walk through the market at local pace, choosing the ingredients you will cook later in the day: tomatoes, onions, seasonal vegetables, spices, fresh herbs. This is the starting point of your meal, and the connection between market and kitchen gives the cooking that follows real meaning.
Cooking with a Berber family near Imlil
From Asni, you continue up the valley to a family home near Imlil. You are welcomed with mint tea on the terrace, with views toward Mount Toubkal and the surrounding walnut groves.
The cooking session is led by a woman of the household, who guides you through the preparation of a traditional tagine using the ingredients you bought at the souk. You also learn to make tafarnout — rustic Berber bread shaped by hand and baked in a clay oven. There is no rush. The session unfolds at the rhythm of the home.
While the tagine cooks slowly, you pick fresh herbs from the garden for tea and learn how the family prepares their daily meals with what the land and the market provide.
Lunch on the terrace, walk through the valley
You sit down to eat what you have cooked — a full meal with salads, bread, tagine, and fresh fruit, served on the family terrace with the Atlas peaks in front of you. It is one of those lunches that stays with you.
After the meal, a short walk through the village and its irrigated orchards lets you stretch your legs and see daily life in the Imlil valley: stone paths, terraced fields, water channels, and the quiet activity of a mountain community. The walk is gentle and adapted to your pace.
A day shaped around food and place
This is not a cooking class in a studio. It is a full day that begins in the market, moves through the landscape, and ends with a meal you made yourself in a place that feels real. The pace is unhurried, the food is honest, and the people you meet are part of the experience — not performing it.
This is the plan
Check out the plan below to see what you’ll get up to with your local host. Feel free to personalize this offer with the host of your choice.
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Departure from Marrakech
Transfer — Your driver picks you up from your hotel or riad and heads south toward the Atlas Mountains, passing through the outskirts of Marrakech and onto the Asni road.
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Moulay Brahim Gorges
Scenic drive — The road narrows through the dramatic Moulay Brahim Gorges, with steep rocky cliffs on both sides. Your guide points out the landscape and the pilgrimage village below. A brief photo stop if conditions allow.
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Asni Saturday Souk
Guided walk — You explore the lively weekly market where mountain families gather to trade produce, herbs, spices, livestock, and household goods. With your guide, you select the fresh ingredients for the cooking session ahead — vegetables, spices, and herbs straight from the stalls.
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Berber Family Home near Imlil
Workshop — At a traditional home in the Imlil valley, you are welcomed with mint tea on the terrace. The cooking session begins: you prepare a tagine with the souk ingredients under the guidance of the family’s cook, and learn to shape and bake tafarnout bread in a clay oven. You also pick fresh herbs from the garden for the tea.
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Lunch on the Terrace
Lunch stop — You sit down to enjoy the meal you prepared together — salads, fresh bread, tagine, and seasonal fruit — on the family terrace overlooking the valley and the peaks of the High Atlas.
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Village Walk near Imlil
Guided walk — A short stroll through the village and its walnut orchards. You pass stone-built homes, irrigation channels, and terraced fields. The walk is gentle and adapted to the group’s pace.
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Return to Marrakech
Transfer — You drive back to Marrakech via the same mountain road, arriving at your accommodation in the late afternoon.
Make it yours
Want to tweak the itinerary? Book directly & chat afterwards with your host to adjust highlights, skip stops, or make small changes to fit your preferences.
Book risk-free: Cancel within 24 hours for a full refund.
Need something special? Personalize your experience for more time, alternative locations or a completely tailored plan.
Flexible cancellation policy
Feel confident booking
Cancel within 24 hours for a full refund. Even up to 7 days before your experience, you’ll receive a refund, minus the service fee.
Change of plans?
Reschedule your experience to a date and time that works best for you.
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Good to know
Everything you need to know for a smooth and enjoyable experience.
Does this tour only run on Saturdays?
Yes. The Asni souk is a weekly market that takes place every Saturday morning. This is central to the experience — you shop for the ingredients you will cook later in the day. The tour cannot run on other days of the week.
What will we cook during the session?
You prepare a traditional tagine using the vegetables and spices you selected at the souk, along with tafarnout — rustic Berber bread baked in a clay oven. You also prepare mint tea with herbs from the garden. Vegetarian tagine options are available if requested at booking.
How physically demanding is this tour?
The day is relaxed. The village walk is gentle — roughly 30 to 45 minutes on unpaved paths with mild inclines. The family home may involve a short uphill walk from the road. No serious fitness is required, but the terrain is uneven in places.
What is the difference between Private, Small Group, and Group?
All three formats follow the same itinerary with the same inclusions. Private gives you a dedicated vehicle and guide for your party only. Small Group is shared with up to 8 guests and includes a dedicated guide. Group accommodates up to 17 guests in a larger vehicle. The cooking session and meal are the same in all formats.
Is this suitable for children?
Children aged 4 and above generally enjoy the market, the cooking, and the village walk. The day is long (8–9 hours including the drive), so consider your child’s comfort with mountain travel. Children under 3 are not recommended due to the road and the duration.
What if I have food allergies or dietary restrictions?
Let us know at the time of booking. Vegetarian tagine is easily arranged. Nut allergies should be flagged in advance, as some Berber dishes use almonds or walnuts. The family can adapt the menu with enough notice, though options are based on what is available locally.
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