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From Travel + Leisure

cassidain

Senior Insider
Makes one wonder about travel magazines...

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I was wondering the same...? Maybe because they are lumping SBH in with all of France? And "region's largest wine store" even makes it sound like SBH is within France. I think it's just poor writing rather than ignorance.
 
what it it you are questioning exactly?

1. Is Bartolomeo a local favorite?
2. Isn't La Cave de Saint Barthélemy Cyril's place in Marigot? 200,000 bottles...I don't think so. Cyril is a nice guy, but most of his stock has been around a long time. Not much turnover I'm afraid.
 
I read a lot worse than that, and the chef at Guanahani is actually really good... Philippe Masseglia... and we have had some really good meals at Indigo. maybe writer was staying at the Guanahani so it was a "local" favorite...
 
Anguilla
From beachfront barbecue joints to chic hotel eateries, the tiny British island of Anguilla personifies the transformation of the Caribbean from culinary backwater to gastronomic paradise. With four gourmet restaurants, professional cooking classes, fine wine and rum tastings, and hydroponic herb garden tours, the island’s CuisinArt resort is dedicated to bringing your taste buds alive. Many of the best local restaurants specialize in barbecue that could give the pits of Memphis or Kansas City a run for their money.
Local Favorites: Tokyo Bay at the CuisinArt resort and Smokey’s at the Cove.
Cayman Islands
Banking isn’t the only thing they do well on this tiny western Caribbean archipelago. The British territory also offers a unique food culture with roots that stretch back more than 300 years to the buccaneers who settled on the islands. “Old Caymanian” cuisine is an eclectic mix of British, Jamaican, and Central American influences. Although rare these days, turtle soup is the unofficial national dish. Among the other island delights are fried land crab, corn bread with custard, and a heavy cake made from coconut, cassava, sugar, and spice.
Local Favorites: Vivine’s Kitchen and Mango Tree.


Curaçao
With a population made up of more than 50 nationalities, Curaçao’s food scene is incredibly diverse. Restaurants run the gamut from French and Dutch to Brazilian, Indonesian, and Japanese. Local krioyo (Creole) specialties include yuana (stewed iguana), keshi yená (stuffed cheese), and kokada (coconut patties). Willemstad, the island capital, combines fine dining and Dutch Colonial architecture, especially in the restored Kura Hulanda compound with its delectable alfresco eateries.
Local Favorite: Blues Restaurant at the Avila Hotel.
Grenada
The “Island of Spice” has long produced cloves, nutmeg, ginger, and cinnamon for export as well as for local kitchens. This bounty of flavor goes into Grenadian dishes like ginger pork, curried mutton, crayfish broth, and stir-fried rabbit. It’s also the Caribbean stomping ground for British chef Gary Rhodes, who kicked off the celebrity chef rush to the Caribbean a decade ago when he created his self-titled restaurant at the Calabash resort.
Local Favorites: Rhodes Restaurant and Patrick’s Local Homestyle Cooking Restaurant.


Martinique
Foie gras and green bananas? Only in Martinique, where French haute cuisine marries Creole cooking in restaurants that look as if Bogart and Bacall might have romanced there in To Have and Have Not. Many of the best eateries are set in French colonial villas and plantation houses, setting the mood for exotic tropical dishes like lobster in vanilla butter, sea urchin in a red curry sauce, or mousseline of smoked marlin with avocado.
Local Favorite: Restaurant Le Brédas in St. Joseph.




Puerto Rico
The big island’s cocina criolla combines Spanish, American, and First Nations influences into a cuisine like no other in the Caribbean. Pork and peppers dominate the ingredients. Lechón asado (roast pig on a spit) is an island-wide passion while the use of peppers in both traditional and nouvelle dishes is an art form mastered by only the best chefs. Old San Juan and swank Condado are both culinary hubs in the capital, but even roadside stalls will blow your mind and taste buds.
Local Favorite: Pikayo restaurant in San Juan.


St. Bart’s
Long a darling of the rich and famous of Europe and North America, this French island has cultivated a cosmopolitan dining scene to feed a demanding clientele. Eateries range from the charming sidewalk cafés in Gustavia to upscale beachfront spots that easily hold their own against counterparts on the French Riviera. St. Bart’s also boasts the region’s largest wine store—La Cave de Saint Barthelemy—with more than 200,000 bottles and 300 varieties of French wine.
Local Favorite: Bartolomeo at the Guanahani resort.
St. Martin
St. Martin offers two for the price of one: French cuisine on one side of the island and Dutch delights on the other. Chic waterfront dining is found in French villages like Marigot and Grand Case, while the best Dutch-side dining hits the gastronomic jackpot with restaurants like Rare and Temptation in the Atlantic World casino. The island also has its own homegrown libation, guavaberry liqueur, made from oak-aged rum, cane sugar, and a rare berry harvested from bushes that grow in the island’s central highlands.
Local Favorites: Le Santal in Marigot and Bistrot Caraïbes in Grand Case.


Trinidad
Dining in Trinidad is a journey through the foods of the various cultures that have come to populate this southern anchor of the Lesser Antilles. More than 40 percent of the population is of South Asia origin, so the Indian cuisine is especially good. But immigrants from Africa, Europe, South America, the Middle East, and China have also enhanced the local food culture. From roti bread and red-hot curries to callaloo soup and jerk meats, it’s hard to know where to start.
Local Favorite: Chaud restaurant in Port of Spain.




St. Lucia
St. Lucians flock to the waterfront towns of Gros Islet and Anse la Ray on Friday nights for “jump ups” that blend food, drink, music, and dancing in the streets. The barbecued seafood is straight off the boat, served with breadfruit, sweet potato, or blackened corn on the cob. Local Creole cuisine is influenced by both the French and British, who once ruled the island. Salt fish and green banana is the national dish—and much tastier than its name might suggest. For something completely different, pop into the restaurant at the Hotel Chocolat Boucan for cacao gazpacho and confit of duck in a white chocolate mash.
Local Favorite: Dasheene at Ladera Resort.


Barbados
Flying fish sandwiches have evolved up the island food chain from roadside rum shacks to the finest restaurants. Bajans love their national dish marinated in lime, doused with hot sauce, battered in egg, and served straight off the grill. An influx of British expats has inspired events like the annual Barbados Food & Wine and Rum Festival in November, which attracts a lineup of celebrity chefs from around the globe.
Local Favorite: The Cliff in Derricks.

 
I read a lot worse than that, and the chef at Guanahani is actually really good... Philippe Masseglia... and we have had some really good meals at Indigo. maybe writer was staying at the Guanahani so it was a "local" favorite...

I like Indigo too. I've asked about Bartolomeo on these pages, but I don't recall tons of interest or positive reviews. Perhaps locals do frequent the restaurant as a favorite???

How many sbhonline forum participants do you think would, if limited to a single choice, name Bartolomeo as a "local favorite"? I'd wager zero...

And, how many, if limited to a single wine merchant, would name La Cave. Zero again IMHO.

No agenda, just a bit of incredulity...
 
We have to get back to Indigo on the beach.

Somehow w keep forgetting about it and it has often been a marvelous lunchtime destination-the view, the room, the staff the sushi/fresh fish and the salads all tops!
 
Oh, and the closest Phil gets to Bartolomeo is the parking area or the road in front of it -I like to take pictures of the lily ponds and flowers.
 
I actually had one of the best single dishes ever at Indigo (or was it Bartolomeo -- which is the more formal one?).

Seared foie gras with a passion fruit chutney.
Ranks with the duck we had at Lucas Carton in Paris as the dishes that were near perfection.

The overall meal itself was just very good (a pretty average rabbit dish didn't help) but that course was absolutely amazing.
 
Was most likely Bartolomeo as Indigo is one of our favorite lunch spots and I don't ever recall them having a seared foie gras on the menu as we would have ordered it. Also, never saw rabbit on the menu. For some reason, we have never been to Bartolomeo for dinner. I think it seemed too formal for us.
 
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