Puerto Rico is a great place for tropical fruits and juices. Every street has a shop that sells freshly squeezed fruit juice in various forms i.e. shakes, frappes, sorbets. One of the local specialities is Mofungo that consists of mashed green plantain seasoned with garlic and other spices and filled with chicken, fish, meat, vegetables, etc. We found a place that served it and ordered one filled with vegetables. It is such a simple preparation and now that I think about it, there must be similar dishes prepared in Kerala as well where plantains are used liberally.
One of the interesting eateries we visited was Baru. This is a small place that serves Mediterranean-Carribean fusion food. As vegetarians, our options were limited but they also proved to be really interesting. We ordered Almond Chivita which essentially consisted of fried plantain chips served with flavoured goat cheese and garnished with almond chips and seasoning. It was an innovative dish, we thought and quite delicious as well. The we ordered a dish whose name I forget but it was made of fried bell peppers, buffalo mozzarella cheese and seasoned with pesto sauce, olive oil and basil mojito. This was even better than the first dish as the flavours were so well-balanced and as for the Mozzarella, I have never eaten a better kind. When the waiter brought the dish, we were taken aback to see two huge wedges of white cheese placed between the peppers and expected that it’d be really rich. But it was the lightest, freshest and nicest Mozzarella that we ever had. Its consistency was like home-made cottage cheese, only softer. The last thing we ordered was asparagus risotto and again, it surpassed our expectations. The risotto was excellently cooked, it had lots of vegetables and the Alfredo sauce was so light and well-flavoured…. such a far cry from the Italian food served in the States that settles in your tummy and just… stays there. No pics, sad to say…:-(
Another place that I had marked out to visit was Cafe Berlin since I read someplace that they had good vegetarian options (It is something we ALWAYS have to check!). As we got busier towards the end of our trip, I thought we’d have to ditch the plan since I didn’t even know where this place was. Voila, en route to San Cristobal, Cafe Berlin appeared. A very nice little place, they had amazing vegetarian food, a very chilled-out ambience and great music! Plus an interesting painting on the wall…:-) What did we order? Freshly squeezed pineapple juice (it was fabulous!), hummus and bread (excellent) and spinach-zucchini lasagne (wonderful). It has been a long time since food felt so immensely satisfying. Both of us felt so good, so generous, so expansive, we gave a tip of 20%. Really nice place.
We ran into a Ben and Jerry’s ice-cream parlour that was run by an American lady who used to be an ex-Olympic gymnast. She had done up the place very innovatively with newspaper cuttings, photographs, concert posters, bright pictures, etc. Pinch and I shared a Baklava flavoured waffle cone and it was the best ice-cream I had eaten in a long, long time! Pinch is not a fan of ice cream at all (Too sweet, too large a portion) but he loved this one.
Lastly, talking about dessert, we had a Guava cheesecake in another eatery called Barrachina’s. Delicately flavoured with the faintest taste of guava, it was quite nice.
Seafood lovers can rejoice. PR serves up various seafood items cooked in the local flavours.
minn says:
Your post has made me ravenously hungry! That cheesecake looks great! 😀
Glad you both had such a great time and enjoyed the food. My dad is a vegetarian, and when in the States, it’s always a bit of a challenge to find good restaurants (non-Indian ones) that serve decent veggie fare. More often than not, the veggie selections are limited to salads/appetizers. 🙁 Of course, there are the vegan restaurants but he hates them. I don’t blame him.
June 2, 2006 — 7:46 pm
Lakshmi says:
Thanks, Minnie! I wish I had taken pics of the other dishes as well, they were really tasty and innovative.
Yeah, there are some cities in the US where being a vegetarian is not an issue but in many others, it’s tough to find any good fare. I had blogged about this a few weeks back.
June 2, 2006 — 7:49 pm
lalunadiosa says:
Yummmmy….
Didn’t comment before….but your PR pix are absolutely gorgeous….and are making me want to visit sooooon!!!!
These food pix are honestly the last straw 😀
Lemme go drool now….
June 2, 2006 — 9:22 pm
Lakshmi says:
🙂 Your reaction is really flattering.
Yeah, you should visit PR. It is a lovely place… and we didn’t even go everywhere!
June 2, 2006 — 9:26 pm
lalunadiosa says:
It’s now # 2 on my list of places to visit….up from around # 5…..and you know if I do go anytime soon….it would be a great example of “imitation is the best form of flattery” 😛
June 2, 2006 — 9:28 pm
Lakshmi says:
What are the others on the list? Btw, we ran into this couple at PR who had visited Hawaii for their honeymoon and talking to them made us real excited about planning a trip ourselves. They visited an active volcano – how cool is that!!!
June 3, 2006 — 2:40 pm
lalunadiosa says:
# 1 is Mexico, I feel like my last visit there was a sham and I need to go make up for it….# 2 used to be Spain but now its # 3 since PR is closer and doesn’t need a visa 😀
Then we have Turkey and Italy….and I would also love to go back to Hawaii….honestly it felt so much like home….and yes the acrive volcano is pretty awesome!!!!
June 3, 2006 — 2:43 pm
murthys_r_us says:
This sounds like a wonderful trip! Thanks for sharing the photos and details of your visit – have been really enjoying it all. Does sound like a good place to visit – if we ever get around to saving some vacation for trips to places other than India! 🙂
In the lasagna/bread pictures above, it looks like the chef has done some Emeril style ‘Bam! Bam!’ with essence! 🙂
– M.
June 2, 2006 — 9:41 pm
Lakshmi says:
I know what you mean. We scrimp and save on vacation so as to have substantial time to visit India… it is a struggle. That’s why this trip happened on a long weekend.
All the food that I ate in PR had that charactertic style of *essence garnish*..:-)
June 3, 2006 — 2:41 pm
goofy_duck2004 says:
Did you ever think of being a food critic? My mouth is watering with your descriptions. Makes me want to go to PR now. I will have to remember to check your post if and when we go.
Glad you two had fun.
June 2, 2006 — 9:42 pm
Lakshmi says:
Ahh, a new career option, Manju! Haven’t thought about it but now I will…:-)
June 3, 2006 — 2:42 pm
shri says:
*drools*
The food sounds so delicious!
June 3, 2006 — 5:21 am
Lakshmi says:
As delicious as the thaali in your user pic..:-) If you ask me, the thaali looks more appealing any day!
June 3, 2006 — 2:42 pm
on9thheaven says:
OMG! this looks so good 🙂 *drool*
loved the vibrant colors all over the place.
guava cheesecake is something i’ve heard for the first time – but it looks delicious!
June 3, 2006 — 1:27 pm
Lakshmi says:
Yeah, when we saw ‘guava cheesecake’ on the menu, there was no question about trying anything else. It was so subtly flavoured and the consistency was wonderful as well.
Like Baklava flavour at Ben and Jerry’s… do you get that in mainland USA? It tasted fabulous…:-)
June 3, 2006 — 2:44 pm
Anonymous says:
Will be there
I will be there.
pazhangalam.blogspot.com
June 3, 2006 — 6:13 pm
Lakshmi says:
Re: Will be there
Really? In PR?
June 5, 2006 — 7:40 pm
bhuvi says:
Yummy pics? What cam did u use?
June 6, 2006 — 7:02 am
Lakshmi says:
The usual Sony DSC P-8. Meaning to get a new one since some time now.
June 6, 2006 — 1:08 pm