Bermuda PDF
Transcription
Bermuda PDF
Expand your culinary horizons PLUS MONTREAL MEXICO GERMANY SINGAPORE PADUA Winter ISSUE 12 CAD/US $6.95 2014 INCREDIBLE INDIA ROAD TRIP BRITISH COLUMBIA GATEWAY TO SNOWDONIA TASTING TEQUILA UNPLUGGED ANGUILLA Beautiful BERMUDA read eat travel FOR PEOPLE WHO LOVE TO , LOVE TO AND LOVE TO DESTINATIONS THIS PAGE White hibiscus. FACING South shore beach. PAGE BERMUDA Beautiful BERMUDA by SUSIE ELLISON 66 TASTE& TRAVEL INTERNATIONAL JANUARY–MARCH 2014 DESTINATIONS BERMUDA Bermuda WHERE ON EARTH Y OU’LL BE SURPRISED HOW CLOSE Bermuda is... just over two hours by air from Toronto. The second surprise is how beautiful it is. Manicured hedges and low stone walls border the roads that undulate along the island’s rocky coastline past tidy houses with stalwart chimneys, stretches of gorgeous beach and pretty, secluded coves. You could almost be in England, except that the hedgerows are riots of tropical colour, flitting butterflies and birdsong, the stone walls are made of coral and the weather is glorious. Bermuda’s lush vegetation and flowering trees inspired John Lennon to write his final album Double Fantasy after a visit with Yoko Ono. Its sylvan beauty also inspired the American artists Winslow Homer and Georgia O’ Keefe. The long narrow island (actually several islands), shaped like a fishhook with a graceful curve at each end, exists in its own lovely time warp. Bermuda is still a British colony and most citizens are happy to be tied to the Queen’s apron strings. It was settled in 1609 when a Virginia Company fleet on its way to the colony in Jamestown deliberately ran aground in Bermuda to avoid being swept away in a hurricane. The shipwrecked crew lived on fish, turtles and wild pigs left behind by earlier Spanish and Portuguese visitors. From the Arawak Indians they learned to grow crops in Bermuda’s fertile soil. When a rebuilt fleet resumed the voyage to America, some opted to stay behind in their newly discovered Eden. Bermuda is divided into parishes with very English names like Devonshire, Warwick and Southampton. Despite the fact that 60 percent of the population is of African descent and a quarter are Portuguese (mostly from the Azores), it still feels decidedly British. But start to eat and you’ll know right away that you’re nowhere near Old Blighty. Bermudian cuisine reflects the island’s blended heritage. The traditional Sunday breakfast is codfish and potatoes, served British style with hardboiled eggs and mayonnaise, or Portuguese with tomato sauce. Either way, banana and avocado come on the side. Seafood is plentiful — rockfish and wahoo are on every restaurant menu and a tasty fish chowder is the national dish. English cakes and biscuits accompany afternoon tea, but there might be Portuguese doughnuts called malassadas. Melting-pot societies come up with some pretty creative mashups — visit Bermuda at Easter and you’ll find codfish cakes stuffed into hot-cross buns! Every house and public building in Bermuda, by law, has a stepped roof of whitewashed limestone. The island has no natural water sources so rainwater (which quickly drains away through porous limestone bedrock) is chanelled from the roof to a cistern under the building. This ingenious setup means that just a couple of inches of rain per month are sufficient to supply a household with cool, clean water for a year. Bermuda’s limestone base is riddled with caves and grottoes. Grotto Bay Beach Resort, where I stayed, even has a spa in a cave. My massage took place amid sparkling crystal columns, with the occasional drip of cool … Melting-pot societies come up with some pretty creative mashups… water from stalagtites overhead. The adjoining grotto holds a natural swimming pool, with water so clear I felt as if I were suspended in glass. My dreamy paddling came to an abrupt end when the local football team came to cool off after a training session. Suddenly I was surrounded by splashing, muscled mermen, some of them buck naked! Afternoon tea beneath the lazy ceiling fans of the Palm Court lounge seemed an appropriate way to calm down. This genteel respite from the stresses of the day (or the excitement of cavorting with nude men) is a timeJANUARY–MARCH 2014 TASTE& TRAVEL INTERNATIONAL 67 DESTINATIONS BERMUDA CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT Dressed for the office; Bermuda roofs; Chef Alfred Konrad; Hibiscus; Fried fish; Dunking stool; British ale. FACING PAGE FROM TOP LEFF Lennon remembered; Dockyard sign; Grotto Bay Resort cave entrance. 68 TASTE& TRAVEL INTERNATIONAL JANUARY–MARCH 2014 DESTINATIONS BERMUDA Bermuda … has plenty of dining rooms with a view… honoured tradition in Bermuda. Another anglophile obsession is cricket. So many workers played truant to watch the annual Cup Match (highlight of the cricket year) that the government declared it a two-day holiday for everyone. Food vendors set up stands, families pack elaborate picnics, some even pitch tents and camp out around the cricketer’s field. It’s one giant party and an excuse to make traditional treats like cassava pie, a weird and wonderful casserole of mashed cassava, sweetened condensed milk, chicken meat and a whole pile of eggs that is usually reserved for Christmas. With over 200 beaches and mile after mile of coastline, Bermuda has plenty of dining rooms with a view. Mickey’s is part of The Lido, a hip, multi-restaurant complex on the picturesque south shore, with a million-dollar view of the Atlantic ocean and a perfect stretch of white sand dotted with crisp navy blue umbrellas. Here I had my first encounter with Dark & Stormy, the refreshing tipple of Goslings Black Seal Rum and ginger beer that’s considered the national drink. It goes down easy. I noshed on bruschetta and a tangle of fried calamari, followed by a plate of shrimp and scallops topped with spicy mayo. A perfectly grilled snapper arrived as gold coins danced on the ocean and the day folded itself into a balmy star-spangled evening. Beau Rivage restaurant not only has a great view of the sunset and Hamilton Harbour, it has Chef Jean Claude Garzia, a local legend who combines the fine techniques of classic French cuisine with Bermudian ingredients. This tony, glass-walled restaurant is where Bermuda’s beau monde like to gather and after tucking into an artistic arrangement of tuna tataki with seaweed salad, sautéed rockfish with vermouth sauce and locally grown vegetables, and a goblet of fresh strawberries layered with yogurt and crumbles, I understood why. In 1996 Garzia was awarded the Meilleur Ouvrier de France, that country’s highest culinary honour, and his laurels are well deserved. Nearly every restaurant in Bermuda serves fish chowder, a tomato-based soup made from fish heads and bone racks, seasoned with Black Seal rum and Outerbridge’s sherry pepper sauce. Everyone has their own recipe and an annual competition determines whose is best. Chowder champ in 2013 was Albert Konrad, chef/owner of Wahoo’s Bistro, a seafood shack on the waterfront in the historic British settlement of St George’s, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. JANUARY–MARCH 2014 TASTE& TRAVEL INTERNATIONAL 69 DESTINATIONS Cook it BERMUDA MAKES ABOUT 4 LITRES Alfred Konrad’s Champion Chowder THIS IS THE PRIZEWINNING chowder served a t Ko n ra d ’s Wa h o o G r i l l . T h e t r a d i t i o n a l w a y to finish the stew is with a generous splash of G o s l i n g s B l a c k S e a l R u m a n d O u t e r b r i d g e ’s S h e r r y Pe p p e r S a u c e a d d e d t a b l e s i d e . I f y o u ’ r e n o t g o i n g to Bermuda any time soon, you can use any dark r u m p l u s d r y s h e r r y a n d a d a s h o f Ta b a s c o s a u c e to get the requisite kick. Fish Heads and Spines1 5–6 lbs Onion 1 Celery 1 bunch Carrots 3 large Leek 1 Parsley 1 bunch Green Papaya2 1 Potatoes 2 large Red Bell Pepper 1 Green Bell Pepper 1 Stewed Tomato 1 x 14 oz can Tomato Paste 1 cup Bay Leaf 6 Allspice Leaf3 6 Cloves 6 Fresh Thyme 1 bunch Whole Black Peppercorns 3 Tbs Cinnamon Stick 1 Ground Ginger 1 Tbs Curry Powder 2–3 Tbs Worcestershire Sauce ¼ cup Browning or Gravy Powder 2 Tbs Cornstarch 5 Tbs Cold Water 1 cup Salt to taste 70 1 PLACE the fish heads and bones in 4 litres of cold water and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer for 30 minutes. Strain out the fish parts and reserve the stock. Remove all meat from the fish head and bones and reserve for chowder. 2 CLEAN and chop all vegetables into small dice and sauté in a little olive oil. Add the stewed tomatoes and tomato paste and brown the ingredients. Tie the bay leaves, allspice leaves or berries, cloves, thyme and peppercorns in a piece of cheesecloth. Add to the pot along with the fish stock, ginger, curry powder, Worcestershire sauce and browning or gravy powder. Simmer for two to three hours. 3 ADD the reserved fish, bring the soup back to a boil and thicken by adding the cornstarch mixed with the cold water. Salt to taste and lace with Goslings Black Seal Rum and Outerbridge’s Sherry Pepper Sauce. 1 Befriend your local fishmonger and you may get these for free. 2 Or 1 large cucumber, seeds removed. 3 Or 6 allspice berries. TASTE& TRAVEL INTERNATIONAL JANUARY–MARCH 2014 When I rolled into Wahoo’s, the sun was glistening on the bay, the soundtrack was Louis Armstrong, and the lunchtime crowd was getting ready for some serious chow. Konrad (who looks like George Clooney crossed with my brother), makes everything from scratch, including the salsa, slaw, and lime-spiked sour cream that dresses a Baja-style fish taco. The fish was locally caught wahoo, meaty chunks with golden sear marks from the grill, wrapped in a soft tortilla. Wahoo also came to the table as a smoked fish pâté — the dock-side smoker visible from where I sat. And the prize-winning chowder, generously offered in little paper cups to passers-by? Dark, complex and delicious! If you’re heading for Bermuda, be sure to visit the Swizzle Inn and Bailey’s Ice Cream, both located near the airport. Swizzle Inn, a legendary hangout since 1932, is known for its eponymous cocktail, a powerful blend of rums and fruit juices. The walls and ceiling of the pub (the building dates from the 1600s) are covered in graffiti left by patrons, among them Mark Twain and Bob Hope. Hope’s comment after sampling the notoriously potent Swizzle: “They not only serve it to tourists, they also use it whenever there’s a shortage of airplane fuel. The plane can’t really fly but it can hiccup its way back to the mainland.” (drumroll... baddam tss!) The small sherry glass it’s served in should serve as a warning but most people order Swizzles by the pitcher, then wonder why they’re seeing double when they leave. Across the road at Bailey’s Ice Cream you can have the same flavours in a cone or cup. Bailey’s has been serving homemade ice cream for 34 years. Current owners Joanna Cassidy and Ernest Rego have had the place for the last seven and still use the original Bailey’s recipe. “We have customers who fly in on private jets, get their ice cream, then fly on out again,” says Rego, inventor of the Swizzle ice cream and other grown-up flavours like Dark & Stormy, and rum and raisin without the raisins. The Premier of Bermuda is said to be a fan of Bailey’s and when I get my private jet, I reckon I’ll be diverting to his beautiful backyard to pick up a pint. it Vis it Grotto Bay Beach Resort www.grottobay.com Mickey’s Beach Bar and Bistro Elbow Beach Hotel, 60 South Shore Road Beau Rivage www.beaurivagebda.com Wahoo’s Bistro and Patio www.wahoosbistro.bm The Swizzle Inn www.swizzleinn.com Bailey’s Ice Cream 2 Blue Hole Hill (across the road from Swizzle Inn) DESTINATIONS BERMUDA CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT Lighthouse flags; Codfish breakfast; Dark & Stormy rum drink; Decorated door; Palm Court ceiling fan; Cannon in St Georges. 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