One of the easiest choices the new wife and I made before our wedding was deciding where to go on our honeymoon. After reading a few articles, we knew that Bora Bora was perfect for us. We don't like to do much while on vacation, really just sit by the pool/ocean and then go out for dinner at night.
Bora Bora is one of the islands of French Polynesia, located pretty much in the middle of nowhere (2500 miles south of Hawaii, basically halfway between Australia and South America if that helps at all).
Receiving no guidance here, and a pretty minimal amount from other online resources, our expectations were pretty low for food. As I posted above, nothing really grows on Bora Bora that you can eat except for coconuts. They are just starting to farm papaya, cucumbers, and some other fruits. No farm animals are raised for food (most meats are flown in from New Zealand). Local fish, as far as I could tell, were mahi mahi and papio (kind of like snapper).
We stayed at the St. Regis, which I can't recommend highly enough. Booking through AMEX Platinum we received free breakfast every morning which, given the prices on everything in Bora Bora, was a pretty valuable benefit. Breakfast was either room service to our terrace or a trip to the hotel restaurant for the buffet. For breakfast, I mainly stuck to fruit (pineapple and grapfruit) and the hotel's house-cured smoked salmon. Shockingly, this was probably the best smoked salmon I've ever had and I'd eat a huge pile of it every morning.
Lunches were primarily here:
The hotel's swim-up bar. I think the swim-up bar is one of man's finest inventions. We would split lunch everyday since portions are huge. Lunch rotated between a pretty tasty cheeseburger, ham on a warm toasted buttered baguette, and a tuna tartine which was the best of the bunch. Strips of lightly seared ahi on focaccia with finely diced vegetables. Light and delicious.
For our dinners, we mainly ate at one of the three restaurants at the hotel. The main restaurant was actually really good as hotel restaurants go. There is also a recently opened sushi restaurant, which had a limited selection but very high quality fish, and Jean-George's Lagoon restaurant. Jean-George's cuisine is actually a perfect fit in Bora Bora. His French-Asian fusion is right in place where much of the culture has heavy French and Asian influences. Lagoon has five tables that are right on the water, like this:
Sure, I've had better food, but the setting can't be beat. Jean-George's signature rice-cracker crusted tuna appears on the menu, as well as some more locally inspired dishes. My appetizer was a stand-out. Slices of raw marlin, in a thai-spiced broth with tapioca pearls and vegetables. Outstanding.
Our other stand-out dinner was at a tiny restaurant on the main island called Villa Mahana. The place is basically in the living room of a house and has only six tables.
We lucked into getting a cancellation, but I would highly recommend securing a reservation before leaving on your trip if you want to go. The menu leans heavily French, but not all the way. I had a wonderful foie gras appetizer:
After serving the foie, our very French waiter returned to the table with a basket of bread, saying "Foie gras without bread is not foie gras"
It was a bit surreal having that kind of French moment in a place like Bora Bora, but hey, what can you do. My main course was a shrimp and lobster risotto that was good but not great. Dessert was a pretty solid chocolate souffle. Kind of like Lagoon, good food but better surroundings.
That's just about it as far as food goes. When I get the digital images I'll post some shots of a ridiculous lunch we had on a private beach that was part of a snorkeling excursion. For now, I'll close with a view of the sunset from our terrace
ETA: This was my first time posting pics. What size should I be re-sizing to, because these look a bit small to me?
ETA II: Pictures have been fixed
Last edited by
jesteinf on September 1st, 2007, 2:23 pm, edited 2 times in total.