Tag: Farm to table

Martinique

Martinique’s Homegrown Flavours

From rainforest cacao to beachfront rum tastings, Martinique’s culinary identity is inseparable from the land that feeds it.

By Jessica Huras

Miles from Martinique’s sandy beaches and sun-splashed coastlines, I find myself deep in the island’s northern rainforest, following a path tangled with hibiscus, heliconia and wild cilantro at Habitation Céron.

Founded in 1658 as a sugar plantation, the 75-hectare estate is now an eco-sanctuary, home to fruit trees, lush gardens and more than 2,000 cacao trees.

Here, chocolatier Julie Marraud des Grottes—whose family stewards the property—cracks open a golden-hued cacao pod and invites us to pluck out its seeds. Slick with pearly white pulp, each one tastes almost like mango, sweet and tart all at once.

Later, she passes around squares of her 70 per cent single-origin chocolate. Marraud des Grottes’ approach to chocolate-making is designed to coax out the cacao’s wild, shifting character. Her bars are made with just two ingredients: cacao harvested on site and locally sourced sugarcane. The flavour shifts. One month it carries hints of banana, the next, notes of red fruit. “I only have one recipe for chocolate,” says Marraud des Grottes. “But the chocolate will taste different depending on when the cacao is harvested.”

It’s a reminder that in Martinique, sense of place isn’t just something you see—it’s something you taste. Across the island, chefs, producers and distillers treat the landscape as both pantry and muse. Their pride in homegrown ingredients is present in every bite, every pour and every decision to let the land’s character take the lead.

Distillerie Depaz
Distillerie Depaz
Cacao pods

The same cane that sweetens Marraud des Grottes’ chocolate also stars in Martinique’s signature spirit: rhum agricole. I see this up close later that day at Distillerie Depaz. Château Depaz—an early 20th-century manor built in the shadow of Mount Pelée—anchors rolling fields of blue cane. In the breezy dining room, we look out windows framing green hills while we taste through Depaz’s range.

Martinique’s rhum agricole is the only style of rum in the world with France’s coveted AOC designation, typically reserved for wine and cheese. Unlike most rums made from molasses, it starts with fresh-pressed sugarcane juice, a method that preserves the plant’s grassy, earthy brightness as a key note.

At Depaz, high elevation and volcanic soil shape the cane’s bold, distinctive profile. A 48-hour fermentation and old-school steam-powered mills keep the spirit rooted in tradition and place. Each glass is like a liquid map of where it’s made.

Le Petibonum Martinique
Le Petibonum
Fresh Seafood

On our final night in Martinique, the road leads us back to the sea—specifically to Le Petibonum, a beachfront restaurant that’s been championing local ingredients for decades. “My grandfather is a farmer here, so I’ve always understood the ingredients of Martinique,” says chef-owner Guy Ferdinand. “When visitors come here, they want to taste what grows on the island. That’s how they learn about our culture.”

Dinner unfolds under a thatched roof on La Plage du Coin, the sky deepening to indigo, our toes buried in the sand. Bottles from Martinique’s storied distilleries, Depaz among them, are laid out across a self-serve tasting table. “After drinking some rum, you’re open to discovering more flavours of Martinique,” Ferdinand says with a grin.

The fish—tuna, dorade, marlin—comes directly from fishermen who dock nearby. Fresh pineapple, in season during our visit, is sliced and served simply.

Between courses, Ferdinand tosses more bay rum branches onto the open grill, then lays fresh fillets over the heat as the smoke curls up around them.

If Martinique’s identity is rooted in what the land grows and gives, there may be no more vivid way to taste it than here: a meal where every element, from fragrant grill smoke to the rhum agricole in my glass, comes directly from the island itself. I leave with sand on my feet, rum on my tongue and Martinique’s flavours still lingering.

Appellation Healdsburg: A New Kind of Wine Country Stay

In Sonoma’s newest stay, the tasting menu never ends — from house-milled pasta at Folia to honey cocktails under the stars.

If you’ve been considering a fall visit to Sonoma, here’s your sign to book your flight. Appellation Healdsburg, the newly-opened hotel from chef Charlie Palmer and hospitality veteran Christopher Hunsberger, has officially opened its doors, inviting guests to experience wine country through a culinary lens.

Spread across eight and a half acres on the edge of downtown Healdsburg, the property unfolds like a modern-day village: gardens, outdoor lounges, and winding paths connecting a mix of suites, studios, and communal spaces. It’s the kind of setting that feels as if it’s been quietly growing here for years — natural, welcoming, and unmistakably rooted in Sonoma’s agricultural rhythm.

But make no mistake: this is a chef’s hotel. Every detail, from the scent of firewood drifting from the open kitchen to the house-milled flour for handmade pasta, is a nod to food as both craft and connection. The hotel’s signature restaurant, Folia Bar & Kitchen, is led by Reed Palmer (Charlie’s son), whose menu leans into elemental cooking — think smoked duck breast, ember-grilled rockfish, and wood-fired vegetables that taste like they’ve been kissed by the surrounding hills.

Upstairs, Andy’s Beeline Rooftop offers a lighter, livelier take on the region’s flavours, pairing vineyard views with inventive small plates and cocktails infused with honey, herbs, and local citrus. It’s as much a social space as it is a dining one — a place where the sun lingers, the glasses clink, and the line between bar and terrace blurs beautifully.

Beyond the restaurants, food weaves through every part of the guest experience. Welcome bites replace front-desk formality. Culinary workshops and garden tastings invite guests into the creative process. Even the on-site spa embraces the region’s bounty, with treatments inspired by botanicals and wine-country harvests.

In a landscape already rich with luxury retreats, Appellation Healdsburg stands out for its sense of purpose. It’s a property built not around opulence, but around a love of flavour — proof that in Sonoma, the true essence of hospitality still begins at the table.