Tag: Hotel Dining

“Comfort Is the New Luxury”: Marriott Forecasts Asia-Pacific’s Next Food Trends

Forget white tablecloths — Asia-Pacific’s hotel kitchens are trading formality for feel-good flavours.

Marriott International has just released its Future of Food 2026 report for the Asia-Pacific region, and the takeaway is clear: travellers want dining that feels good as much as it tastes good. Drawing insights from chefs, mixologists, and food-and-beverage directors across more than 270 hotels in 20 markets, the report charts a shift toward warmth, familiarity, and storytelling.

Gone are the days when fine dining meant hushed tones and starched linens. Today, “comfort is the new luxury,” says the report, as hotels across Asia-Pacific reimagine indulgence through approachable yet elevated experiences. Think truffle-infused noodles instead of foie gras, or caviar-topped fried chicken in place of a ten-course tasting menu. Diners crave dishes that surprise without intimidating — a sign that culinary confidence now comes from authenticity, not extravagance.

Another headline trend: immersion. Nearly half of Marriott’s F&B teams say guests are seeking interactive dining moments — the kind where you meet the chef, watch something sizzle tableside, or take part in the plating yourself. The report also highlights a strong pull toward local and indigenous ingredients, with 85% of hotel restaurants incorporating them as a defining element of their menus rather than a token garnish.

Technology is also quietly joining the kitchen brigade. AI-driven menu design and real-time guest feedback are helping chefs fine-tune dishes while keeping the personal touch front and centre. And geographically, expect to see Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines emerge as the next culinary powerhouses, where a new generation of chefs is blending deep tradition with bold creativity.

The message? Asia-Pacific’s hotel dining scene is having a renaissance — one rooted in comfort, connection, and a sense of place. Because in 2026, the most memorable meals won’t just be the fanciest. They’ll be the ones that make you feel at home, wherever you are.

MICHELIN Unveils Its Key Standard for Hospitality

The latest distinction celebrates hotels that pair culinary soul with inspired design and sense of place.

For over a century, the MICHELIN Guide has defined the pinnacle of dining — those coveted stars signalling where to find the most extraordinary meals on earth. Now, the brand synonymous with culinary excellence is turning its discerning eye toward hospitality with the introduction of the MICHELIN Keys, a new global standard for hotels that deliver not just comfort, but character.

This year’s rollout recognizes 2,457 hotels across more than 120 countries, each evaluated with the same meticulous approach that made the guide a byword for quality. The aim is simple yet ambitious: to help travellers navigate an increasingly crowded world of boutique hotels, eco-lodges, and design-driven stays — and to spotlight the properties that transform a night away into an experience worth crossing the world for.

Much like MICHELIN’s restaurant stars, the new system awards One, Two, or Three Keys, reflecting a property’s mastery of atmosphere, design, and service. A single Key signals a hotel with distinctive personality or flair; Two Keys mark a destination where every detail works in harmony; Three Keys are reserved for the rare few that feel transcendent — where everything from the linens to the lighting tells a story. (Vancouver Island’s Clayoquot Wilderness Lodge, pictured above, is among them.)

Wakax Hacienda
Warren Street Hotel

In North and Central America, fifty hotels earned upgrades this year, including Wakax Hacienda – Cenote & Boutique Hotel in Tulum and New York’s Warren Street Hotel, both elevated from One to Two Keys. Across Asia, Europe, and Oceania, new designations highlight a diverse mix of modern icons and quietly luxurious retreats — proof that excellence takes many forms, from mountain lodges to urban hideaways.

The message is clear: hospitality now stands shoulder to shoulder with gastronomy in the MICHELIN universe. For travellers, the Keys offer something increasingly rare — a trusted benchmark in an era of endless choice. For hotels, they’re an invitation to join a new generation of luxury defined not by opulence, but by authenticity, artistry, and heart.

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.