Douglas Rodriguez Restaurants
#1
Posted 06 August 2001 - 06:22 PM
#2
Posted 06 August 2001 - 08:03 PM
Chef Marisol Cuisine
302 Cristo
725-7454
Having trouble finding a review or website for it though.
#3
Posted 06 August 2001 - 08:05 PM
He's at Patria now in NYC...
#4
Posted 06 August 2001 - 08:14 PM
#5
Posted 09 August 2001 - 08:21 PM
We a couple of good meals at Chayote. The chef was a fiend of my brother-in-law and had worked or done a stage with Robuchon at some point in his life. The food was pretty interesting and on the whole fairly successful in terms of adapting outside recipes to native ingredients and native recipes to ingredients recently available on the island. The clientele seemed to be a mix of tourists and sophisticated locals. On the whole it catered to the locals, who were a regular and stable base of customers. The big minus was that it didn't match the island image I wanted. ;)
I think it's no longer open. My favorite was La Casita Blanca far off in a nontouristy not so classy residential neighborhood. It had some good traditional food in an unsophisticated setting. All in all, the success of my trips was measured by how many cuchifritos I could come by that weren't sodden with grease. Generally I couldn't wait to change my clothes before making a beeline for the huts out by Boca de Congrejos. I'll bet they may no longer be there now that the road is paved.
#6
Posted 10 August 2001 - 09:50 AM
In San Juan, if you're looking for that type of food, there is Parrot Club. It's located at Fortaleza Street in Old San Juan. Their signature dish is the tuna with rum orange sauce. I would recommend Parrot Club if you're looking for Nuevo Latino cuisine. However, I've noticed that the last time I was there, their food was not as good as a few years ago.
#7
Posted 12 January 2002 - 11:26 AM
Chef Marisoll is still going strong in Old San Juan. The Parrot Club is great fun, but the food can be hit or miss these days. The owner of Parrot Club just opened Dragonfly across the street where Bistro Gambaro used to be, haven't been there, but people like it for Latino Asian fusion - very much about the scene, however.
Aquarela was there and then gone in about an instant. It got all kinds of write-ups, but its location in the very back corner of the San Juan put it off the beaten track. The Palm is in that space now with a big sign out front to make sure no one misses it back there.
Chayote has done very well in the Condado, and another place there called Pikayo I would also highly recommend. I am also a fan of Ramiro's and Compostela for Spanish cuisine.
There is good street food in San Juan like cuchifritos, pinchos, and empanadillas. Aside from beachside joints in Pinones and the food stalls near Luquillo, I like to go to Plaza Mercado in Santurce either for Friday happy hour, or on weekend mornings for produce, coffee, and batidas. Also, good street food at winter league baseball games at Hiram Bithorn Stadium or basketball games at Clemente Arena.
#8
Posted 05 December 2003 - 08:50 PM
Rodriguez has opened a restaurant in Scottsdale AZ (see today's WSJ) - and - according to a NYT article this week - he will be opening a new restaurant in Miami very soon. We used to dine at Yuca frequently. It was very imaginative and a lot of fun - high priced compared to the run of the mill Cuban restaurant in Miami - but certainly inexpensive compared to lots of other places. RobynJason, you could certainly get the impression from looking online that Douglas Rodriguez is still at Patria -- it looks like nobody has bothered to update that site during this decade. He left Patria a couple of years ago, however, to open Chicama, and now Pipa, in the ABC Carpet space. His old sous-chef, Andrew DiCataldo, is now chef at Patria.









