Dining in St Croix?
#1
Posted 17 March 2004 - 07:12 AM
So far the list includes:
Kendricks
Nolans Tavern
Cheesburgers
Fort Christian Brew Pub
Divi
and will grow with time.
Stay tuned...
Everybody has Problems, but Chemists have Solutions.
#2
Posted 01 April 2004 - 12:13 AM
Whatever you do,don't miss KIM'S in Christiansted, a wonderful, homey, authentic Cruzan restaurant.I'm on the island of St Croix for a 4-6 week consulting assignment. I'll post my descriptions of the places I visit in the days to come.
So far the list includes:
Kendricks
Nolans Tavern
Cheesburgers
Fort Christian Brew Pub
Divi
and will grow with time.
Stay tuned...
#3
Posted 05 April 2004 - 07:12 AM
Meanwhile let me add the South Shore Cafe to my list; a wonderful little place near the Salt Pond on the South Shore (appropriately) open Wed-Sunday.
Everybody has Problems, but Chemists have Solutions.
#4
Posted 06 April 2004 - 06:00 PM
#5
Posted 08 April 2004 - 11:17 AM
I have never been brave enough to get out of the car in Times Square, though compared to places I've been in NYC, it's no big deal.
I've been to Tutu Bene twice in the past week. One was a "business meal." We didn't talk much business, but a vendor picked up the check. Very nice meals; one of the better run and visited restaurants on the island. They brought over the black Sambucca at the end of the meal, so they must have liked us.
Edited by MHesse, 08 April 2004 - 11:18 AM.
Everybody has Problems, but Chemists have Solutions.
#6
Posted 12 April 2004 - 06:29 AM
Everybody has Problems, but Chemists have Solutions.
#7
Posted 17 April 2004 - 08:01 AM
OK, I have the list. Now I'm back and will try to remember enough for meaningful mini-reviews.
Everybody has Problems, but Chemists have Solutions.
#8
Posted 28 June 2004 - 08:34 AM
#9
Posted 29 June 2004 - 06:58 PM
You're probably thinking of The Terrace or The Brass Parrot. I'd consider them fine dining, though I did not visit either while I was there.What is the name of the fine dining restaurant at the Buccaneer? Is there still a fine dining restaurant there?
Everybody has Problems, but Chemists have Solutions.
#10
Posted 29 June 2004 - 07:09 PM
Let me add a couple names to the list:
Villa Morales - terrific buttered conch
The Cultured Pelican - good Italian, now closed till the fall
The Bombay Club - good steaks and barbecue - depends who is cooking
Breezes - satisfactory, it was right on the grounds of the condo where I stayed the second trip. I'd have breakfast and a Painkiller there while waiting for my laundry to dry. Good Happy Hour crowd and very popular for brunch.
Off the Wall, The Lobster Cafe, Cane Bay Dive Bar and Grill - nice casual places along the North shore.
and more in Fredericksted that I can't recall at this time.
Everybody has Problems, but Chemists have Solutions.
#11
Posted 21 January 2007 - 12:12 AM
Thanks in advance!
#12
Posted 11 March 2007 - 06:12 AM
It's been 6 years since we've been on St Croix and we're heading back for 2 weeks, near the end of March, and I would love to get some recommendations, as well as any updates as to what is new and promising on the island.
Thanks in advance!
Well, I don't have any recommendations, I just wanted to add that my husband and I too are going for 5 days at the end of March, and looking for ant thoughts on the restaurants. We've never been, so we're really clueless. I'm expecting alot of American food and don't have high expectations....
#13
Posted 11 March 2007 - 06:35 PM
Ft Christian Brewpub for dependable Cajun in Christainsted
Kim's for homey, wonderful jerk dishes and other Caribbean dishes (our FAVORITE place on St Croix, hands down), in Christiansted
Cheeseburger in Paradise, on the east end of the island for good burgers, tex Mex and pastas
Duggan's Reef for good local lobster and American dishes, also out on the east end, near where we will be renting a villa
Off The Wall, on the northwest shore road, near Cane Bay, for very good pub grub at an open air bar
and grab a roti at any roadside stand or roadside truck you encounter; they are terrific street food!
THOSE place I know we will be back to, but I am hoping someone posts with any new additions to the St Croix dining scene
PM me when you get on the island and we'll grab a rum punch and some food together!
#14
Posted 20 March 2007 - 05:40 AM
Richard
#15
Posted 21 March 2007 - 01:35 PM
#16
Posted 27 October 2009 - 08:55 PM
Homer Simpson
#17
Posted 27 October 2009 - 11:23 PM
Kim's in downtown Christiansted, my favorite place on the island, it's quirky, with slow service sometimes, very homey, but very real, and an extraordinary value for what you get. And get the jerk chicken, any Indian curry fish dish, any fresh conch dish, and any "stew". BYOB, cash only.
The Pickled Greek, just east of downtown Christiansted, has really good Mediterranean food, mostly Greek, very generous portions, boisterous crowd, lotsa fun.
The Cultured Pelican, at the base of a big pink condo complex toward the East End of the isalnd, it has damn fine Italian, decent, not great pizza, and great views of Buck Island and the nightime shoreline.
Chicken Charlie's, just east of downtown, near the Pickled Greek, is an open air roadhouse with decent ribs and chicken, quesadillas, salds, beers. Some nights they show movies on a big bedsheet hung on a wall, some nights honky tonk music, sometimes both!
Savant, barely just out of the downtown Christiansted heading east, it's a low-slung simple place with some of the hottest West Indian-Thai-French-fusion I have ever eaten. Habanero everywhere, but worth the danger. Very good sophisticated food.
Kendricks, downtown Christiansted, on a quiet sidestreet, is romantic, a little dressy, expensive and also worth it. French-Dutch-Caribbean mix menu, the class of the island along with Savant.
And dont forget to visit the Rain Forest, and the Mt Pelier Domino Club at its very center, for the beer-drinking pigs that have to be seen to be believed.
Just down the road from Mt Pelier is an eco-friendly woodworker's shop that creates magnificent (and pretty inexpensive items from fallen rain forest trees. Quite an interesting place for a unique memento of your trip.
Buy all the locally made hot sauces, they are terrific. There are a few roadside stands in the rainforest, as well as a few at the weekly farmers' market.
#18
Posted 28 October 2009 - 10:37 AM
Homer Simpson










