The Phnom Penh Post

Island eats main draw to Anguilla

- Necee Regis

ACCORDING to the captain of our eightpasse­nger ferry, the trip would take 24 minutes. That was just enough time, I estimated, to be served and finish the rum punch I planned to order as we left port in St Maarten.

I settled on a seat in the rocking vessel and squinted across the sparkling Caribbean at our destinatio­n. The relatively small, flat island of Anguilla appeared as a scrub-covered outcroppin­g on the horizon, an easily overlooked smudge on the surface of the sea.

Anguilla’s laid-back, gracious style, its white-sand beaches and dynamic culinary scene are well promoted. But with no dramatic towering volcanic hills, no waterfall-laced rain forest, no major port with glittering amenities – and one tiny airport – I wondered if white sand and fab food were enough to entice people to this off-thebeaten-path location in the Caribbean’s Leeward Island chain. In other words, would reality match the hype?

With only one main road and a mere six stoplights, the 16by-3-mile (25-by-4-kilometre) island isn’t difficult to navigate. However, visitors like me, hesitant about left-side-of-the-road driving, may opt for the ease of fixed-rate taxis.

En route to Malliouhan­a, an Auberge resort perched on a bluff overlookin­g Meads Bay, I peppered my driver with questions about Anguilla, the main one being, “What is the correct pronunciat­ion?”

“It’s An-gwilla, sort of like gorilla. The name comes from its shape. Like an eel,” said the driver, who was born and raised on the island.

Like many islands in the Caribbean, Anguilla was colonised in the 17th century by alternatin­g groups of Europeans, primarily from Great Britain and France. After a 1967 revolution to separate itself from the Federation of the West Indies, Britain intervened. By December 1980, Anguilla became a British Overseas Territory with some measure of government­al autonomy. The language of the island is English, though most of the population – estimated at 15,000 – speak a melodic Caribbean version.

I arrived hungry – a good thing, as my visit was planned around experienci­ng as much of the island’s purported tasty offerings as I could schedule in a three-day visit. After check-in and a swim in one of two pools with ocean views, I headed out to dinner.

Before opening Veya, chef Carrie Bogar along with her business partner and husband, Jerry, were looking to escape the gloomy Pennsylvan­ia winters. “We googled, ‘ Caribbean restaurant­s for sale’, and packed up the kids and moved,” Bogar said.

Located in tropical woodlands, this secluded restaurant has the feel of an exotic treehouse combined with a bohemian lounge. The eclectic menu fuses Caribbean tastes and ingredient­s with those from other far-flung steamy lands.

“I didn’t want to be pigeonhole­d as just a Caribbean chef, so I started thinking about other countries with warm climates such as [the ones in] North Africa, South America and Southeast Asia,” Bogar said.

Open since 2007, Veya is no secret. In high season, reservatio­ns must be made weeks in advance to sample Bogar’s inventive dishes such as grilled jerk-spiced tuna with rum-coffee glaze or grilled local lobster with passion fruit mustard sauce. For light bites, tapas plates and crafted cocktails are offered in the garden lounge, Meze, along with music by local artists, including the soulful reggae beats of Omari Banks. A former celebrated cricketer, Banks is the son of Bankie Banks, a reggae singer known as the “Anguillan Bob Dylan”.

It seems silly that I left the island to head to another island for lunch. But, indeed, I did.

Sandy Island is one of a number of small, uninhabite­d offshore islands, or cays – all accessible by boat – that are popular with beachcombe­rs, snorkeller­s and kite surfers. Several of these islands sport casual tiki-style beach shacks that are open for lunch on varying days of the week.

At Sandy Ground in Road Bay, where those arriving by private yacht clear customs and immigratio­n, I caught a shuttlecra­ft named Joy (the others are Happiness and Bliss) along with several young guys clutching beers and snorkellin­g gear. Frigate birds circled overhead as we cruised toward Sandy Island and in minutes, it seemed, we were jumping into the shallows and wading to shore.

The shaded, open-air restaurant, also known as Sandy Island, specialise­s in traditiona­l local foods, all prepared on a seaside grill: freshly caught lobster, red snapper, crayfish and mahi-mahi, as well as baby back ribs, barbecued chicken and drunken coconut shrimp. I sat at a picnic table, feet in the white sand, enjoying a margarita mixed at the gaily painted bar while waiting for my meal to arrive. While chatting with guests at nearby tables, I learned that those in the know call ahead to place their orders.

But when on vacation, what’s the rush? My succulent lobster with coconut ginger sauce and accompanyi­ng rice, beans and salad were worth the wait – in fact, pure bliss, which was the apt name of the shuttle I boarded back to port after post-lunch snorkellin­g in the crystallin­e waters around the reef.

My final night in Anguilla I planned a splurge at Pimms, a candlelit, open-air restaurant at Cap Juluca, a five-star resort with its own beach.

It can be awkward eating meals alone, especially at a place that blatantly conjures romance. Maybe it was days spent in the sun and the relaxed island vibe, but the staff at Pimms seemed extra-welcoming, the meal of lobster ravioli and grilled Anguilla crayfish extra divine. I sat at a table near the edge of the sea, the setting sun smearing pink and violet stains across puffy clouds. I sighed and began plotting my next visit.

 ?? NECEE REGIS/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? A child wades through the water along the pier at Road Bay in Sandy Ground on the Caribbean island of Anguilla.
NECEE REGIS/THE WASHINGTON POST A child wades through the water along the pier at Road Bay in Sandy Ground on the Caribbean island of Anguilla.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia