New culinary destination
By Alexander Britell From Caribbean Journal
It’s home to great beaches, world-class rum and one of the most beautiful historic cities in the Caribbean.
And while the US Virgin Island of St Croix has long tended to stay under-the-radar as a tourism destination, it’s now pushing itself onto the tourism map with a major new driving force: food.
Thanks to the efforts of local producers and a collection of talented, mostly young Chefs, St Croix is quickly becoming a Caribbean culinary hotspot.
“The culinary scene in St Croix has evolved into a true branding for St Croix,” US Virgin Islands Tourism Commissioner Beverly Nicholson-Doty tells Caribbean Journal. “It’s a great entree for us becuase the Governor [Ken Mapp] has made it a priority to look at agriculture as a territory.”
And, perhaps most importantly, there is Balter, a St Croix eatery that hasn’t even opened yet but is generating significant buzz.
It’s the brainchild of Chef Digby Stridiron, perhaps the island’s most
Of course, creative new restaurants are just a start. There has to be a community buy-in, both from locals and from existing restaurants — all of which seems to be happening, bringing fish n’ fungi together with haute cuisine.
Indeed, last year, St Croix was the scene of the launch of Dine VI, a
For this year’s DineVI, which begins Oct. 27, almost 100 restaurants across the US Virgin Islands are now participating, with everything from street food expos to food trucks to fine-dining experiences.
It’s an example of what a focus on food, on produce, on sourcing can achieve: it doesn’t just bring in visitors — it makes the island even more livable for the people who are already there.
And it makes St Croix the Caribbean’s newest culinary destination.
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st: the historic streets of Christiansted
Digby Stridiron Chef Digby Stridiron
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