Bon Appétit Magazine Names 10 Best U.S. Hotels For Food

By Larry Olmsted


The 10 Best Food Lover's Hotels feature, plus related stories and detailed info, is in the new issue of Bon Appetit and on the magazine's wesbite.
Photo: Bon Appetit

Food and travel have always been inseparable – no matter where you go or why you go there you are going to eat.

But in recent years, travel for food's sake has exploded in popularity, and accordingly, high quality food is increasingly the reason people pick particular hotels, from Vegas to Paris to rural inns.

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In their May issue, being shipped today, the editors at Bon AppétitMagazine are running a cover story on their picks for the "10 Best Food Lover's Hotels in America," and I got a sneak peek. You should peek too, because you will want to go to several of these places. (In an earlier column here, I similarly previewedBon Appetit's "10 Best New Restaurants of 2011.")

To be completely honest, I would have handled this differently. First off, most of these picks are small hotels or Inns that have a featured restaurant or dining room. If I was asked to pick the best hotels for food lovers I'd start with places that have multiple excellent destination dining experiences, something like theMGM Grand in Las Vegas where you can eat a standout meal at a different place each night for a week, with arguably the nation's top fine dining restaurant, Joel Robuchon, plus the master chef's wonderful L'Atelier de Joel Robuchon, Michael Mina's Nobhill and Seablue, Emeril Lagasse's namesake eatery, Tom Colicchio's Craftsteak, and perhaps the nation's best sake list at Shibuya. Heck, I'd put the MGM Grand on the list just for the stunning Michelin 3-star/Forbes 5-Star starred Joel Robuchon.

Bon Appétit also puts a big emphasis on locally sourced ingredients, which are great in theory but do not necessarily make a restaurant better. If I lived in Parma, Italy I'd happily eat local ingredients all day long, but living in the U.S., I'd still much rather eat real Parmigiano-Reggiano and Prosciutto di Parma (or jamon iberico from Spain or Port from Portugal) than somebody's (almost always) inferior imitation made here. On a more domestic level, I'd rather eat Vidalia or Walla Walla onions than less tasty sweet versions made closer to where I happen to be traveling, and there are many other examples of local not necessarily being better.

The duck orecchiette I had for lunch at Dunton Hot Springs in Colorado, which made the list

But knowing that local is a big factor in the selection helps readers understand and use this list accordingly, and in any case, there is no doubt that some of these places have fabulous food and are well worth visiting for that reason. They also happen to be fantastic hotels. In this sense, Bon Appétit got it right – no one would be disappointed with the food, service or accommodations at stellar but tinyDunton Hot Springs in Colorado, which I just visited and was blown away by. South Carolina's Inn at Palmetto Bluff combines true Southern hospitality with exquisite lodging, service and a refined take on updated southern classics. They also have a killer Jack Nicklaus-designed golf course sprawling through the low Country and dripping with Spanish Moss.

All of the ones on the list that I have personally visited excel, with the sole exception of the underwhelming 21c Museum Hotel in Louisville: it's a fine hotel restaurant and good choice for dinner if you happen to be in Louisville – the KentuckyDerby is in less than three weeks – but I certainly

Blackberry Farm in Tennessee is a perenial food and hotel lover's favorite.
Photo: Blackberry Farm

would not travel there for the food. I'd have swapped it for the Inn at Little Washington or Vermont's Forbes 5-Star Twin Farms (read my Forbes.com "Hotels I Love" review), which is much more in the Dunton Hot Springs mold, and has a huge local emphasis with its own gardens and neighbors doing custom organic growing. But I'll let 21c slide because so many others on the list are so good – I'd gladly make the trip to Tennessee to eat at Blackberry Farm, long and widely considered one of the nation's great gastronomic lodging escapes.

You need to read the whole story online to get detailed descriptions of each winner, plus interesting extras such as separate advice on hotel choices for wine lovers, for breakfast, for the best in-room minibars and to see all 40 finalists before it was winnowed down to these 10:

Blackberry Farm, TN

Ace Hotels, Various

Willows Inn, WA

Dunton Hot Springs, CO

Nebo Lodge, ME

Los Poblanos, NM

Inn at Palmetto Bluff, SC

21c Museum Hotel, KY

There's more… continue reading page 2 of "Bon Appétit Magazine Names 10 Best U.S. Hotels For Food" on the Forbes website.

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