Spoon des Îles by Alain Ducasse
Michelin-pedigreed Alain Ducasse concept at the One&Only Le Saint Géran, fusing world cuisines with Indian Ocean…
Dining at Domaine de l'Étoile is part of a full-day experience in the island's largest private nature reserve, covering 1,500 hectares of native forest in the central-east highlands. Most guests arrive after a morning of quad biking, archery, or a guided tour of the deer park, and lunch at the central pavilion is the reward. The setting is pure Mauritius: tables under a high thatched roof, the sound of the forest, occasional sightings of deer and wild boar at the treeline. The menu is resolutely Creole: daube d'ourite (octopus braised in tomatoes and cloves), cari zourite (octopus curry with turmeric and curry leaves), mine frit (stir-fried noodles with vegetables and pork), and slow-roasted venison from the estate's own herd. The venison dishes are the thing to order — the meat comes from Javan rusa deer raised on the reserve, given free range over native grasses, and is unlike any farmed venison you'll find elsewhere. The local rum punch served on arrival — made with agricultural rum from Chamarel, fresh lime, and cane syrup — is poured generously and sets the tone. Portions are large and the pace is unhurried. Domaine de l'Étoile is for visitors who want to eat Mauritius rather than just taste it, in a setting that feels a world away from the coast.
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