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Caribbean Puerto Rico San Juan; La Playa, Pinones

San Juan, Puerto Rico, Soleil Beach Club at Pinones, Local eats on the beach

When you travel to Puerto Rico and decide to stay in San Juan, the capital city, if you venture just 3 miles east from San Juan International Airport you’ll discover the beach village Piñones. Pinones serves perhaps the best local food in Puerto Rico and is rimmed by the Caribbean Sea that crashes across the reef then slowly rolls to shore.

Having arrived at Piñones, bike or walk along the boardwalk, inhale the smoky aroma from the eateries lining the oceanfront and streets.

Why this place appeals to me

Pinones, Soleil, Ocean View
On Pinones boardwalk

Eight-foot waves driven westward by the trade winds rise skyward and crash over the coral reef that stretches outside the NE coast. Salt mist rides the trades ashore. Beachside coral and sand create 4 foot, flat calm, deep tidal pools; safe enough for small kids to splash. The water is always 82 degrees.

Wrap a cold Dominican-brewed Presidente beer in a thermal sleeve and settle into your private corner of a natural salt water pool; relax.

In 1830, at the age of fifteen Don Facundo Bacardí emigrated from Catalonia, Spain to colonial Santiago de Cuba. In 1862 Don Facundo established the Compañía Bacardi. The Bacardí family initially propped up Fidel and his Cuban revolutionaries. Bacardi supported the revolution publicly with advertisements and parties. But their endorsement turned to opposition as the pro-Soviet Che Guevara wing of the revolution movement began to dominate. Barcardi watched Castro turn against capitalism.

The Bacardí family and Company fled Cuba after Castro confiscated the Company’s Cuban assets in October 1960. All private property was nationalized, all bank accounts seized. However, Bacardi had started foreign branches prior to the revolution; the Bahamas hosted ownership of Bacardi trademarks, assets and proprietary formulas by 1960. Rum was being produced in Puerto Rico to avoid US import taxes.

Bacardi Rum survived Castro.

Your last Presidente beer is dry. Drag yourself out of the tidal pool and head for Soleil Beach Club, midway along Pinones boardwalk.  Today’s feature on the terrace of Soleil is Bacardi Pina Coladas . . . and Ceviche.

How Far Down the Block?

OPTION #1 – From the beach at the Ritz Carleton, Isla Verde, the walking route leads east – past the Marriott Courtyard. The next mile takes you along the beach of Pine Grove, perhaps San Juan’s prettiest public beach park. Pine Grove Beach lies parallel to the runway at the International airport. Toes in the sea you stroll into the Caribbean Trade Winds – as you kick through the sea foam. A Jet Blue 737 aircraft lifts and banks North over Pinones.

After a mile and a half the beach ends and a sidewalk leads over a bridge and into Pinones. Take a hard left, another half-mile wandering East along Pinones’ boardwalk delivers you to Beach Club Soleil.  [mappress mapid=”15″]

OPTION #2 – Bus 45 from Avenida Isla Verde travels along route 187 serving San Juan to Pinones, but the bus schedule is hard to time.

OPTION #3 – Rent a tandem bike at Hotel Villa del Sol, Calle Rosa #4, a small hotel located across the street from the Hampton Inn in Isla Verde; the sidewalk leads all the way to Pinones.

Why you might be nearby  

The upscale resort hotels in Isla Verde include; the Ritz Carleton, InterContinental, El San Juan, Ritz Carleton, Marriott Courtyard, Hampton Inn.

If you have a 3 hour plus layover at San Juan’s Munez airport, the taxi ride to Pinones is 10 minutes during the week – a great alternative to the airport bar.

Lesser Known Facts

Piñones is located in the village of Loíza. In the 1600s, Loíza housed runaway slaves from the British colonies.

Arriving Soleil BC
Arriving Soleil BC

African  influences along with local Taíno traditions contribute to the town’s unique style of cooking. As you bite into a crispy alcapurria (beach food made with green banana batter and stuffed with either meat, crab, shrimp or lobster), you may be serenaded by the sound of drums in the distance, an homage to the bomba y plena, an Afro-Puerto Rican style of music that originated in Loíza.

Bomba; the music, rhythm and dance carried by West African slaves to Puerto Rico. Sunday is Bomba (music day) at Pinones.

Local Recommendation

Today's Features
Today’s Features

Today’s chalk board at Soleil Beach Club features Ceviche, Chorizo in anchovies, Langouste stuffed with rice & crab.

Pinones is not fancy; it’s the sights, the smells. Amazing Frituras (fritters) sold at colorful shacks, made with the indigenous cassava, yautia (a root vegetable), malanga (local sweet potato), and plantains. Frituras are stuffed with beef, chicken, pork or shellfish, served with hot sauce and washed down with an ice cold beer.

Donde Olga Restaurant has been whipping up fritters for more than 30 years. There you’ll find Angie Ponce, a cook who uses the a sea grape leaf to help her mold alcapurrias. It’s a technique she learned after many years of experience.

”At first I used to use plastic wrap but the leaf works much better,” Angie says as she drops fritters into hot oil fueled by wood fire.

Something for Nothing

COOL OFF; in the 4 foot deep tidal pool right in front of Soleil Beach Club.

Pina Colada
Pina Colada

STROLL: the wooden boardwalk promenade to Punto Maldonado turnaround.

TRANSPORTATION: A free ride! Soleil Beach Club advertises they will send a comfy, free shuttle to pick you up in San Juan.

Corner table, Soleil BC
Corner table, Soleil BC
Categories
Caribbean Puerto Rico San Juan; La Playa, Pinones

San Juan, Hotel La Playa; a local hotel/restaurant

Isla Verde, San Juan, Puerto Rico
Hotel La Playa, restaurant is known as La Playita
A bar/restaurant/hotel on top of the Caribbean Sea
6 Calle Amapola St., Carolina 00979

As the plane descends into San Juan, palm trees and surf at Isla Verde beach appear out the left window. Exiting San Juan’s airport, there are no hotel shuttles. Taxis in San Juan have sole right to transport arriving vacationers to their hotel. The ride to Isla Verde takes 5 minutes; perfect for snow-belt refugees.

Orchids line the short path leading to the front desk.

“Welcome back,” said Linda, the office manager, as I signed at the front desk of Hotel La Playa.                                                                                                                                                            “Feels like I’m back home.” I said.
“When did you first visit us?” she asked.
“1973.”

Courtyard at dusk
Courtyard at dusk

Why this place appeals to me

The walk through the small courtyard filled with flowering tropical pants leads to a ten seat bar. Fourteen tables serve the open air restaurant. A plank deck hangs over the Caribbean Sea. When the 18 inch tide rises, the Caribbean Sea sprays the feet of imbibers on the deck.

Robert, bartender/waiter/diver, asks, “What to drink?” My choices have narrowed to a chilled Presidente beer, brewed in the Dominican Republic, or the local favorite; a Mojito mashed behind the bar, “Gracias, Don Facundo Bacardí.”

How Far Down the Block?

The tiny peninsula of Isla Verde separates two of San Juan’s great beaches; Isla Verde and Pine Grove – each a 1.5 mile stretch of sand. [mappress mapid=”14″]Hotel La Playa sits equidistant between the San Juan Ritz Carleton Hotel and the El San Juan Hotel – both featuring pricey beach side bars and glitzy casinos. A 400 meter walk to either hotel.

Both hotels can be reached by the beach during the day.

Early Morning

Why you might be nearby?

The airport is a five minute cab ride.
You’ve just witnessed your first cock fight – yes, it’s legal in San Juan; Club Gallistico is just four blocks from La Playa.

Lesser Known Facts

Isla Verde, tiny island 400 north of the peninsula give the area its name. The Isla Verde Marine Reserve lies 25 meters off the hotel deck; easily accessed for snorkels.

Marine Reserve
Marine Reserve

When Fidel Castro marched into Havana in January 1959, millions of Cubans began an exodus towards the U.S. Isla Verde was an important settling point for 1960’s Cuban emigrants. Still based in Isla Verde, Casa Cuba remains a significant Cuban social club. The first Cubans to flee were the wealthiest. Departing Cuba on flights from Varadero Beach, Cuba, the emigrants became known as Varaderos.

Local Recommendation

Pepe Canosa was an early emigrant, he landed Puerto Rico in 1964. Pepe founded Metropole Restaurant in 1965. Metropole is a four block walk from La Playa Hotel. Pepe’s famous Gallinita rellena, Montuno Cubano and Black Bean Soup continue to be served by his descendants. Metropole is the best in local dining, surperb wine list, top-notch service featuring Cuban/Puerto Rico dishes.

Mojitos mixed and served over the bar at La Playita cost half the price of those served at the nearby Ritz Carleton beach bar.

Upgrade to one of the two ocean-front hotel rooms; 209 or 207. Wedge open windows; drift off to crashing waves.

Something for “almost” Nothing

Slip an icy Presidente into a cooler, step out the front entrance of Hotel La Playa and onto the sands of Isla Verde beach. 200 meters down the beach a local guy rents chaise lounges under a palm tree for $4/day.

The deck at La Playa is a primo location in San Juan to observe a full moon rising.