Apr 29
“Wine Down Wednesdays”
icon1 Karen Whitt | icon2 General | icon4 04 29th, 2009| icon3No Comments »

O’Soleil | Pearl Lounge | Zen Garden

  • Featuring four wine tastings served with a sample of tapas pairing for each wine.
  • Focusing on a different region and grape each week.
  • Tapas specials also available from the bar.
  • Special food and wine pairing available in the restaurant.
  • Specials on “Wine of the Month”.

Wednesday, April 29

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FEATURING:

  • Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin Champagne
  • Special Guest – Paul Auriol, Wine Expert, Moet Hennessy Team
  • $35 per guest for Champagne tastings and Canape pairing for each:
    • Veuve Cliquot Rose
    • Veuve Cliquot La Grande Dame
    • Veuve Cliquot Rose Vintage

For the full “Wine Down” experience after the event, dine from our special six-course menu with wine pairings, available at O’Soleil restaurant.

O’Soleil at The Somerset on Grace Bay
RESERVATIONS RECOMMENDED
649.946.5900

Apr 29

PROVIDENCIALES, Turks & Caicos Islands, April 28, 2009 – Executive Chef Lauren Callighen is a young chef in her mid-twenties whose spirited culinary vision is rooted in seagoing traditions. She is the Turks & Caicos’ rising culinary star, noted for her innovative cooking at O’Soleil, the restaurant with a stunning all-white interior design at The Somerset on Grace Bay that is drawing diners from resorts throughout Providenciales as well as island residents. Chef Callighen borrows from the local Caribbean bounty giving it a unique approach, informed by her coastal upbringing in Newfoundland and executed with a zeal for fresh ingredients from the land and sea.

Executive Chef Lauren Callighen

Chef Lauren Callighen’s inventiveness and creativity have led her to prepare sea bass with chorizo and balsamic salad as well as the pumpkin and tamarind soup with oxtail ravioli. As for wahoo, she likes to grill it, and surround the fish with a coconut peanut sauce, a side of baby bok choy and a garnish of banana relish. With Caicos Bank red snapper, she makes a curried mango risotto and serves it with Mojo sauce and Thai basil.

Apart from the local harvest from the sea, Callighen makes an effort to find, use and support locally-grown organic produce. Much of what she uses comes from Island Fresh Produce, a hydroponic farm in Providenciales. As a nod to her Canadian roots, Callighen also sources several Canadian products including Atlantic salmon, Prince Edward Island mussels, venison, Quebec duck, among others.

2009 Culinary News from The Somerset:

  • Chef Callighen is introducing a new culinary experience to the island – Chef Lauren Clam BakeClambakes. Now on Tuesday evenings, the place to be is barefoot on the stretch of white sand beach at The Somerset. The weekly Sunset Tuesdays are growing exponentially from week to week, drawing guests from other hotels along Grace Bay, as well as island residents. They all come to experience Executive Chef Lauren Callighen’s take on the classic clambake, while getting a front row seat for The Somerset’s prime sunset views from their privileged location on Grace Bay. Priced at $32 per person, The Somerset’s Tuesday Night Clambakes take place from 5:30 – 7:30 pm and includes live music, marshmallows roasting on the bonfire, a full spread of seafood, corn on the cob and mollusks.
  • Chef Callighen is excited to offer a new Chef’s Table experience to Grace Bay. OSoleilA variation on the informal kitchen-side dining, Callighen’s Chef’s Table provides diners with the same customized tasting menu and personal attention, while allowing guests to enjoy their gourmand evening in the elegant, cooler surroundings of O’Soleil’s stunning dining room. She has designed a special corner table, where small groups of up to six people can partake in these exclusive culinary evenings. The dishes are based on an impromptu mélange of that day’s market finds, fresh caught fish, locally harvested conch and the guests’ preferences, items not listed on the restaurant’s dinner menu. The Chef’s Table menu features six-courses, each one paired with a wine off the restaurant’s exceptional list. The Chef’s Table is available weeknights and weekends. Priced at $125 per person, it includes all courses, wines, dessert and coffee. Tax and gratuities are not included.
  • The Somerset has just launched its New Cooking Master Class, taking place O’Soleilevery Thursday. This interactive culinary master class provides guests and non-guests a “behind the scenes” look at the inner workings of one of Providenciales’ top chefs. From 7-9:30 p.m., Chef Lauren gives professional expertise on baking techniques, food sampling, wine tastings and more. The month of April focuses on Italian dishes from the Northern, Southern and Central regions. Each month will focus on different cuisines from various countries. Priced at $115 per person per class, it includes hands-on instruction, all ingredients, recipe cards to take home, shopping lists, food and wine pairing, and one’s own prepared dinner. Priced at $390 for all four classes ($70 savings.)

The Somerset is located on the pristine beach at scenic Grace Bay, in the Providenciales of Turks & Caicos Islands, a brief hour and twenty minute flight from Miami and an easy three hour, non-stop flight from New York, with service from most other major U.S. and Canadian gateways. The resort’s O’Soleil restaurant is one of the top tables in the Caribbean, serving the inspired, contemporary fare of Executive Chef Lauren, and a more casual menu at the LunAsea poolside restaurant. Open since June 2006, the 54 exceptionally large suites ranging from 1,353 to 5,327 square feet feature marble baths, gourmet kitchens and whimsically designed interiors by Keith Baltimore. Rates for The Somerset, start at $600 in peak winter season and at $350 during summer value season. The resort is a member of the Small Luxury Hotels of the World and has been providing guests with a five-star luxury experiences since its inception. For reservations and more information, visit www.thesomerset.com or call toll free 877.887.5722, or the local hotel number at 1-649-946-5900.

U.S. Press Contact:

Conran Communications
192 Lexington Avenue, Suite 805
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212.447.1010
Gayle Conran: gconran@conrancommunications.com
Shin-Jung Hong: shong@conrancommunications.com
www.conrancommunications.com

Apr 24

PROVIDENCIALES, Turks & Caicos Islands, April 24, 2009 – The Somerset on Grace Bay in the Turks & Caicos Islands is one of only a few resorts developed specifically for families by someone who knows – a mother. The family-friendly concept, like many of the insightful, caring elements found here, were created in part by Allyson Nick, a New York real estate developer who also happens to be the mother of five children. She intentionally helped design the 54-Suite resort, which opened in June 2006, to feature unscheduled time for building sand castles on the beach, exceptionally spacious suites with large fully-equipped kitchens, multiple bathrooms, as well as two swimming pools, one with a zero-entry shallow end for toddlers and another with an underwater music piped in for teens keeps kids safe and engaged.

Nick has real estate in her blood. She grew up in working in her father’s residential real estate business in Manhattan and her watched her mother learn resort development first-hand by buying a 4,000 acre Rocky Mountain ranch and transforming it into the exclusive Keyah Grande Resort in Pagosa Springs, Colorado. Yet Nick, a busy mother of five children, has used The Somerset on the island of Providenciales in the Turks & Caicos Islands to put her own theories into action. She has strong opinions about why being a woman may well be an asset in a world traditionally overseen by men.

“There are strengths to being a woman in this business,” Nick says. “We’re more detail-oriented. I try to think outside the box as often as possible and I try to implement. I’m not a person who thinks this should be a typical resort experience.”

“I support other women in business,” she says, noting that her general manager, Karen Whitt, is the new president of the Turks & Caicos Hotel Association – the first woman ever appointed to the position – as well as a member of the Turks & Caicos Tourist Board. The Executive Chef, the position that is traditionally dominated by men, is also a woman. Lauren Callighen is in a leadership position not only at The Somerset, but is established as one of the top chefs in the Turks & Caicos, highly praised for her culinary skill and creativity.

This unique energy that Nick and her team generate is what distinguishes this Mediterranean-style resort with its 54 stylish suites, some with private floors, panoramic ocean views, private outdoor Jacuzzis and marble baths. The centerpiece of the resort is the multi-million dollar pool, which ends in a cascading waterfall overlooking miles of white sandy beach, abetted by an underwater sound system and water currents for simulating lap swimming.

“The Somerset is about understated elegance,” Nick says. “I think the word ‘luxury’ is totally overused. At The Somerset, trying to do less is more. This is not an over-the-top place. It’s upscale elegance and we have a very friendly staff.”

“We try very hard at The Somerset,” she says. “It’s the Caribbean and tropical, so service is not as white-gloved as you’d find in Europe or in Asia. And it is not second nature to do this type of service here. So the service level at The Somerset is something that I’m most proud of.”

Guests are enthralled with the service level at The Somerset and for that, Nick is eager to give credit to her General Manager Karen Whitt, who brings her special skills to bear. The fact is that The Somerset staff is loyal to a fault, with the least turnover of any resort on the island.

“I have to give 99 percent of the credit to Karen,” says Nick. “She has great flair and understanding and she’s been the manager since the opening in 2006. She’s the one who pulls it off.”

Despite the “juggling act” that she must perform with her five children, who range in age from 11 to 20, Nick is at The Somerset at least once a month. “What I wanted to have at The Somerset was this welcome familiarity, so when you arrived, it was like you were going home,” she says. “There’s always a staff awaiting you, people who dotted the “i’s” and crossed the “t’s” and were waiting for you to come home.”

That high level of warmth and service is precisely what continues to make The Somerset the most desirable resort in the Turks & Caicos Islands.

The Somerset is located on the pristine beach at scenic Grace Bay, in the Providenciales of Turks & Caicos Islands, a brief hour and twenty minute flight from Miami and an easy three hour, non-stop flight from New York, with service from most other major U.S. and Canadian gateways. The resort’s O’Soleil restaurant is one of the top tables in the Caribbean, serving the inspired, contemporary fare of Executive Chef Lauren, and a more casual menu at the LunAsea poolside restaurant. Open since June 2006, the 54 exceptionally large suites ranging from 1,353 to 5,327 square feet feature marble baths, gourmet kitchens and whimsically designed interiors by Keith Baltimore. Rates for The Somerset, start at $600 in peak winter season and at $350 during summer value season. The resort is a member of the Small Luxury Hotels of the World and has been providing guests with a five-star luxury experiences since its inception. For reservations and more information, visit www.thesomerset.com or call toll free 877.887.5722, or the local hotel number at 1-649-946-5900.

U.S. Press Contact:

Conran Communications
192 Lexington Avenue, Suite 805
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212.447.1010
Gayle Conran: gconran@conrancommunications.com
Shin-Jung Hong: shong@conrancommunications.com
www.conrancommunications.com