Dining Guide to West End

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After posting this inside another thread, I thought maybe others might want some feedback on places to eat in West End. If you have opinions, reviews, or comments - please share them here. It would be nice to keep an up to date list of good places to eat and current culinary conditions in West End / Roatan.

As for places to eat, should you decide to go to West End:

1. Argentinean Grill - Excellent steaks!! Great food in general. Prices are about $8 - $18 per entree, if memory serves. I don't think you could spend $100 on two people here unless you bought a few liters of wine to go with your meal.

2. The Lighthouse - My wife loves this place. Very romantic setting right on the water. Prices are about the same as Argentinean. The lobster was very good, and the coconut bread was incredible. I had quite a bit to drink first, so the bread was also very theraputic!

3. Chillies - Very inexpensive. Lobster tail w/ sides for about $12. Good food, right on the water at the other end of West End than Argentinean. There's nothing fancy about this place, but Roatan isn't about fancy.

4. Pinocchio's - Up the hill a little from Chillies. Very good Italian themed food. Don't order the garlic chicken unless you are prepared for some serious garlic action. The lobster here was also quite good. I didn't make it here in January when we were down there, but last year prices were about $10 - $15 per entree including sides.

5. Vietnamese Place (I don't know its real name) - Cheap and tasty. Not fancy. Most expensive item on the menu is about $20 and feeds two. Average price on the menu is $6 - $10 per entree. Appetizers are inexpensive. The red thai curry is quite good, although not as hot as I like it. I think it was about $13 after adding a few spring rolls to the order.

6. Sundowners - Lunch and snack foods. Prices are very reasonable. This is my favorite beach bar, and the food is quite good for snack food.

7. The Galley - There is nothing fancy about this place at all. What it lacks in formality it more than makes up for in service, cleanliness, and food. Kristen, who runs the place, is a die hard expat who runs a tight shop. Lunch, including two smoothies, a huge fresh salad that rivals anything I can get here, two sandwiches, and a soda came in right around $20. The smoothies were about $8 of that - they are fresh, delicious, and more addictive than crack cocaine.

8. Josie - This isn't a restaurant, but a super nice lady that comes around West End (and every day to Coconut Tree) with fresh food. She makes lunch on demand (friend chicken to die for) for about $3.50. She also makes the best cinnamon roll on earth. After a two tank dive I get hungry... she is always there to fix that. Her cinnamon rolls are 30L (about $1.50, but we always paid $2 or so).... they are so good that I have found myself daydreaming about them after getting back to the states.

9. Pura Vida - It's a hotel, it's a dive op, it's a restaurant... this is only about the restaurant, as I don't have experience with the rest of their op. The food is good - quite plentiful and reasonably priced. The pizzas are a little bit on the greasy side, but for $8 for a pizza that is big enough to feed two hungry divers I'm not complaining! Their idea of a salad is to cut down an entire field of greens and put it all on the same plate - seldom have a seen a larger salad in my life. Be warned - they make "Italian" food, and by "Italian" I mean they throw a quarter pound of Oregano and Basil on everything.

10. Dian's Garden of Eatin' - Everyone else loves it, we didn't. It was expensive (two people - $40, no alcohol) and I felt that the portion size for the red curry was meant for a child not a full grown man. It's a bit of a hike, maybe 10 minutes, from West End and I would not recommend walking back unless you are feeling daring. We did, and there are no street lights for much of the way. Honduran drivers all aspire to run in the NASCAR races, and the road is curving... The restaurant is located above a furniture store and is quite clean, well decorated, and with impeccably polite and courteous wait staff. If you want to pretend you are in BVI, stop here - everything from the atmosphere to the bill will remind you of other parts of the Caribbean.

Note: The order is pseudo-random.
 
I completely forgot about Canibal Cafe...

Pros: Relatively inexpensive Mexican(ish) food. Eat three burritos and your meal is free.
Cons: On our first trip to Roatan a group of 8 U.S. Army soldiers were there on holiday. Out of the 8 soldiers, 5 of them lost a day to after-effects of Canibal Cafe.
 
I just got back from a week in the west end, and was mostly not thrilled by the restaurants. But, I think you missed a couple that deserve mention. Bamboo cafe (I think?) excellent sandwiches, good breakfast, not open for dinner. The rotisserie chicken place is not bad and pretty cheap. The indian place over near the argentinian grill is probably the best dinner I had that week, but also the most expensive meal.

Definitely the best food was the woman selling a "desayuna tipica" right near coconut tree; you know, where you get chicken and an egg!

Diane's was okay...compared to most of the other places I guess it's a step up. There are dozens of $5 tex-mex places here in San Antonio that I would love to see in Roatan.
 
Mavis & Dixies - Opened in late April. Located next to the Light House Rest. Food is excellent and the prices are dirt cheap for what you get. Wife and I ate two entrees and one beer each....total bill was around $24.

Tia place that doesn't have a sign up, so I have no idea what the name is. Located close to the alley that leads to the Light House Rest. Good food and good price.

We ate at three restaurants in West Bay. None of the food was that great and it cost 50% more than in West End.

Roger
 
Argentinean Grill definitely is the best over all dining experience available in the West End, though and the price reflects it.

Mavis and Dixies definitely the best all around food and best value. The Stewed chicken-an island dish similar to Chicken Biriyani), and the conch ( caracole) soup were both excellent. This is also the place that made the only good eggs I had on the island.

Lighthouse ( run by Mavis' son-who I met in Seatle when he was Sous Chef at Campagne; where he in no way impressed me. ) had quite a few problems like over cooked lobster and poorly prepared vegetables. While it was not bad, was not worth the cost.


The best values to be had were the street vendors:

BBQ:

Sunday on the left past Sundowner chicken/pork/beef + refried beans + potato salad 60-70 limps.

Friday/Sat on the across from the Baptist Church chicken/pork + slaw + potato salad + beens 60 limps

There were two women across from Coconut Tree Divers that made a nice BBQ but they were not there on a specific day.

Other good options were -

Bamboo Cafe (Now Closing) made excellent Croissant sandwiches, and breakfasts

(Ed. Ug.. I'm a retard)
The Galley (two doors down from Coconut Tree) served a big plate of varrious pastas for 70-80 limps that was enough for two people and very good tasting. I eat very little pasta, otherwise I would have eaten here 2 times per week at least. Gorogonzola and green pesto were both excellent.

Cannibal cafe made rather disgusting food, and was exorbitant in price, stay clear of this place. One redeeming quality however was the Margarita. Fresh squeezed orange and lime juice with some tequilla.


One thing you should make an effort to do is spend a few hours kicking it at "Hole in the wall" on the other side of the island, ask a local about it. Don't go there for a meal go there for an afternoon. If you want to feel like you are on Giligans island chomping on $4 chilled lobster cocktails and sipping $2 rum punchs, smoking cigars and bullspitting with some salty bastages, ask someone about this place and go experience it. Take your time and relax its worth it.



Edit:

Sundowners order the Pina-Coladas durring happy hour then switch to the rum and pinapple. This is the _only_ place to be at Sunset.
 
magnetic,

The description you gave for "Global Cafe" sounds very much like The Galley. Are you referring to the wood hut about 20 meters from Coconut Tree when heading towards Pura Vida or someplace else?
 
Personally, I thought the food at Pura Vida was very good. I must like Oregano, or some other chopped dry weed.

Bamboo Cafe had small portions, that is probably why they did not make it.

There is a roast chicken place that has good food, about a block past Pura Vida with the water on your right side.
 
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