What to take to Cozumel? And other questions.

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JessH:
I do not discount a restaurant simply because there are tourists there, and I have eaten at some of the places that you just mentioned. That being said if you want the best bang for your buck no matter where you are it is usually best to figure out where the locals eat when they go out. When you do this you will find some of the best food and more often than not you will be very happily suprised by the prices.

~Jess

I do not disagree with you on that there is good food to be found in holes-in-the-wall restaurants on Cozumel; I do disagree with what I thought you were saying (and correct me if I am wrong) that such eateries have categoricaly across-the-board better food than the more "mainstream" places. Such is not necessarily the case in my experience, and I have eaten at both ends of the scale and lots in between.
 
I'll add in here that Especias and Le Chef, which are my two favorites are frequented by locals and tourists alike, as are La Choza, Casa Denis, Sonora Grill, etc.

El Pique is my favorite taqueria on teh island...it wins hands down for me...and it's on my restaurant list as well as some other "non-touristy" places
 
Just got the flights booked. Arriving 4/20 and departing 4/29.

Thanks for all the info so far. Keep it coming. I'm going to print out this thread for the eating establishment recomendations.

Plan on going to the east side of the island one day. What is the must do on that trip?
 
underachiever:
Just got the flights booked. Arriving 4/20 and departing 4/29.

Thanks for all the info so far. Keep it coming. I'm going to print out this thread for the eating establishment recomendations.

Plan on going to the east side of the island one day. What is the must do on that trip?

Mescalito's, Coconuts, Chen Rio, Playa Bonita, El Mirador, Paradise Cafe. The fried whole snapper at Chen Rio is always a high point of that day trip for me.
 
ggunn:
I do not disagree with you on that there is good food to be found in holes-in-the-wall restaurants on Cozumel; I do disagree with what I thought you were saying (and correct me if I am wrong) that such eateries have categoricaly across-the-board better food than the more "mainstream" places. Such is not necessarily the case in my experience, and I have eaten at both ends of the scale and lots in between.
I think I worded what I was trying to say poorly. I did not mean that a place had to be a hole in the wall or that you shouldn't go to a place because it has gringos in it. Just because a place has gringos in it does not mean it should definitely be avoided, but if there aren't many people in a restaurant during meal time and the few that are there are all gringos than you might want to look elsewhere. The more upscale places may cater mainly to tourists but at the best places you will find locals as well.

~Jess
 
JessH:
I think I worded what I was trying to say poorly. I did not mean that a place had to be a hole in the wall or that you shouldn't go to a place because it has gringos in it. Just because a place has gringos in it does not mean it should definitely be avoided, but if there aren't many people in a restaurant during meal time and the few that are there are all gringos than you might want to look elsewhere. The more upscale places may cater mainly to tourists but at the best places you will find locals as well.

~Jess

Fair enough. There is sometimes a prevailing sense of, well, snobbery, for lack of a better word, that says that in any resort area the places that cater to visitors can't possibly have as good food as those that cater to the locals. The negative "touristy" label is applied to such places, as if we all aren't tourists from the locals' point of view. I have favorite places to eat on Cozumel all up and down the scale, and all over the map, literally. Some compete for the visitor dollar more than others.
 
Have a great time. Coz is one of our favorite places. All the advice you have read is true. However, one word of caution:

DO NOT RENT OR RIDE ON A MOTOR SCOOTER!

Every time we have been there, we have seen or heard of an accident involving a tourist and a motor scooter.

It's not worth it. Take a taxi or walk.

OK, I'm done with my rant.

Dave (aka "Squirt")
 
Hi, Gang,

I am going to go way out on a limb here and suggest some things that may border on heresy. I will await the slings and arrows--and the watchful eye of Christi--for a list of my transgressions.

First and foremost some confessions: I started going to Cozumel before this wonderful Board with its voices of experience came into existence. And, man, would we have loved to have had it. No one in our area except the dive shops knew much about it and the dives shops wanted to sell us a group adventure, which we did not want. Second, and less important, I speak Spanish and traveling in Mexico was not a problem.

All that said we came to the island with pretty much a blank slate other than what we read in books. (Man, has the internet changed our lives!). We picked a hotel and a dive shop based on what we thought our needs were. I will not talk about them because they are not important. Suffice it to say we stayed at that hotel for many more visits and we used that dive shop several times before hooking on with our current outfit...which we love.

So, when it came to restaurants, we just looked in the door, counted the customers, smelled the aroma, and dove in. Very few disappointed. Later in our lives I joined the Board and was brave enough to suggest some of the places at which we dined. Surprise! They were not universally recommended. One that really surprised me was the "French Quarter"; we found that simply excellent, but others did not. I have not seen it recommended recently and I fear it may have seccumbed to the hurricane. Now I see that Guidos has received bad reviews...that was one of our standards...on a two or three week stay we would eat there at least 4-5 times.

So, I guess where I am coming to is that folks heading there for the first time are served well by using the excellent advice here. However, I would like to be bold enough to suggest that everyone just take a walk around and, if you see someplace that looks good, give it at try. If it turns out wonderful, please come tell us about it.

As I wrote earlier, we have not been to Cozumel since the hurricane and a lot could have changed. However, in the past, we walked all over the city with impunity. It seemed very safe to me. I hope that things have not changed, but I feared they would when the pier facilities expanded and more cruise ships cruised up. More cruise ships = more money. Sometimes more money = more crime. But I just do not know. I guess we will find out when we are on-island again.

It will be a shame if my wife and I cannot take an evening stroll back to our digs without fear...a very big shame...

joewr
 
joewr:
It will be a shame if my wife and I cannot take an evening stroll back to our digs without fear...a very big shame...

joewr

I traveled to Cozumel last August with my husband, and neither of us were divers at the time. We were just there for a relaxing and fun vacation where we could explore the surrounding area without having to be back at our hotel by dark and other such nonsense. Cozumel exceeded our expectations tenfold, and I'll be going back the second I can swing it. I never once felt the slightest bit unsafe even walking around the back streets at night. Everyone we met was really nice and helpful, and didn't seem too put off by my pathetic attempts at speaking the language. I don't think you and your wife will have any worries about enjoying a nightly stroll, or anything else except how miserable you'll feel when it's time to leave.
 
joewr:
As I wrote earlier, we have not been to Cozumel since the hurricane and a lot could have changed. However, in the past, we walked all over the city with impunity. It seemed very safe to me. I hope that things have not changed, but I feared they would when the pier facilities expanded and more cruise ships cruised up. More cruise ships = more money. Sometimes more money = more crime. But I just do not know. I guess we will find out when we are on-island again.

It will be a shame if my wife and I cannot take an evening stroll back to our digs without fear...a very big shame...

In town, not much was permanently changed by the hurricane. Restaurants (some of them) come and go, and it's economics more than weather that drives that process. I, too, am a Cozumel "old-timer"; my first visit there was in 1978. The changes to the island which have been wrought as a result of its dicovery by the cruise ship industry have far outstripped those brought about by storms.

But it's still a charming place, as long as you stay out of Puta Langosta and the tanzanite stores. Walking the streets is as safe as it ever was.
 

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