The 7 Most Instagrammable Four Seasons Desserts

Who says dessert has to wait until after dinner? You may find sumptuous confections from Four Seasons pastry chefs hard to postpone. From architectural hot chocolate to a tarte au framboise worthy of its own Pantone colour, these courses are ready for their close-up.

 

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Montblanc in Jakarta

At Four Seasons Hotel Jakarta’s chic La Patisserie, you can be a kid in a debonair candy store. The boutique’s gold-leaf ceiling, robin’s-egg blue walls and sparkling chandelier set the stage for Executive Pastry Chef Lorenzo Sollecito’s exquisite sweets. In his artful Montblanc, smooth chestnut crèmoux and a Chantilly of mascarpone and Madagascar vanilla rest on a crunchy alpen butter cookie. Sink into the settee and prepare to evoke Instagram envy. It’s almost too pretty to eat.

Four Seasons Hotel Jakarta

 

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Molten Cake in Bahrain Bay

Executive Pastry Chef Imad Boukli’s version of the Jean-Georges classic is a decadent mixture of crisp and smooth – 70 percent dark-chocolate cake with a liquid centre, paired with homemade vanilla ice cream and spritzed with a fragrant coffee foam. “I love watching our guests’ reactions once they break the crust of the cake and the warm chocolate melts its way through the frosty vanilla scoop,” Boukli says. “It’s a decadent, hot-icy experience for all dessert lovers.”

Four Seasons Hotel Bahrain Bay

 

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Deconstructed Carrot Cake Macaron in Washington, DC

Pastry Chef Moliere Patrice’s comfort-food take on the French macaron is served alongside deconstructed versions of two other iconic American desserts – a s’more and a pecan tart – during the Seasons Sunday Brunch at Four Seasons Hotel Washington, DC.

Patrice sources almond flour from his hometown – Brooklyn – for the macaron, and rich, sweetened cream cheese replaces the customary ganache filling. The delicate beauty is finished with carrot cake crumbs and a dusting of cinnamon. “Between Seasons Restaurant, in-room dining, private events and more, our pastry team has to find inspiration for hundreds of different desserts each month,” says Executive Chef Andrew Court. “They’re all fantastic, but I think the most successful creations are influenced by some type of special connection, whether that be a hometown ingredient, a take on a classic recipe or, in this case, both. It’s amazing to see their creativity come to life.”

Four Seasons Hotel Washington, DC

Le Baba au Rhum Mojito, Trilogie de Chocolat and La Framboise in Hong Kong

French techniques flourish along with two Michelin stars at Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong restaurant Caprice. By bestowing on le baba au rhum the flavours of mint and lime, pastry chef Nicolas Lambert gives it a Cuban kick. The elegant trilogie de chocolat combines the caramel crunch of feuillantine with milky Valrhona Chantilly and white chocolate namelaka, a Japanese ganache whose name translates to “creamy texture.” Lambert’s framboise is a study in subtlety that celebrates the marriage of raspberry and lemon. “Pastry is pleasure for the palate,” Lambert says. “I associate flavour with texture, and I like to play with three or four textures at a time. Once I have the textures and the flavour right, I think about presentation. For me, the most important part of pastry is that it’s tasty – or gourmand, as we say in France.”

Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong

 

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Tarte au Framboise in Casablanca

Executive Pastry Chef Thierry Mette’s raspberry tart is sensory delight of multiple dimensions. Sweet dough filled with almond cream is topped with vanilla Chantilly, then bejewelled with a tower of fresh raspberries and a dusting of icing sugar. “It’s an iconic dessert that represents the best in French pastry techniques delivered in its simplest form,” says Mette, a 28-year Four Seasons veteran from Brittany, France. And it’s just as easy on the palate as it is on the eyes.

Four Seasons Hotel Casablanca

Haute Chocolate in Vail

A pièce de résistance for après-ski since the Resort’s opening in 2010, this architectural beverage turns heads when it’s served tableside at Four Seasons Resort and Residences Vail’s Remedy Bar. An attentive server delivers a mug topped with a homemade marshmallow on a chocolate lattice, and then carefully pours steaming hot Valrhona chocolate and steamed milk from a traditional French pot. The finishing touch? Chocolate shavings and a dollop of whipped cream. “When we first started serving it, we actually had the marshmallow inside the mug,” says Executive Pastry Chef Andrew Schweska. “But soon we realized our guests wanted something more experiential, so we put the marshmallow atop the lattice, providing the ultimate hot chocolate experience.”

Four Seasons Resort and Residences Vail

YOUR JOURNEY BEGINS HERE

Where will you indulge your senses?

City at night

Escape to These 6 Otherworldly Pools

From a free-form infinity pool fronting the Pacific in Punta Mita to a lazy river in Orlando, these Four Seasons water features offer immersive bliss.

Grand-Hotel du Cap-Ferrat, A Four Seasons Hotel

The 108-foot-long (33-metre) Club Dauphin pool – filled with seawater and heated to a constant 28 degrees C (82.4 F) – has been the centrepiece of this glamorous Côte d’Azur hotel since it was added in 1939. Want to streamline your stroke? Enlist the help of long-time staff swimming instructor Pierre Gruneberg, who counts the Kennedys, McCartneys and Depardieus among his clientele.


Pool at Four Seasons Hotel Dubai DIFC

Four Seasons Hotel Dubai DIFC

There’s never been a better reason to buy a swimsuit. More chic glass box than traditional swimming pool, this rooftop respite sits seven storeys above the Dubai International Financial Centre. After a dip, settle on the pool deck with a berry and wildflower-honey smoothie. Or postpone it until you’ve had an al fresco massage or private yoga session.

Four Seasons Safari Lodge Serengeti

Soak in this free-form infinity pool for a while and you might witness a convoy of African elephants gathering at the watering hole below. A few steps up, the expansive pool deck offers plush chairs and couches, and drinks are served from sunrise to sunset. We recommend claiming a chaise lounge for watching the sun sink below the Serengeti horizon.


FS Chiang Mai pool

Four Seasons Resort Chiang Mai

Surrounded on all sides by lush rice paddies, this terraced pool complex overlooks the pastoral Mae Rim Valley. Ringed by lounge chairs and sun-shielding umbrellas, an all-ages pool with a smooth tile floor overlooks an adults-only soaking spot that seems to emerge from the glades. Designed by cocktail master Javier de la Muelas, the Ratree Bar’s drinks menu redefines the poolside sipper. Need more to plunge into repose? Poolside foot massages are available upon request.

Four Seasons Resort Punta Mita

There’s whale-watching, and then there’s ogling a band of humpbacks as you bask in a free-form infinity pool fronting the Pacific. Engage in the latter here, along with plenty of other opportunities for soaking and splashing, from an adults-only infinity-edge lap pool to a palm-shrouded lazy river that conveniently circles family rooms and suites.

Four Seasons Resort Orlando at Walt Disney
World Resort

Baby-safe splash zones, a lazy river, two water slides and a zero-entry pool that hosts dive-in movies – these are encompassed by the 5-acre (20,2034-square-metre) Explorer Island water park. If you find yourself in Orlando without little ones, or are letting them live it up in the Kids For All Seasons program, beeline to the Oasis, an ultra-modern adults-only pool and jetted tub served by staffers who hand out frozen-fruit skewers and iced cappuccino shooters.

Your Journey Begins Here

Dive into your next trip.

Time to Ride: Top Surfing Destinations Around the World

“Surfing is freedom,” says Clive Scherer, Tropicsurf Program Manager at Four Seasons Resort Punta Mita in Mexico. “Whenever you’re in the ocean, it’s totally refreshing – there’s no stress!” Scherer should know: He’s been surfing since he was 12, growing up near Jeffries Bay, South Africa. Now he and his wife travel the world, teaching surfing and other water sports at Four Seasons locales with Tropicsurf.

And yes, it’s possible for rookies to get an Endless Summer experience their first day, with the right teacher. “There’s nothing like seeing the stoke in students’ faces when they’re experiencing surfing for the first time,” he says. “It’s like surfing the first time again yourself.” Here, Scherer shares the particular surfing spots that still get his heart racing after all these years, from Costa Rica to the Maldives.


Seaplane Surfing in Maldives

THE MALDIVES

Surf Style: Sheer Magic for All

“The Maldives is perfection in terms of clear, bathtub-warm water, and Four Seasons Resort Maldives Kuda Huraa is off the charts,” Scherer says. Tropicsurf does much of its instructor training here. “Most people don’t think of the Maldives as having waves, but they’re world-class on everyone’s level, from beginner to best. Plus, every August, Four Seasons invites the biggest-name surfers in the world to compete for a trophy here, and guests can be part of the whole thing.” The Four Seasons Maldives Surfing Champions Trophy is often called the World’s Most Luxurious Surfing Event: Where else can you end a day of wave-riding with a contemplative spa treatment on a private beach under the stars?

If you’re feeling inspired, take a cue from the most adventurous guests and book the Resort’s Seaplane Surfing Safari, during which you’ll travel via seaplane to the most idyllic – and crowd-free – surfing spots around, stopping whenever you’d like to have a sun-soaked rest aboard the snack-stocked plane.

Post Session: Explore Unbelievable Reefs

If you want to spot the neon-hued fish you’ve only seen in screen savers, the Maldives is your dream destination. “Some days diving in the Maldives, visibility underwater is 80 feet,” or 24 metres, Scherer says, and snorkelling or diving the Aquarium or Twin Palms reefs is unmissable. “It’s some of the best in the world, and you can see manta rays, turtles – sometimes even whale sharks.” He recommends a stop at the Four Seasons Resort Maldives Kuda Huraa dive centre for gear, lessons and additional insider suggestions.


Two Surfers at Witch's Rock in Costa Rica

COSTA RICA

Surf Style: Cinematic

“There’s a break in Costa Rica called Witch’s Rock that’s world-famous from the Endless Summer movies,” Scherer says. “Surfers come from all over the world to surf that iconic place, in Santa Rosa National Park, with a massive rock in the middle.” Nearby, Four Seasons Resort Costa Rica at Peninsula Papagayo has just emerged from its own fresh break: a USD 35 million renovation. First-time visitors should be aware, according to Scherer, that “it’s a Costa Rican tradition to have a pineapple on the beach after a surf, or a coconut.” Another option: the coconut crème caramel with candied orange served up at the Resort’s Añejo tapas bar.

Post Session: Learn to Fly

“The zip lines in Costa Rica are awesome,” Scherer says, “and they have the second-longest one in the world.” You might spot howler monkeys and tree frogs as you whizz through the rainforest canopy on the 90-minute Witch’s Rock Canopy Tour, with 11 cables (some up to 450 metres/1,500 feet long). The namesake company comes highly recommended by the Resort, and it’s just a 20-minute drive from your room.


Surfer riding a wave in Bali

BALI, INDONESIA

Surf Style: Epic

“Jimbaran Bay’s left-handed waves are some of the most famous on the planet,” Scherer says of the surf that rolls in adjacent to the all-villa Four Seasons Resort Bali at Jimbaran Bay. “The waves are so popular that it can be a little crowded, but the instructors at Tropicsurf know how to get away from everyone. The waves are really good – a bit tougher than the Maldives, but it’s an epic ride.”

Post Session: Join A Beach Barbecue

One of Scherer’s favourite things about Jimbaran Bay is that every night at dusk, most local restaurants host a barbecue right on the sand. “It’s massive; there’s so much delicious smoke in the air,” he recalls. “They start at sunset, and you sit at your table and choose from snapper, crayfish, all the catches of the day. It’s so warm even in the evenings, and the Indonesian sunsets over the ocean are breathtaking.” Try the Resort’s famous Seafood BBQ Night for the freshest lobster and crab of your life.


Female surfer in Punta Mita

PUNTA MITA, MEXICO

Surf Style: Calm

“The waves are really friendly and easy here at Four Seasons Resort Punta Mita, so it’s much more suited for families,” says Scherer, who currently teaches surfing courses at the Resort, among other activities. “The location is perfect because you can surf right here on the property, and for easy-going waves it can’t be beat.” Other perks for those travelling in a pack: The flight from the United States is painless, and the Resort features a lazy river adored by younger surfers. “Punta Mita is a place everyone wants to come back to. It’s Mexican hospitality at its best,” Scherer says. “And the tacos are amazing!”

Post Session: Whale Watch (With Cocktails)

One of Scherer’s go-to activities as evening falls? Head to the Resort’s The Shack, on the white sands of Las Cuevas Beach, for a cocktail and watch whales jump and frolic with their newborn calves just a mile out at sea. “This bay, Baya de Banderas, is the second-biggest bay in the world, and sometimes when I arrive here in the morning I spot four whales within just a couple of minutes,” he says. Take a seat at the firepit and order the El Burro cocktail, The Shack’s spin on a Moscow Mule, made with tequila reposado – the kind deliciously aged in oak barrels.

Your Journey Begins Here

Where will your next surfing adventure be?

Bali at Jimbaran Bay

Paradise Found: The Most Instagrammed Spots in Bali

Crystal-clear waters, vivid coral reefs, lush jungles, historic cultural sites: The island of Bali is a picture-perfect tropical paradise. Find inspiration at one of the thousands of ancient temples, catch a glimpse of rare wildlife at a leafy sanctuary, or greet the sun from the peak of Mount Batur – whatever the adventure, photo opportunities abound. Here are a few ways to take in the best of the island, as documented by Four Seasons experts and guests.


Plunge pool at Four Seasons Resort Bali at Jimbaran Bay

Jimbaran Bay: Take the plunge

“When Four Seasons Resort Bali at Jimbaran Bay opened in 1993, it was the world’s first large-scale luxury villa resort and the first to feature plunge pools in every guest villa,” says General Manager Randy Shimabuku. Pools at the Resort’s 147 villas range in size from 13 square metres to the Imperial Villa’s showstopping 68-square-metre pool, offering a 180-degree panorama of Jimbaran Bay. “These physical features have since been imitated, but you can’t copy a feeling – that’s the essence and soul of the Resort and this special island.”

Looking to test the waters beyond your thatched-roof villa? Asia’s top waterpark, Waterbom Bali, offers outdoor adventures from an adrenaline-pumping shoot down a transparent waterslide to a calm float along a lazy river under a canopy of trees.

Unwind by the water in Jimbaran Bay


Shrines in Bali

Jimbaran Bay: Admire sacred shrines

More than 1,500 stone statues and 300 shrines dot the Resort’s leafy property, many visited by staff and neighbouring villagers as part of their daily rituals. “The Balinese call a shrine pelinggih, meaning ‘place or seat,’” says Resort Priest Aji Ngurah. “Simpler than temples, they’re built as a residence for sacred or holy spirits, which can be ancestors or Hindu deities. Shrines are considered a permanent or temporary place where offerings are made.” One such example: the Resort’s historical Hindu temple, a 17th-century shrine overseen by Ngurah where offerings are made to the gods daily by a resident pemangku (priest) and his daughter.

Don’t miss the clifftop Uluwatu Temple, built in the 11th century. Locals recommend visiting at sunset, when you can watch the surrounding sea turn orange and pink in the twilight. Just be sure to keep an eye out for the temple’s resident pickpocket monkeys.

Explore temples in Jimbaran Bay


Rooftop Lotus Pond at Four Seasons Resort Bali at Sayan

Sayan: Discover an otherworldly oasis

High above the treetops and only accessible by a 55-metre footbridge, Four Seasons Resort Bali at Sayan‘s 852-square-metre infinity-edged Rooftop Lotus Pond is the jewel of the Sayan Valley. Feed koi while enjoying panoramic views of the surrounding forest that cascades down to the Ayung River. “Many guests feel emotional as they cross the suspension bridge to the rooftop lobby pond and begin their descent to the soundtrack of the forest symphony,” says Rao. “Bali is a place that, once visited, stays with you for a lifetime, and Four Seasons Resort Bali at Sayan captures the unseen, ethereal magic of the island’s cultural heart.”

For another chance to interact with the surrounding inhabitants, don’t miss the Ubud Monkey Forest – a leafy sanctuary home to 700 macaque monkeys – or the Bali Bird Park, where 250 kinds of fowl are organised by country of origin. Stop by the Owl House to see Malaysian barred eagle-owl and then make your way to the Balinese jungle exhibit to encounter stark white Bali starlings, reportedly the rarest bird on earth.

Feel the magic in Sayan


Yoga Bale at Four Seasons Resort Bali at Sayan

Sayan: Ascend to find your centre

Inspired by the elegant curves of lotus petals, the Resort‘s Dharma Shanti Yoga Bale was designed by Balinese architecture firm Ibuku and is made of locally sourced, sustainable bamboo. “Drawing from the spirit of Buddhist philosophy, dharma refers to the intrinsic nature of things – the path sometimes referred to as your true purpose – while the word shanti comes back to peace,” says Regional Spa Director Luisa Anderson of the gazebo. “Watching the Bale take shape, it felt like the architectural embodiment of those concepts.”

Connect to the natural world while melting tension with a Restorative Hot Stone Yoga session: Heated pebbles from the sacred Ayung River are placed on the body during each pose, a treatment rumoured to buoy the immune system. Or try an AntiGravity Yoga session, created by a group of gymnasts led by Broadway dancer and world-class athlete Christopher Harrison. Looking for something a little more strenuous? Join the local guides of Bali Sunrise Hike on a trek at dawn to the peak of 1,717-metre-tall Mount Batur, just over an hour’s drive from the Resort.

Practice yoga in Sayan

YOUR JOURNEY BEGINS HERE

Where will you find paradise?

Bali at Jimbaran Bay

Finding Your Way in Tokyo

At some point in our lives, we all find ourselves at a crossroads – a time when we need or want to re-evaluate our past and rethink our future.

This sense of self-reflection is front and centre in Tokyo, where the city’s past and future are simultaneously on display: Steel-and-glass skyscrapers tower over ancient shrines and temples while age-old traditions are joined by modern attitudes. A focal point of the city’s constant evolution is Shibuya Crossing, one of the world’s busiest and oldest crossroads. Pedestrians of all ages swarm the zebra-striped walkways as neon signs reflect off shops’ glass fronts, creating a Japanese-centric futuristic vibe. But even here the past is present, as in the famous Hachikō statue, from the 1930s, honouring the faithful Akita dog who waited patiently for his deceased owner every day for years.

Venture beyond Shibuya to discover creative corners where Tokyo’s culture is reinventing itself.

Ginza

Ginza Image02

Tokyo’s first Western-style shopping district, Ginza is defined by wide boulevards lined with high-end boutiques, department stores and exclusive restaurants. It’s also home to the Kabukiza Theatre, newly renovated but opened in 1899. The theatre is the city’s main venue for kabuki, a classical Japanese dance drama that dates back to the Edo period, from 1603 to 1868.

For a quiet moment in Ginza, the Concierge at the nearby Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Marunouchi recommends Japanese tea salon Higashiya Ginza. The small space – it seats about 40 – is an ideal spot for afternoon tea, but visitors can also participate in Cha-Kabuki, a popular game from the 12th century to the 14th (Kamakura to Nanbokucho periods). Players start with a blind tasting, and then guess the name and origin of each Japanese tea based on its flavour and aroma. For your evening meal, enjoy a kaiseki-ryori – a traditional multi-course Japanese dinner.

Chiyoda

Chioya1

Windows at the upcoming Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi will look out on a distinct symbol of the city’s heritage: the Imperial Palace, the official residence of the Chrysanthemum Throne – the modern embodiment of a royal line said to extend back to the fifth century BC. The park-like complex is a serene green space in the heart of busy downtown; the East Garden features carved wood buildings that date to the Edo period.

Travelling with a little one? Take the Hotel’s complimentary jogging stroller for a run on the Imperial Palace loop, a 5-kilometre circuit around the palace that many runners recommend for its views of some of Tokyo’s most popular landmarks: Tokyo Tower, the Sakuradamon Gate and, from late March to early April, cherry blossoms in Chidorigafuchi Park.

Next, head to the National Museum of Modern Art, home to a vast collection of ukiyo-e woodblock prints, silk paintings and ceramics. The first national art museum in Japan, the institution showcases notable Japanese artists from the Meiji period (1868–1912) to the present, as well as contemporary Western works to document the cultural impact the West has had on Japanese art. Reflect on the collection in MOMAT’s fourth-storey “A Room With a View” relaxation space, which, in fact, affords more than one scenic view.

Akihabara

Akihabara Image

Known as Tokyo’s Electric Town, the Akihabara district is a nexus of otaku geek culture – multi-storey arcades, bustling pachinko parlours, anime stores and idol shows line the frenetic main street. It’s not unusual to find people dressed as their favourite anime and manga characters; idol group AKB48, one of Japan’s highest-selling musical acts, runs its own theatre in the district.

Fans of vintage anime and otaku culture shouldn’t miss Mandarake, offering eight storeys of manga comics, fanzines, classic collectibles, arcane videogame systems and pieces for cosplay.

 

Jimbocho

Jimbocho

Known as “Book Town,” this time-worn neighbourhood of sinuous backstreets and alleys is packed with vintage shops selling books, prints and old movie posters. At Komiyama Book Store – opened in 1939 – get lost among four storeys of classic fashion books, magazines, posters, prints and photography books. Bohemian’s Guild specializes in books on art, photography, fashion and architecture from around the world, plus a gallery of paintings, sketches and calligraphy by writers, including Kenzaburo Oe.

Tucked away above one used bookshop is Curry Bondy, an intimate kissaten-style diner offering plenty of umami in local, Indian and French flavours – a surprising hidden culinary gem in a neighbourhood devoted to the written word.

Those who like their stories to have a happy ending should make a stop at the University of Tokyo, at the edge of Jimbocho. There, you’ll discover another statue of Shibuya Crossing’s Hachikō – this time, however, the loyal pup is joyously reunited with his beloved owner.

Your Journey Begins Here

What will you discover in Tokyo’s boundless energy?

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