Fourth of July Fireworks, Four Seasons Style

Nothing says summer in the U.S. like Fourth of July. While backyard cookouts and sparklers are classic ways to celebrate Independence Day, sometimes you want a more elevated experience. Whether you’re craving a private cabana by the pool or prefer to soak up panoramic skyline views, Four Seasons is the perfect destination for the whole family. Here are a few of our favourite stateside Four Seasons properties for unparalleled Fourth of July fireworks viewing.  

St. Louis

With sprawling views of the Mississippi River, Four Seasons St. Louis is an ideal destination for this most American of holidays. The eighth-floor Sky Terrace features a rooftop pool with tropical cocktails and cabana rentals. If you need to escape the heat for a while, pop into the Topgolf Swing Suites to unleash your inner Tiger Woods. Come nightfall, Sky Terrace offers exceptional views of the pyrotechnics over the iconic Gateway Arch. You can also host a more private celebration by booking an Arch-view room.  

Sky Terrace at Four Seasons Hotel St. Louis

Nashville

It’s no secret that Music City knows how to party, and this year’s Fourth of July celebration at the Rivière Rooftop at the Four Seasons Hotel Nashville aims to keep that tradition alive. The festivities kick off at noon with grilled family favourites, a sorbet station, and a whoopie pie dessert bar. Turn the fun up a notch come sunset with an all-inclusive ticketed event that includes a summer barbecue showcase (think BBQ ribs, cedar plank salmon, and smoked brisket) and an open bar. Overlooking the Cumberland River, you’ll savour one of the city’s most spectacular fireworks views with a full belly and a song in your heart. 

Rooftop fireworks at Four Seasons Hotel Nashville

Philadelphia

Every guest room at the Four Seasons Philadelphia boasts stellar views of the City of Brotherly Love, making the property an ideal setting to experience the annual fireworks display above the Museum of Art. Or reserve a table at 60th-floor lounge SkyHigh and enjoy a glass of bubbly while taking in the epic views of the shimmering night sky. You can also make it a more educational Fourth of July by booking a walking tour of the city’s historic landmarks and learning about Philadelphia’s pivotal role in American independence.

A historical stop on the Independence Walking Tour

Minneapolis

At 36 stories high, Four Seasons Hotel Minneapolis enjoys sweeping panoramas of downtown and the Mississippi River. It’s just a short distance away from Stone Arch Bridge, where the city’s annual Red, White, and Boom fireworks display takes place. Cool off in Minneapolis’s only hotel with both indoor and outdoor pools, and beat the crowds come nightfall as you delight in the spectacle from the rooftop at Riva Terrace Restaurant and Bar

Four Seasons Hotel Minneapolis has unencumbered views of the skyline.

New Orleans

With a 75-foot saltwater pool and expansive views over the Mississippi River, the Four Seasons Hotel New Orleans offers a cool escape from the bustling city. With private cabanas, a full-service bar and restaurant, and plenty of pool toys, its roof is also the ideal perch for fireworks watching with the whole family—and enjoying a glass or two of signature Frosé. If you’re looking to take the Fourth to even greater heights, the Vue Orleans observation deck on the 34th floor has 360-degree views of the city. 

Vue Orleans’ observation deck

Soaking It In: Bathtubs With a View

Once the rush of festive season settles down, making time to reflect becomes a little easier. What’s in store for the year ahead? If you ask us, there’s no better place to gather your thoughts than in the warm, relaxing embrace of a perfectly drawn bath. Better still – make that a bathtub with an unforgettable view. At Four Seasons, the simple yet grounding experience of a bath gets elevated to new heights.

Look out onto Petite Anse bay from your hillside tub in the Seychelles, relax in a hand-hammered copper bathtub set among the treetops in the Golden Triangle, or sip champagne as you gaze out on a historic garden in Florence from your free-standing marble tub. Whatever your view of choice, the result is bound to be relaxation and clarity. These tubs will have you dreaming of your next stay with Four Seasons.

Ocean views in the Seychelles

A woman sitting in a bubble bath with rose petals

Whether you’re feeling jet-lagged or simply tired after a long day in the hot sun, the large sunken bathtub in your private villa at Four Seasons Resort Seychelles is the ideal spot to recover and recharge – with a little help from a personal attendant from the Resort’s Le Syel Spa, who can time your bath to coincide with the sunset over Petite Anse Bay. Immerse yourself in the flavours of the island with the Mahé treatment – a soak in coconut and mango milk and cinnamon essence – or opt for the Indulgence treatment: a chocolate-scented bath accompanied by a bowl of melted chocolate.

Open-air bliss in the Golden Triangle

 

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After an adventurous day trekking through the jungle, soothe aching muscles with a bath in a hand-hammered copper tub at the treetop-fringed Spa at Four Seasons Tented Camp Golden Triangle. Take in breathtaking views of River Ruak and the expansive bamboo forest as you splash in water enhanced with mountain botanicals, invigorating body and spirit, set to a soundtrack of birds singing nearby.

An artful take in Florence

A spacious, ornate bathroom with a raised marble bathtub in the center

The bathtub is the star of your art-filled bathroom at Four Seasons Hotel Firenze. Sip champagne in your free-standing marble tub filled with delicately scented bubbles, gazing up at frescoed ceilings, a Renaissance courtyard or out onto the lush garden. In the Conti Renaissance Suite, some of the frescoes in the bathroom represent the Temple of the Seven Virtues seen in the Hotel garden. But no matter which room you’re staying in, bath time here is a feast for the eyes.

Downtown views in New York

 

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Each of the 189 rooms and suites at Four Seasons Hotel New York Downtown feature deep soaking tubs, but the true star is the egg-shaped tub in the Empire Suite, which also boasts stunning views of Midtown’s distinctive skyline. These oversized tubs fill up in two minutes flat, making it easy to squeeze in a relaxing bath to wash off the day before transitioning to a fun-filled night. Need an extra energy boost? Stop by Next|Health at the Hotel Spa for one of their innovative IV therapies or have the Spa book a personalized session with one of the industry-leading wellness experts from The Collective.

Instagram-worthy views in Costa Rica

Bathroom with a vanity, mirror and a free-standing white bathtub opens up to an outdoor terrace with views of the ocean

The soaking tub in the Casa del Cielo residence at Four Seasons Resort Peninsula Papagayo, Costa Rica has become an Instagram sensation thanks to its sensational ocean and jungle views. But the Resort’s custom bath rituals can turn any room with a tub into a private spa. Whether your muscles are tired from a hike or you’ve just come from the airport after a long flight, the Spa team can customize bath ingredients like jojoba oil or Epsom salt to cure your woes as you gaze out at the surrounding tropical forest.

Private spa in Oahu

When the views are this beautiful, you’ll want to do everything outdoors. And the Deluxe Room with Outdoor Spa Tub at Four Seasons Resort Oahu at Ko Olina let you do just that. Surrounded by lush green foliage with the deep blue of the ocean waters peeking through, the outdoor spa tub is set on an open-air patio outfitted with a table, chairs and loungers inviting you to stay a while. With a plate of fresh Hawaiian papaya and your drink of choice, what more could you need?

A cultural approach in Kyoto

Indoor wellness pool

In Japan, bathing is considered a daily ritual meant to bring purification and pleasure. At Four Seasons Hotel Kyoto, the best way to experience the custom is with some time in the Hotel’s ofuro, a hot bath and sauna. Steep in traditional Japanese sake – which contains rich amino acids to brighten and soften skin along with purifying, moisturizing and anti-ageing properties – or luxuriate in a milk bath made with natural hot spring water, organic green tea extracts and green tea seed oil for dewy skin.

Sky-high serenity in Tokyo

The fervent energy of Tokyo is keenly felt in the Otemachi district, the city’s buzzing financial centre. Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi offers an unexpectedly delightful place to collect your thoughts: your room’s freestanding bathtub. Surrounded by floor-to-ceiling windows, the tub is perfectly positioned so you can take in the sprawling city views from the ultimate vantage point. Turn on the Bluetooth speaker and put on the Frequencies playlist – curated by Bellosound in collaboration with the Hotel’s Director of Spa and Wellness Faraaz Tanveer – and time your bath with the sunset to watch the Tokyo skyline glide from day into night.

Cityscapes in Philadelphia

Woman with short dark hair sits in a bubble bath sipping a glass of champagne next to floor-to-ceiling views of a city skyline

Float above the clouds at Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center, where deep soaking tubs set against floor-to-ceiling windows provide skyline views you won’t find anywhere else. The Hotel itself is set atop Philadelphia’s tallest tower – the Comcast Technology Center – meaning you can relax in the tub and go sightseeing at the same time.

Natural splendour in Tamarindo

Blurring the lines between indoors and out, each room at Four Seasons Resort Tamarindo, México, feels like you’re in your own private world. Wake up to the sound of waves crashing on the nearby beach before stepping into your free-standing oval tub to watch them roll in as you enjoy a soothing soak. A hammock waits for you just outside on your private terrace to further ease into the morning at your own pace.

Spa attendant pours oil on woman's bare shoulders as she sits in rectangular tub

No matter where you are in the world, taking a little time for yourself is always a good idea – and Four Seasons is here to help you make the most of it. Whether it’s turning your bathroom into your own private spa with a locally inspired bath ritual or drawing a bath for you just in time to see the city skyline light up as the sun goes down, these tubs at Four Seasons come not just with incredible views, but with personalized care and attention that makes a simple thing like a bath feel luxurious.

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Hotel on beach

Find Your Holiday Cheer at Four Seasons

An indoor winter wonderland designed by Jeff Leatham in Philadelphia, windows into magic worlds in Paris, a fiery display in Langkawi: The celebration of the season is in full swing at Four Seasons destinations worldwide. Here, we share some of the photo-worthy experiences and activities that will ensure this joyous time of year is merry and bright.

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Arctic artistry in Philadelphia

The City of Brotherly Love looks more like the North Pole at Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center, where Artistic Director Jeff Leatham has created a modern festive display. Flocked Christmas trees and festive florals are adorned with warm twinkling lights, while a life-size reflective reindeer keeps watch over the merrymaking. Don’t miss the most coveted ticket in town at the New Year’s Eve celebration. The iconic Hotel will play host to an extravagant event featuring ice sculptures, sumptuous food stations, passed hors d’oeuvres, awe-inspiring entertainment and live musical performances as well as a front-row seat for the city’s magnificent fireworks.

Holiday happenings in Philadelphia

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Dream by the fire in Langkawi

Hike through the jungle, cruise through the mangroves, explore the coastline by kayak. After a day of adventure in this island playground, a sunset picnic on the beach is a cozy way to unwind in the evening. Gather under a canopy of stars and raise a glass to your time together at Four Seasons Resort Langkawi. The festive revelry really heats up on New Year’s Eve with a fireworks display and traditional Malaysian fire dancers, who put on a glowing performance as you enjoy a merry feast to welcome the new year.

Celebrate in Langkawi

Hot Holiday

A special visitor in Costa Rica

Can you blame St. Nick for soaking up a little sun before making the trek back to the North Pole? This year, join the man in red himself – plus the jolliest bunch of elves and even a grinch – at Santa’s Annual Beach Party at Four Seasons Resort Peninsula Papagayo, Costa Rica. In addition to the unforgettable Christmas Day bash, the family-friendly Resort offers a variety of activities and events throughout the festive season. Experience the flavours of a Latin American asado at Nemare, or immerse yourself in Costa Rican culture while picking up gifts at the Papagayo Street Fair. Want to explore even further? Set out on a journey into the Nicoya Peninsula – Costa Rica’s famed blue zone, one of only five places in the world where residents live exceptionally long, healthy lives – and visit traditional villages to experience the country from a local perspective. Families will also find plenty of adventure close by, with zip-lining, surfing, night hikes, coral snorkelling and loads of water sports available in and around the Resort grounds.

Plan your visit to Costa Rica

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Holiday magic in Paris

The City of Lights exudes charm year round, but during the festive season it becomes even more enchanting. Make the most of this special time with help from the experts at Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris, where the concierge team can tailor an itinerary of unforgettable experiences. Glide across the ice at a skating rink overlooking landmarks like the Eiffel Tower and Hotel de Ville, or stroll through picturesque Christmas markets. You’ll be dazzled by Parisian traditions like the fantastical scenes filling les vitrines de Noel – elaborately decorated windows at the city’s iconic department stores. Our favourite? The can’t-miss display at Le Bon Marché Rive Gauche. As for the Hotel itself, thanks to Artistic Director Jeff Leatham’s breathtaking holiday decorations, you’ll feel as though it’s been transformed into your own personal vitrine de Noel. Lose yourself in the vibrant hues and intricately crafted compositions adorning the Hotel’s common areas and celebrated Marble Courtyard. Take a seat for Executive Pastry Chef Michael Bartocetti’s Signature Tea Time at Le Cinq on December 17, or enjoy an immersive holiday dinner at one of the Hotel’s Michelin-starred restaurants. The entire month of December will be filled with glittering events combining some of the world’s finest gastronomy with all the magic of the season.

Spend the season in Paris

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Traditions with a twist in Boston

Many families celebrate the holidays with their own time-honoured traditions – a comforting meal, treasured decorations, special activities. Start a new family tradition at Four Seasons Hotel Boston, where the new Very Important Kid Package will delight young guests (and their parents) with an in-room enchanted tent setup, a personalized amenity and a Hotel scavenger hunt. In addition to the magical accommodations, you’ll find festive surprises throughout the Hotel, such as themed vaults and mystery closets for kids to explore, along with seasonal coffee specials at Sottovento that adults will love. Our favourite this year is the Boston Fog, a creamy tea latte made with a blend similar to the tea tossed into the Boston Harbor in 1773, served in honour of the 250th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party. Have the Coffee Concierge deliver it to your room in the morning before you head out to explore the city’s historic sites or do some holiday shopping.

Festive toasts in Boston

Panoramic View Of Old Town And Temple Of Tyn In Prague.

Handcrafted gifts in Prague

In wintertime, it’s easy to see Prague’s hilltop castle, narrow cobbled streets and towering spires as a setting straight from a fairy tale. Experience the city’s old-world charm during a stay at Four Seasons Hotel Prague, where the attentive concierge team is eager to share local traditions, ensuring you don’t miss any hidden gems. Browse the traditional Christmas market stalls in nearby Old Town Square for handcrafted ceramics, jewellery, wooden toys, clothing and seasonal treats, then stay a little longer to hear choirs singing carols in the late afternoon. Grab a warm cup of mulled wine or hot chocolate from one of the stalls to make this outdoor shopping experience all the sweeter. Afterwards, climb the stairs of Old Town Bridge Tower and take in the twilight scene of twinkling lights – a picture-perfect holiday moment.

A winter wonderland in Prague

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Langkawi Beaches

A Recipe for Change

With artful menus and inventive cocktails, Four Seasons chefs and mixologists are reimagining dishes and drinks in a way that’s both creative and confident – and they’re winning prestigious honours, like Michelin stars (31 at last count).

Among those award-winning chefs are remarkable women eager to help Four Seasons introduce guests to new destinations through local flavours. They join a roster of inspiring women – adventure guides, hospitality directors, general managers and more – who help make Four Seasons shine.

Here, in honour of International Women’s Day on March 8, a handful of them share the ingredients for their success.

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MALYNA SI
RESTAURANT CHEF, CAPA
FOUR SEASONS RESORT ORLANDO AT WALT DISNEY WORLD® RESORT

Malyna Si may be the only female chef helming a Michelin star restaurant in Florida, but she is also an artist at heart. Si originally studied to become a glass sculptor, but it was during her time at art school that she took a job in a restaurant.

Her talent caught the eye of a senior cook who became her mentor. After working her way up in the kitchens of various restaurants all over Florida, Si made her way to Four Seasons Resort Orlando at Walt Disney World® Resort in 2017 and became Cook One at Capa, the Resort’s celebrated Spanish-style steakhouse. Two years later, she was promoted to chef de partie and then sous chef in 2020, working closely with Chef Gabriel Massip and Executive Chef Fabrizio Schenardi. Five years in and she’s now running the whole show.

Even though she didn’t initially set out to become a chef, her artist mindset serves her well in her role as restaurant chef. “From experimenting with concepts with my team in the kitchen, to creating surprise off-menu dishes for our frequent restaurant guests, I love having the exposure to ingredients I wouldn’t normally have access to,” says Si. “The necessity of eating is inspiring to me; I feel that I’m able to impact the most people through food as my medium.”

For Si, working in an industry that is still mostly male-dominated has pushed her to work twice as hard, be twice as fast and be twice as smart – a reality she believes results in excelling beyond those who don’t have the same added pressure. To other aspiring female chefs, she offers some wise words of encouragement: “Don’t allow your gender to define you, but rather, allow it to energize you to rise to the challenges of navigating this career. While this industry is not for the faint of heart, it’s an exciting and evolving space with ample opportunities to grow.”

Encouraging and uplifting other women along the way is also really important to Si, who knows the impact that support and mentorship can have. “Women make up 70% of my team. Together with the talented men on our team, we’ve established a real sense of synergy and collaboration,” she says. “Working at Four Seasons, especially at a larger property, affords me a unique opportunity to grow, adapt with different teams and strengthen my resolve as a leader. I’m really grateful for the support I receive.”

Enjoy dinner with a view in Orlando

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ANNE-SOPHIE PIC
EXECUTIVE CHEF, LA DAME DE PIC LONDON 
FOUR SEASONS HOTEL LONDON AT TOWER BRIDGE

Anne-Sophie Pic didn’t plan on becoming a chef. Instead, she studied business at the Instituto Superior de Gestión in Paris, working with brands like Cartier and Moët & Chandon. But she couldn’t escape the pull of the kitchen. After all, it was in her blood – her family’s first restaurant was founded in 1889 as Auberge du Pin, and since then has been led by three generations of Pics. Her grandfather, Andre, was the first to earn the restaurant its three Michelin stars – an honour her father, Jacques, maintained.  

“I realized that the kitchen was in my DNA,” she says. “It became a passion. I suppose deep down, I had always had the instinct for flavour and scent, and when I finally came to the kitchen, I knew it was where I was meant to be.” 

Expand your palate in London

Today, she’s one of the most celebrated female chefs in the world – and one of the most decorated. Under her leadership, her family restaurant Maison Pic has maintained its three Michelin stars, and in partnership with Four Seasons, her restaurant La Dame de Pic London at Four Seasons Hotel London at Tower Bridge has earned two. At La Dame de Pic, she takes pride in introducing guests to new flavours and sensations, using unexpected food pairings and a warm, inviting atmosphere to inspire powerful emotions.

And while in her family it’s been the men who cook, Pic thinks there’s more than enough room in restaurant kitchens for women. “Men, historically, hold the vast majority of chefs’ jobs, but women have an important place in the profession,” she says. “Women show tenacity, endurance and concentration, and also sensitivity and humility. I think a woman’s approach to the work is often different, but in the end, our strength comes from a balanced team.”

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This year, La Dame de Pic London is celebrating International Women’s Day with a one-night-only dining experience. Pic and chef de cuisine Evens Lopez designed a six-course menu that showcases Pic’s penchant for exploring new and unexpected flavour combinations. The second course, for example, is Les Berlingots ASP, an Anne-Sophie Pic signature featuring pasta parcels filled with Baron Bigod served atop watercress and ground ivy coulis along with smoked pine oil and seasonal truffles. But the food is only half the story.

The experience also includes the talents and creativity of Natsuki Kikuya, a Sake Samurai – the most prestigious title awarded to sake sommeliers – and Sooji Im, founder of the Korean tea shop Be-oom, for a premium beverage pairing featuring sakes and naturally sourced Korean tea brewed tableside in a tea ceremony. Head sommelier Élise Mérigaud has also selected special wine pairings with a focus on female-led producers to complement the evening.

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SUMALEE KHUNPET
CHEF DE CUISINE, KOH THAI KITCHEN
FOUR SEASONS RESORT KOH SAMUI

Growing up in a small Southern Thailand province, Sumalee Khunpet – fondly known as Chef Jeab – worked in her family’s bakery business learning to make home-made doughnuts and coconut roll wafers. “I loved seeing the joy on people’s faces when they’d take a bite,” she says. “I knew that this was what I wanted to do.”

After completing her secondary school education in Koh Samui, Khunpet joined the team at a small hotel in Chaweng, where she worked for 14 years before joining a local restaurant on the island. She credits her first supervisor, a female chef named Patcharee Smith, as the one who spurred her on – even though back then, female chefs were still rare in professional kitchens. “She taught me how to cook Thai food and French food,” Khunpet says, “but most importantly, she gave me the confidence to keep cooking.”

Thirty years later, Khunpet is still cooking – but now she’s leading the kitchen. As chef de cuisine at KOH Thai Kitchen at Four Seasons Resort Koh Samui, her culinary style is relaxed yet authentic. It’s important to her to share the flavours of the destination with guests.

“Thai cuisine for me means home, and sharing that feeling with our guests,” she says. “I try to craft a story that’s relevant to our culture and that the guests will enjoy, like massaman nua, a curry of cardamom-scented Wagyu beef cheeks that originated from Malaysia but was adopted by Thailand in the 17th century. It’s how I stay connected to my culture, and how I can pass it on to others, too.”

“Meeting guests on a daily basis makes everything that much more meaningful to me,” she adds. “Four Seasons is where I began my journey on a truly people-centric path, and I’ve found it to be one that I love.”

Savour Thai cuisine in Koh Samui

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MARIA TAMPAKIS
EXECUTIVE CHEF
FOUR SEASONS HOTEL NEW YORK DOWNTOWN

Maria Tampakis grew up watching women cook. She spent summers in Greece, where her grandmother prepared dish after dish to feed her large family. Back home in Brooklyn, her mother was a pastry chef and culinary instructor, creating works of art with puff pastry.

It’s no surprise, then, that Tampakis gravitated towards a culinary career.

“My grandmother has always been a rock star chef, cooking for the masses and making sure everyone was always well fed,” she says. “And my mother has been a constant support and inspiration.”

Explore the flavours of New York

Tampakis trained under Michelin-starred chefs like Gordon Ramsay and Heston Blumenthal, a molecular gastronomy pioneer. As she honed her strengths, she gained an appreciation for the perspective female chefs can bring to the table.

“Large kitchens can benefit from a female presence to achieve a balance,” she says. “Women are proving that when they are given the opportunity, they can not only excel but truly shine in their kitchens.”

She’s bringing that balance to Four Seasons Hotel New York Downtown, where she was recently named executive chef. Her menus highlight fresh and local ingredients, inspired by those languid summers in Kalamata, Greece. “Over the summer, we had Faroe Island salmon with Long Island corn, Jersey tomatoes, fresh herbs, Greek aged feta cheese, red wine vinegar and Greek olive oil,” she says. “It’s not unlike something that my grandmother would’ve made. I think she’d be quite pleased.”

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KAREN ARCEYUTH
HEAD MIXOLOGIST, NEMARE
FOUR SEASONS RESORT COSTA RICA AT PENINSULA PAPAGAYO

“My mother was a bartender and I really liked to see her in action behind the bar, always with a beautiful smile and so much charisma,” says Karen Arceyuth. “I think passed that down to me – that great passion.” Ask any guest who visits the bar at Nemare at Four Seasons Resort Costa Rica at Peninsula Pagagayo and they’ll likely agree. Not only is Arceyuth head mixologist at the sophisticated steakhouse, she’s also one of the most popular bartenders in the entire Resort.

A Costa Rica native, it was Arceyuth dream to reach the top of the hospitality world in her home country. For her, that meant working at one place: Four Seasons. “For anyone who studies and works in this field, being able to work at Four Seasons represents a great pride and therefore a great responsibility, too,” she says. “I am completely in love with Four Seasons culture and the golden rule that they teach us from day one – treat others as you wish to be treated.”


Another thing she loves about her job is being able to share her Costa Rican culture and history directly with guests, whether it’s talking about locally sourced cocktail ingredients or offering her suggestions for which beach or mountain trail to explore.

Arceyuth is grateful for having access to the best tools and resources to become better at the job she loves and works hard at. For other women looking to make their mark behind the bar, she emphasizes curiosity. “First, always give your best anywhere and anytime with a genuine smile,” she suggests. “Always be curious, always want to know more and never stop learning.”

Sip the flavours of Costa Rica

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CORNELIA SÜHR
CHEF DE CUISINE, JEAN-GEORGES PHILADELPHIA
FOUR SEASONS HOTEL PHILADELPHIA AT COMCAST CENTER

Cornelia Sühr knew she wanted to become a chef by the time she was 8 years old. Growing up in a small town in northern Germany, it just seemed natural – her mother was a chef, her older brother was a chef, and her sister was a pastry chef. Her twin brother would become a baker.

“Being a ‘female chef’ was never something that stood out. You either knew how to cook or you didn’t,” she says. “Plus, I loved eating. It was something that we, as a family, always did together. I always connected food with being with others that I love.”

Try new dishes in Philadelphia

That connection is what drives her passion, she says. After working in the kitchens of several Michelin-starred chefs, including Alain Ducasse – whom she credits with influencing her classic, refined, ingredients-based cooking style – she is proud to lead her own kitchen at the helm of Jean-Georges Philadelphia at Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center. Since it’s reopening in March 2022, the team has earned both a AAA Five Diamond designation and a Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star rating. Her kitchen is celebrated locally as well, receiving the Reader’s Choice Award for Philadelphia Style’s Best of Fine Dining in 2022.

Like many chefs, inspiration comes from many places and many people. “As someone who values travelling the world and exploring different cultures, cities and culinary scenes, Four Seasons has facilitated doors opening to a network of culinary professionals across the industry,” says Sühr. “Having the opportunity to travel gives me exposure to global ingredients which are reflected in our menu. I am very grateful that the culture of Four Seasons encourages employees to be exactly who they are and trusts us to showcase our true selves and talents together.”

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KENDIE WILLIAMS
MASTER MIXOLOGIST
FOUR SEASONS RESORT NEVIS, WEST INDIES

A self-taught mixologist, Kendie Williams proves that when you have a passion for something, amazing things can happen. “My love for bartending was inspired not only by my love of food and beverage, but also the fact that I just love seeing people have a good time,” she says. And when Williams is behind the bar at Four Seasons Resort Nevis, West Indies, you can be sure a good time will be had by all.

Known for her creative use of fresh ingredients, she uses her extensive knowledge of flavour combinations to craft her award-winning cocktails. “Local ingredients are a big deal for me because not only are they more fresh, but they tell a story,” says Williams. “I love having fresh fruits, vegetables and other ingredients at my fingertips and being able to freestyle at any time knowing that my cocktails are going to be unique, fresh, taste good on the palate and also look pretty.”

Williams’ devotion to local ingredients runs deep, with some of them sourced from her own backyard garden such as hot peppers, herbs, guava, tamarind and soursop. “Some of these fruits can only be grown in the Caribbean, so my guests are usually excited to try cocktails made with them.”

Another source of inspiration? The chance to meet a variety of different people from many different places and cultures. “Working at Four Seasons has helped me to understand the diversity of people from around the world, what they like and how to cater to them,” she notes. “I have also learned how to incorporate their favourite flavours with my Caribbean ingredients to give a mash-up feel to my cocktails. It makes people feel at home while also allowing them to get to know my culture through my cocktails.”

Go rum tasting in Nevis

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Brooklyn Bridge

The Chefs You Need to Know in Philadelphia

Like many Philadelphia-area residents, Greg Vernick grew up spending summers “down the shore.” His parents have a place in Margate, an Absecon Island town where the population quintuples during the summer. There, between the bay and ocean, Vernick’s love of the sea and seafood was born. “There’s nowhere I’d rather be,” says the chef-owner of Vernick Food + Drink and chef-manager of Vernick Coffee and Vernick Fish at Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center.


Chef Vernick Portrait

Greg Vernick’s affinity for the region’s seafood is both personal and professional.

Depths of Flavour

Forty miles south of Margate, in Cape May, New Jersey, the V-shaped mouth of the Delaware Bay decants into the Atlantic Ocean. In the brackish backwaters, a resurgent oyster industry thrives. “Sweet Amalias – they’re the best,” Vernick says. The farmers raising these small but plump and sparklingly clean oysters deliver 250 of them once a week to Vernick Fish, and, he says, “Once we’re out, we’re out.”

The chef keeps the supply chain tight at Vernick Fish, where sustainable seafood is top of mind. Sometimes that means working directly with small producers like Sweet Amalia Oyster Farm. Other times, it means relying on a company like Island Creek Oyster Co., which distributes its own and other farms’ oysters, turning six trucks on the road into just one. Sometimes it’s a trade-off: carbon emissions for access to sustainable species such as abundant Galician sardines (tinned in olive oil and served with house-baked sourdough) and New Zealand’s Ōra King salmon (gently smoked tartare with quail egg and Parmesan). Other times, it’s as straightforward as sourcing porgy and bluefish from the mid-Atlantic, but comes with the added challenge of convincing diners that fish with a poor reputation can be delicious in the right hands.


Diners And Oysters At Vernick

Left: At Vernick Fish, guests discover the bounty of the mid-Atlantic;
right: On the Vernick Fish dinner menu are lists of tartares and raw selections.

As the organic and local food movements have become more central to quality restaurants, sustainable seafood is catching on across Philadelphia. Jersey oysters like Stormy Bays, Rose Coves and High Bar Harbors adorn the raw bar menus of Oyster House in Center City and Aether in Fishtown.

At East Passyunk’s sister restaurants Laurel and In the Valley (also known as ITV), “Top Chef” winner Nicholas Elmi serves line-caught Atlantic albacore tuna, an overlooked but tasty alternative to overfished Pacific species. The choicest belly cut is cured and diced for creative crudos and tartares, and the scraps and trim are transformed into robust tuna Bolognese for house-made rigatoni.

“‘Sustainable’ is a big word with many meanings,” Vernick says. “I think the answer is to find balance. With fish, things are so fluid. You have to be nimble.”

Play All Day

By the time the sun comes up over the Delaware River and canines start romping around the grassy space across from Fiore Fine Foods, Justine MacNeil has already been at work for two hours. As part of the growing local contingent of all-day dining rooms, Fiore opens at 8:00 am every day, its handsome bar stacked with her anise-sugared morning buns, almond-ricotta cookies, schiacciate (a Tuscan flatbread jewelled with olives) and other Italian-inspired baked goods that glisten in the sunlight.


Justine Macneil Fiore Fine Foods

Justine MacNeil of Fiore Fine Foods

MacNeil, formerly a pastry chef at Del Posto in New York, relocated to Philadelphia with her chef husband, Ed Crochet. When they decided to open Fiore Fine Foods in Queen Village, the morning-till-evening hours were a key part of the plan.


Fiore Fine Foods Interiors

The bar at Fiore Fine Foods serves pastries by day and cocktails by night.

“If you’re paying rent all day, you might as well utilize the space,” she says. But the benefits are not only financial. “In my romantic idea, it’s a way to bring all facets of the culinary field to the table – bread, pastry, coffee, alcohol, savoury – and having all these different programs gives us a way to work with our friends who have expertise in these areas.”

While all-day concepts are plentiful these days in other locales, they’re a relatively recent phenomenon in Philly, where breakfast and lunch were long the domain of casual cafés or Center City power restaurants. Ambitious indie spots tended to stick to dinner hours, until Hungry Pigeon, a plant-filled hangout a few blocks from Fiore, made the scene in 2016 serving three meals a day. MacNeil and Crochet arrived in town not long after Hungry Pigeon debuted, and then came Suraya, a glittering Lebanese palace in Fishtown that opened with a market and an all-day café in 2017 and added a dining room and garden the following year. “We were like, ‘All right, so people want this,’” MacNeil says.


Fiore Fine Foods Day To Night

Left: A scrumptious morning pick-me-up at all-day café Fiore Fine Foods;
right: Ed Crochet’s pork shanks and polenta

Given how quickly her pistachio cornetti disappear, people clearly want breakfast, which can also include a fennel sausage, egg and fontina sandwich and a pizzetta layered with pears and stracchino. Crochet, a veteran of Philly restaurateur Stephen Starr’s organization, fires up his wood-burning oven and grill for lunch and dinner, sinking pork shanks into polenta and serving caramelized kalbi-style short ribs with fermented porcini. As the sun sets, the light flooding Fiore’s window-wrapped dining room takes on a lilac tint. The pooches reappear, out for their evening strolls. MacNeil and Crochet serve the last guests, clean up, kill the lights, and do it all again the next day.

To the Tooth

Philly has long been a pasta town. Italian immigration, with numbers swelling in the early 1900s, has had an enduring influence on its culinary DNA; today the metro area ranks behind only New York in Italian American population. Michael Vincent Ferreri, who grew up in an Italian American household in Rochester, New York, adopted Philly as his hometown when he moved here in 2011. After honing his pasta-making skills at some of the city’s best restaurants, he moved to Res Ipsa in the Rittenhouse neighbourhood, where he’s dedicated himself to crafting unusual pastas. Dinner in this cosy café might involve lorighetti, which look like braided basket handles; culingioni, potato-filled bundles from Sardinia; or strascinati, a Pugliese cousin of orecchiette. Ferreri and his team make them all in-house with semolina milled weekly at Green Meadow Farm in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.


Vincent Ferreri Res Ipsa

Res Ipsa’s Michael Vincent Ferreri

“I think the size of the restaurant speaks very pleasantly to what we’re doing, because I could make something, run it on special, and I’ll only need five or six orders of it,” Ferreri says. “So some of the pasta shapes that are a little bit more involved, that take a little bit more time – even just to learn, let alone to physically make – we can make and serve people things that you wouldn’t normally be able to get in most restaurants in America.” The shapes take diners deeper into pasta-making traditions that vary not just from region to region in Italy, but from town to town.


Res Ipsa Handmade Pasta Dishes

Left: Res Ipsa’s pasta shapes provide a culinary tour of Italian towns;
right: Philadelphia’s Res Ipsa satisfies diners’ hunger for comfort food and culinary expertise.

Pasta exists on a spectrum in Philly, from superb basics, like gumdrop-size potato gnocchi with emerald pesto at Mr. Joe’s Café and buttered bow ties kissed with lemon and poppyseed at Musi, to the esoteric shapes Marc Vetri makes at his Vetri Cucina with fresh flour milled on site from whole local grains. The key, Ferreri says, isn’t whether the pasta is fancy: “It should be very comforting, and it should be very homey. For me, that’s what pasta is all about.”

Oh, Natural

Chloe Grigri is “perpetually dehydrated,” she says, draining a glass of water at Le Caveau, her new bar in the Bella Vista neighbourhood. Located above Good King – the 6-year-old French tavern she owns with her father – Le Caveau is all lace curtains, cosy tables, exposed brick attractively crusted with plaster, and wine bottles in colour-blocked rows of vermilion, blond, apricot, plum and pale pink. She’s been tasting all the wines in the yearlong lead-up to the bar’s late 2019 opening. Hence the dehydration.


Chloe Grigi Le Caveau

Chloe Grigri opened the doors to wine bar Le Caveau in autumn 2019.

Most of the labels Grigri has curated for Le Caveau are natural, made from organic grapes and without additives. “Natural wine is what wine has always been,” she says; the style predates modern technology and chemically altered agriculture. When she began skewing Good King’s selection towards natural winemakers five years ago, the movement was nascent in Philly. Now it’s in full bloom, with restaurants like Walnut Street Café in University City and Friday Saturday Sunday in Rittenhouse creating lists around natural bottles, and retailers like Tinys in Port Richmond and Bloomsday Café in Society Hill dedicated to the stuff. “Natural wine has pushed itself to the forefront in such a way that there is no restaurant that isn’t doing it in some capacity,” says Grigri, who can claim a good portion of the credit for that state of affairs.


Charcuterie At Le Caveau

Le Caveau provides a warm welcome to organically minded oenophiles.

Complemented by cheeses, charcuterie, and simple bar snacks like olives and nuts, about 15 wines are available by the glass at Le Caveau, but intimate clusters of tables invite patrons to linger over full bottles of crushable Gamays and cult grower Champagnes the way Grigri does when she hangs out at bars à vins in France. “I’ve been strategically holding back certain hard-to-come-by wines for over a year,” she says – and now it’s time to pop some bottles.


Fs Dividing Line Thin

Elevated Cuisine

The local culinary scene reached new heights with the opening of star chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s Jean-Georges Philadelphia, one of four noteworthy dining outlets at the new Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center.

The express elevator rises 60 storeys into the sky, taking you to the lobby of Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center and its JG SkyHigh lounge. An onyx staircase flanked by whispering twin waterfalls leads down to the 59th floor, where Jean-Georges Philadelphia’s 40-foot (12-metre) windows look out over the shoulders of skyscrapers, the city resembling a giant green-and-grey picnic blanket below. Executive Chef Nick Ugliarolo sips a turmeric latte and surveys the view: “Pretty beautiful, right?”


Chef Jean Georges

Chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten says he’s “thrilled to be joining this culinary community.”

This vista welcomed the Connecticut native and five-year veteran of the Jean-Georges group when he relocated from New York to helm this flagship restaurant. “None of this was here,” he says, gesturing to the dining room’s glowing island bar, upholstered mid-century chairs and towering flower arrangements, “but from the view alone, I knew this was going to be awesome.”

If the visuals are what people come for, the food is why they come back. Ugliarolo says the menu balances Jean-Georges classics – “I could eat the black bass with sweet-and-sour jus every day,” he adds – with his own creations, including the amuse-bouche that gets things started. Serving three meals a day, the restaurant is as well-suited to a Gruyère cheeseburger as it is to Ugliarolo’s seven-course tasting menu. Chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten, the master behind the menu, says he’s “thrilled to be joining this culinary community.”

At street level, indoor-outdoor Vernick Fish from James Beard Award–winning local Chef Greg Vernick specializes in dishes ranging from classic (his signature Dover sole meunière) to inventive (uni-and-caviar French toast). Or stop by Vernick Coffee Bar for breakfast, lunch and coffee, either to go or to enjoy in a 40-seat communal dining space.

Whether you dine upstairs or downstairs, count on sterling service, says Ugliarolo. “People know they’re in good hands and they’re going to be taken care of.”


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