My Perfect Weekend: Chef Samantha Sanz’s Ultimate Scottsdale Itinerary

Samantha Sanz – a James Beard Award nominee and the top toque at Talavera at Four Seasons Resort Scottsdale – takes you on a three-day tour of the Arizona thrills she can’t get enough of.


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Chef Samantha Sanz studied at Le Cordon Bleu in Scottsdale and honed her palate in Paris.

Recently nominated for a James Beard Rising Star Chef of the Year Award, Samantha Sanz – chef at Four Seasons Resort Scottsdale at Troon North – is something of a wunderkind. When she took the helm of the Resort’s Talavera restaurant at 28, she was among the youngest chefs ever to oversee a Four Seasons restaurant kitchen. Sanz, however, has been steeped in the food scene from birth – her family has owned a restaurant for more than 60 years in her home town of Nogales, Mexico. Her experience shows in the worldly inventiveness she imparts to Talavera’s boundary-pushing menus, which meld Mediterranean and Latin flavours in dishes such as grilled Galician octopus and Picon tapas.

“I’m constantly playing around,” says Sanz of her menus, and that spirit of joyful discovery informs her weekend hit list for Scottsdale and Phoenix. Here are her tips for what to do, where to eat and the place to find the best prickly-pear frosé.

Friday Evening: A Garden-Fresh Dinner


Dish at Pa'la in Scottsdale

Ramon Navarro bowl

Pa’la used to be an old house, and now it’s a little restaurant with a wood-fired oven,” Sanz says of the boîte in midtown Phoenix. The restaurant combines Mediterranean and South American fare in its menu, which changes daily based on what’s freshest. “Order the Ramon Navarro bowl – it has all these wholesome grains cooked to al dente perfection, seasoned with high quality vinegar,” Sanz says. “Chef Claudio always keeps it fresh with all the local produce, and quite honestly it’s the best meal after a hike.”


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The wood-fired grill and Bavette steak with mushrooms and tomatoes at Pa’la

Friday Night: Best of Brews


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Big Spill Pils with Nelson hops

A couple of doors away in a 1920s bungalow, Wren House Brewing Company is one of Sanz’s go-to spots for a tipple. “I love beer,” she says. “My favourite beer of all time from them has to be the Berries and Cream, which is a sour India pale ale that has raspberries, blackberries and strawberries. It’s brewed with some milk sugar and malt, which gives it a nice mouthfeel and is very refreshing for the spring here in Arizona.”


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The taproom and a glass of Kingsnake imperial stout at Wren House Brewing Company

Saturday Morning: Local Caffeine


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“We serve Press Coffee Roasters at the Hotel – it’s locally owned by a husband and wife, and they’re so sweet,” Sanz says. “They do all their own roasting, and do an amazing job.” The coffee shop, with locations in the Scottsdale Quarter mall, Tempe, Phoenix and beyond, sources beans directly from farmers in Ethiopia, Guatemala and Costa Rica. Devotees will appreciate the regular hour-long Coffee 101 Tasting classes, which take you from seed to cup as you sip.


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Saturday Afternoon: Hiking and Shopping Trips


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Pinnacle Peak

Sanz likes to get her endorphins pumping by hiking the 3.5-mile (5.6-kilometre) round-trip trail at Pinnacle Peak Park, in the backyard of Four Seasons Resort Scottsdale. “The earlier you can hike Pinnacle Peak, the better – it gets hot over here,” says Sanz, who urges guests to bring plenty of water. “You’ll see birds – cardinals, quail – and iguanas. It’s out-of-this-world scenic.”

Her next stop? Phoenix General, in an area brimming with cocktail bars, lifestyle shops and buzzing gastropubs. “It’s a small boutique with some really unique finds,” Sanz says of the airy storefront, which sells everything from juniper incense to decorative powder-coated iron horseshoes in rainbow hues. Clothes, too: “I’m obsessed with the clothing lines they have collaborated on with local artists, such as the Fortoul Brothers.”


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Saturday Night: Supper in Style


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As dusk falls over the landscape, Sanz beelines to Tratto – helmed by James Beard Award–winning chef Chris Bianco – for dinner. “My biggest love there is the chicken livers on toast,” Sanz says. “Chef Cassie does an outstanding job and serves them with the seasonal jam she makes. I crave this constantly.” And you really must order a cocktail, Sanz says: “The cocktail program there is outstanding, thanks to Blaise Faber – he makes his own house-made vermouth – but I do enjoy my glass of Sorelle Bronca Prosecco.” Finally, “End the meal with some rich dark chocolate and one of the many amaros they have on the list.”


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Beets with ricotta and homemade pasta at Tratto

Sunday Morning: Mexican-Style Brunch


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The dining room at Ghost Ranch

Sanz starts her day with a brunch at Ghost Ranch in nearby Tempe, run by Mexican cousins Chef Rene Andrade and Chef Roberto Centeno. “They have chilaquiles,” Sanz reports with pleasure – the Mexican comfort food dish that slathers fried corn tortillas with salsa and cheese. “The best thing is that the eggs they use are from local farmer Two Wash Ranch. And if you are indecisive like me about red chile or green, you could ask for both.” Yet another of her favourite orders is the prickly pear frosé. “It’s a combination of a margarita and rosé,” she says – “so delicious.”


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Chicken chilaquiles and prickly pear frosé at Ghost Ranch

Sunday Afternoon: Art Hours


Fs Mag Phoenix Art Museum

For an afternoon well spent, Sanz heads to the sleek Phoenix Art Museum, where more than 19,000 works of art are housed in a building originally designed by Alden B. Dow, a protégée of Frank Lloyd Wright. “There is always an amazing exposition to catch there, and it’s never super crowded,” she says. “They had an exhibit by Mexican artist Carlos Amorales where an entire wall was mounted with 25,000 black paper moths and butterflies – awesome.” On exhibition through February 9, 2020: “American Scenes/Americas Seen,” with work from the 1930s and ’40s by artists such as Diego Rivera and Alice Trumbull Mason.


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Sunday Night: Twilight in the Desert


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“We have the best sunsets, especially at the Desert Botanical Garden,” Sanz says of the 140-acre (57-hectare) grounds, where visitors can glimpse thousands of species, including organ pipe cactus, teddy bear cholla and 186 types of agave. Walk around and relax, Sanz says. It’s a peaceful way to round out your weekend.


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Making Waves: Inside Four Seasons
Pop Down Miami

Every December, the art world congregates in South Florida for two jam-packed weeks of cultural and aesthetic indulgence, during which a veritable Who’s Who roster takes over Miami. On December 7, many of them could be found onboard the 300-foot (95-metre) superyacht KISMET for the third Four Seasons Pop Down, the event concept specifically designed to offer guests an immersive brand experience beyond the walls of hotels and resorts. Sixteen Four Seasons mixologists and chefs hand-selected from around the globe ensured that those in attendance were well-cared-for, while Questlove, ensconced in a second-floor DJ booth, provided the soundtrack.

Transportive Sips

Exquisitely crafted cocktails and culinary delights are a Four Seasons hallmark, and Pop Down Miami was no exception. Wherever you went on the seven-storey KISMET (the personal vessel of Four Seasons Hotel Toronto owner Shahid Khan), offerings abounded. And their credentials were impeccable: Participants for each Pop Down are selected out of more than 100 submissions from across the Four Seasons global portfolio. A few of the evening’s master mixologists included Fatima León of
Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City, Keith Motsi of Four Seasons Hotel Beijing and Ashish Sharma of Four Seasons Hotel Kuala Lumpur.

The colours, the people and the cocktails were inspiring for me. – Fatima León

León shook up the complex and tropical Surrealismo, a crowd-pleaser made with tequila, guava and cotton candy, topped with a butterfly confection. “The experience of being in Miami for Pop Down was amazing,” León says. “The colours, the people and the cocktails were inspiring for me” – so much so that she’ll be revamping the menu at her own Fifty Mils bar, and adding her creation, next year.

Michelin-Starred Eats

Michelin-starred chefs Daniel Boulud, of Café Boulud and d|bar at Four Seasons Hotel Toronto, and Mauro Colagreco of the newly reimagined Four Seasons Resort Palm Beach showcased their mutual talents in the form of caviar, crab and lobster gelée; egg cups stuffed with truffle, mushroom and foie gras bavarois; and a warm mushroom tart with Parmesan and black truffles. Speaking of Florie’s, his new post just up the coast in Palm Beach, Colagreco compared it to Mirazur, his lauded oceanfront restaurant in Menton, France. “It’s an amazing project, a very beautiful oceanfront resort, so there’s lots in common,” he says. “We have a pizza oven, a tandoori, a yakitori – many methods of cooking with fire.”

Artful Immersion

On KISMET’s lower deck – also known as the spa level, complete with barbershop, sauna, pedicure station and hair salon – the sensorial experience continued as guests, surrounded by citrus trees, were invited to create customized perfumes from French fragrance house Atelier Cologne. Also on board: two-storey video walls displaying time-lapse images of the artistic process of Spanish artist Ignasi Monreal, whose digital paintings are featured in
Four Seasons: The Art of Hospitality, a new coffee-table book from Assouline.

And that wasn’t the only artwork on view. At Island Gardens Marina, where the superyacht was docked for the occasion, attendees were greeted by Glass Horizon, the latest Skynet installation from artist Patrick Shearn and studio Poetic Kinetics. The sculpture, 35 feet (11 metres) high, was constructed using rope, monofilament net and approximately 67,000 holographic Mylar streamers, spanning 10,800 square feet (1,003 square metres). No invitation was needed to take in its iridescent charms, on display throughout the weekend.

Next up? In early 2019, the global series moves to Hong Kong. Watch this space for more.



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Authentic Gems of Dubai’s Food Scene

Anyone who’s ventured to Dubai knows that when it comes to dining, the glittering Middle Eastern metropolis is a bit like Las Vegas: You have a world of choices, from French pastry to deep-dish pizza. The real work lies in finding where the locals feast. Convening with Chef Gilles Arzur and other people of Four Seasons Resort Dubai at Jumeirah Beach, where seven restaurants await to sate you by the Arabian Sea, we produced a list of the most authentic Emirati eateries in the City of Gold.

“The foundation of local cuisine within the UAE is very simple ingredients,” Arzur says. “Saffron and rice are found in many preparations, and camel milk is being used more and more in ice cream along with traditional local flavours such as pistachio and rose water.” Here, a most delicious, insider-approved tour.

1. Al Falamanki

Al Falamanki is a throwback to the rural Emirati villages where many locals grew up. Directly across the street from Four Seasons Resort Dubai at Jumeirah Beach, the Arabian café is a popular hangout where residents play backgammon to the sounds of Lebanese singer Fairuz on the radio. Don’t leave without trying the grilled pomegranate eggplant, sumac potatoes, and wild thyme salad with spring onions, lemon and olive oil. “Of course, you can’t forget sweet pastries like cheese kunafa, a crunchy shredded phyllo dough baked with a layer of creamy sweet cheese and then infused with rose water essence,” Arzur says. “It’s a must-try!”

2. Siraj

One of 22 restaurants at Souk Al Bahar, the “sailors market” set on Burj Khalifa Lake overlooking the Dubai Fountain, Siraj combines Emirati and Levantine cuisine. “It’s one of my favourites in the city – they champion traditional food with a healthy approach,” Arzur says. “My recommendation would have to be the glazed date salad with kale leaves. Dates are native to the Middle Eastern region and represent a huge part of its history.” Bonus: Each one contains 5 percent of your daily recommended potassium.

3. Suq

Guests queue up for porridge-like harees at Suq, an Arabian market–inspired hideaway ensconced in the Four Seasons Resort Dubai at Jumeirah Beach. Made with barley and chicken or lamb, harees is Arzur’s favourite dish on the menu, not least because it’s a popular choice during celebrations such as weddings or Ramadan. “Traditionally, harees was only made by the wealthy during Ramadan, Eid and wedding celebrations,” Arzur says. “It was, however, customary for the harees dishes to be shared with poorer neighbours on such occasions.” Today, it’s on everyone’s edible agenda.

 

4. Al Nassma

Proponents of camel milk sing its praises for many reasons: It’s said to contain more calcium than other kinds of milk and even to have curative properties. “Over 35 years ago, the idea of a camel-milking facility was born at the Central Veterinary Research Laboratory [CVRL] in Dubai,” says Assistant Concierge Manager Peter Wharmby. “Research commenced on a small number of camels, raised with the aim of obtaining scientific proof that this Bedouin diet staple contains outstanding health benefits.” To conduct your own taste test, he recommends the Camel Milk chocolate at Al Nassma in The Dubai Mall.

5. Shai Salon

If you’re a fan of afternoon tea, Shai Salon, just off the lobby at Four Seasons Resort Dubai at Jumeirah Beach, will call to you. “Make yourself at home beneath the intricate lattice ceiling, snack on meze plates and relax,” Wharmby says. The cardamom and date thin crêpes and the lugimat (sesame seed, honey and date fried dumplings) are standouts. Pro tip: Ask for a table with a rosefinch’s-eye view of the Arabian Gulf and a piping-hot karak tea, a cardamom- and ginger-infused milk variety with saffron threads.


Al Fahidi district Dubai

The historic Al Fahidi district, where the Sheikh Mohammed Centre for Cultural Understanding is located.

6. Sheikh Mohammed Centre for Cultural Understanding

For extra Dubai with your food, make a beeline for the Al Fahidi Historic District. “Join a tour guide for a walk through the beautiful wind towers that adorn the original residences along Dubai Creek,” Wharmby says. “As part of the tour, you’ll have an Emirati meal at the Sheikh Mohammed Centre for Cultural Understanding and learn more about the culinary heritage.” It’s the ideal place to combine a locavore meal with delectable discourse; you’ll chat with Emirati hosts about the area’s culture, customs and religions.

7. Al Mandaloun

A Dubai staple since it opened in the mid-1980s, Lebanese hideaway Al Mandaloun is now a go-to lunch spot for captains of industry in the Dubai International Financial Centre. Your order: thin-crust zaatar pizza with thyme and olive oil, sojouk (Armenian spicy lamb sausages with tomato and pepper), or, for more adventurous eaters, kebbeh mohammasa – raw lamb with pine nuts and a side of tomatoes. Dessert fiends can’t depart without at least one bite of the muhalabia, a pudding made with rose water and corn flour that dates back to 7th-century Persia.

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90 Years of Excellence at Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris

Among the many storybook sights in Paris – an architectural wonderland where even utilitarian traffic circles are postcard-ready landmarks – Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris ranks high. A crown jewel in the Four Seasons portfolio, the Hotel has attracted the world’s glitterati since opening its doors in 1928. Honouring the 90th anniversary of this grande dame of the Champs-Élysées, we’ve put together a brief guide to its illustrious history – and summarized why it’s still the only place to stay in the City of Lights.

Heritage Highlights: A Brief History of the George V

When it opened at the height of the art deco period in 1928, the George V – its name a nod to the British monarchy – coddled guests with amenities that were unheard of at the time, including two bathrooms per suite (it was rare for any Parisian hotel to have an en-suite bath at all, much less two), a telephone with an outside line and dumbwaiters that delivered food straight from the kitchen to the room. By 1930, guests could charter flights to or from London, Madrid and Berlin on the Hotel’s three-seat Farman plane. But why would they ever leave? Designed by French architects Lefranc and Wybo with a sunlit inner courtyard, the Hotel feels like a royal residence where you’d want to stay awhile – one where a subterranean wine cellar, built 14 metres below ground in former stone quarries, holds some 50,000 carefully curated bottles.

No surprise, then, that some of the 20th century’s boldface names chose the George V as their home away from home in Paris. The Beatles wrote “I Feel Fine” in their suite at the George V, where a piano was installed just for them; their photographer, Harry Benson, captured them twisting and shouting during a pillow fight for some of the most famous images of the Fab Four ever made.

Even in the most romantic city on earth, the George V is so romantic that Elizabeth Taylor and Conrad Hilton chose the eighth-floor Penthouse Suite – with wraparound overlooks of the cityscape — for their honeymoon. The view, of course, includes the Eiffel Tower, which now sparkles by night every hour on the hour in an effervescent light show reminiscent of Champagne bubbles. “The George V is in the Golden Triangle of Paris, so it has always been in the middle of things – cinema, fashion,” says Roderick Levejac, Chef Concierge of Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris. “We became a part of it. Yves Montand, the Beatles, Orson Welles . . . I could name a hundred more. They all knew the address.”


Spa pool at George V

A Splashy Spa

The just-renovated Spa at Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris, reopening in June 2018, is a striking tribute to relaxation in style. Included in the revamp designed by the celebrated Pierre-Yves Rochon: a 90-square-metre (970-square-foot) fitness room, a new salon for your daily coiffure and a 17-metre-long pool – a rarity in Paris. Interiors will be lush with orchid arrangements by Jeff Leatham, the Hotel’s lauded Artistic Director, who has 12,000 flowers delivered direct from Amsterdam every week to adorn the George V.


Chefs at George V

Three Michelin-Starred Restaurants

One Michelin-starred restaurant distinguishes a hotel from the rest. Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris, has three – each worthy of a trip to Paris. Le Cinq is the only restaurant in the city to have garnered three Michelin stars in 2016, 2017 and 2018; Chef Christian Le Squer’s menu changes regularly but may include such edible wizardry as roasted blue lobster with pistachio and creamy coral sauce, or truffle spaghetti with morel mushrooms and ham.

The Hotel’s other two mainstays shine with one Michelin star apiece: Mediterranean-style Le George – be sure to try the sea bass crudo with powdered balsamic vinegar – and the atrium-like L’Orangerie, an ideal setting for a brunch of champions. Under its glass dome, windows look out on the marble courtyard, as do guests dining on such dishes as smoked soft egg served with imperial caviar on a bed of watercress.


George V suite

Suites to Call Home

Each of the 244 guest rooms and suites at Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris, combines fine French design traditions (gilding here, Louis XVI furniture there) with meticulous modern enhancements – 24-hour dining and dry-cleaning, even in-room bread toasting services. “We have renovated the Hotel since its opening, but, to me, nothing has changed,” Levejac says. “The George V has a real story. Throughout the years and changes, it remains one of the most well-known hotels of the whole world, and, of course, one of the very best too.”

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floral art installation at Four Seasons Hotel George V Paris

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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

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