Centuries-old aqueduct, open courtyard, candlelit salons. The cazuela de mariscos alone is worth crossing an ocean for.
Hotel Casa San Agustín occupies a complex of three colonial houses in Cartagena's historic centre, joined across what was once a portion of the city's original aqueduct. That aqueduct. The stone archway still intact and visible from the dining room. Is the backdrop against which Alma Restaurante operates. To eat here is to eat against four centuries of Cartagena history, in a room that has been designed to make that history feel present rather than merely decorative.
Chef Heberto Eljach specialises in the fresh seafood of Colombia's Caribbean coast, and his mastery of that subject is complete. The cazuela de mariscos a la Cartagenera. Langostinos, almejas, camarones, calamar, mejillones, and pescado in coconut milk. Is one of the definitive dishes of the city, the version against which all other interpretations should be measured. The Ceviche Eljach, featuring the freshest local seafood paired with a roasted arepa, is the opening course that sets the tone: Cartagena's culinary identity, rendered with precision and respect.
Dining options include the open-air courtyard. The most atmospheric choice, with the aqueduct as its backdrop and the night sky above. Or two beautifully designed interior salons for those who prefer air conditioning and an enclosed room. The service is what you expect from a property at this level: attentive, warm, and technically accomplished without feeling corporate.
The combination of extraordinary setting and genuinely excellent seafood cuisine makes Alma a compelling choice for virtually any significant occasion. It is, however, particularly suited to two: proposals, which benefit from exactly this kind of historical weight and visual beauty, and first dates with someone you want to impress without intimidating.
Proposal: The courtyard table at Alma, at night, with the aqueduct illuminated and the colonial stonework glowing, is one of the most beautiful proposal settings in the Americas. The food is excellent. The service, if you advise them in advance, will handle any special arrangements with complete discretion. Book the courtyard table and specify the occasion when you call. The team at Casa San Agustín have experience with this.
First Date: The ambience removes the pressure of having to create a romantic atmosphere yourself. Alma does it entirely without assistance. The seafood menu is accessible to anyone who enjoys fresh fish and shellfish, without requiring adventurousness or knowledge of Colombian cuisine. The price point is generous relative to what is provided. This is the first-date restaurant for anyone who wants something serious without the four-hour tasting menu commitment.
Impress Clients: For clients visiting Cartagena for the first time. Particularly those from outside Latin America. Dining in the courtyard of a colonial hotel with an intact 17th-century aqueduct as the backdrop is exactly the kind of experience they will describe for months. The lobster tail and the aged beef cuts are appropriate choices for a business dinner where the food should reflect your standards.
Birthday: Alma has a private salon that accommodates groups with elegance. The kitchen produces a menu of considerable range. From the sharable ceviches to the individual main-course proteins. That works well for mixed groups. The visual drama of the setting ensures that any birthday dinner here feels distinctly marked off from an ordinary meal.
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