Pacific
heart BY Tatyana Leonov
A fusion of French and island fare, New Caledonia is a culinary connoisseur’s Mecca.
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f Captain Cook were still alive he’d probably be kicking himself for not claiming his discovery. The British explorer discovered the collection of islands and islets that make up New Caledonia in 1774, and thinking that the landmass looked a little like Scotland named it after his father’s native land but he decided he didn’t want it and the French claimed it in 1853. At first the French used it as a penal colony, but today the French overseas territory is a magnet for both residents and travellers alike. Glimpsed from the air New Caledonia is a patchwork of vibrant greens and wishy-washy yellows painted on a turquoise-blue canvas. Most people arrive into New Caledonia by air – it’s worth it just for this view. Those who cruise in still get the white-powdery sand and jaw-dropping blue sea view – just at eye level – as their first impression.
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vacationsandtravelmag.com
vacationsandtravelmag.com
However you arrive, you’ll quickly notice that New Caledonia is defined by two key factors – its melting hot pot of cultural influences, the land and the sea. These are the two facets that not only drive the New Caledonian way of life, but also the burgeoning culinary scene. In New Caledonia you could be dining on French foie gras one night, trying an aromatic coconut-based stew the next, and watching a local fish being grilled right in front of your eyes on night three.
The people’s influence New Caledonia’s population of around 260,000 or so people is made up of mainly of Melanesians (also known as Kanaks) and French descendants, as well as a smaller number of inhabitants from Wallis, Futuna, Tahiti, Indonesia, Vietnam, Vanuatu and other nearby countries. This combination of cultures
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