The Southern Out Islands Restaurants

Out Island restaurants are often family-run and focus on home-style dishes. You'll probably eat most of your meals at your hotel, since there aren't many other places. If you want to dine at a restaurant or another inn, it's crucial to call ahead. Dinner choices largely depend on what the fishermen and mail boats bring in; be prepared for few choices. If you are renting, make sure to bring lots of food and snacks. Here, they are double or triple the costs from home and the variety is limited. Use dry ice and coolers.

Although served at a couple of places, don't expect fine dining or gourmet food but instead anticipate tasty Bahamian fresh fish, lobster, conch, fresh-baked bread, and coconut tarts—along with a smattering of American and international dishes. Fish, lobster, and conch—which is served stewed, as a salad, or cracked (battered and deep fried)—is served at almost every restaurant for lunch and dinner. Chicken served many ways is a Bahamian staple and the skills of Bahamian cooks to prepare tasty chicken are legendary. These islands have breezy roadside conch stands—typically near a settlement or a beach or with sea views—that deserve a special trip from your hotel. On Friday and Saturday nights many restaurants and bars crank up the music and visitors and locals will drink and dance 'til late.

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  • 1. S sinn L Restaurant & Bar Lounge

    $ | Matthew Town

    The best spot to dine and even party is at S sinn L in Matthew Town, which becomes Inagua's dance hot spot on the weekend. In a comfortable, smart, air-conditioned dining room, you can enjoy delicious fresh Bahamian breakfasts, lunches, and dinners with some American fare as well. The bar gets lively, too, so take a chance to enjoy some local beer or rum and coke or the more exotic Bahama Mama. Dance to live calypso and Bahamian Goombay.

    Great Inagua Island, Inagua Islands, Bahamas
    242-339–3923

    Known For

    • Live calypso and Bahamina Goombay
    • Go-to spot for dancing
    • Bahama Mama cocktails
  • 2. Forest Take-Away

    $

    This family-owned and -operated takeout restaurant is a favorite with the locals for tasty, island food and value. It offers barbecued ribs, cracked conch, conch burgers, fish fingers, chicken snacks and dinners, and the ever-popular Forest Burger, a hamburger with boneless ribs and sautéed onions. Call ahead for your order or sit and wait with a cold beer. There's a shady shack with picnic tables adjoining.

    Deadman's Cay, Long Island, Bahamas
    242-337–1246

    Known For

    • Cold beer while you wait
    • Shaded picnic table seating
    • Local favorite

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.
  • 3. Hawk's Nest Dining & Clubhouse

    $$

    High-beamed ceilings, tiled floors, blue-and-lime-green walls, and blue ceramic-topped tables create a cheerful vibe to go with the Bahamian comfort-food menu. If you have your heart set on a menu item, be sure to call your order in by 3 pm. Start your day with fresh juices and a full breakfast. For lunch there are burgers, salads, and sandwiches, and for dinner you can enjoy Bahamian specialties such as cracked conch, grilled lobster tail and the catch of the day fresh off the dock. You can eat on the terrace by the pool or inside with ocean views. The bar runs on the honor system and the 60-inch TV can catch you up on news, sports, and everything else you're happy to miss while lounging in paradise.

    Devil's Point, Cat Island, Bahamas
    242-342–7050

    Known For

    • Fresh-squeezed juices
    • Poolside dining
    • TVs showing sports and news

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed mid-Sept.–Oct., Reservations essential
  • 4. Hidden Treasures

    $$

    Cat Islanders and visitors alike love this restaurant for its delicious food, refreshing daiquiris and smoothies, and seating on the beach. You will find seafood favorites including conch, lobster, grouper, and shrimp here as well as jerk pork. Everything is made to order, and you are welcome to call ahead to place your order for dine-in or takeout. The family owns a farm that grows broccoli, beets, native peas, okra, and tomatoes, and their produce goes from the farm to the kitchen to the table. Try a soursop, papaya, mango, cocomelon, or even tamarind daiquiri on a hot day and take it with you into the ocean while you wait for your order.

    New Bight, Cat Island, Bahamas
    242-424-9237

    Known For

    • Chef's suggestions
    • Daiquiris and seafood
    • Family-run
  • 5. Max's Conch Bar and Grill

    $

    This island treasure and possibly the area's most-recommended dining spot, is praised up and down by locals and visitors alike. Quintessentially Bahamian, it's where you can sit all day on a stool at the colorful roadside hexagonal gazebo or at a table in the garden patio amid chickens and a goat, enjoying beers and nibbling on excellent conch salad prepared right in front of you. Become a veritable expert on Long Island and its people with gregarious Max and the sweet, chatty Liz. Such is the charm of this laid-back watering hole, visitors come back again and again. Their recipes are old-time Bahamian, hard to find elsewhere. Be sure to try the conch fritters, steamed snapper, and breadfruit chips, or any of the daily specials such as pot roast and crawfish-stuffed potatoes. Max also offers complimentary Wi-Fi for those needing to stay connected.

    Deadman's Cay, Long Island, Bahamas
    242-337–0056

    Known For

    • Warm hospitality
    • Conch fritters
    • Traditional Bahamian recipes

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.
  • Recommended Fodor’s Video

  • 6. Moonshine Bar & Grill

    $

    The views surrounding Stella Maris Resort Club's new poolside bar are as beautiful as the frozen fresh-fruit daiquiris they serve. Once a week Rake 'n' Scrape musicians pluck your heartstrings with Bahamian and calypso songs. On the bar's west side is the sunbaked pool with lounges; to the south, a kids' playground and beachy cove; and to the north, a long boardwalk to a carved-out ocean pool and spectacular views of the coastal bluffs with the waves breaking over the coral reefs. Go for a snorkel when it's calm or enjoy the bar decks when the breeze is up. The menu offers Bahamian and American fare. The Moonshine panini—salami, pickles, and Swiss on marble rye is a favorite.

    Stella Maris, Long Island, Bahamas
    242-338–2050

    Known For

    • The Moonshine panini
    • Weekly live music
    • Coastal bluff views
  • 7. Outer Edge Grill at Flying Fish Marina

    $$

    Outer Edge Grill is what local Long Islanders call a "poop deck," meaning a restaurant on the water. Open daily for lunch and dinner, Outer Edge serves up Bahamian favorites like conch fritters and fish fingers, along with sweet potato french fries, mozzarella sticks, and homemade desserts. This is one of only a few restaurants open on Sunday.

    Flying Fish Marina, Clarence Town, Long Island, Bahamas
    242-337–3445-restaurant

    Known For

    • Open Sunday
    • Bahamian favorites
    • Homemade desserts
  • 8. Paradis Restaurant and Bar

    $

    A typical Bahamian enclosed restaurant, Paradis has a daily changing menu written on a chalkboard. Home-cooked Bahamian and American food such as burgers, conch, ribs, and the fresh catch of the day are tastily prepared. The restaurant is popular with both locals and visitors and offers complimentary Wi-Fi.

    Cockburn Town, San Salvador Island, Bahamas
    242-331–2400

    Known For

    • Popular with locals
    • Free Wi-Fi
    • Fresh seafood
  • 9. Rowdy Boys Bar and Grill at Winter Haven Inn

    $$

    Don't let the name scare you—it's named after the Knowles family's well-known construction company and the owners' two sons. Breakfast, lunch, and dinner can be served in the cool inside or out, and feature authentic Bahamian and American fare. The restaurant overlooks the roaring Atlantic, with a beach nearby, a big pool, a whirlpool, and a tiki bar on the large outside deck. The chef-owners Chloe (pronounced "Klo") and Bertram Knowles serve some of the best food on the island (with Bahamian stewed fish for breakfast with 24 hours notice)—and the prices are affordable (Delmonico steak for just $32 and lobster for $28). Clean, bright, popular with the locals, and with ocean views, it's a great place to enjoy a drink and hearty meal. If you can catch their Friday pig roast, you'll enter succulence heaven. This is one of the few restaurants open on Sunday.

    Clarence Town, Long Island, Bahamas
    242-337–3062

    Known For

    • Friday pig roast
    • Open Sunday
    • Whirlpool and tiki bar

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 10. Seaside Village at Jerry Wells

    $

    Located at the end of Jerry Wells Road, this charming, authentic conch shack stuck out on a dock in the water is truly local, offering friendly service, fun music, and good food. Sling back in the hammock, catch some tunes and breeze as you (if you're lucky) watch the almost-tame osprey, "Iron," snack on fish morsels. House favorites include fresh conch salad (watch Kenny pull the conch straight from the water), grilled lobster, and grouper made any way you want it—all go best with a cold Kalik. Some visitors rate the fresh conch salad as the best, noticing the great care Kenny takes to make it. Seaside Village is open on Sunday.

    Jerry Wells Rd., Deadman's Cay, Long Island, Bahamas
    242-337–0119

    Known For

    • Fresh-caught conch
    • Grouper cooked to order
    • Best conch salad

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