Home » Featured, Tourism

SCORCHING! Three great ways to cool off in Old San Juan

29 June 2009 3 Comments

While Old San Juan is a very cool city, it can get scorching hot very quickly! Here are some of the best ways to lower the heat when your in the OSJ.

3-Ben and Jerry’s

Ben and Jerrys

Although you might think that because of its comfortable and air conditioned facilities, and the fact that they serve any product derived from the lovely iced cream, this one would be on top of the list. Well your not entirely wrong, but the only thing keeping it from climbing higher is the fact that its a franchise found in the USA.

Regardless, Ben and Jerry’s is one of the most visited establishments in the city and the number one choice in many tourist’s minds to find a little taste from home and cool off. All of the traditional B&J flavors are in check and presented with a bohemian flair characterized by the friendly staff, who have no shortage of recommendations for all the customers who find themselves baffled by the selection process.

2- Piraguas

piragua

A delicious Puerto Rican tradition, the piragua is a staple of Old San Juan just as the military base of El Morro. Consisting of a cone of shaved ice swimming in fruit flavored syrup, the treat is a necessity for anyone who visits the city, not only to cool off, but to make the experience complete. The locals say that to visit OSJ and not have a piragua is like never having visited at all.

The syrup flavors run the gamut of authentic Puerto Rican fruits and tastes like guava, tamarind, coconut, pineapple, strawberry and orange. The Piragueros who sell the treat are scattered throughout the entire city. It is impossible to visit the city and not see one of the many colorful pushcarts, with a giant block of ice inside and dozens of syrup bottles decorating it, moving up and down the streets looking for customers. Although most of the Piragueros find a sale spot and stick with it. Some take their creativity to another level in the way of multi-flavor, multi- colored syrup concoctions that give the shaved ice the artful quality of a Van Gough or Rembrandt.

1- Old Harbor microbrewery

Old Harbor

Let’s face it, there comes a time on a persons life where ice cream is just not enough. You want something that will cool the sweat on your forehead and all through the cells in your body. You need a beer. A REAL beer. Something that will leave a full bodied taste and not a watered down mess. You need Old Harbor: where the beer stops being beer and becomes Ambrosia.

Located on Tizol street, near the Paseo de la Princesa, the brewery shines with modern elegance and a tranquil environment where the beer is king. The cuisine is as delectable as their beer, making the entire package just one sweet, sweet experience.

Nothing gets the heat out of the body like a Santo Viejo pint on the afternoon. An award winning pilsner, Santo Viejo is this humble writer’s favorite beer in Old Harbor, although the selection is vast and all top notch, you will find one that makes you fall in love always on tap and perfectly cooled. You could try the coffee flavored stout Kofresí, or the ever changing Taina, a seasonal beer that is a must for every patron! As you might have guessed by now, words alone cannot express the majesty of Old Harbor, so go and try it for yourself!

Which one of these do you prefer? Have an option that is not on this list? Take the test for yourself and let your voice be heard in the comments! Name your favorite place and well do a spotlight on it!

Now go cool off!

*all pictures provided by google images, except the Old Harbor glasses part of  Toxic Lunch’s private collection

3 Comments »

  • Chikita River said:

    I loved the “Piraguas”, became fascinated, especially the strawberry and tamarind.

  • Qul said:

    Santo Viejo is my favorite too, just got back from Maine and the Summer Ales were great but the Santo Viejo is up there with the best craft beers…

  • isasbread said:

    I love coqui ale. The best craft beer in Puerto Rico.

Leave your response!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.