The General Manager met us at arrival. Not a junior staff member with a clipboard — the General Manager, Eleonore, who had apparently decided that personally welcoming guests was part of her job description. This is rarer than it should be at $1,200 a night and rarer still at half that.
The property is Moorish-white architecture on Maundays Bay, which is the kind of beach that ends arguments about where to go. Twelve rooms deep at most, arranged so that every sightline ends at the Caribbean. The upgraded king room had a balcony with two tanning beds and a dining table. We used both. The walk-in closet was larger than our first New York apartment. We are at peace with this.
Claudia was our personal concierge. Her answer to every request — taxis, dinner reservations, a last-minute change of plan at 9pm — was some variation of yes, of course, I can make it happen. She said this with the tone of someone who meant it, which meant we believed her, which meant we stopped worrying about logistics entirely. This is the correct outcome for a hotel at this price point and most hotels at this price point do not achieve it.
Lunch was at Cap Shack, daily, without apology. Fresh mahi-mahi, snapper, tuna, and a lobster roll that will recalibrate your expectations for lobster rolls everywhere else you ever eat one. Dinner: Uchu, the Peruvian restaurant on property, which was the meal of the trip and one of the better meals we have had at any hotel anywhere.
The measure of a luxury hotel is not the thread count. It is whether the staff has been briefed well enough that you never have to explain yourself twice. Cap Juluca passed this test on every interaction over four nights. That is not nothing. That is, in fact, everything.