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CuisineContemporary
LocationPlaya del Carmen, Mexico
Michelin
Wine Spectator
Star Wine List

Woodend occupies a serious position in the Riviera Maya dining scene: a contemporary steakhouse operating under chef Curtis Stone, with a wine list of 2,360 bottles earning a White Star from Star Wine List and back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025. The program is built on collaboration between sommelier Hugo Hernández Sánchez and wine director Edward Sánchez Pomol, with a cellar weighted toward Champagne, Bordeaux, and California.

Woodend restaurant in Playa del Carmen, Mexico
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Woodend Playa del Carmen

Where the Riviera Maya Steakhouse Format Gets Serious

The stretch of highway between Cancún and Tulum has accumulated a dense tier of destination restaurants over the past decade, but the steakhouse format within that corridor remains thinly populated at the premium end. Woodend, set along Carretera Cancún-Tulum at Km 51 in the Riviera Maya, fills that gap with a contemporary program that carries two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) and a wine operation substantial enough to earn a White Star designation from Star Wine List. In a region where the competitive set skews toward Mexican regional cooking — see Ha', Axiote Cocina de Mexico, and Bu'ul — Woodend occupies a distinct position by pairing steakhouse craft with a wine program calibrated to international fine-dining standards.

The Team at the Center of It

What distinguishes Woodend's approach is structural: the kitchen, the floor, and the cellar operate as a coordinated program rather than three separate departments. Chef Curtis Stone leads the culinary side, bringing an international profile that positions Woodend within a wider conversation about contemporary cooking in the Americas. His counterpart on the floor is General Manager Alfredo Ruiz Falcon, whose front-of-house discipline shapes the rhythm of service. But the clearest signal of Woodend's ambitions is its wine operation, jointly held by Wine Director Edward Sánchez Pomol and Sommelier Hugo Hernández Sánchez. The pairing of a wine director and a dedicated sommelier in a single restaurant is not standard practice in the Riviera Maya; it signals a program designed to be navigated with guidance rather than simply browsed.

That collaboration extends to the list itself. At 2,360 bottles across 450 selections, the cellar is substantive by any regional standard. The declared strengths , Mexico, Champagne, Bordeaux, France, Italy, California , map a list that is simultaneously rooted in Old World prestige categories and attentive to the domestic market. Mexican wine sits alongside Burgundy and Napa; that is an editorial choice, not a shortcut. Corkage is available at $50 for guests bringing their own bottles, and wine pricing sits at the $$$ tier, with a meaningful number of bottles above $100. For context on how Mexican wine has evolved as a category, Animalón in Valle de Guadalupe and Lunario in El Porvenir anchor the domestic fine-dining wine conversation from the producer side.

The Steakhouse Format in a Resort Corridor

Contemporary steakhouses operating at the $$$ tier tend to live or die by the coherence of the overall experience: whether the kitchen's sourcing and execution, the sommelier's guidance, and the floor's pacing hold together as a single offer. Michelin's Plate recognition , awarded to restaurants that deliver good cooking within the guide's framework, short of star level , is an appropriate marker here. It confirms technical competence without overstating the position, and the consistency of that recognition across two consecutive years suggests a program that has stabilized rather than peaked on opening.

For comparison within the Riviera Maya fine-dining tier, Cocina de Autor Riviera Maya operates at the $$$$ level with a creative format, while El Fogón anchors the accessible end of the market at $. Woodend's $$$ positioning sits between those poles, delivering a formal steakhouse experience at a price point that aligns it with peers across Mexico's recognized dining circuit. Le Chique in Puerto Morelos, a short distance north, operates in the same geographic zone at the ambitious end of tasting-menu cooking. The two restaurants address different formats but draw from an overlapping guest pool of travelers seeking a considered dinner in the corridor.

Placing Woodend in the Broader Mexican Dining Map

Mexico's recognized restaurant scene has concentrated heavily in Mexico City , Pujol being the most internationally cited example , and in secondary culinary cities like Oaxaca, where Levadura de Olla Restaurante has built a reputation around traditional technique, and Monterrey, where KOLI Cocina de Origen applies a rigorous local-produce frame to northern ingredients. The Riviera Maya's dining recognition has grown more slowly, partly because the corridor's economics tilt toward resort volume rather than chef-driven independent restaurants. Woodend's Michelin recognition, alongside the wine program's external validation, positions it as part of a smaller cohort of Riviera Maya venues that are being evaluated against national rather than purely regional standards.

Internationally, the contemporary steakhouse format that Woodend represents has parallels in programs like César in New York City and, at the refined end of the Asian market, Jungsik in Seoul , though the latter operates in a different format entirely. The point is that serious wine programs and kitchen credentials are not confined to European or East Asian dining rooms; they are increasingly present in markets where geography and hospitality infrastructure align.

Planning Your Visit

Woodend operates for dinner service and sits at Km 51 on the Carretera Cancún-Tulum, placing it within reach of both Playa del Carmen and Tulum without being walkable from either town center. Guests arriving from Playa del Carmen will need a car, taxi, or ride-share; the highway location is a committed destination choice rather than a casual drop-in. Cuisine and wine pricing both sit at $$$, so budget accordingly for a full dinner with wine pairing or a cellar selection. Given the combination of Michelin recognition, a 2,360-bottle wine list, and the size of the Riviera Maya's peak-season visitor volume, advance reservations are advisable. Google Reviews show a 4.7 score from 26 responses , a small but consistent signal of guest satisfaction at the premium tier.

For a wider view of where Woodend sits within the region's restaurant, bar, hotel, and experience offerings, see our full Playa del Carmen restaurants guide, Playa del Carmen hotels guide, Playa del Carmen bars guide, Playa del Carmen wineries guide, and Playa del Carmen experiences guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I eat at Woodend?

Woodend's format is contemporary steakhouse, so the kitchen's core proposition is centered on beef, prepared with the technical precision that Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) implies. Chef Curtis Stone leads the culinary program, and the format is built for dinner service. Beyond the meat program, the wine list's breadth , 450 selections, 2,360 bottles, with declared strengths in France, Italy, California, Champagne, Bordeaux, and Mexico , makes it worth engaging the sommelier team for a pairing rather than selecting independently. Specific dishes are not listed in the public record, so confirming the current menu directly with the restaurant before visiting is sensible.

Can I walk in to Woodend?

Woodend's location on Carretera Cancún-Tulum at Km 51 means it is not in a walkable urban zone; reaching it requires a car, taxi, or ride-share regardless of where you are staying in the corridor. On the question of reservations: the combination of Michelin recognition, a $$$ price tier, and peak-season Riviera Maya demand means walk-in availability cannot be assumed. Securing a booking in advance is the safer approach, particularly during the December-to-April high season when the corridor's visitor numbers peak.

What has Woodend built its reputation on?

Woodend's reputation rests on two pillars. The first is kitchen execution: consecutive Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 under chef Curtis Stone confirms a consistent standard of cooking. The second is the wine program: a White Star from Star Wine List, a 2,360-bottle inventory across 450 selections, and a dual-leadership structure with both a wine director (Edward Sánchez Pomol) and a sommelier (Hugo Hernández Sánchez) signals a cellar managed with deliberate attention. Together, these credentials place Woodend in the upper tier of recognized dining along the Riviera Maya corridor.

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