I didn’t really plan this trip. That’s the honest version. 

There was no spreadsheet, no saved Instagram reels, no group of friends to coordinate with. Just a Tuesday afternoon where the city felt too loud and too close, and a thought that turned into a booking before I could talk myself out of it. Corbett. A few days. Leave Friday. 

That was the whole plan. 

I’ve done solo trips before, but there’s always that small adjustment period, the first few hours where you’re still carrying the pace of wherever you came from. I checked into Sterling Corbett carrying all of that. And then, almost without noticing, it started to leave. 

It wasn’t dramatic. It was just quiet. Birds, wind, the sound of leaves doing what leaves do when there’s nothing competing with them. I stood outside my room for a while and didn’t feel the need to do anything in particular. 

Somewhere on the property, half-tucked into the treeline, was Tree House ; the resort’s restaurant. I noted it the way you note things you’ll get to eventually. Food on solo trips is practical, mostly. You eat when you’re hungry, you don’t linger. 

That habit didn’t survive Tree House. 

It’s hard to describe without sounding like I’m overselling it, but the restaurant genuinely feels like it grew there. Open, shaded, unhurried. No sharp edges or loud design choices trying to impress you. Just a space that sits comfortably inside the greenery instead of against it. 

The first time I sat down for a meal, I realised I’d put my phone face-down without deciding to. That doesn’t happen often. 

Solo travel and mealtimes have a complicated relationship. In cities, eating alone at a restaurant can feel performative, you’re either obviously on your phone or obviously trying not to be. It draws a kind of attention you don’t always want. 

Here, it was different. 

The staff were friendly in a way that felt uncontrived. They’d check in without hovering, suggest things without pushing, and then leave you to it. Nobody made me feel like a table being managed. Just a person having a meal. 

Small thing. Made a real difference. 

I worked through a mix of buffet mornings and à la carte evenings, and the thing that struck me most was the consistency. Nothing was trying to be more than it was, it was just cooked with care, and you could taste it. 

One morning I ordered a cheese masala omelette. Nothing revolutionary on paper, but it came out exactly right; soft inside, warm, seasoned without being heavy. The kind of breakfast that doesn’t announce itself, just quietly makes the morning better. 

Another day, I saw cheese dosa on the menu and ordered it mostly out of curiosity. It shouldn’t have worked as well as it did. Crisp, a little indulgent, the kind of thing that feels like a small reward for no particular reason. 

But the meals I keep coming back to mentally were the local ones. 

The Pahari Bhuna Gosht was serious. The kind of dish that makes you put down your phone, if you’d picked it up at all. Slow-cooked depth, rich without being overwhelming, the sort of flavour that only comes from someone not rushing the process. I ate it slowly, which felt right. 

And the Gobi Adraki surprised me. I nearly skipped it. Cauliflower didn’t seem like the evening’s highlight, but the ginger cut through it in a way that was sharp and clean and completely satisfying. Simple ingredients, handled well, that’s all it was. That was enough. 

I don’t usually write home about hotel buffets. They tend to be the same, a long row of trays, some things warm, some things less warm, nothing particularly memorable. 

These were better than that. 

Breakfast had variety without being chaotic. Dinner offered enough local options that you weren’t eating the same thing twice. More importantly, everything tasted like it had been made recently, which is a lower bar than it sounds and yet so many places don’t clear it. 

I started spending more time at Tree House than I had any practical reason to. A coffee would stretch. A meal would become an hour. I’d finish eating and then just… sit there, looking at the trees, not filling the silence with anything. 

I don’t usually do that. I’m not naturally someone who lingers. 

But there was nothing pulling me away, and the space didn’t make you feel like you were overstaying. So, I stayed. 

Corbett gave me what I went for – quiet, green, slow. The trails, the air, the general mercy of being somewhere without a deadline. 

But when I actually try to locate the feeling of that trip, a lot of it lives at that table. A warm plate of something local. No notifications worth checking. The particular quality of afternoon light through trees. 

I went to eat. I ended up, without meaning to, actually resting. 

If you’re heading to Sterling Corbett; alone, with someone, with family; don’t treat Tree House as the default option between activities. Give it a proper meal. Ask what’s local. Order the extra coffee and don’t feel like you need to justify the hour. 

The wild is right outside. But sometimes slowing down enough to feel it starts at the table.