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Innovation reigns in Spain

The country’s rising chefs deconstruct and reassemble culinary traditions


By MICHÈLE  GENTILLE



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(Aug. 06, 2007) Spain has produced a generation of young chefs for whom immersion circulators, soda siphons and hypodermic needles are basic tools of the trade.

While testing the boundaries of the culinary arts, these heirs of the innovations of such chefs as Juan Mari Arzak, Martín Berasetegui, the Roca brothers and, the most famous of all, Ferran Adrià, are not turning their backs on tradition, but finding fresh uses for traditional ingredients and deconstructing classic dishes.

At a summit of Spanish chefs hosted by the International Culinary Center in New York last October, chef Alberto Chicote of Nodo restaurant in Madrid demonstrated his technique for making a carrot broth. He filled the base of a stovetop espresso maker with fresh juice and then packed the filter with smoked carrot pulp. As the juice heated and was forced up through the filter, it became a rich, deep orange liquid.

Spanish chef Carles Abellan.

For Chicote and other up-and-coming culinary artists in Spain, it’s almost a rite of passage to work with Adrià, and many restaurants in Barcelona hang his picture in their dining rooms.

A look at the menu of Adrià’s elBulli shows why—it contains more than 30 dishes served in procession, each with a mysterious name and intricate preparations and presentations. Dishes include Fever Tree tonic meringue, beetroot and yogurt meringue, tangerine bonbons with peanut and curry, and tiger nut milk flowers. Adrià also continues to show a penchant for the liquid center with his liquid wonton of mushrooms, one of his early trademarks.

Working on creations such as these is an ideal jumping-off point for a rising chef. Part of the point of this style of cooking is to change food perceptions, yet it is also meant to tweak sentiments.

At the same New York summit, the idea of tugging at the emotions with food—or the “cuisine of memory”—was invoked by Joan Roca as well as Daniel García, an Andalusian chef who rhapsodized on the subject as he shot tomato water and olive oil through a siphon into a vat of nitrogen, retrieving little white knobs that resembled popcorn but tasted like distilled frozen tomato.

Roca’s menu carries footnotes such as “cuisine of contrasts,” “cuisine of the seasons,” or his own “cuisine of memory,” a dish of clams with blood grapefruit and Campari sorbet. His younger brother, Jordi, pastry chef at the family-run food temple El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, where a third brother, Josep, is sommelier, has become known for desserts that recreate the scent of commercial perfumes, such as Eternity by Calvin Klein and Trésor by Lancôme.

Engaging all the senses also plays into the microregional cooking that Quique Dacosta, self-taught chef of El Poblet on the eastern coast of Spain, labels the cuisine of “terroir,” a term usually reserved for wines. It weaves together foods that would co-exist in the wild. In essence, he deconstructs and then reassembles elements from a natural habitat.

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