Situated
outside the small town of Roses on the Costa Brava in Spain, El Bulli is
renowned as the spiritual home of molecular gastronomy—a cuisine
that has equal footing in science and the culinary arts. Here, equipment
commonly found in research laboratories—liquid nitrogen,
centrifugal motors, pacojet machines—is key to masterminding dishes prepared with techniques including spherification (suspending a
liquid in a thin alginate membrane) and aerification (foams). If El
Bulli is this food movement’s temple, then its chef and owner, Ferran
Adrià, is its high priest. He has influenced a generation of
scientifically minded chefs, and his acolytes can be found the world
over: Noma’s Rene Redzepi served for a stage at El Bulli, while
restaurants such as Alinea in Chicago, wd~50 in New York, and Varvary
in Moscow are clearly in his debt. El Bulli is only in
operation six months a year, in which it typically receives one
million applications (for 8,000 places), so getting a seat is tough.
What's more, it is set to close this December, much to
the chagrin of gastronomes the world over. For today’s film, we sent filmmaker Alison Chernick (known for documenting artists, notably Matthew Barney and Jeff Koons, who she recently
captured for
NOWNESS) to infiltrate the gastronomic mecca. “I think the big question, which
I don’t think is answered yet, is whether Adrià is a chef with an
extremely artistic practice, or whether he is an artist using food as
his medium,” says the director. As for her eating experience? “Surreal,” she says. “My favorite course was the first: a Comme des
Garçons perfume spray on a plate with a dry martini inside. Next to
it were ‘spherical olives’—green balls filled with olive puree.
Ferran really flexes his muscles on you, while setting the bar pretty
high for the ultimate dining experience. I'm still digesting it on
many levels.”
Quench your thirst with more El Bulli delights and check out the restaurant's newly concocted bespoke beer. HERE >>
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