Thursday, February 10, 2011
  • An array of vintage water vessels on the El Garzón grounds
    Ingalls Photography, 2011

  • El Garzón's courtyard and pool
    Ingalls Photography, 2011

  • Left: Lobster gnocchi with shaved grana padano cheese
    Right: Salad of arugula with grapefruit, hazelnuts, grana padano and fast dried tomato
    El Garzón, 2011
    Ingalls Photography

  • Left and right: The El Garzón dining room
    Ingalls Photography, 2011

  • Left: Napolean of roasted vegetables
    Right: Salad of zucchini ribbons with mint, almonds, grana padano and Garzón olive oil
    El Garzón, 2011
    Ingalls Photography

  • Left: Tortilla of thin roast potatoes with shrimp
    Right: Seared tuna with thyme and Garzón olive oil
    El Garzón, 2011
    Ingalls Photography

  • El Garzón's outdoor bar
    Ingalls Photography, 2011

  • Outdoor dining table, El Garzón
    Ingalls Photography, 2011

Thursday, February 10, 2011 Replay
El Garzón: Languid Vacation
Francis Mallmann’s Uruguayan Hotel is a Calm Culinary Paradise
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El Garzón: Languid Vacation

Francis Mallmann’s Uruguayan Hotel is a Calm Culinary Paradise

Chef Francis Mallmann’s move to Uruguay’s rustic Garzón has transformed the one-time ghost town into a jetset hideaway. In 2004, the acclaimed Latin American culinary talent eschewed the glitz of his 1884 and Los Negros establishments (located in Mendoza and José Ignacio, respectively) to open El Garzón, a boutique hotel and epicurean restaurant. “I always thought it was a horrible little place,” says Mallmann, “but over the years I began to see it had huge potential—it had very nice bones.” Thanks to Mallmann’s thoughtful development, Garzón has caught on among discerning travelers, and the Rothschild family has snapped up property nearby. Photography duo Andrew and Gemma Ingalls were given free rein throughout the luxe guesthouse and kitchen, where the cuisine is distinguished by the Andean technique infiernillo ("little hell")—delicacies are cooked on iron griddles between two wood fires, and often include homemade olive oil and fresh herbs from the on-site garden. With plans to add new suites to the hotel, Mallmann sees El Garzón as a long-term project, one he plans to develop in keeping with the area’s seductively lazy pace.


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I love Uruguay. This country has something raw, primal in it... I also love their boutique hotels. They manage to present raw wilderness and rustic living in the most enchanting and chic way! Brilliant!
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WOW !

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