From Sambal Belacan to Jamón Ibérico – Spain, Part 1 – MUGARITZ

a day at el bulli

It’s funny how holiday destinations are determined.   While we were holidaying in Australia last year, Bald Eagle purchased Ferran Adrià’s book, A Day at El Bulli, lugged all 500 pages and 7lbs of it, covertly, back to Malaysia and presented it to me as a gift on Valentine’s Day this year.   It was an incredibly thoughtful gift.   What I didn’t realise was that Bald Eagle was also secretly conspiring to get reservations at the much sought-after, world’s best restaurant, El Bulli, a fact which he revealed to me much later in the game.

Unfortunately, when 2 million people are competing for 8,000 places, and despite regular correspondences with the restaurant (at this point, we were on a first name basis with a very possibly frustrated Luis Garcia of El Bulli…hola, Luis!), we did not succeed in getting bookings.  And like everybody else who visits Spain and isn’t successful in getting reservations at El Bulli, we started planning our itinerary at locations closest to the next available Michelin rated restaurant.  We still wanted to visit Barcelona for the sights, but the other city that we chose was based purely on its culinary offerings.

S.Pellegrino World's 50 Best Restaurants

Enter San Sebastian, holy ground and birthplace of Basque high cuisine and city with the highest number of Michelin starred restaurants per square kilometre.   We were SPOILT for choice.   With the assistance of our friend, Le Cordon Bleu trained chef, Jun, we narrowed down the list to two restaurants – Mugaritz and Arzak.   To be honest, I chose Mugaritz over Arzak for two reasons – its ranking on the S.Pellegrino World’s 50 Best Restaurants for 2009 and the uber cool minimalist website.  Call me superficial.  Upon further research, I learnt that Chef Andoni Luis Aduriz at Mugaritz was a protégé of Adriá and had also trained under Martin Berasategui and Juan Mari Arzak, which was almost like divine providence (re Adriá) and assurance that I had made the right decision.

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Getting to Mugaritz from San Sebastian isn’t easy as it is quite literally in the middle of nowhere.   The restaurant provides detailed directions, but perhaps not precise enough as a number still lose their way.  It is a mere 30 minutes or less to the destination, hardly anything in relation to time spent in our KL traffic, but we didn’t want to risk losing our way so we hailed a cab – 20 Euros was a fair price to pay to eliminate potential arguments along the way (you said turn left at the 4th bush, no I said turn right 60 degrees from the 5th puddle!).

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The farmhouse which the restaurant occupies is lovely, a perfect foil for the sunshine that streamed in so generously that day through the large glass windows into the expansive dining room.

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We were delighted when the affable Maître d’ led us to the kitchen for a quick tour, a rather brilliant touch to the overall dining experience, and reassuring if I may add, knowing that our meals were prepared in a very controlled environment, where sauces were measured into test tubes and temperatures were regulated thus ensuring consistency of preparation and presentation.   We also learnt later that the herbs and flower petals in our dishes were all grown in and gathered from their garden.

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If you’re looking for just a bite, be warned that an ala carte menu is not available at Mugaritz.   There are only two set menus at Mugaritz.   In our case (and because we wanted to maximise on our miles to consumption ratio), we chose the more expensive and extensive Naturan menu with 11 dishes.   One of the most recognizable of Mugaritz’s dishes is the amuse bouche – potato “rocks”, designed to create a bit of humour whilst maintaining functionality.   This was more of a visual treat; after all, potatoes are potatoes are potatoes, aren’t they?   Before I get reprimanded by the potato police, I will add that they had a nice creamy texture with a crunchy exterior thanks to its fired ceramic clay covered skin.  Other items of amuse bouche included fried prawns that could be eaten whole, and silken smooth squid with alliums (onions, garlic and flowers from the allium family).

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Part of the thrill of dining at Mugaritz was the challenge of figuring out what the chef had pulled out of his hat.   Some were new to our palate but straightforward, like the silky Kokotxa de Bacalao (literally translated: cod chin) served with an acacia honey emulsion.   The texture was what I’d expect a “chin” to taste like, especially when the chin resembled mine – fatty and gelatinous.  I sometimes suspect that chefs secretly enjoy teasing their guests.   Why else would a description of “roasted tomato salad and its own cool water” and “carpaccio accompanied by a sweet and sour dressing, D.O.Idiazabal cheese and vegetable splinters” sound so innocent, yet mask surprises?   The tomato looked shriveled like my grandma, slightly dehydrated, but yet retaining its sweetness (unlike my grandma), and the icy granita beside it numbed my mouth with its coldness and exploded with the cool taste of tomatoes.   A ravioli filling of crab and fresh walnuts followed this dish where a clear citrus scented consomme, very delicate in flavour, was brought separately and poured onto the ravioli.

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The seabass was served on a bed of grilled zucchini seeds.  I love the use of the allium flower to add a light pungent perfume to the dish.

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The pièce de résistance which succeeded in confounding us was the carpaccio.   “It’s not meat,” winked José Ramón, the cheeky Maître d’.   Convention + logic made me conclude that the carpaccio was red pepper while Bald Eagle still insisted it was meat, but in reality it was watermelon cooked for 12 hours, then frozen and thawed 3 times, and then taken out and sliced thinly to resemble “carpaccio”, deseeded, smoked and served.  The texture was certainly very much like meat.

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Fossilized salsify with briny roe and sea accents

If you’ve ever tried eating a twig, this is it.  Seriously, though, the fossilized salsify is a tuber that has been, well, fossilized.  In this dish, the salsify was soaked in water with calcium added to it, and then cooked, resulting in a fossilized appearance on the outside.  The whole dish exuded a whiff of the sea.   The green seaweed-like thing was apparently harvested from a point between the river and the sea.

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Sauteed red mullet fillets served over a vegetable and liver stew

The mullet was ingeniously halved, deboned, then reassembled together with an equivalent of Italian “lardo”.   The liver in the dish was from the mullet, and in order to use it, the fish had to be super fresh.  The iberico ham added flavour to a relatively bland type of fish.

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Milk fed veal, roasted and perfumed with vine cutting embers and fragments of thyme, cinders, salt and crisp radishes

The meat that we had came from a 180kg 4 month old milk fed calf.   Thanks to the special diet, the meat was pale and slightly pinkish and the flavour subtle.  The black exterior was a result of marinating the meat in black ink made from vegetables. The meat was cooked rare on a coal fire, thus sealing in the juices and allowing us to fully appreciate its flavour.

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Loin of duck, served with iodized compliments, crumblings and shavings of summer truffle

When we first glanced at this dish, the immediate thought was – they must have HUGE ducks in Spain, only to be informed later that several pieces of duck loins were joined together to form one piece.   Summer truffles were not in season, and its sole purpose there was to offer a bit of texture, and slight flavour, to the dish.

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Several spoonfuls of clashing contrasts – heavy cream, sweets and leaves, and warm artisan tablet with whipped honey and oats

The dining experience at Mugaritz was a glorious assault on the senses.  Our first dessert resembled a food bouquet.  Eleven different flowers and herbs were used to create this dessert, and the herb ice cream, which contained no sugar, derived all its sweetness from celery root.  The second dessert was a perfect ending to the meal.  The child within was summoned as pretty bubbles made of honey sat playfully in a bowl, created with a fish tank bubbler and held together by xanthan gum.

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The weather was beautiful enough to have coffee in the garden.   When one has just arrived from the sahara, sitting outdoors in aircond temperature with the warm sun on the skin is a wonderful feeling.   It didn’t go down well with my facialist, though.  In her words, “Aiyoh, Meena, you’ve become BLACK!”.  Some people have no appreciation for a nice tan.  I’ve decided to ignore my pigmentation.

The question you’d probably ask me is this – was it worth it?  (And I’m assuming you know that I’m referring to the meal and not my damaged skin.)  The food, as you can see above, was amazing.   Putting aside the scientific genius employed in the preparation of the food (which definitely deserves bonus points), I let my senses decide – taste, smell, touch….every aspect was put to the test, and yes, I was impressed at the way the flavours came through.   As for service, I have incredible respect for José Ramón, the multilingual Maître d’.   He held the fort well, gliding from table to table to hold discussions, tease, tantalize and challenge everyone with his own brand of humour.   The sommeliers did a wonderful job in recommending wines to us.   The waiters rotated; a dedicated waiter would have been better, but José Ramón’s constant appearance made up for the deficiency in that area.  The ambience was very zen-like – stark, quiet, peaceful.   One would expect a 2 star Michelin rated restaurant to have a formal dining atmosphere, but to us, it was an invitation to relax rather than to be stiff.  We slouched, moved about, spoke amicably with the neighbouring tables, laughed…it felt great.  Mugaritz’s invitation to submit is this….150 minutes to feel, imagine, reminisce, discover.  150 minutes to contemplate. So the question one has to ask one’s self is this:  How much would I be willing to pay for a dining experience where so many different emotions are evoked as a result of the above factors?

www.mugaritz.com

Momiji’s Amazing Australian Adventure (Part 1 of 2)

Cherries

It may be almost the end of January 2009, but I am still in 2008.  Perhaps it is the flurry of activities that has me gasping for air, but it could also be age that’s slowing me down.  Anyhow, I am, as always,  too lazy to comprehend the meaning of life, so if my mind says that I’m still wearing last season’s fashion, then I say hallelujah, bring out the char siu and celebrate.

The good news is, I FINALLY finished going through my 1,000+ photographs from our recent trip to Australia.  Bald Eagle played a big part in this accomplishment.

6/1/2009,  Bald Eagle, in an excited tone:  “You gonna blog about Oz?” *bounce bounce*  Me: “Yeah, definitely, dude!” *bounce bounce*

9/1/2009,  Bald Eagle, not so bouncy:  “I see you blogged about Pan Heong.”  Me:  “Sowwwy sweetie, I haven’t compiled my pictures.”  *bulging puppy eyes, brimming with tears* “Next post, k!”

The whole of the next week,  Bald Eagle:  “Not working on a new post?”  Me:  “Busy, busy!!”  *trying to avoid eye contact*

20/1/2009,  Bald Eagle:  “You blogged about Extra Super Tanker?!”  Me:  “It’s almost Chinese New Year, mah….gotta show picture of yue sang!”  *still avoiding eye contact*

23/1/2009,  Me:  “Before you yell I have a valid reason it’s Kenny Mah’s birthday but the next post will definitely be Oz!!!!!”  *taking deep breath*

This week,  Bald Eagle:  “I’m gonna stop reading your blog until you update it!”

Yikes.  Every reader is valuable.  And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the unsubtle way of ensuring that Lyrical Lemongrass updates her blog with a very overdue post.  So if you see pictures of fireworks from 2008, don’t scold me ar.  Scold Bald Eagle.

Where to begin, where to begin?

A long time ago……ok, in the not too distant past……fine, LAST MONTH, there lived a tiny creature known to the world as a Momiji.  Unlike other babies, the stork didn’t bring her to the world.  Nay, she came packaged in a brown noodle box with a label at the bottom announcing her name as Silly Billy.  Oh dear, with a name like that, she was teased mercilessly despite having silky-looking white resin hair with purple baubles and laughing eyes.   People can be quite unforgiving sometimes.  So she jumped into a medicine box together with her friend, Twinkle (a little girl who wanted to see the world), and ran away to the land down-under where stranger looking creatures existed.

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“I want to see the sea!” exclaimed Silly Billy.   “I want to press my ear to a seashell and listen to the ocean’s lullaby.   I want to bury myself in the sand and feel the waves wash over me.   I want to sip champagne and eat oysters.”  Yes, this little Momiji wanted to do so much, and can you blame her?  So she lazed by the beach for two whole days, and at night, she slept soundly, tucked in her tiny blue bed, and dreamed of Barossa Valley bacon and smoked salmon sandwiches and spicy prawn pasta and cheeses and oysters and cherries, all washed down with bubbly that made her head light.  And best of all, waking up from her slumber brought her back to a reality that wasn’t very different from that rainbow in her mind.  “I could do this forever, Twinkle!” she declared to her friend.

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The ever fidgety Twinkle replied, “I want to see the world, Silly Billy.  I like it here, but don’t you want to do other things too?  Like go-karting and clay-pigeon shooting?”   Silly Billy thought for a bit.   Twinkle was right, of course.   Silly Billy loved Callala Beach, but the reality is that time stands still for no Momiji.  Life has a way of moving on and taking everyone with it, which isn’t a bad thing considering that most Momijis don’t get to experience much beyond their brown noodle boxes.  So they packed up their bags and boarded a train that travelled a thousand kilometres north of Sydney to the Gold Coast where they got to try go-karting and clay-pigeon shooting.

“I haven’t seen any strange creatures yet, Twinkle,” said Silly Billy.  “Let’s go to the Australia Zoo….perhaps we may see some humans there?”  So they trekked further north towards the Sunshine Coast where they finally arrived at the Australia Zoo, home of the Crocodile Hunter.  “Crikey!” said Twinkle, “look at that human feeding the crocodile!”  They saw elephants and tigers and crocodiles and wombats and kangaroos and koalas and lots and lots of humans.  But they soon got tired and yearned for some hearty food.  The Ettamogah Pub looked friendly enough to a couple of tiny Momijis, even if some of the patrons looked a little scary with their very big motorcyles.  The beef, bacon and cheese burger was humongous, twice Silly Billy’s height, but she ate it with relish because it tasted so good.  Twinkle was terribly hungry and ate a 350gram succulent pork cutlet which she enjoyed oh so much because it was juicy and tasty, and washed it all down with a cold beer, just like the hairy patrons of Ettamogah Pub.

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Silly Billy and Twinkle were sad to leave their friends in Gold Coast, but they were excited about their road trip back to Sydney.   “We can see The Big Banana and The Big Prawn along the way!” squealed Silly Billy even though she knew that they were kitschy and pointless.   She didn’t care, because she liked being silly.  She liked being silly!  That’s right! She didn’t care what the the other Momijis thought of her because she was having fun while the other Momijis were stuck in their boring little boxes.  So she yelled hello to the pink flamingos as she whizzed by (within speed limits, of course, for it wouldn’t do for a Momiji to get a speeding ticket) and waved to the man in the lighthouse.  She ate delicious eggs benedict in a cafe in Byron Bay called Spoon. It was a most exhilarating road trip indeed.

Thus ends Part 1.

Note:
I don’t normally do multi-part posts. In this case, for the sake of marital bliss, I am compelled to put up this post as soon as possible (otherwise, it’s off with my head), and to be honest, there is so much more I’d like to share with all of you. The second part of the Momijis’ adventure is even more exciting with loads of good food featured. Addresses for all restaurants featured will be included in Part 2 as well.

Hope you’re having a good Chinese New Year break!

My Christmas

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Roast turkey and stuffing, glazed ham, apricot chutney, several different types of salads, baked potatoes……

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Festive decorations in red and green…..

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Appetisers before the main course…..

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The most delicious glazed ham in the entire country…..

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Trifle…..

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Yummy cookies and pies…..

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And presents! (I LOVE this one….a great cookbook called Maggie’s Harvest written by Maggie Beer…thanks, BE!)

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Merry Christmas!

We’re spending Christmas in Australia this year.  (I’ll probably give you more updates when I get back.)  Our Christmas meal was entirely homecooked, and the organising involved in getting food ready for 25 people was amazing.  No short fuses.  No flustered looks.  Responsibilities were delegated, and when all the guests arrived, even the chefs (Bald Eagle’s uncle, aunt and family members) were able to partake in the celebrations.  For Christmas gifts, save for the exceptional item, we all agreed to donate to a worthy cause instead, because the fact is, we’re all blessed with so many wonderful things that we really don’t need another box of chocolates or that extra iPod.  Thanks to this gift initiative, so many more people are going to be touched and helped by the donations made.

And my Christmas….my Christmas is all of that and more.  It is a reminder of that birth that happened 2,000 years ago that changed the world forever.  Heaven’s gift.  And I am constantly thankful.

A blessed Christmas, everyone!