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COME TOGETHER - THE WORLD'S FINEST CHEFS

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VERONICA CANHA-HIBBERT GAËL CLAVIERE GRANT MACPHERSON NOUEL OMAMALIN RAY WONG NATE GREEN STEVEN SMALLEY FEDERICO TERESI ROBERTO SEGURA GLENN NOEL LUCA ROSATI JAVIER GUILL ÉN FRANCESCO ACQUAVIVA JÉRÔME JULIEN ANA ROŠ LUIGI VESPERO CARLA PELLEGRINO GIUSEPPE MOLARO SAMANTA BAKKER MOHAMAD CHABCHOUL DANIEL NEGREIRA JOHN BUENAVENTURA STEPHANIE CERONIO FRANCESCO GUARRACINO ESZTER PALÁGYI JAMES OAKLEY JEAN WINTER TIM NEWTON JORGE RIVERO GIORGIO DIANA LI CHI WAI NIC VANDERBEEKEN BALAZS ENZSOL DWIYANTI CINTANINGRUM GIANLUCA RENZI SALVO SARDO GARY FOULKES JOE BARZA JOSÉ LUIS VICENTE GÓMEZ DAVID TOUTAIN MANU BUFFARA REIF OTHMAN NIYATI RAO MIKAEL SVENSSON CHRISTOPHE DEVOILLE RYAN HARRIS VINEET BHATIA DANIEL CHAVEZ TERESA CUTTER NIKO ROMITO CRAIG BEST KONSTANTIN FILIPPOU GIUSEPPE IANNOTTI ALFREDO RUSSO PACO PÉREZ SAM AISBETT THOMAS BÜHNER ELENA ARZAK HEINZ BECK

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GETHER

THE WORLD’S FINEST CHEFS FLAVEL MONTEIRO

AWARD-WINNING AUTHOR

COLIN CLAGUE ANDONI LUIS ADURIZ SEBASTIAN FRANK YOSHIHRO NARISAWA VALENTINO CASSANELLI SILVIA BARACCHI TANO SIMONATO JAMES KNIGHT PACHECO TAMARA CHAVEZ TONI KOSTIAN LIZ STEVENSON GREGORY CHRISMANT STEFANO BAIOCCO SIMONE CANTAFIO ANTONIA KLUGMANN RICCARDO CAMANINI MARCO MARTINI MICHELANGELO MAMMOLITI BEL COELHO SAVERIO MACRI JUNIOR NADJE OLIVIER ELZER ADAM REID KARIME LÓPEZ OLI MARLOW







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GETHER WITH THE WORLD’S FINEST CHEFS FLAVEL MONTEIRO

AWARD-WINNING AUTHOR


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GETHER

THE WORLD’S FINEST CHEFS


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84 of the world’s finest chefs from 6 continents, 31 countries, with over 50 Michelin stars, representing some of the best restaurants from Brazil to Australia who are featured on La Liste, the World’s 50 Best Restaurants and with international awards - we have indeed Come Together!

~ FLAVEL MONTEIRO


The recipes are presented in a clear and easy-to-follow way, with ingredients, methods, preparations and photographs of the dishes. The recipes are arranged by type of food. All measures are level unless otherwise stated. Centimeter - cm Cup - c Deciliter - dl Fluid Ounce – fl oz Gram - g Kilogram - kg Liter - ltr Milligram - mg Milliliter - ml Ounce – oz Pound - lb Quarts - qt Tablespoon - tbsp Teaspoon - tsp

Text © 2019 Flavel Monteiro Photo Credits - All photographs are Copyright Cover design: © Flavel Monteiro First Words: Elena Arzak Introduction: Courtney Brandt and Doug Singer Commissioning Editor: Fabian deCastro Contributing Editor: Doug Singer Editorial Assistants: Maria Aquino and Kurt Berger Design: IZZY and WG Picture Editor: FJMdesign Digital Content: WG Magazines Published by:

Izzy Publishing Pvt. Ltd. Unit 14, Agnelo Colony, Kerant, Caranzalem, Goa www.wgmagazines.com COME TOGETHER - THE WORLD’S FINEST CHEFS by the Award-Winning Author Flavel Monteiro. The author hereby asserts his rights to be identified as the author of this work in accordance with the Copyright Design and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the author.

CONVERSIONS 1 teaspoon (tsp) = 5 ml / 5 g 3 teaspoons (tsp) = 1 tbsp / 15 ml / 15 g 1 tablespoon (tbsp) = 15 ml / 15 g 15 tablespoons (tbsp) = 1 cup / 225 ml 1 cup = 8 fluid oz / 237 ml 1 pint = 2 cups = 473 ml 1 quart = 4 cups = 0.95 liters 1 ounce = 28 grams 1 pound = 454 grams 1 stick butter = ¼ cup 1 deciliter (dl) = 100ml WEIGHT 1 gram = 0.035 ounces 100 grams = 3.5 ounces 500 grams – 1.1 pounds 1 kilogram = 35 ounces VOLUME 5 milliliter = 1 teaspoon 15 milliliter = 1 tablespoon 240 milliliter – 1 cup or 8 fluid ounces 1 liter = 34 fluid ounces Liquid measures 8 fluid ounces = 1 cup = ½ pint = ¼ quart 16 fluid ounces = 2 cup = 1pint = ½ quart TEMPERATURE Conversion from Fahrenheit to Celsius: C = (F - 32) / 1.8 Conversion from Celsius to Fahrenheit: F = C x 1.8 + 32 20°C = 68°F 120°C = 250°F 160°C = 320°F 180°C = 350°F 205°C = 400°F 220°C = 425°F

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It was the evening of March 23rd, 2020 when as I was watching news footage of an array of coffins of those fallen from COVID-19 that I first had the inspiration to publish this book. I saw people all around me who were taking shelter in their homes against this invisible enemy and my colleagues in the restaurant industry suffering. I was inspired to find a way for all of us to join together in solidarity with those on the front lines of this battle, and connect as one in a celebration of something that we can share—great food! My goal was to mount the formidable task of getting this book put together and published by Sunday, April 12th… an Easter celebration if you will. It is truly amazing what you can accomplish when we join efforts. This labor of love was made possible by an incredible array of individuals and features 84 of the finest chefs from around the world. From 6 continents, 31 countries, with over 50 Michelin stars, and representing some of the best restaurants from Brazil to Australia who are featured on La Liste, the World’s 50 Best Restaurants, Asia’s 50 Best Restaurants and with a plethora of international awards—we have indeed Come Together! I want to thank the world’s finest chefs - Heinz Beck, Elena Arzak, Paco Pérez, Alfredo Russo, Andoni Luis Aduriz, Niko Romito, Thomas Bühner, Yoshihro Narisawa, Vineet Bhatia, Silvia Baracchi, Tano Simonato, Konstantin Filippou, Stefano Baiocco, Sebastian Frank, Ana Roš, David Toutain, Manu Buffara, Riccardo Camanini, Antonia Klugmann, Marco Martini, Michelangelo Mammoliti, Karime López, Oliver Elzer, Adam Reid, Colin Clague, Reif Othman, Francesco Guarracino, Valentino Cassanelli, Giuseppe Iannotti, Toni Kostian, Mikael Svensson, Teresa Cutter, Joe Barza, José Luis Vicente Gómez, Gary Foulkes, Grant MacPherson, Eszter Palágyi, James Oakley, Sam Aisbett, Nate Green, James Knight Pacheco, Luigi Vespero, Carla Pellegrino, John B, Nic Vanderbeeken, Salvo Sardo, Steven Smalley, Luca Rosati, Glenn Noel, Giorgio Diana, Tim Newton, Jean Winter, Simone Cantafio, Bel Coelho, Saverio Macri, Oli Marlow, Li Chi Wai, Craig Best, Daniel Negreira, Francesco Acquaviva, Daniel Chavez, Tamara Chavez, Liz Stevenson, Giuseppe Molaro, Javier Guillén, Jérôme Julien, Balazs Enzsol, Veronica-Canha-Hibbert, Gaël Claviere, Nouel Omamalin, Samanta Bakker, Ray Wong, Stephanie Ceronio, Ryan Harris, Dwiyanti Cintaningrum, Jorge Rivero, Federico Teresi, Gianluca Renzi, Gregory Chrismant, Christophe Devoille, Niyati Rao, Mohamad Chabchoul, Roberto Segura and Junior Nadje. A special thank you to Elena Arzak for the first words; Courtney Brandt and Doug Singer for the introduction. I want to thank my editorial and creative team, as well as the vast array of photographers who made it possible for me to visualize these recipes. I’d also like to thank Maria Aquino, IZZY, Manuela Filippou, Kurt Berger, Mónica of Restaurante Arzak, Rebeca López, Pia Marston, Stephanie Leung, Ellie Taylor-Roberts, Manca Istinič, Zeyneb Larabi, Janire Zubizarreta, Alexis Parszos, Patrícia Taqueda, Cristiana Ferrauti, Stacey Hawkins, Simona Guarneri, Chiara, Kerstin Riedel, my sister Hanan and all those who made it possible for me to complete this book in two weeks. I’d also like to also thank those who doubted my ability to get this done—it kept gas in my tank! With that said, I give you Come Together – The World’s Finest Chefs! Be Safe Stay Safe

Flavel Monteiro 9


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Food feeds the soul. It binds families and communities. And never more so than in unsettling times like these. The kitchen has always been a place to gather, to nurture, to share. Cooking for others in times of crisis is a show of solidarity. The simple act of sharing food builds memories that stay with us forever. Now is a time to come together and be generous with our knowledge. Those who can cook can teach those close to them. This book helps us reach beyond the walls of our kitchens and encourages those who are staying home to cook together, to experiment with new recipes, to support each other. ELENA ARZAK RESTAURANT ARZAK DONOSTIA - SAN SEBASTIÁN

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UNPRECEDENTED UNEXPECTED UNANTICIPATED

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lobally, these are times we couldn’t have predicted. That we never thought would occur.

What happens next? What can we do in this strange interim? In my mind, one of the easiest ways to release stress and come together (virtually, and from a safe distance, of course) is over a plate of food. While we might not be able to dine out or to visit our favorite restaurants, there is still the act of cooking. Of preparing a meal. For those we love. For ourselves. Life goes on through breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Meals continue to bring us together throughout the day. Kitchens may look different where you read this. You might be with your family. You might be by yourself. You might have access to different produce and proteins than you are used to preparing. There might not be the same spices and condiments available. And so we adapt. We change. We make the best with what we have. Those ingredients will be available again one day, and we won’t take them for granted. In these difficult times, that chefs have given something of themselves speaks to their training and dedication to the craft. Perhaps you’ve been fortunate enough to visit one of their restaurants, or be familiar with their cuisine. There could be something aspirational in this book for you, or something comforting. There could be a family favorite or something memorable from your home country.

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GETHER It is our hope that you find a recipe that resonates.

Now is the time to come together, in a way that has never been necessary. Order from restaurants that are safely delivering in your area. Buy gift certificates for a future meal. Tell others on social media about outlets and venues that are still open. Use your network to help others, or share what you are making at home. Until the next time we can meet at our favorite restaurant and share a meal - stay safe!

THE WORLD’S FINEST CHEFS

-Courtney Brandt

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“When you acknowledge, as you must, that there is no such thing as perfect food, only the idea of it, then the real purpose of striving toward perfection becomes clear: to make people happy, that is what cooking is all about.”

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-Thomas Keller

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he sharing of food has always been a significant part of the human story, as cuisine is one of the main components of any culture. Breaking bread brings people together from all walks of life, as the dining table seems to have a heartbeat of its own. Even when world leaders get together, it is commonly over a meal. It erases all borders, as coming together and sharing a meal is the most communal and bonding activity in almost every part of the world. Unfortunately, people don’t eat together as they used to. As our schedules get busier, the communal dinner table seems to have become a relic of simpler times. Creating meals and sharing food with others, whether that means catching up over a simple dinner or feasting at a major celebration, brings people together. Dining provides a comfortable space to talk about our days and quite effectively opens an avenue for communication. Whether it is discussing our fears and anxieties, or our joys and successes, sharing a meal is an instrumental way to maintain our relationships. Food has been a contributing factor of most cultures since the beginning of human civilization, and as the incredibly talented chefs featured in this book make clear, the developments made to this art are simply astonishing. Whether you are cooking up your great grandmother’s special Sunday gravy, or your own timetested and perfected banana bread, food is directly linked to our history, and possibly more importantly, our sense of community. Recipes are deeply personal and are best enjoyed when shared.

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GETHER When we open our table, we build relationships, love, and trust. It engages all of the senses, and when it is sincere, it nourishes the mind, body, and spirit.

THE WORLD’S FINEST CHEFS 15

Food has a great power to build a global village and create belonging with others—it brings friends, families, colleagues, and people of all backgrounds together. It transcends all boundaries and reminds us, even in diversity, how much we have in common. Food reminds us of places we have been and the people we have known. It always has a story and it is of paramount importance that you continue to share yours. -Doug Singer


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rzak is one of the most prestigious references in the history of Spanish cuisine. Elena Arzak brings her own sense of responsibility and her enormous curiosity. Mother of two who was named best Female Chef in the World in 2012 discovered her culinary vocation at an early age and insisting that she wanted to follow in the footsteps of her parents. Elena Arzak is a product of both inherited and nurtured talent. Alongside her father, Juan Mari Arzak, Elena shares the head chef responsibilities of three Michelin starred restaurant Arzak, a must for any dedicated food pilgrim and lover of Basque culture. Elena left home to study in kitchens all over Europe, both in restaurant kitchens and a variety of vocational and catering schools. From 1988 to 1991, she went on to study at the Schweizerische Hotelfachschule Luzern in Switzerland while also working at the International Hotel in Zurich and the Grand National Hotel also in Lucerne. Elena then went on to work in some of the most prestigious kitchens - Le Gavroche in London; Troisgros in Roanne, France; and Carré des Feuillants and Vivarois in Paris. Short but influential stops were also made at elBulli in 1997 and Pierre Gagnaire in 1998.

ELENA ARZAK RESTAURANT ARZAK SAN SÉBASTIEN, SPAIN

An accomplished chef with her own personality who is positive and loves to interact with different kinds of people, a very practical person who finds life to be interesting, not much of a person to get upset about things which are not significant and Elena views food in the same way. “My father and I work as a duo and have done for many years now. Life in the kitchen is very intense. I am very sentimental and not a day passes where I’m not moved by something.” Food is in her DNA… it’s the first thing she wanted to try, “If it wasn’t the right thing or it didn’t work out then fine but you need to try the first thing you want to do. I was 90% sure but if I were not a chef, it would be something related to gastronomy because I like gastronomy.” In her family they have a great sensibility when it comes to food. Elena’s aunt and her grandmother lived with them and every Saturday morning they would cook rice pudding with cinnamon. When she would wake up and go to the kitchen, Elena was greeted by the aroma. “I was very small, maybe four or five and I still remember when I entered the restaurant, there were always crabs boiling so I can recognize that smell of fresh crabs.” At Arzak, she creates an author’s cuisine: a Basque cuisine with research, innovation and a desire to be avant-garde, without turning our backs on local traditions. ”The use of Basque products as the recipes tie in with the region’s code of flavours. She brings all her creative potential to the fore is in the laboratory, a small kitchen and workplace housing her own library of flavours where she plans new recipes, experiments with surprising combinations and works on textures.”

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aco has made cooking a way of life, born in Huelva. When he was just six months old his family moved to Llançà, on the Girona Costa Brava coast. His first contact with restaurants was at El Peña, the tapas bar owned by his family in Llançà, where he helped out by serving during weekends and holidays. After this experience, he continued by taking other temporary summer jobs in traditional Catalan restaurants. His introduction to the professional kitchen was first in France where Paco Pérez trained alongside Michel Guèrard, one of the forefathers of “nouvelle cuisine”. Finally, Paco joined El Bulli in 1993, for five years. It is there that he acquired much of his philosophy of cuttingedge techno-emotional cuisine.

In 1997, Paco married Montse Serra and after three years of producing modern Catalan cuisine in Miramar during the summer seasons, he decided to take a step forward and open year round. Together, they faced the evolution of Miramar, converting the past traditional restaurant into the avant-garde cuisine restaurant that it is today, a place of pilgrimage for contemporary gourmets. His culinary philosophy is focused on a cuisine with roots and proximity in which creativity and the search for unknown horizons flood every dish. The influence of these surroundings is not just felt in the restaurant. It is also present in the kitchen, where Paco turns the sea and nature into mouthfuls of pure art. He uses extremely high quality products that come from an ideal environment, which Paco Pérez knows and looks after to perfection.

PACO PÉREZ MIRAMAR LLANÇÀ, SPAIN

Paco found its ultimate explanation in the world of emotions, in their inner cosmos. From this private brainstorming, in constant dialogue with the Mediterranean Sea that lies next to Miramar and with the “no memory” dreamscapes, up to 130 dishes of pure creation are conceived each year. But Paco is also a great academic chef, a great teacher for his young and enthusiastic international team. He cares about everything, from the most innovative, surprising and provocative dishes on the tasting menu to the most affordable dishes on the a la carte menu, where he offers the same exacting perfection as he does in the tasting menu.

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einz Beck is known as one of the most notable “Masters” of gastronomy in the world. With his unique interpretations of the modern kitchen, Heinz Beck thoughtfully curates ingredients and implements innovative techniques to convey simple components into highly evocative dishes. Beyond an excellent career as a highly decorated chef, Heinz Beck has been heralded as a leader in Italian and Mediterranean culinary tradition. Born in Friedrichshafen, Beck is a careful observer of food effects on the body. His profound understanding of culinary culture is revealed in several of his noteworthy articles, which address more than culinary practices. “As I often say, at first I desired to be a painter, due to the love I have for art, but my family opposed, so I decided to dedicate myself to a profession that could allow me to express my creativity.” For more than 20 years, he has had important collaborations with national and international scientists, as well as Italian universities, concerning the good balance between food and health. Today, Beck consults on several businesses and offers the same attention to detail that his guests receive at his Three Michelin star restaurant La Pergola in Rome, as well as his restaurants worldwide. This is a testament to the genius of Heinz Beck. A genius of our time, in which different attitudes evolve into different arts. Beck, a multi-starred and widely awarded chef with prizes including the Five and Six Star Diamond Award by the American Academy of Hospitality Sciences, the Gold Medal at the Foyer of Artists, an international prize awarded for the first and only time in 40 years to a chef, and the Knight of the Order of Merit from the Federal Republic of Germany. Founder of the Order of the Knights of Italian Cuisine, in 2010, Heinz Beck along with other top Italian chefs joined forces to communicate with national and international institutions and the media as a united front. In 2014, Beck was named Chef of the Year at the 10th Identità Golose International Congress, and the recipient of the Lion of Venice Career Award, conferred by AEPE during the 6th Congress Gusto in Scena. In 2016, he was nominated for Ambassador of Extraordinary Italian Taste by MIPAAF, the Italian Ministry of Agricultural, Food and Forestry Policies, for the promotion Italian Cuisine worldwide and in the same year, he was awarded the “Italian Excellence”, the symbol of the first edition of the Italian Excellences Festival. In March 2018, Heinz Beck received a Degree in Natural Bio Energies, which was awarded to him by the Popular University of Arezzo. In November 2019, he received the “Best German Chef Abroad” award from Gault & Millau guide. In December 2019, he received the “ANGI 2019 Innovation Experience Award”. Heinz Beck has been collaborating with the Catholic University Hospital Agostino Gemelli as part of its 50th-anniversary celebrations, creating healthy and yet enjoyable, menus for their in-house patients. “My cuisine has passed through several styles: from traditional to creative with imaginative side dishes, to technically cutting-edge, to attentive to health issues. Healthy menus are my top priority and I’m a chef who pays attention to the wellbeing of my guests. I don’t invent diets.”

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HEINZ BECK LA PERGOLA ROME, ITALY


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orn in Castel di Sangro, a small town in the Central Italian region of Abruzzo. Niko Romito’s father had a historical pastry shop, which was open from 1970 to 2000, until it was converted into a restaurant. For Niko it has always been a place of the soul: this is where he spent many years of his childhood, when he returned from Rome to Abruzzo for the holidays. This is where his passion for leavened products and sourdough comes from. He used to eat the “bomba”, a krapfen like pastry, which was the only thing he was happy to eat every morning - now the same is converted into a street food format. When his father suddenly passed away, his trattoria Reale was just opened, and he decided to keep it open only during the summer and then sell it in order to go back to Rome and continue his life. At that time he was studying economics at the university and he wanted to become a broker. He had only five exams to take to complete his degree and no culinary experience at all. His initial efforts at Reale was driven largely by improvisation and survival instinct, accompanied by a relentless research and a strong entrepreneurial attitude.

NIKO ROMITO REALE CASTEL DI SANGRO, ITALY

It was the ultimate reason that made him decide to attempt a career as a chef, he realized that he had to make a choice, which life was putting him in front of a challenge which he decided to face and together with his sister Cristiana, he took over the family restaurant. It was sort of driven by an inner instinct. He was not sure at all that he had taken the right decision back then, nevertheless after the summer he didn’t close the restaurant and decided to follow this path going through a completely new experience, without any safety net. This aspiring broker, self-taught cook with deep ties to his territory, in just seven years he received three Michelin stars, followed by several more distinctions, such as the “Performance of the Year” award from the Espresso Guide, the 84th place on The World’s 50 Best Restaurants in 2016, European Chef of the Year by Madrid Fusion and the “Dish of the Year” award, with the highest score of “5 Hats”, from the Espresso Guide in 2017.

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na Roš is extremely cosmopolitan. Understandable, considering that the top Slovenian chef was allowed to travel the world from an early age and, thanks to her degree in diplomatic studies, has even learned five languages. But rather than becoming a diplomat, Ana opted for a career in the kitchen. At her Hiša Franko restaurant in an Alpine valley close to the Italian border, she combines all her impressions into a cuisine that is local and traditional, yet international and avant-garde at the same time. Upon finishing linguistic high school, she decided to study diplomacy and thus moved to Italy where she graduated in international and diplomatic science. A year later she met her future husband, the owner of Hiša Franko where she started to help out in the kitchen. When she graduated, she decided not to proceed with her diplomatic career and instead to fully focus on the kitchen in Hiša Franko shocking everyone. She travelled around the world visiting the best kitchens and learning about local cuisines before settling down to have children. Ana wanted to express the seasons, the locality, my character, travels and femininity through her food so she worked hard exploring techniques and flavours through experimentation and reading books until she found her method. She sometimes say that she wished her hands could reflect what’s in her head. At the beginning she was completely self-trained, using her talent of combining tastes and learning from my mother in law’s knowledge of bread, meat and pastas. After a few years she had a chance to work with and become good friends with some of the world’s most famous chefs who gave her great advice and tips to help her cuisine grow. Her decision to work mainly with local ingredients (lamb from neighbouring mountains, goat kids, game, local pasture beef, even bear, wild herbs and flowers, fantastic milk products, trout, honey and wild fruits) was based on the natural ethos of Hiša Franko. But also because she believed that a guest who travels 500 or even 1000 kilometres to eat her food should experience her food as an ambassador for the local area, people and culture. For Ana, using local ingredients also means supporting local producers. Ana’s approach to the kitchen today is technical, almost scientific, but it still allows the ingredients to develop or preserve the original (strong) taste. ‘Raw’ is my favourite. The element of surprise is essential for me – alternating textures (cold/warm, soft/hard) or some taste contrast (bitter/sour; sweet/salty). She has an herb and vegetable garden at the back of the house from which she harvest all important herbs and spices.

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ANA ROŠ HIŠA FRANKO KOBARID, SLOVENIA


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orn in Austria, Frank has enjoyed cooking since his early childhood. He already knew cooking was his vocation at 13 – he was the only boy among 15 girls in his school’s home economics class. Later, he trained at the fourstar Wende hotel in Neusiedl am See before going on to work at the Steirereck in Vienna, arguably the best restaurant in Austria. A few years later, he had already become sous-chef at the renowned Interalpen Hotel Tyrol. Aged 29, he moved to Berlin with his companion Jeannine Kessler to become head chef at the legendary HORVÁTH restaurant in 2010. He had earned his first Michelin star within a year. He associates cooking with his childhood memories and offers his unique reinterpretation of regional cuisine where he provides a stage for Austrian cuisine that the culinary world will take heed of. Frank considers all products equal. Vegetables, meat and fish are all actors on an equal footing that can take on various roles depending on whether they are used to spice up a dish, lend consistency or play the lead. He describes his approach to cooking as “emancipatory”. He breaks traditional conventions associated with certain products and “frees” them. With meat, fish and vegetables all equal the distinction between simple and luxury products is blurred. Rather they turn into players on the plate that can slip into very different roles - from spice, providers of consistency or flavouring all the way to the star performer, anything is possible. A demanding cuisine that breaks down rigid dividing lines and goes new ways.

SEBASTIAN FRANK HORVÁTH BERLIN, GERMANY

The winner of the 2011 “Cook of the Year” competition and his son Oliver is born. The second star came in 2015, just a year after he and Kessler had taken over the restaurant as owners. In 2017 the jury of the Berlin Master Chefs awarded the title, Berlin Master Chef 2017” to him. At the beginning of 2018 he received the title Best Chef of Europe 2018 at the international food fair ‘Madrid fusion’. The restaurant also has 18 Gault Millau points, 4.5 Feinschmecker F´s out of 5 and the culinary travel guide Gusto gives its highest ranking. Sebastian Frank works on behalf of the agency, “Chefservices”, an international agency for top chefs. Today he himself sits on the jury as Vice-President of this competition in a voluntary capacity and several times a year he travels through Europe in order to crown the best young chefs and to give them the benefit of his advice and assistance. “The Great Restaurant & Hotel Guide 2020” of HDT media gives Sebastian Frank the award of “Rising Chef of the Year”.

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ndoni was born to cook. His was a difficult academic childhood, he had failed almost every subject in school. Andoni’s mother, frustrated and at her wits’ end, decided to enrol him in the local culinary school. Her personal life experience had known long periods of starvation after the Spanish civil war, and she believed that at least if Andoni could learn to cook, he wouldn’t starve. It was a decision that changed Andoni’s life and the course of gastronomy forever. Andoni learned how to express himself through his cooking, pouring his heart into his dishes. He had finally found an outlet for his curiosity and creativity and his love of country. Andoni completed his academic studies at the School of Hotel and Restaurant Management in Donostia-San Sebastian. He subsequently worked with some of Spain’s most renowned chefs such as Ramón Roteta, Hilario Arbelaitz, Jean Louis Neichel, Juan Mari Arzak, Fermín Arrambide and Pedro Subijana, which cultivated a great respect for his country’s culinary traditions. In 1993, Andoni spent two years at Ferran Adria’s El Bulli and a world of gastronomic possibility was revealed. He returned to his beloved Basque country in 1995 to work with Martin Berasategui but in 1998 he left his head chef position to open his own establishment, Mugaritz. Mugaritz offered the chef an outlet for his relentless creativity, a place to develop his own innovative ideas, and a space that allowed him to embrace the traditions that defined his personal culinary style. The perfect combination of ground-breaking techniques and traditional Basque country ingredients, Mugaritz has won several awards and has become not only one of Spain’s most influential restaurants, but a key component of the Basque cult. Andoni is one of the most innovative chefs of our time, he engages all of the senses in the dining experience at Mugaritz, utilising knowledge and talent outside of the culinary universe to achieve this. Working closely with scientists, anthropologists, poets, musicians, and anyone that can bring inspiration to his restless appetite for innovation, Andoni’s scope of how to experience food knows no bounds.

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ANDONI LUIS ADURIZ MUGARITZ GIPUZKOA, SPAIN


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or over 20 years, Thomas Bühner has been at the top of the league of German chefs. Born 1962 in Riesenbeck as the son of a housewife and a commercial clerk, he was first exposed to catering at his grandparents’establishment. Here, guests were always greeted with a slice of fresh pain gris with butter and Westphalian ham, and the clattering in the kitchen and the hubbub from the pub acted as a backdrop at bedtime, late in the evening. But all the same, young Thomas Bühner had no clear idea for a long time which career to choose once he left school. Whilst his twin brother turned to carpentry, an aptitude test at the job centre came up with concrete ideas: he was facing a choice of becoming a chef, a baker or a farmer. Bühner decided to become a chef, and even back then, he announced to his parents: “If I’m going to be a chef, then I’m going to have to be a good one.” This is the standard that Michelin-starred chef Thomas Bühner has held himself to since leaving school. Fortunately, he followed his careers advisor’s suggestion that he become a chef, a baker or a farmer, and Bühner has now been regarded amongst the highest echelon of German chefs for more than 20 years, one of just ten master craftsmen to have been awarded three Michelin stars. Thomas has kept his word to this day. Bühner trained at Schweizer Haus in Paderborn. This was followed by stints with Günter Scherrer at the Hilton in Düsseldorf, Landhaus Scherrer in Hamburg, Restaurant Grand Cru in Lippstadt and Restaurant Jörg Müller in Westerland on Sylt. In 1989, Bühner became Harald Wohlfahrt‘s chef de partie at the Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn. This was one of the most important stages of his career, after all, he was fascinated by Wohlfahrt’s discipline and consistency – indispensable assets in his vocation – and, above all, the down-to-earthiness and benevolence the patron showed his employees day in, day out.

THOMAS BÜHNER THOMAS BÜHNER CONSULTANCY OSNABRÜCK, GERMANY

The ideal prerequisites for taking on the position of head chef at the restaurant La Table in Dortmund in 1991. Five years later, he was awarded his first Michelin star, followed by a second one in 1998. Gault Millau voted Bühner “Newcomer of the Year” in 2001 and “Chef of the Year” five years later. From April 2006 since July 2018, Thomas Bühner has been running restaurant la vie in Osnabrück. In 2009, Thomas Bühner became a “Grand Chef” with Relais & Chateaux. In addition, la vie has been a member of “Les Grandes Tables du Monde” since early 2010. The restaurant has been awarded 19 Gault Millau points and three Michelin stars, as well as top grades in all other German restaurant guides. It was closed in July 2018. Thomas Bühner’s inspiration to his culinary creations is a procession of three dimensions Natural Flavour, Preparation and Extensive Range. Since its closure, Thomas Bühner has been active as a guest chef, keynote speaker and consultant for gastronomic concepts and food producers worldwide.

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orn in the Chita peninsula in Aichi prefecture, south of Tokyo, Yoshihiro Narisawa’s grandfather ran a Japanese sweet shop and father ran a western sweet shop. Naturally, the kitchen was his playground. He grew up with a family who cooks with the freshest milk and eggs directly delivered from farms every morning. It was so natural for him to buy ingredients from producers and he learnt the importance of this when he was a child. Yoshihiro left Japan to train in Europe at the age of 19. Eight years later, he returned to Japan to open his first restaurant - La Napoule in Odawara City. The restaurant relocated to Tokyo and in 2011 it became Narisawa. Bringing the best from his training in France, Yoshihiro combined classical French cooking techniques with the finest Japanese ingredients. Sustainability and gastronomy are Yoshihiro’s themes and he is a pioneer of cuisine connected to the preservation of the natural environment. Having travelled to his producer’s fields, having stepped into the earth, and having built a relationship with the natural world, he has created dishes such as Soil Soup, Water Salad and Essence of the Forest. Through these signature Narisawa dishes, the consumer gains a new relationship with the natural world, and with environmental concerns. Taking his innovative Satoyama cuisine, a step further is the theme ‘Evolve with the Forest’, a calling towards the forests that make up the Japanese land. This theme captured the attention of chefs around the world, resulting in Yoshihiro being named Most Influential Chef at Madrid Fusion 2010. Yoshihiro has received about every honour imaginable and Narisawa in Tokyo currently sits at 18 on The World’s 50 Best Restaurants. He brings nature to a plate, the natural landscape of the season where you carefully consider the main ingredient as the core of the dish, a composition of smell and textures which is full of flavours and perfectly balanced.

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YOSHIHIRO NARISAWA NARISAWA TOKYO, JAPAN


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orn in Mumbai, Vineet Bhatia grew up in Juhu near the airport, the sound of planes overhead delivered dreams of flying jets for a living. Every morning, he would wake at 6:30 to the engines of the Gulf Air flight to Bahrain. Both he and his would cycle down to school through the Juhu airport, just to see the helicopters and airplanes. Fortunately for many, his dreams were dashed when he failed to pass a physical examination to join the Indian Air Force at the age of 17. It was at this time that he decided to go in an entirely different direction. After completing catering college, Vineet was selected to attend the Oberoi School. They hand-picked individuals from all over India and educate them for an additional two years. Vineet went through the training, five days a week: three days in college and two days on the job. He used to finish school and would then go into the kitchen on his own. His batch mates used to say, ‘this guy is crazy, he is trying to save money on food,’ but it was not about saving money, it was about learning.” After a stint at the Oberoi, Mumbai, in 1993 Vineet moved to London where he found Indian cuisine to be in a “disappointing state.” Intent on introducing authentic Indian food to London’s city dwellers, he worked at Star of India for five years and did his best to influence the menu. Eventually, he and a partner opened Zaika, in London’s Chelsea neighbourhood and the rest, as they say, is history. Zaika went on to win a Michelin star in 2001, making Vineet the first Indian chef to receive this honour. In 2004, Vineet went out on his own and opened Rasoi, which was the recipient of numerous international accolades and ultimately launched his career as a global restaurateur. Today, he operates restaurants around the world, with locations in Qatar, Switzerland, Bahrain, Mumbai, Mauritius, Dubai, and Saudi Arabia and is the recipient of three Michelin stars. He notably created ‘The Last Supper,’ a fine-dining pop-up at the Mount Everest Base Camp.

VINEET BHATIA INDEGO BY VINEET DUBAI, U.A.E

Vineet worked with Qatar Airways and British Airways on their in-flight meals for first and business-class travellers. He has been the only person of Indian origin featured on the Netflix series Chef’s Table, the recent opening of KAMA by Vineet, marked the first Indian restaurant to ever grace the world-famous Harrod’s department store and MasterChef India season 6 judge. Named the 1,000 most influential Londoners was just one of many accolades that Vineet Bhatia has enjoyed over the years. He has built an extraordinary reputation as one of the most exciting, creative, and accomplished Indian chefs around the world. His culinary masterpieces are both the traditional and modern, as he continues to deliver a one-of-a-kind style.

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on of a Greek father and an Austrian mother, Konstantin Filippou was born in Graz, Austria. The multicultural marriage of his parents and the Mediterranean influence of his childhood were the early driving forces for his future professional career. Konstantin’s cuisine is pure, straightforward, based on Austrian products and characterised by an unbridled passion for ingredients. Always aiming for the essence of taste, his cooking style reflects his multicultural background and allows for a unique approach to food from both of his worlds that can be seen in his dishes. He is influenced and inspired by his travels, meeting people, new products, strolling through forests – everything. For Konstantin, it’s important to represent his signature style. His cooking is never only about the food. It’s about colours, design of the dishes and plates. He endeavours to surprise his guests, even when they have the feeling that they’ve already seen everything. In 2013, Konstantin Filippou opened his first restaurant, Konstantin Filippou and, seven months later, he was awarded with three bonnets (Gault Millau) followed by a Michelin star in March 2014. In June 2015, Konstantin’s story continued with the opening of O boufés, and was awarded “Gault Millau Chef of the Year 2016”. Only four months after the opening O boufés, he received two bonnets (Gault Millau) and a Bib Gourmand in the March 2016 Michelin Guide. It has two Michelin stars in the 2019 Michelin Guide. “Cooking and eating is my passion. I have been to too many restaurants where food is worshipped and diners whisper. To me it is more important to cook exciting and inspirational delicious food using the ingredients I love with integrity and perfection. I am Greek Austrian and this reflects in my dishes and the spirit of the dining room.”

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KONSTANTIN FILIPPOU RESTAURANT KONSTANTIN FILIPPOU VIENNA, AUSTRIA


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his unconventional culinary artist was born near Modena, land of great culinary tradition. Valentino Cassanelli’ passion for food starts as a child as cooking tradition is really strong and permanent. Watching his grandma making fresh pasta all day, he remembers stealing tortellini from the table and would run eating it raw, he still recalls the flavours which he can still taste it. He grew up curious and wanted to know what is behind things, to fall in love with music, art, so he decided to go to catering school because he was sure the kitchen would be part of his future. Finishing catering school, he spent two years in a traditional Italian restaurant where he learned the bases to use product and to feel the territory. At 19, his passion and hunger for knowledge took him to London to work at Mosaico where he found a big and angry brigade and learned to stay in a big kitchen. He then moved to Locanda Locatelli, it was a great opportunity to study. After having dinner in Nobu London, he still remembers most of the plates, the following day he applied and spent an intense year learning fusion cuisine, “Chef Hideki Meda was telling me all the time to go inside your tradition, your roots and when you know how to manage it you can evolve and mix it to do new plates.”

VALENTINO CASSANELLI LUX LUCIS TUSCANY, ITALY

He returned to Italy and joined Cracco in Milan, the next 3 years was a fantastic journey, learning how to collaborate, be creativity, the rigor and hierarchic mood. Cracco and Matteo Baronetto taught him how to manage a kitchen and to think ahead, be aware of everything with a true open mind. He then moved to Venice with Matteo Tagliapietra, the chef of Local and Rocco Grisoni where he started to work together in the kitchen and together they managed it. In 2012, Principe forte dei Marmi became his home and in May of the same year he opened the Lux Lucis Restaurant. His style is a free expression of Italian cuisine. Behind all his plates is his heart and soul, there is always a story, a message to tell. His cuisine highlights the purity of flavours, “I smell something, eat, touch, see or taste something, and I try to keep this information and my brain start working. It’s the instinct and expression of ideas coming out in an unconscious harmony.”

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orn and raised in Skåne, in the countryside among farmers and open landscapes, Mikael wasn’t interested in cooking when he was young, and was not sure about going to culinary school. Since he liked to eat and always had good food at home he didn’t participate very much in the cooking at home. It was at 16 when he had a test week in a kitchen. As an avid sports fan, the team spirit in the kitchen spoke to him. His career as a chef started at school in Kristianstad, where he fell in love with cooking. Earning experience in high-end establishments, busy brasseries and seafood restaurants, Mikael started his culinary journey in Le Canard in Oslo. He then honed his culinary skills in the three Michelin star kitchens of chefs Martin Berasategui and Quique Dacosta. It was during this time in Spain that he gained the required technical knowledge of cooking. Back in Oslo, Mikael participated in the launch of Grims Grenka restaurants Madu and Tjuvholmen Sjømagasin as the assistant chef for the seafood restaurant where he worked with big grills and live seafood. Mikael also did stints in Asian restaurants making dim sum. This was to get a broad experience, see as much as possible and do new things. In 2013, he opened his first restaurant. Kontrast is a dream he’d had for 15 years, ever since he decided to become a chef. Kontrast is a modern Scandinavian restaurant with a focus on using ingredients that are both local and at the peak of their season. The main goals are to offer world class, organic and ethically sourced ingredients from Norway and to showcase the farmers who produce them. Mikael’s philosophy is to cook with the season, only to use products that grows in its season and in this region. We do use spices, dry stuff and influences from around the world but the main ingredients are always something from Norway. Either it is in season or it something he has preserved for the winter. He is always searching for the right feeling in a dish. It has to be tasty, interesting for him and for the guest. And most of the time he is searching to create a contrast in the food, that is also why he did choose the name of the restaurant.

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MIKAEL SVENSSON KONTRAST OSLO, NORWAY


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orn in Manchester, Adam started his culinary career at age 16, following training at Paul Heathcote’s School of Excellence. His hospitality career began at Bridgewater Hall in Manchester as a commis, progressing to chef de partie, followed by Le Mont, also in Manchester, where he was chef de partie. In 2006, Adam moved to Warwickshire as demi chef de partie at Michelin-starred Mallory Court Hotel, where he advanced to unior sous chef. He then took a position as chef tournant, and was later promoted to the position of senior sous chef, at Michelinstarred Simon Radley at The Chester Grosvenor in Chester in 2009, where he remained for two years. Adam then moved to Brockencote Hall in Worcestershire in 2011 as senior sous chef. Upon his return to Manchester in 2013, Adam joined Simon Rogan to launch The French at The Midland Hotel in his first role as Head Chef. Within the year, he was awarded The Caterer’s Acorn Award, which recognises the brightest young talent in the hospitality industry, and in 2014, he won Manchester Food Festival’s ‘Chef of the Year’. Adam took over the reins of The French in November 2016, following Simon Rogan’s departure from The Midland Hotel. His menus showcase his own personal style of modern British cooking, and The French underwent a refurbishment in 2017, including the addition of a chef’s counter allowing interaction between the chefs and guests. The French has a score of 8/10 and is ranked #11 in the Waitrose Good Food Guide 2020 ‘UK’s Top 50 restaurants’. The French was also awarded four rosettes in the AA Restaurant Guide 2020.

ADAM REID THE FRENCH MANCHESTER, U.K.

Adam appeared in BBC2’s Great British Menu 2016 series and won a coveted place at a banquet at Westminster Palace to celebrate Great Britons of HM The Queen’s reign with his spectacular dessert – The Golden Empire. He returned to take part in the 14th series of Great British Menu in April 2019, succeeding in the regional heats to reach the final of the competition. His winning dish, Comfort Food Sounds Good, (a stew of chicken, pearl barley, sweetcorn, turnips and leeks), provided the main course at the banquet held at the legendary Abbey Road Studios in London celebrating 50 years of British pop music.

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ith over 20 years of experience and over 10 years in Hong Kong, Olivier Elzer’s passion for food came from my family; it was always something that was meant to be. His family were all in the restaurant and food industry, so it is no surprise when he told them that he would like to train as a chef. His mother ran a restaurant and his grandfather had three restaurants in Geneva, the concepts of their restaurants were simple but authentic. His mum once told him that going to a restaurant should feel like a celebration, something exciting, so L’Envol means taking off in French, and it means that the guests coming into L’Envol will be on a culinary journey with him and his team. Olivier had the opportunity to work with some well-known chefs, including Pierre Gagnaire, Jean-Yves Leuranguer and his mentor Joël Robuchon. “He was like a father to me, a great man with a big heart and one of the most celebrated and respected chefs of his time earning the most Michelin stars ever. Training under Joël Robuchon was a great honour and he was a talented man, I learnt how to be better, the importance of food and dining journey – the uses of ingredients and how to represent the pinnacle of French dining. Robuchon was a pioneer in choosing bold flavours and choosing ingredients for their quality – a lot of chefs uses home-grown ingredients, but Robuchon led the way for others to explore other ingredients from the world, for example Japanese Wagyu beef. The menu at L’Envol chooses seasonal ingredients, using the best ingredients worldwide.” As culinary director for L’Envol and highly regarded as one of the leading French chefs in Hong Kong, Olivier’s focus is on classic French cuisine with a contemporary style. He tries to personalise the dishes based on his experience at the time of his life, he chooses local and seasonal ingredients. For example, beef tartare at L’Envol, Olivier serves it with abalone because people in Hong Kong local love seafood and he found that the textures goes well with the beef tartare, and added some caviar as well for a different texture as garnish. Olivier is passionate about refining and redefining the tastes, textures and techniques of French cuisine. Previously chef patron, he opened his first restaurant venture, Seasons by Olivier E in Hong Kong’s Causeway Bay in 2014, creating classic French dishes with Asian influences, which went on to earn one Michelin star a year later. In his earlier years, he worked at the Abbaye de la Bussière in Burgundy, France and was named one of the country’s 22 best young chefs by the Gault Millau French restaurant guide. In Hong Kong, Olivier has worked for high-profiled restaurants including Pierre’s restaurant in Mandarin Oriental, Hong Kong and French fine dining restaurant L’Atelier de Joël Robuchon at The Landmark, Central, where he led the teams to achieving two and three Michelin stars respectively. Within eight months of opening, L’Envol earned its first Michelin star.

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OLIVIER ELZER L’ENVOL HONG KONG, CHINA


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SMOKED CUTTLEFISH TARTAR WITH COFFEE POWDER AND LIME 120g Fresh cuttlefish 10ml Lime juice 5g Coffee powder to smoke the cuttlefish 5ml Italian espresso coffee 5ml Extra virgin olive oil Maldon salt Take a whole cuttlefish and clean it ensuring no organic matter remains. Divide the cuttlefish into two pieces, put it in a vacuum bag and blast freeze it at -50. Once frozen, thinly slice the cuttlefish lengthways and cut into cubes. Place the cubes in a bowl and dress them with the remaining ingredients. Once this is done, shape two quenelles with a large spoon and roast with a torch. Set aside. GAZPACHO 90g Red bell pepper coulis 50g Green tomatoes 50g Red tomatoes 50ml Vegetable stock 10ml White vinegar from Modena 5ml Italian extra virgin olive oil Salt and black paper Cut all of the vegetables into cubes, add the remaining ingredients and leave them over night to macerate in the fridge. Once the vegetables have released their juices, use a Thermomix to blend and strain in a fine chinois. Add a touch of xantana to thicken the gazpacho if needed. COUSCOUS SALAD 50g Couscous 100ml Vegetable stock or fish stock 5ml Italian extra virgin olive oil 10g Rosemary and thyme 10ml Mandarin orange juice Fresh mandarin zest Salt and black pepper Steam the couscous in the vegetable stock. Once the couscous has cooled down, add all the ingredients and combine.

IL PROFUMO DI CAFFE FRANCESCO GUARRACINO ROBERTO’S DUBAI & ABU DHABI

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GARNISH 25ml Fresh squid ink 20g Jumbo green asparagus (blanched) Sakura leaves PLATING With a small spoon place a bit of squid ink on the plate and hit it in order to create a splash effect on the plate. Place the cuttlefish quenelles on the plate. Using a ring, create a small tower with the dressed couscous salad. Slice the asparagus and randomly place the slices around the main ingredient. Finish the dish by adding the gazpacho all over the plate and garnish with the Sakura leaves.


GRATINÈ CAULIFLOWER NIKO ROMITO REALE CASTEL DI SANGRO, ITALY 2 Cauliflowers 500g Fresh rosemary 20g Extra virgin olive oil 20g White vinegar 20g White wine 3g Salt 2g Sugar Wash the cauliflower and throw away the external leaves. Split it in two parts and season separately with olive oil, vinegar, white wine, salt and sugar. Wrap it in aluminum foil and steam it at 110°C for 90 minutes, then cool down and age for 3 days in the fridge to intensify the taste. Whip/blend one half of the cooked cauliflower with water, filter and reduce it until you obtain a glaze. Then use the second half of the cooked cauliflower as a main part of the dish that thereafter glaze it. Take the second cauliflower, dice it and roast it in a pan with olive oil. Blend it to obtain a cream, season with salt and few drops of vinegar. Plunge the rosemary into cold water for two hours, then pass the leaves into a juice extractor and obtain a very strong taste extract. Put the first cauliflower in the oven at 170°C for 10 minutes, then glaze it. Plating In a plate put a few drops of rosemary extract, lay over the cauliflower cream and then the glazed cauliflower. Drizzle with extra virgin olive oil as the finishing touch.

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David Toutain wanted to highlight the contrast between earthy and iodised flavours. The coffee is balanced between the earthy perfume of the artichoke and the savoury taste of the caviar. The Chemex coffee used for this recipe emphasises the harmony of the earthy, citrus and floral notes.

CAVIAR AND ARTICHOKE DAVID TOUTAIN RESTAURANT DAVID TOUTAIN PARIS INGREDIENTS 80g Caviar 30 Borage flowers ARTICHOKE PURÉE 10 Pieces of artichokes 1ltr Milk 1ltr Cream 100g Whipped cream 1 Lemon (juiced) 1 Shot of espresso Prepare the artichokes and place them in water with a generous squeeze of lemon juice. Cook the artichokes in the milk on a medium heat till it is tender. Push through a strainer and mix with the cream, the milk and the espresso. Pass through a fine strainer and reserve in the fridge. Before serving, incorporate whipped cream.

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JERUSALEM ARTICHOKE AND SHRIMP JELLY 1.3kg Jerusalem artichoke 400g Grey shrimps 900ml Water 3g Salt 6 Sheets of gelatine 30 Coffee grains Clean the Jerusalem artichokes with a soft brush. Combine them with the shrimps, the coffee grains and the water. Clarify the consommé on the heater at 90°C. Filter through a cloth and reserve the consommé. Incorporate the six jelly sheets per litre of consommé. ARTICHOKE CHIPS 5 Artichokes (preferably from Macau) 500ml Peanut oil Prepare the artichokes. Create thin strips with a vegetable peeler. Blanch, dry them on a towel and fry them at 160°C. Reserve in a dry place. ROASTED HAZELNUTS 300g Hazelnuts from (preferably from Piedmont, Italy) Roast the hazelnuts in the oven for six minutes at 160°C PLATING Spoon the purée into 10 small bowls. Cover them with the jelly and add small dollops of caviar. Place the chips regularly between the caviar spots and delicately place the borage flowers on top.


WRONG TONNATO GIUSEPPE IANNOTTI KRÈSIOS TELESE TERME (BENEVENTO), ITALY 8 Eggs 40g Seed oil 40g Tuna oil 8 Lyophilized capers 20g Lemon juice 8g Wine vinegar 400g Salt 400g Sugar THE MAYONNAISE In a container break an egg and add salt, tuna oil, lemon and wine vinegar. With a mixer emulsifying it with the seed oil until you get the desired consistency. On a tile place some salt and sugar, remove the eggs and adjust your spacers spaced in the previously prepared pre-loaded tile. Cover the egg yolk with the other part of salt and sugar and leave the egg yolk in a water bath for 30 minutes. The water eliminate salts and sugar from the egg yolk. Put the egg yolk in a flat dish with the tuna mayonnaise and lyophilized capers as seen in the image.

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POTATO FOAM 300g Pressed potato 100g Butter 150g Water 150g Cream Boil the potato mild and keep the water back. Peel and boil again with all ingredients. Mix fine and filter all. Taste with some salt. Fill all up in the ISI-Syphon and keep it hot for the service. PUMPKIN ICE CREAM 15g Ginger 30g Diced onions 30g Butter 450g Pumpkin 500g Cream 70g White wine 160g Egg yolks 100g Trimolin 150g Crème fraîche Salt and curry powder

POTATO FOAM WITH PUMPKIN CURRY ICE CREAM THOMAS BÜHNER GERMANY

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Heat the onions, ginger and curry powder in the butter. Deglaze with white wine and add the pumpkin Then fill up with the cream and cook, mix and pass with all the ingredients. Beat egg yolks and Trimolin until boiling water. Add the pumpkin cream and crème fraîche and stir in. Cool on ice and freeze in an ice maker. Heat the potato foam in a water bath to 80°C. Put the hot potato foam in a small bowl and put a tablespoon of pumpkin curry ice cream on top. Serve quickly.


250g Flour 165g Fine table salt 160g Water 1pc Celeriac (fist-sized) 500g Chicken carcasses 300g Chicken skin 100g Carrot 150g Celeriac 100g Leek 30g Parsley stalks 1 Onion 1 Whole garlic 5pcs All spice 3pcs Whole star anise 10pcs Whole cloves 5pcs Juniper berries 2pcs Bay leaves Salt 1pc Celery tuber (fist-sized) Salt 20g Celery seeds 200ml Chicken soup 3 Egg yolks 30g Butter Salt CELERY IN SALT DOUGH Mix salt, water and flour and knead to a smooth dough. Shape the dough into a ball and leave it covered overnight. Wash the celeriac and beat in evenly with the salt dough. Preheat the oven to 220°C, bake the celery in the salt dough for 20 minutes, and reduce the temperature to 180°C and bake for another 40 minutes. Then let it cool down. Store in a place with a constant temperature, dry at approx. 15-20°C. For the first two months, the celery has to be turned through 180°C every other day so that the moist area on the salt dough faces upwards. In the next six months the celery is turned weekly and for the remaining four months the celery simply remains in the dough without being turned. CHICKEN SOUP Put the chicken drumsticks and skin with salt in cold water, bring to the boil and degrease. Peel, cut into small pieces and add the root vegetables. Halve the onion and garlic, roast black on the cut side and add to the soup. Add the remaining spices and ingredients and simmer gently for 1.5 hours. Then pass the soup and remove the chicken soup fat and keep it. CELERY SLICES Cut the washed celeriac into 1mm thick slices, steam for 2 minutes and let cool. ROASTED CELERY SEEDS Roast the celery seeds in a pan until they get dark. ALLOYED CHICKEN SOUP Heat the chicken soup to 80°C with salted butter and alloy with egg yolk. Salt. COMPLETION Salt the steamed celery slices and place them side by side on the plate. Pour on the foamed chicken stock, season with roasted celery seeds and drizzle over the chicken soup fat.

CELERY “RIPE” AND “YOUNG” SEBASTIAN FRANK HORVÁTH BERLIN, GERMANY 42


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RISOTTO PIZZA MARGHERITA ALFREDO RUSSO DOLCE STIL NOVO TURIN, ITALY 320g Carnaroli rice. 150g Sunday sauce 150g Fresh mozzarella 80g Basil pesto 100g Powder mix - tomatoes (red) basil (green) and burnt onion (black) 4 Leaves fresh basil 20ml Dry chardonnay 1ltr Vegetable broth 40g Parmesan cheese 80g Butter 60Wml Extra virgin olive oil METHOD Toast the rice in a saucepan with just a small splash of oil for a few minutes. Deglaze the pan with the dry chardonnay and let it evaporate a bit. Add 1 ladle of broth, stir, and leave it alone until broth is nearly absorbed, 2 to 3 minutes. (Run a wooden spoon through it; rice should slowly fill in the channel.) Stir, add another ladle of broth, and stir again. Cook undisturbed until the broth is absorbed, 3 minutes. Repeat until about 1 ladle of broth remains, 15 to 18 minutes of total cook time for the rice. Stir in the end of the broth, the majority of the chopped basil, the butter, the olive oil and the majority of the Parmesan cheese. Spread the rice on a plate and sprinkle the remaining basil and parmesan.

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OLIVE DUST 500g Black olives (small) Take off the seed and slice the olive. Dehydrate the olives in the oven at 90°C for an hour and a half. Put the dehydrated olives into a food processor until the olives turns to a powder consistency. MANDIOQUINHA (TYPE OF BRAZILIAN POTATO) CHIPS 300g Peeled and sliced mandioquinha (very thin) 300ml Sunflower oil Heat the oil and fry the mandioquinha until it is slightly golden. Dry it using a paper towel and put it aside. EGG YOLK 10 Egg yolks In a pan, boil water with salt. When the water starts to boil, put the yolk and cook it for 35 seconds. MANDIOQUINHA, PIRARUCU AND PLATING 600g Dried pirarucu 600g Sea salt 500ml Olive oil 2 Fresh bay leaves 3 Sprigs of thyme 3 Sprigs of rosemary 2 Cloves of garlic - crushed 500g Onions – sliced thin 500g Mandioquinha – peeled and grated thick Salt to taste Black pepper to taste Salsa leaf Cilantro French parsley Chopped chives Dill

PIRARUCU À BRAZ CHEF BEL COELHO CLANDESTINO RESTAURANT, SÃO PAULO, BRAZIL

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Salt the pirarucu with the sea salt for 24 hours. Keep the piraruca in water for 4 hours to remove the salt and change the water at least three times. In a glass baking dish, place the pirarucu filets, olive oil, garlic, bay leaf, thyme and the rosemary. Put it in the oven for half an hour at 120°C. Take the pirarucu out of the oven and separate the olive oil from the fish. In a frying put 100 ml of the fish’s olive oil and braise the sliced onion. Add the grated mandioquinha and let it braise for 20 minutes, stir until it is soft. Add the pirarucu and add more of the fish’s olive oil, salt and black pepper. In a deep plate, put a spoon of the mandioquinha with the pirarucu. Make a hole in the center and put the boiled yolk. Around the yolk, put the fresh herbs, the mandioquinha chips and the olive dust on top.


POTATO CYLINDERS FILLED WITH GRANA PADANO CRÈME BRÛLÉ, CARAMELISED QUAIL EGGS, DEHYDRATED CHAMPIGNONS, PORCINI AND CHAMPIGNON FLOUR AND GLAZED BLACK TRUFFLE BRUNOISE. POTATO ROLLS AND THE PARMESAN CREME BRÛLÉ 6 Large potatoes 80g Grated Parmesan cheese 150ml Milk Corn flour 2 Eggs Nutmeg White vermouth Salt, sugar, pepper Wash and peel the potatoes. Form cylinders, cook the cylinders in the steam, putting the cylinders on a grate or in a steamer for 10 or 15 minutes - white potatoes cook longer than yellow potatoes. They must be al dente but soft. Place in the refrigerator. Grana Padano crème brûlé- Mix the parmesan with cold milk until it is well blended. Put the milk and parmesan mixture in a high and narrow bain-marie, add the 2 whole eggs, 1 tablespoon of cornstarch, ¼ glass of white vermouth, a grated nutmeg, salt, sugar and pepper to taste. Cook while blending with an immersion blender. It must have the right thickness. CARAMELIZED QUAIL EGGS 12 Quail eggs – if required take a few more Sugar DEHYDRATED CHAMPIGNONS 10-12 Champignons PORCINI AND CHAMPIGNON FLOUR 20 Champignons Sliced frozen porcini mushrooms (during this period) Clean the champignons, cut them into strips of 2-3 mm and put them in the oven at 55/60°C or in a dryer over night, about 12 hours, if necessary you may increase the hours of dehydration, but never increase the temperature. For the flour, do the same thing, only the frosted porcini mushrooms will need twice the hours of dehydration. For the flour, make sure that the mushrooms are very dry, and then blend them with a fine blade blender, such as a coffee or herb grinder. Place the flour in an airtight plastic container, while the dehydrated champignons will be placed in an airtight container with silicon, to ensure the do not humidify again.

TANO SIMONATO TANO PASSAMI L OLIO MILAN, ITALY GLAZED BLACK TRUFFLE BRUNOISE 2 Black truffles of approx 40g Salt, sugar Truffle essence Light extra virgin olive oil Clean the black truffle by washing it under running water with a brush. Boil the whole truffle for about 7-8 minutes in boiling water. Diced brunoise. Make a sugar syrup with the following ingedients: 200g. sugar and 150ml of water, and cook desired density achieved, about 5-6 minutes over moderate heat. Allow the syrup to cool and add the brunoise. Add 3-4 tablespoons of light extra virgin olive oil and 2 drops of truffle essence. FINISHING Crack the quail eggs and put the put the yolks in a tray and cover them with sugar, leaving them to marinade for the minutes necessary to cook the creme brûlé. Fill the potato ccylinders with the parmesan cream, put them in the oven for 2 minutes. Place a little sugar on the creme brûlé and swirl with a torch. Make a light indention with a spoon on the top of the creme brûlé and place the quail egg in it and swirl again with a torch. Gently melt some Grana Padano on a pan, prepared for plating the creme brûlé. PLATING Draw to taste with the melted Grana Padano cream on the serving dish. Place the potato cylinder with caramelized quail yolks on top. Decorate with the dehydrated champignon and the porcini-champignon fluor and as final touch add the glazed black truffel brunoise. Drizzle a bit to light olive oil on top.

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5 STUFFED RAVIOLI 150g Tomato sauce / 50g Cooked spinach / 50g Wild mushrooms / 5ml Herb oil / Micro herbs to finish PASTA DOUGH 520g Pasta flour / 100g Semolina flour / 100g Whole eggs / 130g Egg yolks / 50g Olive oil / 80g Water Place both the pasta and the semolina flour into a big mixing bowl. Make a well in the middle of the flour. Then add the whole eggs, egg yolks, olive oil and water. Mix all the ingredients together until it is combined as one and in a dough like ball. Place the dough on a work top with dusting of flour and knead it roughly for 10 minutes. Place the ball back into the bowl. Cover and leave it to rest for a couple of hours. Once rested, thinly roll the pasta out, then cut into 5cm rings. 5 HERB RAVIOLI STUFFING 300g Ricotta cheese / 100g Mascarpone cheese / 50g Parmesan cheese / 115g Spinach / 50g Olive oil / 100g Chopped onion / 2 Garlic cloves / 24g Chives / 12g Tarragon / 12g Parsley / 12g Dill / 12g Chervil Start with sweating the onions, garlic and spinach together in a pan with a touch of olive, once all cooked leave it to cool. Once cooled place all the ingredients together in a mixing bowl and season to taste. With the mixture, make 50g balls, then place in the fridge to set. RAVIOLI First wet your fingers slightly so that it helps the pasta stick together. Take 1 herb cheese ball and 2 pasta rings, place the ball in the middle of one pasta ring and the other on put the other pasta ring on top. Pinch the sides together to close the Ravioli. Then place the ravioli into boiling water. It will take 6 minutes to cook. HERB OIL 30g Chives / 30g Tarragon / 30g Parsley / 20g Chervil 20g Dill / 20g Chervil / 200g Olive oil First heat the olive oil to 50°C. As the oil is heating put all the herbs into a blender, then add all the heated oil and blend until smooth. Pass the the oil mixture through a sieve and leave to hang over a bowl to collect the herb oil. TOMATO SAUCE 2 cans Peeled tomatoes / 20g Thyme / 50g Onions / 5 Garlic cloves / 5 Basil leaves / 20g Sugar / 20g Sherry vinegar / 20g Olive oil while blending / Salt and pepper to taste Place the tomatoes in a heated oven 180°C and leave it to roast for 20 minutes. While the tomatoes are roasting, sweat the onions and garlic down in a pan. When the tomatoes have finished roasting add them to the pan of onions and add the rest of the ingredients. Cook the mixture out for another 20 minutes. Once done, put the sauce into a blender and add the olive oil to help smooth out the sauce and pass through a sieve.

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RAVIOLI OF FIVE HERBS WILD MUSHROOMS, ROASTED TOMATO COULIS AND HERB OIL CRAIG BEST HELL’S KITCHEN DUBAI


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aris-based David Toutain is considered, among colleagues and food writers, one of his generation’s most talented and popular chefs, making appearances in kitchens all around the globe. After what was seen as his homecoming to Paris with the opening of his new restaurant in December 2013, Toutain has continued to practice meticulous and conceptual cooking of seasonal produce. At David Toutain you are offered an entirely novel experience, and he takes vegetables very seriously. Accuracy, rigor, perseverance and creativity were values David discovered at Manoir du Lys culinary school. After his graduation, David confirmed his motivation of cooking at Bernard Loiseau’s restaurant. At 20, David got a position with Alain Passard’s Arpège when Alain Passard was turning towards a vegetable-oriented cuisine. David enjoyed a real autonomy, freedom and spent three years specialising with vegetables and at the same time asserting his own personality. Improving his culinary skills, David went on to work at Ambroisie, Bernard Pacaud’s restaurant and later mastered his cooking techniques with Marc Veyrat. It was time for David to venture out, and experiment with new cuisines. His travels took him to Andoni Luis Aduriz’s Mugaritz in Spain; preparing him for his role as chef de cuisine at the iconic two Michelin-starred New York restaurant, Corton. With the birth of his son in 2010, David returned to France and with the idea of opening a gastronomic counter, he joined the Agapé Substance, the avant-garde 26-seat restaurant with a young and warm atmosphere with its fine cuisine. His unfailing enthusiasm and sensitivity to the freshest ingredients, quality produce and unexpected flavours earned him and Agapé Substance numerous awards including “62nd Top Restaurant in Europe” by Opinionated About Dining (OAD), as well as “Rising Chef of the Year” by Magazine Le Chef. In 2012 Chef David was named by the Gault Millau guide as “One of the Six Greats of Tomorrow”, cementing his place as a tastemaker and trendsetter of the culinary world.

DAVID TOUTAIN

David Toutain’s cuisine is inspired by nature, travel, and different cultures – always with the goal of letting products speak for themselves all year round. Interesting techniques play a part in his cooking, whilst still honouring the product.

RESTAURANT DAVID TOUTAIN PARIS, FRANCE

Today David shares his experiences and travels with his guests through his concept and menu at his restaurant in Paris, located at 29 Rue Surcouf. A year after its 2014 opening, Restaurant David Toutain was awarded its first Michelin star and the second in 2019.

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t was at the age of 13 that Turin native, Alfredo Russo discovered his culinary passion. “I was a very young boy, and there is a funny story behind this because nobody in my family was involved in a restaurant or a hotel. My father was in engineering, and my mother was a teacher. One day, I said, I want to become a chef, and they asked me, “Chef? Why?” Yes, being a chef was my choice because there were three options which I had—to be a chef, a tailor, or a carpenter. In the end, I chose to cook. My family were not happy about this decision, but my parents agreed and told me to go to the restaurant to clean and wash the pots and dishes just to demoralize me. However, I was determined to be a chef.” Not to be deterred, after cutting his teeth as a dishwasher and working his way from the ground up, it was at the ripe age of 19 that Alfredo wanted more responsibility and opportunity than he was being offered and made the bold decision to open his restaurant. At 20, his goal was realized, and after purchasing a space with a small kitchen, and virtually no money, he started to cook - and just like that, word spread - and every night, there was a line outside of people coming to eat. A short two years later, Michelin gave him his first star. After this incredible accomplishment, they moved into a significantly larger space, and the story continues to unfold from there. In 2004, Russo’s brand evolution continued, and he notably started to work as a consultant. Working with Starwood for approximately 10 years, Alfredo opened several Italian restaurants in Japan and Thailand, amongst other locations. In Dubai, he partnered with Sheraton and started Vivaldi by Alfredo Russo and then the Franklin by Alfredo Russo in London. With a global restaurant footprint in place, in 2008, the government of Italy allowed Alfredo Russo to work inside of the Royal Palace. The Palace of Venaria (Italian: Reggia di Venaria Reale) is a former royal residence and gardens located in Venaria Reale, near Turin. The Palace was designed and built starting in 1675 by Amedeo di Castellamonte, as a commission from Duke Charles Emmanuel II, who needed a base for his hunting expeditions in the hill country north of Turin. Reggia di Venaria Reale is one the largest palaces in the world and is one of the Residences of the Royal House of Savoy, included in the UNESCO Heritage List in 1997. Alfredo Russo’s career continues to be extraordinary. His cuisine is founded upon immutable respect for the Italian and Piedmontese regional traditions, coupled with a constant search for innovation. The outcome of his lifelong passion is a highly original and creative style. His dishes evoke a sort of collective memory, and his continuous and unwavering search for the purity of taste co-exists with a playful spirit that is articulated by a surprising mix of textures, shapes, and consistencies with each dish he creates. His signature is a gastronomic adventure consisting of seven or nine courses that change daily depending on the availability, freshness, and quality of produce - reinventing, amusing, and consistently surprising his diners. He is a self-made man, a global enterprise, and a true culinary artist at heart.

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ALFREDO RUSSO DOLCE STIL NOVO ALLA REGGIA TURIN, ITALY


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am Aisbett is part of a new generation of Australian chefs, transforming the notion of modern Australian food. His flavour-driven approach to international ingredients has a distinctly Asian touch. Born and raised in Australia, Sam was brought up around food because of his mum, an amazing cook who was always experimenting in the kitchen. Sam started off as an apprentice butcher in his parents’ butcher shop which served as a good foundation for him to enter the culinary world. His parents were aware of his love for cooking and were the ones to help him secure his first kitchen job. His first experience in a commercial kitchen was as a kitchen hand learning to clean, manage his time and how to take charge of a busy section. Sam then went on to work in the kitchens of Peter Gilmore’s Quay in Sydney as a head chef and as a sous chef under Tetsuya Wakuda at Tetsuya’s.

SAM AISBETT SINGAPORE

The menu at his restaurant Whitegrass in Singapore transcended geographical boundaries and was inspired by Sam’s extensive travels. As chef-owner of Whitegrass, Sam offered a comfortable and relaxed platform for diners to enjoy inspired food at the highest level. He likes to add a juxtaposition of textures, to create an amazing mouth feel. Another trademark of his culinary style is the way he incorporates an umami element into the dish, in order to round out the flavour profile and in return balance the dish. As a young chef, it was Sam’s dream to have a Michelin star, and he looked up to the chefs who ran Michelinstarred restaurants. He achieved his dream when Whitegrass was awarded a star.

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orn in Perugia and raised in the heart of Cortona, Silvia Baracchi proudly declares herself Etruscan. Hailing from a family of restaurateurs, she has inherited a passion for good food, sensitivity to tradition, and a passion for the art of hospitality. She started to cook when she was a child with her mother and grandma—both of whom had a great passion for Tuscan cuisine. “When you breathe the air, hear the sounds, and live the lifestyle of this world, it remains deep in your soul.” In 1989, Silvia opened Il Falconiere by transforming a 17th-century villa on the grounds of her husband’s Baracchi Winery in the quiet Tuscan countryside, into the most glamorous restaurant in the area. In 2002, her hard work paid off, and Il Falconiere received a Michelin star. However, these days Il Falconiere is much more than merely a highly acclaimed restaurant. Il Falconiere is a stunning luxury resort and spa, set on 150 acres of vineyards and olive groves. This idyllic property sweeps across the Tuscan hillside in the shadow of the stunning mountaintop village of Cortona. It is this pristine environment that continues to guide Silvia’s passion. Her cuisine is highly influenced by the Chiana Valley, providing a seemingly endless supply of inspiration. She likes to use exceptional ingredients to create small masterpieces of taste. In the end, she is committed to remaining faithful to Tuscany. Each season provides wonderfully perfect products for her kitchen. The changing of seasons pushes her into a sort of delirium— new ingredients all around—new scents, fresh and light recipes in the spring. Savoury ingredients in summer, wild game, truffles and mushrooms in autumn brings a perfect environment for the most authentic Tuscan cuisine and finally, recipes to warm your stomach and soul in winter. “We are lucky to operate in a valley where the prized Chianina breed of cattle was born. Thanks to our proximity to Lake Trasimeno, we can afford to support sustainable fishing. This not only allows us to have very fresh lake fish every day but safeguards marine species that, in some cases, are at risk of extinction. We are rather blessed. We can find all of the best products right in our community and let’s not forget the extra virgin olive oil and the wines produced by my husband Riccardo’s company that is right on the property! The right balance is our goal, and the best way to achieve it is to follow the seasons and be able to capture the most exceptional fragrant flavours and scents. Tuscan cuisine is itself very rich with definitive aromas, but it is essential to balance tradition with contemporary trends.” Silvia emphasizes the quality of ingredients she uses, with the firm belief that Cortona provides the best available in Tuscany. She communicates this passion through her cuisine, which she elevates with the use of spices and aromatic herbs from her garden. Her ongoing commitment to ever-evolving cuisine is the cornerstone of her success and one to be admired. For female chefs working in a male-dominated industry, the honour of having a Michelin star is even more elusive—and one that is genuinely deserved.

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SILVIA BARACCHI RELAIS IL FALCONIERE & SPA CORTONA, ITALY


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aetano Simonato started cooking at the age of 15, it all started when his father passed away and he had to feed his brothers. After a lot of salads and steaks, he started to love cooking. Self-taught and it’s his curiosity that has led him to be a chef today. The nice thing is that he believes that he will never stop learning or researching as it’s his true passion. Tano began working as a chef after working for many years as the bartender and owner of “Tanus Bar,” which he opened in Milan in 1982. During that time he cultivated a great passion for cooking which started while growing up with parents who were restaurateurs. It was in 1995 when he opened his restaurant, Tano Passami L’Olio in Milan, Lombardia Region. “Tano” is a diminutive of his given name Gaetano and “passami l’olio” means “pass me the olive oil.” A meal at his restaurant begins with a taste of different types of bread and extra virgin olive oil to determine which is best suited to your palate and the food that will be presented. Since 1995, top-quality Italian extra virgin olive oil has been at the core of his tasteful, light signature dishes. He firmly believes that olive oil is the best possible condiment and is indeed the essence of cooking. His cuisine is loved by customers and critics alike, and in 2008 he was awarded a Michelin star, for his creative, Mediterranean cuisine—an honour that has been bestowed upon him multiple times. His restaurant harmoniously combines the identity, simplicity, and creativity of the local gastronomic tradition. He innovates according to the seasonality of products. Not surprisingly, the main condiment in Tano’s cuisine is extra virgin olive oil. Committed to health and nutrition, and essentially banishes the use of butter and cream in the preparations of his menu items. Extra virgin olive oil is built into the foundation of his cuisine, and he sources more than 40 different oils to complement these dishes. “I use the olive oils to keep the flavour of the food so that the dishes are nutritious and not greasy.” Tano Passami L’Olio was named “best Italian restaurant” in 2015 by Il Glossario. To call him a true master of Italian Gastronomy would be an understatement. Tano’s desire to make cooking an ongoing journey in search of improvement is his life’s mission. The way in which he combines innovation with timeless techniques is genuinely admirable and he is fiercely committed to preparing his cuisine in the most healthy way.

TANO SIMONATO TANO PASSAMI L’OLIO MILAN, ITALY

His philosophy is born from very simple elements— lightness, equilibrium, and taste. For this reason he abandoned fried foods and realized that extra virgin olive oil could give him all that he needs. The explanation is very simple. It is the only fat that is born from a fruit. It is a much healthier choice as animal fats contain high levels of cholesterol and distort the taste. In each of his dishes, there must be six things—consistency, softness and crunchiness, flavour, sweetness, and acidity. In 2015 he received the prestigious Best Table in Italy award granted by Paolo Massobrio and Marco Gatti’s Guida Critica Golosa.

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oni Kostian describes his cuisine as tasty, focused, plant-based and inspiring. He concentrates on high quality ingredients and preparing them so that everything he does to them is to only get that ingredient better. Chef Kostian even makes own preserves for his restaurant during the spring, summer and fall. He feels that is the only way to get interesting ingredients during cold winter months when nothing grows in Finland. Toni Kostian is very passionate about creating new in his restaurant Grön which he started with his colleague Lauri Kähkönen in 2016 in Helsinki. Chef Kostian is also one of the owner`s at the newly opened Way bakery and wine bar. Together with Lauri Kähkönen and Toni Feri they also have a Kallio based natural wine. Besides cooking Toni focuses on sustainability and the atmosphere in his restaurant. He wants his guests to be happy, relaxed and feel welcomed. As a result of his exceptional cooking and relaxed atmosphere restaurant Grön was the Best Finnish Restaurant 2017 by Finnish Gastronomic Society in January. One way for Chef Kostian to develop his skills and challenge himself is to take part of the competitions. In 2009 he became 2nd at Dubai National Junior Challenge and in 2010 he was on the 3rd place at Wales Battle of the Dragon Culinary Competition. In 2012 Chef Toni Kostian was Finland´s candidate at WACS culinary Olympics and was on the 7th place. From 2011 to 2012 Chef Kostian was the captain of Finnish Culinary Team. And after trying three times for Finland´s Chef of the Year, he won the title in 2016. In 2017 he won his category in Food and Fun in Reyjavik, Iceland. Grön was awarded ”Finland’s best restaurant” 2018 by Optio magazine. Grön won the ”Finlands 50 best restaurants” list by taking first place and was awarded Finlands best restaurant once again. Chef Toni Kostian was awarded with a Michelin star February 2018, 2019 and 2020. His favourite food memories are from Lapland where he cooks fish and vegetables on an open fire with his friends after a day of fishing by the rivers of Lapland. The same simplicity and close to nature flavours his likes to have in his cooking. If possible Chef Kostian likes to start his day by foraging few hours before coming to work. He feels that it is the only way to know what is growing at the moment and that is really what determines his menu at Grön during the warm months. Chef Toni Kostian is a Helsinki born. He graduated from Perho Culinary School in 2004. After graduation he has worked as chef de partie in restaurant Luomo (one Michelin star) and restaurant G.W. Sundman´s (Bib Gourmand) and as a head chef in restaurant Kaskis in Turku.

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TONI KOSTIAN GRÖN HELSINKI, FINLAND


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t wasn’t until halfway through her law degree that Antonia Klugmann fell in love with food. Born in Trieste to a family of doctors in 1979, her younger years were very academic, but after attending a few extra-curricular pâtisserie courses at a local culinary school in 2001 she decided to return home and become a chef. Antonia’s first four years in the industry were spent at Harry’s Grill, where she was mentored by Chef Raffaello Mazzolini. Once she’d mastered the stove there, she travelled all over Italy, working stages wherever she could and absorbing as many regional dishes, techniques and cuisines as she could. Unfortunately, this method of learning was cut short after a car accident meant Antonia had to stay at home for almost a year. During her time in recovery, Antonia decided to start her own vegetable garden and quickly gained a new found respect for the ingredients she tended to. She also began putting together plans to open her own restaurant once able to work again. This finally happened in 2006, when she opened the Antico Foledor Conte Lovaria in Pavia di Udine, Friuli-Venezia Giulia with her partner Romano. Just three years later, she was shortlisted as one of the best emerging chefs in northern Italy. In 2011, Antonia travelled to Venice to work at the Michelin-starred Il Ridotto, which specialised in seafood and Venetian cuisine. A few months after arriving in the city, she decided to start devising ideas for a new restaurant, until she received a job offer to work at the Venissa on Mazzorbo, a Venetian island. ‘I couldn’t say no,’ she says. ‘I fell in love with the place and it was a huge opportunity that helped my career.’

ANTONIA KLUGMANN L’ARGINE A VENCÓ GORIZIA, ITALY

After working at Venissa for three years, Antonia and Romano decided to open their own restaurant for the second time. In December 2014, L’Argine a Vencó opened for service north of Venice in Dolegna del Collio, near the Slovenian border. Surrounded by vineyards, the small farmhouse restaurant has already won a Michelin star and makes the most of the fresh produce and herbs Antonia fell in love with when tending to her vegetable garden. Being based on the Italian-Slovenian border means her cuisine celebrates diversity, and plays with unusual flavour combinations to create dishes like no other. ‘I come from a place where there is a mix of cultures and influences,’ she says. ‘I am part-Serbian, part-Austrian and my grandfather spoke four different languages. Being based on the border means I can cook traditional food in a nontraditional way.’ Much of Antonia’s food and the way she pairs flavours together is down to her admiration for chefs such as Ferran Adrià, Massimiliano Alajmo and Pier Giorgio Parini. Yet her cuisine has been always strictly connected with the territory where she works. Distinctive quality raw materials of the area where she works are her primary source of inspiration. She loves to use them in her cuisine, understanding their role in the history, with the goal of enhancing them in a new creative way.

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fter having obtained the degree as a chef from the Hospitality Technical Institute of Dario Boario Terme in Brescia, Riccardo Camanini began his professional career collaborating with the Gualtiero Marchesi’s school. This allowed him to experience of a new mode of “do cooking”. Cooking that becomes art, an art that reinterprets time and space catalysing the material aspects and those spiritual ones where everything always start from the product. The curiosity is what drives Riccardo Camanini to discover the product in order to create new combinations that as far as originals and particulars always remain tied to the memory of the scents. It is only in the imperfection that he discovers the pleasure of a sensorial experience, the perfection dampens the emotionalism, the gestures made of extemporaneous, drive from colours, scents and flavours, close the Camanini’s courses making them unique, authentic and incomparable. Camanini loves to share through his courses, the travel that he does each day. Travels made of sensorial experiences told by colours, fragrance and tastes reinterpreted and held in my every single recipe. Riccardo Camanini’s experience began with a luggage of modesty and passion, enriched then by the encounter with important experts which had known how to address the way of his life, allowed him to create his professional identity that, now, he desires it to become a benchmark in the Italian and international wine and food culture.

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RICCARDO CAMANINI LIDO 84 GARDONE RIVIERA, ITALY


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orn just outside Alba, Michelangelo’s passion is almost innate as his family, in particular his grandparents had been restaurant owners for over 30 years so as a child until the age of 4 Michelangelo grew up in the restaurant. He spent most of my time in the kitchen and for him it was fun to see all the ingredients and see how they were transformed into something extraordinary. After the age of 11, he decided that his life would be dedicated to trying to do this work at a high level. At 14, he bought his first book in French, it was a book that he was fascinated with the extraordinary techniques of this great French chef Michel Bras and decided that France would become his second home. Michelangelo had the chance and luck of working with great chefs in Italy - Marchesi and Baiocco and then in France which lasted over five years at some of the most prestigious kitchens with Alain Ducasse, Pierre Gagnier and Pavillon Ledoyen with Yannik Alleno in Paris. It was then that Michelangelo forged his philosophy, laying the foundation for what today is his way of cooking which is based on three key words – standards, excellence and rigor. His journey then continued with Marc Meneau at Saint Pere sous Vezelay and it is Marc who transmitted the deep passion for cooking which today Michelangelo tries to infuse into every single dish so as to satisfy the expectations of his guest.

MICHELANGELO MAMMOLITI LA MADERNASSA GUARENE, ITALY

Michelangelo highlights the colours of his land, his beloved Roero, Monviso which is a stone’s throw away. All this he tries to sublime into one delicious mouthful but only after having chosen the best and the most noble products with which it is impossible not to combine simple choices, sometimes unusual, such as forgotten roots, flowers, shoots or wild herbs. His creative process starts essentially from personal memories, from a trip or from his garden. So often before elaborating a new plate, he starts the design of the vegetable garden and then the emotional and personal memories linked to the past or to a trip. Often he likes to take the time to analyse the products that he will use before processing something new with various tests that follow each day until the plate is ready to be put in the menu. His culinary approach blends tradition and innovation, he uses precise rules - a dish must have a good acidity because it allows you to stimulate salivation and therefore increases appetite. The crunch - must have a crispy part because it also stimulates chewing. The perfect seasoning must be precise to sublimate the product. He always uses a base extracted from a vegetable or an animal to amplify the taste and reduce the amount of sauce. Concentration of flavours must be immediate on the palate and therefore easy to understand for those who taste it.

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native of the southern Brazilian state of Paraná, Manoella (Manu) Buffara has been rising to prominence among a new generation of masters in the contemporary gastronomy scene. At her restaurant, Manu, in Curitiba, dishes delight guests with very Brazilian ingredients. Notable for their technical sophistication, they are also masterpieces of simplicity and sensitivity. Manu’s ingredients are grown in her very own garden, coddled by a team of trained gardeners who are treated like part of the family and are passionate about nature. They dictate and mould Manu’s ever-changing menu. Her respect for ingredients started in her childhood, and was seasoned in Italy during placements at Michelinstarred establishments. This same respect gained form and consistency after she became the first Brazilian to intern at then-unknown Noma, in Denmark. Another significant influence, in terms of discipline and perfectionism, came with a stint working for Grant Achatz, of Alinea in Chicago. Inspirations for Manu’s recipes come from a plethora of experiences, including some hard graft on a fishing boat in Alaska and backpacking through Europe, as well as from distant family memories and her current team of small scale producers with whom she partners. Her technique is indisputable, and it has become visible in the construction of her dishes, even for those who do not understand the subject. Good taste and sophistication are keywords as she carefully selects her products. This journalism graduate decided that her way of communicating was not through words but through taste. This is the way she writes her story. So much love and dedication earned Manu awards such as Revelation Chef, Chef of the Year and Personality of the Year in publications such as Guia Quatro Rodas, Veja Curitiba Comer & Beber and Bom Gourmet/Gazeta do Povo. In 2015 Manu was also awarded as Best Restaurant of the Country, and Best Restaurant of the South Region. In 2018, Manu put Curitiba on the culinary map as won the Miele One To Watch Award for Latin America’s 50 Best Restaurants. “For me cooking is an expression of love, knowledge, technique, authenticity and respect. Respect for the product, for the farmer, for the chef, for my apron and my family.”

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MANU BUFFARA MANU CURITIBA, BRAZIL


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rowing up Colleferro, a village hour and a half from Rome. Marco’s comes from a simple family with solid in values- responsibility, honesty and self-sacrifice are values which his parents raised him with and, of course, his mum passed down to him her passion for cooking and the culinary traditional flavours of their hometown. As a rugby player with a great passion after food, Marco learnt the importance of respect, team spirit and competition, both in the rugby field and in life. He found his way into the culinary field firstly by necessity. When he was 16, he got a part-time job delivering pizza’s to have some extra pocket money. Soon he started working for Antonello Colonna in Labico, which was his first important experience. He was really fascinated by food and suddenly he realized that becoming a great chef in his own restaurant would be his future. And here he is - a result of determination, enthusiasm and experience. Marco was young, ambitious and determined. Colonna understood his talent and soon he wanted him to be the executive chef at the Open Colonna, the central restaurant at the top of Palazzo delle Esposizioni in Rome. He was only 24 and was given the responsibility, it was tough but a great source of satisfaction as it was the first Michelin star he received. After few years, he realized it was time to face new challenges, and one day he received a phone call from Heinz Beck. “I was talking on the phone with him and was trembling with emotion.” Working with Heinz Beck was an extraordinary experience as well as being a sous chef in Tom Aikens’ restaurant in London. After the UK experience, he went back to Rome and worked for Stazione di Posta where he received his second Michelin star. Finally in 2016, he achieved his dream to have his own restaurant. Marco Martini Restaurant in Viale Aventino is finally the place where he expresses his culinary philosophy. After a few months opening he was awarded with a Michelin star.

MARCO MARTINI MARCO MARTINI RESTAURANT ROME, ITALY

He learnt a lot from each and every experience and has the greatest regards for Antonello, Heinz and Tom as he could find his own personal style in cuisine. He wouldn’t say other chefs influenced his style, but rather says that his personal experiences, like a journey or everyday life, did it. Marco’s cuisine is “eyes, tummy and head”. It‘s a perfect balance mix of beauty, tastiness, instinct and technique. “My cuisine has been defined as evocative cuisine: each plate has its own story to tell, and it is made of emotions, memories, flavours of traditional cuisine - mainly Roman and regional Italian – but combined with innovation.”

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ince the age of six, Giuseppe always tried to cultivate and keep alive his passion for cooking. Despite this, he decided to follow his head rather than his heart and so, after finishing science high school, Giuseppe went to university to study computer science and only needing to pass a few more exams to graduate but his passion for cooking made itself increasingly felt, he decided to register for a hospitality management course and explore that side of his character. In 2007, he opened a small restaurant Kresio in Castelvenere, this followed with a shop Kresios Bottegain Telese Terme which was selling gourmet specialties selected with meticulous care. In 2011, the two businesses were brought under one roof. Self-taught, driven not only by the will power and stubbornness that have always been part of his character, but also by passion for technical studies and a profound knowledge of the raw materials involved. Passion, determination, the thirst for knowledge, travel and world cooking are his valuable teachers and constant companions on this important journey of Giuseppe Iannotti. Giuseppe’s cuisine at Krèsios is extemporaneous and brave, experimental and based on a fine selection of the best raw materials from all around the world with a strong distinctive connection with the tradition of Southern Italy. His philosophy is based on the concept of “modernism”, or in other words on the constant need to renew ideologies and methods so that they are consistent with the new needs of the modern world: renewing, doing things differently, inverting orders. He think of himself as a modernist in the kitchen, as someone who likes to subvert, while maintaining a rigorous but inverted sense of order. Always trying to use a language that is essential but rich, with a semblance of linearity that conceals from the superficial eye or palate a whole world to explore. When he thinks about creating a new dish, his focus is on the contrasts between old and new, with his heart in origins and tradition and his head in the world. In this process, he always tries to reject styles, fashions and mores, trying instead to develop new concepts that spring from nature in which he was born and raised.

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GIUSEPPE IANNOTTI KRÈSIOS TELESE TERME, ITALY


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rant’s illustrious culinary career stretches over four decades. He started at a young of 16, he started at a local restaurant cooking chicken wings. Although the surroundings would fail to foreshadow the five continents that MacPherson would grow to cook on, and to build legacy restaurants and culinary programs within, they did light a fire in the young man that would lead to his continuation of cooking, and his decision to attend and later graduate with honours from the Niagara Falls Culinary Institute. “I didn’t enjoy school, and I travelled a lot as a kid through Canada. In the kitchen I found a peace with myself because there was so much going on, so much action, so much to live up to. Things were always buzzing with action and everything seemed interesting from butchering a piece of meat, turning a vegetable, or making the perfect mashed potatoes. It continues for me today.” Life got a bit richer after his graduation, as he seized the opportunity to work at the Four Seasons in Vancouver, which then took him across the Atlantic to join the brand in London. “It started with travel, and travel led me to my successes and I started to meet people and see different cultures and that was always the driving force. It was incredible to be able to pick up my knives and venture off to places I barely knew existed.” Sydney, Australia was his next stop with Serge Dansereau at the Regent Hotel and from there he moved to open the Regent in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia where his love affair with Asian cuisine began. From there on he went on to design and run world-class kitchens, and built topnotch teams at iconic places including Raffles Hotel in Singapore, Bellagio Las Vegas, Wynn Las Vegas, Wynn Macau, Ritz Carlton Big Island, and Sandy Lane Hotel in Barbados. This native Scotsman’s robust embrace of global wanderlust and contrasting cultures is exceeded only by his passion for food and all things culinary.

GRANT MACPHERSON HAKKASAN LAS VEGAS, U.S.A.

After 10 years of overseeing the mammoth juggernaut of the Wynn properties in Las Vegas, and in Macau, Grant decided to accept the challenge of renovating and reimagining the jewel-like and world-revered Sandy Lane property in Barbados and 2010, he decided to leave the corporate structure to start his own global culinary consulting company - Scotch Myst. In 2019, Grant decided to add another assignment to his ever-growing resume by taking on the title of Senior Vice President of Restaurants Globally for the powerhouse Hakkasan Group. Currently, he is overseeing Hakkasan’s stellar global concerns from Las Vegas to the Middle East and the Far East. Grant continues to have an absolute passion and true love for cooking, as well as for creating a total experience from concept to completion of the culinary experience.

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ary Foulkes has a wealth of experience, with over two decades of working in Michelinstarred restaurants and in some of the UK’s most highly-acclaimed establishments. He began his career in 1996, aged 17, as a Trainee Chef at The Chester Grosvenor, Cheshire, while studying Catering at West Chester College. On completing his course, Gary took a full-time position as a commis at Rhodes & Co in Manchester with Gary Rhodes, where he remained for three years, gaining a promotion to chef de partie. In 2000, he moved to Neat, with Richard Neat, in the Oxo Tower in London, before taking a role as chef de partie at Michelin-starred Aubergine a year later, under William Drabble. In 2003, Gary moved to The Vineyard at Stockcross as chef de partie, progressing to sous chef during his two-year tenure with John Campbell. He then shifted back to the capital in 2005 as junior sous chef at Phil Howard’s two Michelin starred restaurant The Square, remaining there until 2009. International travel then lured him to tour Europe, India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Australia and the USA for two years, and when he returned in 2011, Phil Howard re-appointed him at The Square, this time as Head Chef. Gary joined D&D London as Executive Chef of South Place Hotel in 2016, where his responsibilities include the hotel’s Michelin-starred restaurant Angler, room service, banqueting and events, as well as the more casual restaurant South Place Chop House. Since joining Angler, Gary has retained the Michelin star and developed his own modern European menus which focus on fish and seafood. Angler was awarded a score of 6/10 in the 2020 Waitrose Good Food Guide.

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GARY FOULKES ANGLER LONDON, U.K.


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ALMOND CRUSTED VEGETABLE TIKKIS VINEET BHATIA INDEGO DUBAI, U.A.E. 40g Unsalted butter 1tbsp Cumin seeds 1½ tbsp Ginger, peeled and finely chopped 1 tbsp Green chillies, finely chopped 75g Carrots, finely diced 75g Courgettes, finely diced 75g Fine beans, finely diced 75g Cauliflower, finely diced 75g Corn niblets 300g Red potatoes, boiled and grated 1tsp Turmeric powder 1tsp Red chilli powder ½ tsp Cumin powder ½ tsp Coriander powder 2 tbsp Fresh coriander, chopped To wash egg To crumb flaked almonds Heat butter in a pan and add the cumin seeds. As they splutter add the chopped ginger and green chillies. Sauté for a minute and add diced vegetables, the powdered spices (turmeric, red chilli, cumin and coriander). Cook till the vegetables are done. Finally add the potatoes and blend into the vegetables. Now add salt, cool the mixture and add the coriander leaves. Check seasoning. Shape into flattened disc shapes. Egg wash and coat with flaked almonds. Deep fry the tikkis and serve with tomato chutney.

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FALAFEL JAMES KNIGHT-PACHECO ME DUBAI DUBAI 80g Chick peas - pre soaked - 24hrs 30g Onions 4g Onion 2g Cumin powder 10ml Tahina dip 10g Yoghurt 5g Mint 30g Mixed pickle 2g Soda powder 5g Salt 5ml lemon uice 20g Sesame seed mix Mix all ingredients together. Roughly blend, until it starts to come together. Shape them by hand. You can make around 6 for this recipe. Leave them to set in a chiller for at least 8 hours. To finish, deep fry until golden and crispy, serve with Tahini and pomegranate caramel.

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MANGALICA RAGOUT 400g Mangalica minced meat 2 White onions, finely chopped 50g Mangalica fat 10g Paprika powder 5g Smoked paprika powder 100g Pasta 75g Cream cheese 2 Garlic cloves - grated 4g Sea salt 2 pinches of freshly ground black pepper 1 Sprig of lemon thyme 1 Bay leaf Bring the mangalica fat to medium high heat with the finely chopped onions in a Dutch oven or deep skillet. Add the minced meat and cook until browned, for about 5 minutes. Add the smoked and normal paprika powder pure with 1dl water, then add the pasta, garlic, salt, pepper, lemon thyme and bay leaf. Bring it to a boil, reduce the heat, cover and simmer gently for 30 minutes. Add the cream cheese and boil it up again. TOMATO SAUCE 400g Pasta 100g Water 2 pinches of salt, sugar, pepper 2 Fresh basil leaves 1 Sprig of lemon thyme 1 Garlic clove

PIAC MANGALICA RAGOUT WITH PASTA ESZTER PALÁGYI MATILD PALACE BUDAPEST, HUNGARY

Put every ingredient into a Thermomix and mix it for 10 minutes on 50°C, then filter it through a fine strainer. When plating the dish, the sauce should be added last. PASTA 150g Flour 5g Semolina 1 Egg yolk 1 Whole egg 2 pinches of fine sea salt Mix everything well together, vacuum it and leave it in the fridge for a minimum of 6 hours. Roll it, shape it and cook it in salty water for 4 minutes before plating.

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CARAMELIZED SILVER ONION PIE TONI KOSTIAN GRÖN RESTAURANT HELSINKI, FINLAND 4 Large silver onions - you can use other onions as well Cut the top and the bottom of the onions so that they will stand on a tray. Roast onions in160c for about 40 minutes, depending on the size. You want the onions to be cooked but not over cooked, just perfect. Cool down to room temperature. Cut the outer 3 layers off and cut the insides to 1cm thick slice. You need 8 silver onion slices to complete this recipe. ROASTED ONION CARAMEL 200g Cane sugar 200g Salted organic butter 60g Broth from roasted onions (we use a recipe with 500g of well roasted onions to 1000g of water, vacuumed and steamed overnight in 95°C. The next morning sieve the broth and reduce to get the right flavor and consistency. Season the broth with fall apple vinegar, salt and cane sugar) Add sugar and butter to pot and emulsify by boiling. Add hot onion broth and emulsify again. Sieve the caramel and keep in room temperature until use. Put to fridge if you use it the next day or after. PIE Sufficient puff pastry dough to cut 8 rings out of that will fit perfectly on top of your tartlet mold. Use a basic puff pastry recipe, but you might as well use any good quality puff pastry dough you can get your hands on. Suggest to ask for your local baker if they can sell you a sheet or two. Grease eight tartlet molds with room temperature butter. Add 20g of caramel to each tartlet mold. Arrange onion slices on top of the caramel. Add puff pastry rings on top and press gently with the wrong side of a ring cutter to fit the dough perfectly around the onion slice. It`s good to dip the ring in to water before pressing. Bake in 180°C oven for 23 minutes. The exact time is something you need to figure out yourself, it may vary because of the size of your pie. Let it rest for 10 minutes in room temperature. Flip upside down and take off the molds. Serve hot with something acidic like a rhubarb or fermented black currant jam or paste.

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ADAM REID THE FRENCH AT THE MIDLAND HOTEL MANCHESTER, UNITED KINGDOM 74


TATER’ASH 50g Swede dice (0.75cm) 50g Large carrots dice (0.75cm) 50g Celery stick dice (0.75cm) 20g Banana Shallot brunoise 30g Black truffle dice (0.75cm) 100g Red skin potatoes dice (0.75cm)(not in water) 4 Sliced white bread (warburtons) 20g Picked celery leaf 20g Picked celery leaf 275g Dry aged sirloin dice (0.5cm) 500g Driping 9g Smoked maldon salt Mignonette pepper to taste Kosher salt / Kombu dashi granules 25g Coal oil Charcoal / Rapeseed Oil Heat coals until white hot. Carefully drop into oil 1 at a time, 1 litre per coal. Mushroom Catsup 3.5kg Button or chestnut mushrooms / 123g Salt / 400g Mushroom juice / 350g Madeira / 50g Caster sugar / 25g Jerez / 4g Blade mace / 2g Whole clove / 5g Cinnamon / 3g All spice / 200g Medjool dates – destined and halved / 1tsbp Sweet tamarind purée Chop the mushrooms well (slight mash) in a food processor, mix well with all salt. Leave to leech the juices out at room temperature for 2-4. Squeeze juice out through muslin cloth. Mix weighed juice with madiera/jerez/spices and boil, take off heat, cover and infuse for 1-2 hours. Pass onto dates & tamarind, reduce steadily to 1/2 volume. Pass through chinois, push lightly with a ladle but be careful not to push all puree through Mix the swede, carrots, celeriac in a vacuum bag, season generously with dashi, salt and a little pepper. Seal and cook 85°C for 1 hour, remove and allow to cool in sealed bag but do not refrigerate. Put the diced potatoes in a vacuum bag, season generously with dashi, salt and a little pepper. Seal and cook 85°C for 1 hour, remove and allow to cool in sealed bag but do not refrigerate. Mix the shallots, celery and truffle into vegetable and potato. Season to taste loin dice with tabasco, oil and maldon, mix into the vegetables. Remove the crust from bread, roll flat and dice to 0.5cm, heat small amount of dripping in a sauté pan to smoke, throw in the dice and fry fast to light gold, drain straight through sieve and add toss in salt to taste. Chiffonade celery and parsley together. Dress the tater’ash in catsup, fill the bowl, sprinkle croutons over, dress with chiffonade, and finish it with small amounts of mignonette and parsley oil (optional).

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ASPARAGUS SALAD WITH MOUNTAIN RICOTTA ALFREDO RUSSO DOLCE STIL NOVO TURIN

30g Green asparagus 300g Fresh mountain ricotta 200g Valerian salad 10g Coffee powder Extra virgin olive oil to taste Red grape vinegar to taste Salt to taste Wash the asparagus and divide the tips from the stems (eliminating the woody part), cut into rounds, blanch and shake them with a little salt until creamy. Slice some of the tips with a potato peeler and leave them in ice water for about an hour. Season the valerian salad with oil, salt and red vinegar and place on the plate topping with the blanched asparagus tips. Sprinkle some ricotta flakes and coffee powder. Finish the dish with the warm asparagus, extra virgin olive oil, a few drops of balsamic vinegar and the tips of raw asparagus seasoned with extra virgin olive oil and a little salt.

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COLD PEA SOUP 1kg Fresh peas 1 Bunch of mint 20cl Liquid cream 15% 2 Handfuls of ice cubes Fine salt Pepper - 3 turns of the pepper mill

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JÉRÔME JULIEN SAINT RÉMY DE PROVENCE, FRANCE Shell the peas. In a pan put a liter of water, once it is boiling, put the peas in it for 12 to 15 minutes. Once cooked, drain and cool under a stream of cold water. Put the peas in the blender with the mint leaves, the cream and the ice cubes, a teaspoon of salt and 3 turns of the pepper mill. Blend until you get a fine consistency. Put the soup in a deep plate and garnish it with sprouts of pea.


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1 cauliflower steak 50g Butter 3g Thyme 3g Rosemary Cauliflower leaves 50g Purple cauliflower florets - pre blanched 50g Yellow cauliflower florets - pre blanched 50g Broccoli florets - pre blanched 60g Cooked beetroot 30g Raspberry vinegar 20g Raw Broccoli tops 60g Corn oil 10g Sea salt

BRASSICA JAMES KNIGHT-PACHECO ME DUBAI DUBAI

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Pan roast the cauliflower in a hot pan with corn oil, on both sides until golden brown, then add the butter until foaming, add the rosemary and thyme, leave in the pan for later use. Heat up the florets in a small in a small pan, keep warm. Deep fry the cauliflower leaves, the oil needs to be between 160170°C, if any higher the leaves will burn. Cut the beetroot into small discs, and leave them in the raspberry vinegar for 24 hours at room temperature, this will help to pickle and ferment the beetroot. ASSEMBLY Place the cooked cauliflower steak on the plate, then place the pickled beetroots onto the cauliflower, followed by the rest of the florets, to finish sprinkle the brocoli tops over the tops of the dish, followed by the cooked cauliflower leaves.


LECHE DE TIGRE 3 Celery sticks in cubes 1/2 Red onion in cubes Juice of 10 limes 1 Garlic clove - crushed 1/2 Red chilli - crushed 6 Coriander stems cut in half 1tsp Sea salt Mix all the ingredients in a bowl and reserve for at least 1 hour, then pass through a strainer by pressing the vegetables to get all the juices out. Reserve the juice in the chiller.

WATERMELON CEVICHE ROBERTO SEGURA DUBAI, U.A.E.

CEVICHE 180g Watermelon seedless cut in cubes 30g white onions cut in slices 40g Hearts of palm cut in slices 20g Organic lettuce 8 Leaves coriander chopped 1/2 cup of leche de tigre 1tsp Black quinoa cooked Pinch of sumac Pinch of salt Pinch of black pepper In a bowl mix the watermelon with the salt, sumac and black pepper, add the onions, and mix with the leche de tigre. PLATING Put the lettuce at the bottom of the plate and place the previous mix on top, finish with slices of palm of hearts, black quinoa and sumac on top, and coriander chopped. Garnish it with cress or coriander leaves. Add sea salt flakes on top if necessary .

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Fresh brewer’s yeast 320g Spaghettoni pasta, preferably artisanal 130g Butter – preferably Beppino Occelli Salt Pepper Crumble the yeast onto a baking tray and dry it out in the oven or a dehydrator at 70°C for around 5 hours. Cook the spaghettoni in salted boiling water until al dente, for about 8–12 minutes. In a separate pan, soften the butter. Add the cooked spaghettoni and season with salt and pepper. Neatly plate the pasta and sprinkle with the dried yeast to finish.

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SPAGHETTONI BURRO, LIEVITO DI BIRRA RICCARDO CAMANINI RISTORANTE LIDO 84 GARDONE RIVIERA, ITALY


JERUSALEM ARTICHOKES ARTICHOKE SKIN 10 Medium sized artichokes / Oil for deep-frying Cook the artichokes until soft in boiling water, being careful not to overcook them. Once cooked, strain the artichokes, place them on a tray and dry them in the oven at 120°C for 10 minutes. Cut in half and scoop out all the pulp inside, being careful not to pierce the hollow skin. Dry the skin in a dehydrator for 10 hours. Powder half of the artichokes in a blender and set to one side for use in the filling. Deep-fry the remaining artichoke skins in 190°C oil until puffed, lightly golden and crisp. FILLING FOR THE ARTICHOKE SKIN 3tbsp Sour cream / Powdered artichoke skin / Salt to taste Whisk to soft peaks and flavour the sour cream with salt and the artichoke powder. Pipe the mixture into the cold, crisp artichoke skin just before serving. ARTICHOKE CREAM Filling from the cooked artichokes / 10 Peeled artichokes cut in pieces / Oil for frying / 100g Butter / 1ltr Cream / 60g Coffee beans (crushed) / Salt to taste On medium heat roast the artichokes until golden brown, add butter and brown the butter with the artichokes until caramelised. Bring the cream to a boil and add the coffee. Leave to infuse. Strain the cream over the artichokes. Bring to a boil until it resembles a thick cream. Pass through a fine strainer. Add salt to taste. Keep warm for serving.

MIKAEL SVENSSON KONTRAST OSLO PLUM VINEGAR PEARLS 150g Aged plum vinegar or balsamic vinegar / 150g Brewed coffee / 4g Agar / 1ltr Neutral oil, ice cold from freezer Keep the oil in the freezer for minimum two hours so its ice cold. Mix in the agar in the vinegar and coffee, bring to boil and simmer for one minute and let it cool down to about 60°C degrees. Pour the mixture into a squeeze bottle and drip small drops into the ice-cold oil to create pearls. Leave at room temperature so the oil turns fluid. Strain the pearls from the oil. COFFEE AND ARTICHOKE REDUCTION 1kg Washed artichokes / 20g Coffee beans, ground / Aged plum vinegar or balsamic vinegar / Salt to taste Juice all the artichokes in a vegetable juicer, strain and bring to boil. Carefully lift away all the foam that comes to the surface and reduce until about a ¼ is left. Add coffee, leave to infuse for 30 minutes, add vinegar and salt to taste. Strain and serve warm with pearls inside. ROASTED ARTICHOKE 10 Small even artichoke pieces / Oil / 50g Butter / Salt to taste Evenly roast the artichokes in oil until golden. Add the butter and let them brown a bit more and get soft. Season with salt and serve.

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SHITAKE AND RISOTTO FERMENTED SHITAKE SAUCE 260g Shitake mushroom 13g Non-iodized salt 100g Milk 100g Cream 32% fat 5kg Kuzu Put in the vacuum bag the Shitake mushroom and non-iodized salt, and leave it to ferment for 1 week at 20°C. After 1 week strain the liquid then add the cream and milk bring to the boil and thicken with kuzu. In a big frying pan cook the whole champignon with a little oil, but make sure you stir them constantly, when they are all evenly colored - a light caramel brown take them out and put to one side. SHITAKE STOCK 375g Shitake 1,100g Champignon mushrooms 20g Madeira 100g Shallots 120g Extra virgin olive oil 1000g Vegetable stock

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GIUSEPPE MOLARO CONTAMINAZIONI RESTAURANT NAPOLI, ITALY Cut the shallot and the shiitake in juliennes then slowly fry them with some oil, then when they become soft add the champignons and bring to a boil. The next step is to add the Madeira and burn the alcohol off, add the vegetable stock cover with a lid and bring to a boil, turn down the heat to simmer for 1 hour and strain. RISOTTO 100g Riso carnaroli 10g Butter 20g Dry white wine 10g Grana padano 10g Apple vinegar aged in barrels 400g Shitake stock 50g Extra virgin olive oil 20g Chiodini mushroom 2g Thyme Melt the butter and toast the rice, add the dry white wine, and start to cook the rice with the mushroom stock. Cook for 13 minutes adding the stock slowly making sure you are stirring the rice constantly, after 13 minute let it rest for 4 minutes by adding the Grana Padano, butter, apple vinegar, oil and cover with a lid. In a frying pan cook the chiodini mushrooms with oil and thyme.


RIGATONI AL SUGO DI CODA MARCO MARTINI MARCO MARTINI RESTAURANT ROME, ITALY When in Rome, you might bump into a very popular dish called “coda alla vaccinara”, here I give you Rigatone al Sugo di Coda. The inspiration comes from Rome, my hometown, and the culinary traditions to create his gourmet dish. I take all the main ingredients of “coda alla vaccinara”, such as celery, carrots, onion, tomato, pine nuts, raisins and cocoa and have combined them to create a gourmet tasty sauce for the rigatoni pasta, which preserves and enhances the flavor of “coda alla vaccinara” at his maximum. 2kg Beef tail 500g Carrots 200g Celery 100g Flour 1 Onion 2 Bay leaves 50g Raisins 50g Cocoa 50g Pine nuts 500g Peeled tomatoes 2ltr Mineral water Salt to taste Extra-virgin olive oil to taste Glass of red wine 100g Pecorino roman cheese 450g Rigatoni pasta Take the beef tail and sprinkle it both side in the flour and place it in the oven for about 10 minutes at 220°C. For the sauce, take a pot and add the celery, carrots and onions, and add it to the previously cooked tail to the pot, brown and blend with the red wine. After browning, add the peeled tomatoes, bay leaves, cocoa, pine nuts, raisins and water. Simmer it for 12 hours and with the help of a slotted spoon, remove the impurities and excess fat. After cooking, take a sieve and strain all the sauce to obtain the “vaccinara” tail sauce. In a pot with boiling water, pour the rigatoni pasta, drain it just few minutes before its cooking time and put it in the pan, and continue to cook it with the sauce. Stir till the pasta has thick and finish it by creaming it with the pecorino romano cheese. Complete the dish with a sprinkling of tomatoes, celery leaves and a diced carrot.

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GOAT CHEESE CRÈME BRÛLÉE MOHAMAD CHABCHOUL GRAND MILLENNIUM BUSINESS BAY DUBAI, U.A.E. GOAT CHEESE CUSTARD 200g Goat Cheese / 250ml Cream / Salt and Pepper / 100g Cream Cheese / 5 gelatine sheets TO CARAMELIZED 2tbsp Sugar Purée the goat’s cheese with all the other ingredients except the gelatine. Place the gelatine in cold water and whisk it with a fork. Set aside for 5 minutes or until spongy then added into the cheese mixture. Transfer the mixture to the plastic moulds, keep in the chiller for 45 minutes. Sprinkle sugar evenly over the cheese custard, caramelize gently with the flame on a blowtorch. GARNISH 1 Green Apple / 1 Red beetroot / 1Yellow beetroot / 100g pecan nuts / 2g Micro greens / Fresh Thyme Preheat the oven to 200°C. Wash the beetroots under cold running water and pat dry with kitchen paper. Cut away the leaves making sure you leave at least 1-inch of the stalk, preferably a

tiny bit more. Place the beets in a large, roomy roasting tin, sprinkle with the olive oil, roll the beetroot in the oil to make sure they are well covered. Finally, sprinkle with sea salt and the thyme. Bake in the preheated oven for 40 to 45 minutes or until the beets are soft but not shrunken. Remove from the oven, then leave to cool. Once cooled, rub the skin away with a piece of kitchen paper, cut round slices. BALSAMIC CAVIAR 170ml Balsamic Vinegar / 10g Sugar / 2g Agar agar / 1.5ltr Corn Oil Fill a tall glass with olive oil and place it into the freezer for at least 30 minutes. The oil needs to be very cold so the balsamic vinegar pearls will cool before they reach the bottom. Once the oil is cold you may continue making the balsamic vinegar pearls. Add the balsamic vinegar to a pot along with the agar agar & sugar and bring to a boil while stirring. Once it begins to boil remove it from the heat and let it cool slightly. Drip the hot liquid using a dropper or syringe into the cold olive oil. It’s best to try to leave drops of equal size but you can always sort them into different sizes of balsamic vinegar pearls once they are done. Once all the pearls are made you can remove them from the olive oil and rinse them in water. PLATTING Place the caramelized Cheese on the plate and start to build up with beetroots, fresh sliced of green apple finish with balsamic caviar and micro greens.

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PICKLED PAPAYA SALAD JEAN WINTER JEAN’S PRIVATE KITCHEN DUBAI, U.A.E. Papaya Small red Radish White Vinegar Chilli 3 cloves of whole garlic (skin removed) Salt Sugar

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Don’t choose a raw green papaya but one that is half ripe so that it’s is still very firm but has a pinkish / peachy colour . In a saucepan, heat up 2 cups of vinegar and dissolve 1 cup of sugar or adjust the amount t of sugar to your liking. Leave to cool. Remove the skin of the papaya before using the peeler to slice around the papaya lengthwise. Use a mandolin to slice the radish into paper thin slices. Place sliced papaya and Radish in a large bowl. Add 1tbsp of salt. Mix well and set aside for 20 minutes and rinse. Remove the seeds from the red chilli if you don’t like it too spicy and slice the chilli lengthwise. In a clean jar or air right container, put in your papaya and radish slices, chilli, whole garlic cloves and cover with your completely cooled vinegar mixture. Leave for 3-5 hours at least or best overnight.


A TOUCH OF FOREST WITH SMOKED EGG YOLK THOMAS BÜHNER GERMANY

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strips to the garlic and as dark caramelize. Cut the mushrooms into the pot and cook until the mushroom juice is boiled and the mushrooms take color. Continue to roast a little and then pour in the water. Cook for 6 hours, roughly pass. Cook until a dark background is formed. GARLIC BLOSSOMS FERMENTED Garlic blossoms / Pear vinegar Brush, wash and fill with a pear sauce in a rinse and allow to ferment for at least 4 weeks.

FRIED MUSHROOMS Cep / Oyster mushrooms / Deathroms mushrooms / Red oyster mushrooms / Chanterelle Clean all mushrooms and cut evenly. All together the portion is 50 g mushrooms. Fry these mushrooms in a frying pan with some sunflower oil and salt. Place on a cloth and place in the center of the plate. MUSHROOM 2 Garlic pods / 10 Onions / 10l Water / 5kg Brown champignons 3kg Oyster mushrooms / 2kg Cep Heat some oil in a large saucepan, halve the garlic in half and brown on the cut side dark brown. Cut the onions into small

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SMOKED EGG YOLK 10 Egg yolks / 1ltr Sunflower oil / Smoke gun Put the sunflower oil in a tin, cover with foil and once vigorously smoke with the Smoking Gun! Separate the egg yolks from the egg white, place in small cups of smoked oil and leave to stand for 24 hours. 4 hours before service in the oven, if necessary, get out of the oil and drain a little HERBS FOR THE MUSHROOMS Pimpinelle mallow / Gundermann / Meadow limb / Birdworms Fried basil / White and blue cornflowers / Garlic blossoms Wash all the herbs and place 3-5 leaves each in a lock box. These come late on the fried mushrooms on top of it. Wash the basil, deep-fry and place on a kitchen towel to dry. Garnish with the flowers.


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LOBSTER AND MOZZARELLA RAVIOLI 2 Lobsters of 600 to 700 g each / 8 Eggs / Buffalo mozzarellas Basil leaves / 250g Flour 0 / 150g Durum wheat flour / Salt and sugar / Light extra virgin olive oil - Liguria, Sicily biancolilla Put the flour with 3 whole eggs, 5 yolks and extra virgin olive oil in the mixer, knead until it is smooth and homogeneous. Remove and work it by hand for a few minutes. Cover with a cloth and plastic wrap and put in the refrigerator. Blanch the lobsters in boiling water for 3 to 4 minutes. Put in cold water and remove the shell from the lobster meat. Make 4 medallions of ½ cm thickness from the larger part of the meat. Chop the rest of meat fairly finely with a knife, also adding the meat from the claws. Put in a bowl. In the same way chop the mozzarella fairly finely with a knife and drain a little of its milk. Chop the basil very fine and add both mozzarella and basil to the lobster. Add salt and sugar to taste and finally a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil. Stir everything together and put in a piping bag. Take the pasta and with a rolling pin roll it to a thickness of 1 mm. Cut with a 7-8 cm pastry cutter, put the lobster and mozzarella mixture and form the ravioli, put in the blast chiller, and then in the freezer. CARROT FOAM 2 Large carrots / 150ml Fresh cream / ½ Egg white of one egg / 1g Agar agar / Salt and sugar Clean the carrots, peel them and cut them finely. Blanch in boiling water with a bay leaf. When the carrots are soft, drain and keeping a little cooking water aside. Blend with an immersion blender and only if it is too thick add a little of its cooking water. Reheat, adding 1g of agar agar and bring to 90°C. Add salt and sugar to taste. Put the carrot mixture, cream and ½ egg whites in a ½ ltr siphon. Close and load with 2 gas cartridges. At the time of service, keep in a water bath at 50°C. COCOA BEAN SPONGE 30g Cocoa bean flour / 5g Cocoa powder / 2 Eggs / 150ml Water 50g Flour 00 / Salt and sugar / 40g Extra virgin olive oil - Tuscany, Puglia Put the cocoa beans powder (pre-extracted from the beans) in a cylindrical container, adding water and the extra virgin olive oil and blend with an immersion blender. Add 1 whole egg and 1 egg white, the flour and season to taste with salt and sugar and mix everything. Put in a ½ ltr siphon and load 2 gas cartridges. Put the mixture in 6x6 cubic silicone moulds and cook in the microwave, 30 seconds at a time until the right texture has been achieved. Cut the sponge into 3x3 cubes.

LOBSTER AND MOZZARELLA RAVIOLI TANO SIMONATO TANO PASSAMI L’OLIO MILAN, ITALY 91

Preparation Cook the ravioli for about 2 minutes. Put the ravioli in a bowl with a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil.Place them on a serving dish (a large priest’s hat) then add the carrot foam, then the cocoa bean sponge cubes and finally the lobster medallion, pre-heated in the microwave. A few watercress sprouts, a drizzle of oil and caviar to finish it off.


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orn and raised in a gourmand family in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Bel discovered her vocation at an early age, at 17. She started her internship in a French restaurant in Sao Paulo, with Laurent Suaudeau, then did another internship in Fasano and then went to the Culinary Institute of America from where she graduated in 1999. Getting back to Brazil, she worked with Alex Atala for a while and then went to Europe. She felt that she needed to learn more, to learn different techniques and cuisines, for the next 2 years she worked at El Celler de Can Roca after which she returned to Sao Paulo to open her own restaurant.

BEL COELHO CLANDESTINO RESTAURANT SÃO PAULO, BRAZIL

What really made a difference in her style of cuisine and in the way she cooks nowadays, the turning point was when she looked at her culture and her ingredients, when she really started researching Brazilian food, native products and native techniques. On her internationally acclaimed TV Show “Travel Recipes”, a French Brazilian production broadcasted around the world by Discovery Chanel, TLC and Arte, Coelho had the opportunity to travel throughout her homeland, visiting over 35 cities, meeting new promising cooks, learning local traditions and more importantly, developing an broad research on native Brazilian ingredients. This research resulted in the creation of “Biomas (Biome)” a 10 course tasting menu where each dish carries an ingredient of a specific Brazilian the biome like Amazon, Pantanal, Cerrado, and Pampas. Another celebrated Bel’s creation is “Orixás” a tasting menu entirely dedicated to the gods of the AfroBrazilian religion Candomblé. An agro ecology advocate, Chef Bel Coelho has a strong connection to Brazil’s richbiodiversity and acts as a fierce defender of the importance of a sustainable andfair food system, in terms of social environment. Her ideals and principles are heartily represented in her cuisine that can be savored at Clandestino, the chef’srestaurant located in Sao Paulo, where she serves, only for one week per month, a creative tasting menu, carefully constructed with the chef’s unique narrative style and made with seasonal native ingredients.

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rowing up in the Isle of Man was the ideal breeding ground for the beginning of Colin Clague’s culinary journey. It was here that he was strongly influenced by his mother who was a passionate food lover and cook in her own right—and the sheer freshness of all of the local ingredients used in food preparation was largely responsible for developing his love of the craft. As a boy, this provided Colin a significant distraction to his studies, as his dreams was to travel the world in search of culinary wisdom. At sixteen he applied to join the Royal Navy as a chef but was turned down. It was at this time that he decided to move to London as a jumping-off point for his career in the world of food. Colin was fortunate to work and gain valuable experience with some well-known chefs such as Anton Mosimann, Peter Langan, Gary Hollihead, Jean-Georges Vongerichten and Sir Terence Conran. “Anton was an impeccable chef, very military-like where everything is ticked off. On the other hand, Jean-Georges is the other way. You get more of the French passion with Jean-Georges and obviously, he is packed with a catalogue of amazing recipes which just fly out over the shelf. Working with Jean-Georges—he is very humble. He comes in and says “let’s do lunch, or let’s do dinner.” You can see even now that Jean-Georges is as passionate today as he was probably 30 or 40 years ago.” In 1999 Colin was part of the pre-opening team of the “seven-star hotel” Burj Al Arab in Dubai, and then went on to become the executive chef of the award-winning Zuma. Colin then moved on to Caprice Holdings where he took charge of all of the restaurants and handled the opening of The Ivy at the Emirates Towers in Dubai. Later he was the Head Chef with Jean-Georges Dubai and the Middle Eastern restaurant, Q’bara. After a well-deserved one-year break in Singapore, Colin took the position as executive chef at the Pollen with a dear friend and Michelin star chef Jason Atherton. A nominee for the World’s Best Chef Awards, Colin Clague joins the likes of Grant Achatz, Sat Baines, Bjorn Frantzen, Pierre Gagniere, Philip Howard, and Jean George Vongerichten. His cuisine is firmly planted within his passion for the use of quality ingredients and it is with these perfect vehicles that he creates a composition of flavours which is executed with masterful simplicity and finesse. Colin modestly notes “I always say, 70% is the farmer and everything else we just titillate the bit of what we like.” Whether it be Japanese cuisine at Zuma, Middle Eastern at Q’bara, or riffs on 3000 years of Anatolian culinary tradition at Rüya, Colin Clague’s award-winning philosophy is based on his dedicated love of historical cuisine.

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COLIN CLAGUE RÜYA DUBAI, U.A.E.


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im Newton, the chef behind OPA Dubai started cooking at home with his mum and grandmother, baking and helping with the family meal. When he was around 16-17 he started cooking planned meals for friends and really fell in love with it. He worked in Oakland CA when he was 18, he then worked with Sebastian Brown at Stacy’s and decided to make it a career. He booked a one way flight to Paris, found a school and went back the following year. From then it has been a long satisfying road of a culinary journey - a commis for 4 years, it took him 10 years to get to sous chef. And even then he thought he was swimming against the current. Tim always looks at dishes that he wants to put on in the easiest possible way. Do I like it? Will the customer like it? Can he make it 30-40 times a night and be proud of it. His classic French cuisine is artfully combined with fresh, mostly seasonal ingredients, aromas and textures, which is brought in perfect harmony. He creates dishes that he likes to eat. A pretty simple philosophy really. “A lot of chefs cook food they don’t like to eat and I think to get the best out of dish you should love it. I don’t have a best dish. I don’t want to have a best dish. I want to have great dishes that continuously evolve.”

TIM NEWTON OPA DUBAI, U.A.E.

Gaining his experience at Stacy’s, Sebastian Brown was a tough chef to work for. Very aggressive and dedicated to providing a great experience to the guest. “He ran his kitchen very fairly and treated us all the same. I think I loved the aggressive side of it, very heated and felt like I was comfortable around people yelling and wielding sharp knives. Working for Sebastian helped me develop my own structure and gave me a base to how I would run a kitchen.” Obsessed with Chilies, Tim has been on a mission to cook with a lot of different chilies. Likes to work with shellfish as he loves that you can taste the ocean differently in each one. He hasn’t come across an ingredient that he could not master as everything can be manipulated, but has met a few ingredients that he won’t use again. “Produce is most important. It’s the base of creativity. And even great technique won’t make horrible product its best.”

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orn in Budapest, Eszter Palágyi traveled throughout Europe working in some of the most prestigious kitchens before returning to her Hungarian home. One of Eszter’s earliest memories were peeling potatoes alongside her dad. As an extremely young child, she learned to cook from him as he was the hobby cook at home—a very good one at that. Along with him and her family, she learned everything there is to know about Hungarian flavours and traditions. Although cooking was part of their everyday life, this wasn’t her initial choice of career. Eventually, life took her in this direction and one opportunity led to the next one and basically, this is how she climbed the ladder in what became her profession. She was a rebellious teenager whose parents were struggling to guide and control her. When she was ready to start college, her father told her that he was not willing to finance her studies and her partying lifestyle, so she had to find a job and become self-sufficient. Then with a prompt move, she changed schools and professions. She rapidly turned from PR and marketing into a cook’s apprentice at the Hilton. Eszter ultimately honed her culinary skills in some of the finest kitchens—L’Atelier de Joël Robuchon in London, Mount Falcon in Ireland, and Taubenkobel in Austria. “This period was very difficult. This type of fine dining was new to me, especially at such a high level. I had to work a lot. The days were very long and stress and shouting were part of everyday life. This was alongside an intense pace, a requirement of continuous concentration and zero tolerance for failure. But it was well worth it. I have learned an incredible amount. Both in terms of the human perspective and in terms of my profession. I have learned about discipline, fitting into a team, research, and the utilization of raw ingredients found in nature. I have also learned to be more creative and experienced how much hard work is required to be the chef of such a kitchen.” After returning to Budapest, Eszter joined Costes, the first restaurant in Hungary to receive a Michelin star. It was in 2015 when she took over Costes as chef de cuisine and a year later Costes Downtown was opened where she was declared Hungary’s Chef of the Year. This was at the same time Costes Downtown was also awarded a Michelin star, making her one of the youngest female chefs in Europe to earn this high honor. Her culinary philosophy is traditional. Hungarian flavours and dishes combined with French style and techniques. When she creates a new dish, she always recalls her childhood memories when she was cooking with her dad. “I love to represent these flavors and scents in my dishes and raise them to a fine dining level. I am inspired by the current season intertwined with a memory. I always consider my current dish the best, as at the time I am in love with the one I am developing. I never give up. Sometimes it is necessary to recognize our limits, as well as possibilities.” She truly finds it important to present and keep alive the traditional gastronomy of her home country. Without past, culture and heritage there is no future.

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ESZTER PALÁGYI MATILD PALACE BUDAPEST, HUNGARY


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orn in Lebanon, Joe Barza comes from a family of fishermen. His ancestors, his country’s culture and society led him to the world of cuisine, where he found peace.

After finishing his degree in the Hotel School of Arts, he interned in two different restaurants, and after the war in Lebanon, he decided to leave the country, just like many other Lebanese natives did. In 1986, he went to live in South Africa where he started his culinary journey at the International Airport of Johannesburg. He started out as a chef de partie and in three years he became the executive sous chef and was responsible for a kitchen with 110 staff members and three sous chefs. In 1993, he returned to Lebanon and worked as a head chef at the Century Park Hotel where he was responsible for a team of over 1,000 people including 20 permanent chefs. He then decided to use his knowledge and experience to follow a different path as a gastronomic consultant, and so, in 2009 “Joe Barza Culinary Consultancy” was born. Joe has collaborated with several restaurants, hotels and companies in numerous places all over the world, from concept creation to menu conception. Throughout his professional life, he always strived to learn new techniques and ideas that would allow him to promote his country’s gastronomy internationally and has been credited for reviving Lebanese and Middle Eastern fare across the world. To achieve this, he combines local ingredients in unconventional ways, juggling colour, flavours and presentation in order to create revolutionary dishes for the 21st century.

JOE BARZA JOE BARZA CULINARY CONSULTANCY LEBANON

Recognised as a television personality, co-hosting the Middle Eastern version of Top Chef and making guest appearances all over the globe, Joe has amassed numerous awards and accolades, and takes part in international events to promote Lebanese cuisine. He has created several menus for different restaurants in numerous countries, including Marjan, in the Waldorf Astoria Al Khaimah and Al Maeda at the Double Tree JBR By Hilton, both in the U.A.E.; the Oak Grill by Joe Barza at the Conrad in Egypt, the NAYA Express in New York, and Za’atar a Lebanese restaurant in Lisbon in a partnership with the José Avillez Group.

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eif Othman’s earliest experiences in the kitchen were those in his mom’s food stall. It was here, at the age of 14 that he would assist in preparing their traditional Javanese food (a mix of Indonesian and Malaysian cuisine). Here he would cut and wash the vegetables, as well as assist in making the pastry and being responsible for the baking. He eventually went on to learn under the tutelage of Violet Oon, a Singaporean chef specializing in Peranakan cuisine. Reif recalls that while mentoring him, it was Violet that recognized his potential. It was this recognition that he credits for giving him the drive that landed him where he is today. In 2007 Reif began gaining international recognition for his culinary talents while working with One Rochester Group in Singapore at some of the city’s top restaurants and hotels. In 2009, Reif joined the team of Zuma Dubai, and as someone who seems to find inspiration in all types of cuisine, his culinary excellence continued. Reif went on to establish Zuma as one of the most renowned restaurants in the City of Gold. He was instrumental in keeping them on San Pellegrino’s ‘World’s Best Restaurants’ list for four consecutive years. He recalls, “At this time, this was my most significant achievement—the hard work and my dedication to Zuma paid off. Consistency was the key to this success.” Reif’s culinary creations seem to be without limits. He takes his guests on a sensory and gastronomic journey, through perfectly balanced, one-of-a-kind cuisine—a masterful blend of exquisite flavors that seamlessly fuse East and West. His simplicity, passion, and innovative exploration away from conventional norms, bring inspiration from around the world. After much success at his restaurant PLAY, in 2016, Reif was the recipient of the 2016 Restaurant of The Year award. “PLAY had only been operational for 12 months, and we bagged the most coveted award of the night. It is a great achievement and it goes to show, that when you are focused on what you do, and you have the best team (both front and back of house), you are already a winner. We have guests that come back again and again, and every time they come back they expect the same level of consistency, taste, presentation, and service.” Reif next launched his most intimate creation—‘The Experience.’ It was here that he unleashed a captivating and mind-blowing culinary experience to Dubai’s elite. This revolutionary concept takes a fresh look at the traditional chef’s table. One was transported to someone’s magnificent living room, stepping into this exclusive 12 seat setting. The bespoke menu is tailor-made, giving guests a one-of-a-kind interactive experience with the chef. In 2019, Reif opened his new restaurant, Kushiyaki. If the past is any indicator of the future, it will be a smashing success. He goes on to open his second restaurant later this summer in Dubai.

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REIF OTHMAN KUSHIYAKI DUBAI, U.A.E.


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rom a culinary family, with his father being a revered two Michelin-starred chef, Francesco Guarracino started working in professional kitchens at the age of 11. Originally from Sorrento, after graduating, he travelled around Italy, to Rome, Florence, Sicily and Milan, to gain experience in the different regional cuisines of his home country. He developed a passion for seasonal and quality produce which are of paramount importance and shine through in all his creations. Francesco has worked at some of Italy’s most prestigious eateries, including Michelin-starred restaurants. He has also worked alongside some of best chefs in Italy, including Heinz Beck, Enrico Bartolini, Oliver Glowig, Marianna Vitale, Salvatore Bianco, Pasquale Palamaro, Gennaro Esposito and Moreno Cedroni. Through these experiences, he learned the discipline and attitude necessary for success. His diligent approach and natural talent led him to excel in culinary competitions and have resulted in him holding many senior leadership positions in restaurants across Italy, Spain, England and now in the U.A.E. In 2007, he won the Best Young Chef Award from the renowned Federazione Italiana Cuochi (Italian Chef Federation.) In the same year, he moved to the UK to join the Italian restaurant group Piccolino, which has 22 restaurants across the country. After two years with the brand, he joined the San Carlo Group as development chef and later, group regional executive chef for the entire portfolio of venues. In 2011, he moved to Dubai as executive chef for BiCE Mare, where he helped build their reputation as one of the best seafood restaurants in Dubai, receiving Pro Chef’s 2015 Dubai Seafood Chef of the Year award.

FRANCESCO GUARRACINO ROBERTO’S DUBAI, U.A.E.

Today, Francesco is the group executive chef at Roberto’s where he brings his true Italian flair for fine dining. Injecting a sense of culinary theatrics, he has developed a range of new speciality dishes from around Italy, with tableside cooking to give diners an unforgettable and exceptional experience. In order to raise the hospitality bar in the UAE, and to ensure authenticity, he has brought eight Italian chefs to work with him. Adding to his accolades, Francesco recently took home the BBC Good Food Middle East Chef of the Year award. His passion for fine food is profound. Bespoke menus, one-off dishes and a personal style are key to Francesco and he blends traditional and contemporary methods in the dishes that he creates. For him, the ingredient is the king of the restauran.

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orn in Gassin, a small village close to Saint Tropez on the French Riviera, Jerome spent his childhood with his grandparents in Cavalaire sur Mer, and for him it was here where his passion for food would start. With both grandparents cooking at home, Jerome remembers as a child before going to school he would ask his grandmother if he could taste the dish she prepared. The choice about his future was not done because he was young but it started to be clear. Jérôme acquired his expertise between Saint-Raphaël on the French Riviera and the United Kingdom. His cuisine is expressed by his personality, his history and his experiences. His professional life begins with Chef Hervé Guerry at la Tonnelle restaurant in Port of Santa Lucia, he then went to South America for two years and then United Kingdom for 6 years to open up to other horizons. Across the Channel, he started out as a second chef in Birmingham in a 5 star hotel for the Louvre Hotels Group and participated in his first cooking competition - the London Olympia Show. There he met some of the industry’s best - great chefs such as Yannick Alléno, Marco Pierre White and Gordon Ramsay. With his new experience he returns back in 2009 to Saint Raphaël, France as chef de cuisine at Le Pavillon Noir. In 2015, Jérôme took over Le Niçois in Fréjus for the next two years along with his wife Charlotte. A brief move to Switzerland at the Mirador Kempiski Resort & SPA Givenchy and he then to Maison Prévôt in Cavaillon, a gourmet restaurant on the outskirts of the Luberon. Today Jérôme is private chef and consultant in France and travels abroad in abroad in order to share his knowledge, and his gourmet cuisine.

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JÉRÔME JULIEN SAINT RÉMY DE PROVENCE FRANCE


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raig’s passion for cooking started while working at a local village pub in Bedfordshire before making his move to London to work for Gordon Ramsey Group. Craig started as a demi chef de partie and for four years he worked his way up to a sous chef. He then decided that he wanted experience in a Michelin star restaurant and he moved to join La Trompette in Chiswick. After spending two years there he took on the role as the head chef at Michael Nadra which was also based in Chiswick. He then moved to work with Marcus Wareing and was part of his opening team for Tredwells before he moved across to The Gilbert Scott as the sous chef. After a year working for Marcus Wareing, he went on to work with Jason Atherton’s Social Company as the head chef at Social Wine & Tapas. Whilst in this role he was allowed to help with the opening of the restaurant in the Philippines before moving over to Dubai in 2016 as head chef of the Marina Social. Craig was then approached by David Martin, the International Operations Director at the Gordon Ramsay Group and offered a position as head chef at Gordon Ramsay Hell’s Kitchen, an offer which he couldn’t refuse.

CRAIG BEST HELL’S KITCHEN DUBAI. U.A.E.

Each kitchen he moved to was different and it enabled him to learn new skills. As a young chef, he use to panic when it was busy. His head chef from La Trompette use to tell him why did panic, you’re just cooking someone’s dinner.He learnt a lot from Jason Atherton and his motto was ‘the harder you work the luckier you get’. To get to the top of your game, it does take a lot of hard work and dedication. If it hadn’t been for the Gordon Ramsay Group he wouldn’t be where he is today. Gordon has been a big inspiration to Craig. Craig’s philosophy is about creating a menu that enables guests, to choose dishes that complement each other and a dining experience that they will enjoy. A lot of it comes from experience and knowing what flavours go well together. With a lot of drive, ambition, the 2019 BBC Good Food Chef of the Year wants to be the best, and Craig is constantly trying to enhance his skills. He enjoys teaching his new chefs the way to work and see them improve.

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culinary passion which started at an early age, José use to sit on his mothers and grandmothers lap and would learn how to knead, season, cut, mash and eventually cook, they were his first teachers and to this day they are. In the kitchen, as in life you have to be willing to absorb all the knowledge you can without an issue as to where or from whom it comes from. José never forgets his grandmother’s warnings, as she worked in a professional kitchen before in a well-known restaurant in Bilbao and she told him it was a very tough job. Coming from a humble and hardworking family background, José left his parents’ house to study the culinary art at the state cooking school, in Santo Domingo de la Calzada and decided to enter the working world which he combined with a job as he thought that for his family it was better that there were a little more income from his job rather than having to pay for his studies as staff in a renowned restaurants. José was lucky as he found himself in one of the best steakhouses in Spain, a madman on the grill, Fermín Lasa, and maestro Julián de Tolosa. Although he was very young, he learnt a lot from his teacher. He then went on to work with other chefs in the north of Spain but the person who put a mark on him was Pilar en el Cachetero, she purified his style, she spoke to him of patience, and she did not like to cook in a hurry. From Pilar he learnt to be ambitious with in order to be with others, guests comes first and above all perseverance and the daily apprenticeship ‘the A,B,C of the kitchen’, sacrifice for the profession is very high because weekends, holidays, vacations and while many people are resting you must be working, but it is proper to the job. Pilar helped him to become a chef and a person, at first she was very tough with him but as time passed, she trusted him but he had to show her his worth. On a daily basis, his commitment, his ability to sacrifice, fidelity to the house, and she knew from the beginning that he had a certain talent, which was imaginative, decisive that combined very well with her wisdom, purity, finesse and carefulness that she later transmitted to José. José Luis Vicente Gómez and Cachetero… Cachetero is an indisputable reference in La Rioja gastronomy, and endorsed by four generations of the same family. With over hundred years of history and thousands of people and celebrities have passed through our tablecloths such as Ernest Hemingway, Anthony Quinn, Jacinto Benavente, Miguel Delibes, Celia Gámez, Antonio Ordóñez, and members of the Royal Spanish House. “All these people have given us the opportunity to share our recipes every day. I am only a small part of it, 20 years sweating on those stoves and providing my personal touch, perhaps sometimes a little crazy, but personal, sincere, passionate and respectful.”

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JOSÉ LUIS VICENTE GÓMEZ CACHETERO LOGROÑO, SPAIN


SPIDER CRAB AND CORAL ROE 1 Large crab 2 Onions 1 Ripe tomato 40g Olive oil Salt

LOOKING FOR CRABS ELENA ARZAK RESTAURANT ARZAK SAN SÉBASTIEN, SPAIN On one hand this dish is an homage to a popular Basque recipe called “Txangurro a la donostiarra” or San Sebastian style baked crab. On the other hand it reminds me of collecting crabs on the beaches of San Sebastian. Everyone in our city, from little kids to senior citizens, has done it at some point in their lives. With this dish, I’m trying to evoke a moment of everyday life that is very familiar and very much our own. The “cookie” is in the form of a crab. It’s a lot of fun. If you don’t have the crabbing basket you can serve it on another plate or surface.

CRAB COOKIE 100g Brown sugar 12g Molasses ½ egg white, whipped 20g Water 500g Melted butter 2.5g Cinnamon powder 2.5g Ginger powder 1.5g Ground clove 250g Wheat flour 2.5g Baking powder Salt GARNISH Several types of dried seaweed A hand fishing net Seasonal flower petals PREPARATION: For the spider crab and its coral Cook and clean the spider crabs. Clean the shells well and set aside. Chop the onions very thin and sauté with a little oil. Add the peeled and diced tomato, without pips. Let it stew for 20 minutes. Add the spider crab meat and coral. Swirl the pan and its contents. Let it cook for 2 minutes over low heat. Taste for salt. CRAB COOKIE Mix the sugar, flour, ginger, cloves, cinnamon, flour and yeast in a bowl. Once this all well blended add the honey, water, the egg white and melted butter. Add a pinch of salt and knead the dough well. Let it stand for 20 minutes. Stretch to a thickness of 0.5cm and cut with the help of a crab cookie cutter. Place in the oven at 175°C for 10 minutes.

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LOBSTER MEDALLIONS ON PEA PURÉE WITH DEHYDRATES OLIVES AND CAPPUCCINO SAUCE HEINZ BECK LE PERGOLA ROME, ITALY LOBSTER 2 Lobsters PEA PURÉE 80g Peas / 20g Onion / Chardonnay or similar / 200ml Vegetable broth Extra virgin olive oil / Salt to taste DEHYDRATED OLIVES 100g Taggiasca olives in oil CAPPUCCINO SAUCE 40g Milk / 20g Coffee / 2g Corn flour / Salt to taste / Sugar to taste PISTACHIO SPONGE 160g Pistachio nuts / 250g Egg white / 160g Isomalt / 160g Yolk / 20g Flour / Salt to taste GARNISH Fresh peas (blanched and cut in half) / Broad beans (blanched and cut in half) / Heinz Beck Grand Cru Coffee Essence Herbs PEA PURÉE Shell the peas and wash them. Chop the onion and cook in a little extra virgin olive oil. Add the peas, sprinkle with chardonnay or similar, pour over the vegetable broth and cook for 10 minutes. DEHYDRATED OLIVES Remove the olives from the oil. Dry them on paper towels and freeze-dry for 36 hours. CAPPUCINO SAUCE Bring the milk to a boil; at the same time, make coffee in a coffee machine. Once ready, season it with salt, sugar and add milk. Dissolve the corn flour in hot water and mix with the milk and coffee. Boil the mixture for 10 minutes. PISTACHIO SPONGE Blend the pistachio nuts, the flour, the salt and the isomalt together then add the yolks and egg whites. Let the mixture rest then pour it into a syphon charged with three cream cartridges. Fill transparent plastic ramekins with the mixture, cook the sponge in the microwave on maximum power for 30 seconds and freeze. Before plating, cut the ramekins to remove the sponge. PLATING Place two spoons of pea purée on the bottom of the plate and lay lobster medallions over it. Put broad beans, peas and dehydrated olives close to lobster and garnish the dish with herbs, pistachio sponge and some drops of cappuccino sauce. Flavour with Heinz Beck Grand Crù Coffee essence.

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TEMARI YOSHIHIRO NARISAWA NARISAWA TOKYO, JAPAN SHINJO 800g Scallops 600g Tiger prawns 400g Japanese yam 12g Salt 1portion is 30g Shinjo and 10g Tiger Prawns STRINGD FOR TEMARI Carrot (Kintoki, yellow, Purple) Vitamin Daikon Radish Beni-Kururi Radish Beni-Shigure Radish Shougoin Daikon Radish Remove the shell of the tiger prawn, then remove the vein at the back of the prawn. Make a paste with a food processor. Add the scallops to make a paste add the grated Japanese yam potato paste. Make a 30g ball with the paste and season with salt. Remove the vein from the back of another tiger prawn and chop it to 1cm. Cut the root vegetables in julienne (carrot 3colors, radish 4colors) and boil it, should be slightly underdone. On the plastic wrap, place root vegetables in a radial pattern and then put them on top of the ball and wap it together. Steam cook with steam convection oven 100°C for 10 minutes. ICHIBAN-DASHI 6ltr Water 180g Kombu 80g Tuna flakes 150g Bonito flakes Soak Kombu 180g into 8l of soft water, keep in the refrigerator for 24 hours. Then strain to make Kombu dashi. Put the Kombu dashi into the pot and boil it. When it is boiled, put out the fire and then put Tuna flakes and Bonito flakes into the Kombu dashi. Let it remain for 10 minutes to extract the flavours and aroma. Filter with a paper towel and season with salt, add a few drops of Light “Usukuchi” soy sauce and Mirin. DASHI Ichiban Dashi Salt Usukuchi Soy Sauce Mirin TO FINISH Kinome Sansho pepper leaf Plating Place the steamed Shinjo in the middle of bowl, pour hot Ichiban dashi, decorate with Kinome Sansho pepper leaf.

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SUSPENSION - SQUID SILK ANDONI LUIS ADURIZ MUGARITZ GIPUZKOA, SPAIN For the perfect resolution of this recipe the freshness of its two ingredients is very important to notice the sweet taste of fresh squid and the freshness of the flowers. THE HANDKERCHIEF 80g Small squid 10g Seasonal flowers Clean the squid by stripping it of the tentacles and the interiors. Clean the rest of the squid with the help of a napkin, trying to make it completely white. Blend the squid on the tabletop cooking robot at maximum speed until you get a smooth and chewy pasta, making sure that it does not get hot. In a bowl mix 80 g of the squid paste and 10 g of seasonal flowers until they are well integrated into the dough. Transfer the mix to a large vacuum cooking bag and make a small layer of 2 millimeters, seal with 100% vacuum. Put in a temperature controlled bath at 65ºC for 4 minutes and immediately stop the heat in a bath with ices. Cut the cooking bag on all four sides and carefully remove the sheet of squid and flowers. Divide the sheet into portions of 10x10 cm and reserve in refrigeration. FINISHING AND PLATING 4 Handkerchiefs Jumai Daijingo On a white napkin serve the handkerchief very carefully and spray some sake.

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TUTTO IN CONTRASTO 6 pcs Tomatoes on vine / 150g Extra virgin olive oil / Icing sugar to taste Thyme / Salt to taste / Pepper to taste Clean tomatoes on vine, making a very rapid passage in boiling water and then immediately in ice water, this procedure enables us to easily remove the skin, and to obtain firm tomatoes. Cut them into quarters and remove the seeds. Place the tomato quarts on baking sheet (on baking paper to prevent them from sticking to the pan) well-spaced out, drizzle the tomato pieces with icing sugar, extra virgin oil, fresh thyme and a few cloves of garlic for aroma. Bake the tomatoes at a temperature of about 80 degrees celsius for about 1 hour and 30 (time and temperature depending on the thickness and size of the tomatoes), so as to obtain slightly dehydrated petals of tomatoes and sweetened by icing sugar.

SIMONE CANTAFIO MAISON BRAS JAPON HOKKAIDO, JAPAN

SARDINES IN “SAOR”(VENETIAN DIALECT FOR FLAVOURS) 500g Fresh sardines / 700g White onions / 80g White wine vinegar / Sugar to taste / Salt and Pepper to taste / Raisins (rehydrated) / Neutral peanut oil (for frying) / Flour as needed / 100g Extra virgin olive oil / 50g Toasted pine nuts / 2 Bay leaves – dried Open the sardines on the belly side and remove the bowels and the central bone. Wash them thoroughly under cold water and dry them. Flour the sardines gently and fry them briefly and rapidly in neutral peanut oil, adding salt to taste after frying. Slice the onions finely and let them stew gently with extra virgin olive oil flavoured with 2 bay leaves to give the mixture aroma. When the onions are slightly stewed, add the white wine vinegar and add the sugar, reduce to obtain sour sweet dark and fragrant onions. At this point add the toasted pine nuts and the rehydrated raisins to the onions, let the mixture rest for about 30 minutes. With the help of a kitchen bowl, put the sardines and onions and lightly whip everything with a whisk to obtain a soft mixture with the typical sweet and sour taste of the sardines in “soar” SWEET CORN PURÉE 2pcs White corn cobs / 50g Usalted butter / Thyme and Salt to taste Bake the corn wrapped in aluminium foil with a knob of butter at low temperature (130 degrees centigrade for about 2 hours) with a knob of butter the cobs in order to obtain a thorough cooking. Remove the corn kernels from the cobb and blend it with unsalted butter so as to obtain a clear and smooth homogeneous puree. SANBAIZU SEASONING (TOMATO VERSION) 1/3 Tomato water / 1/3 Mirin / 1/3 rice Vinegar Sanbaizu is a typical condiment from japan that is obtained by mixing 1/3 of each ingredient in equal parts (indicated above in the ingredients list), my variant is to replace the part of soy sauce that normally exists in the classic recipe with a tomato water obtained by decanting the scraps of tomato hearts, in this way we will recover every part of our ingredients and we will have a pleasant sweet sour and aromatic balance. PREPARATION On plastic film place the confit tomato petals and garnish with our stuffing of sardines in “soar” (to recreate the typically round shape of the tomato, and then at the moment of service we will remove the plastic). A touch of sweet corn purée, some aromatic leaves of salads and herbs from our garden (i.e. basil, rocket, lettuce etc.) and as final touch we will finish the dish with a few drops of “sanbaizu” * dressing. The dish will have to play on the subtle balances of sour sweet and on the soft and crunchy textures given by the crunchy pine nuts that we will find in our tomatoes.

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ZANDER, HAZELNUT, TRUFFLE, DASHI AND COFFEE OIL KONSTANTIN FILIPPOU RESTAURANT KONSTANTIN FILIPPOU VIENNA, AUSTRIA

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BEEF MARROW 2 Large beef marrow bones / 1 Pinch of salt Soak the marrow for 12 hours, changing the water every two hours. Then thinly slice the marrow (5 millimetres), and cut out discs using a round cookie cutter (2.5 centimetres in diameter). Add a bit of salt and keep warm. HAZELNUT FOAM 500g Hazelnuts (peeled) / 1l Cream / 200ml Milk Pinch of salt Roast the hazelnuts in the oven at 180°C. Mix the milk, cream, and salt, then heat and add the hot hazelnuts. Refrigerate for 12 hours. Very briefly blend and pass through a fine sieve. Pour into an iSi whipper with two chargers. DASHI STOCK 2 Onions / 50g Brown sugar/ 100ml Soy sauce / 2l Water / 100g Bonito flakes / 1kg Button mushrooms / 90g Arrowroot powder Roast the button mushrooms in the oven at 180°C for 30 minutes. Halve the onions and roast them cut side down, until they blacken. Deglaze with soy sauce, add water and bring to a boil. Stir in the brown sugar, then the bonito flakes, and button mushrooms. Remove from the heat and let sit for two hours. Strain and thicken the stock with arrowroot powder. BUTTON MUSHROOMS 4 Button mushrooms / 100ml Dashi stock Cut off the mushroom stems and vacuum seal the mushrooms with a little dashi stock. Cook in the sous-vide basin at 63°C for 20 minutes. Cool in ice water. Finally, cut out with a round cookie cutter (2 centimetres in diameter). ZANDER LIVER 4 Zander livers / 250ml Olive oil / Pinch of salt / 2 Sprigs of thyme / 2 All spice berries / 2 Juniper berries 2 Black peppercorns Very slowly cook the zander livers together with the spices in hot olive oil (max. 65°C) for about seven minutes. ZANDER FILLET 200g Zander fillet (boned) / 25g Butter / Pinch of salt Quarter the zander fillet, sear until crispy on the skin side until transparent, then salt lightly. ZANDER CHEEKS 4 Zander cheeks / 50g Butter / Pinch of salt Pour hot butter over the zander cheeks; keep warm for five minutes, then salt. COFFEE OIL 200ml Olive oil / 60g Coffee beans Put the coffee beans and the oil in a pot and heat it up to 80°C and simmer for 15 minutes. Put it through a sieve and cool it. ROASTED HAZELNUTS 250g Hazelnuts, peeled / Pinch of salt Roast the nuts in the oven at 180°C for about 15 minutes, then chop finely and lightly salt. PÉRIGORD BLACK TRUFFLE 50g Périgord black truffle Shave the truffle into thin slices and cut out discs slice PLATING Circularly arrange the zander liver, zander fillet, zander cheeks, and button mushrooms in a deep plate and pour in the dashi stock. Fill the mushrooms with hazelnut foam and cover with the beef marrow. Evenly sprinkle the coffee oil and the roasted hazelnuts on the marrow disc and garnish with the truffle.

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STIR-FRIED FISH NOODLES LI CHI WAI CHINESE THE LEGACY HOUSE ROSEWOOD HONG KONG

Mandarin Fish Yellow croaker Fish Chinese Celery Chinese Mushroom Bean sprouts Chinese Chives Red Pepper Carrot Dried flatfish Fish Sauce Remove all bones from the Mandarin fish and yellow croaker fish. Add salt, iced water, spring onion, oil, sesame oil, cornstarch and pepper, and mix until it gets sticky. Shape the mixture into the shape of noodles with a noodle maker. Fried the fish noodles with bean sprout and dried flatfish powder. Add seasoning to taste.

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A FISHY MIX Marinara sauce Fresh prawns Fresh calamari Your choice of white fish Fresh clams Black pepper Salt to taste Olive oil Sunflower oil 1 Pod garlic sliced Parsley

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Shell and devein the prawns and leave aside. Prep the calamari, cut it into rings and leave aside. Soak the clams (change the water at least twice every 15 minutes). Strain just before cooking. Check the fish fillet for any bones and remove if necessary. Cut into squares or bite size slices. Pat dry. Season with salt and pepper and set aside. Heat a pan with some sunflower oil. Gently fry the fish slices on both sides until the meat turns from transparent to white with some signs of golden brown. Set aside. In a deep pan, heat up 1 tablespoon of olive oil. Sauté the garlic and add the clams and sauté until the clams start opening. Add in the Marinara sauce, calamari and prawns and cook until the prawns and calamari are cooked. Add in the fish slices and let the sauce simmer for another 2 minutes. Garnish with minced parsley. You can have serve this sauce with pasta or even with a big side of toasted bread for dipping! A very versatile dish!


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CURED SALMON DILL CRÈME FRAICHE, SHAVED FENNEL, CITRUS SEGMENTS AND YUZU TRUFFLE DRESSING LUIGI VESPERO WALDORF ASTORIA DIFC DUBAI 100g Thinly slice the smoked salmon 20g Crème Fraiche 5g Dill cress 35g Finely sliced fennel 3 Orange segment 2 Grapefruit segment 50ml Truffle yuzu dressing 15ml Extra virgin olive oil Maldon salt CURED SALMON 1kg Salmon fillets, pinned and brownout 100g Caster sugar 20g Star Anise 20g Coriander seeds 15g Ginger 100ml Lemon juice 100g Maldon salt 25g Lemongrass 100ml Fresh orange juice Mix all the ingredients in a medium-deep tray. Place the salmon with flesh side down and leave it for 2-3 hours. Turn the salmon over so that it is skin-side down and leave to cure for a further 5-7 hours. Curing time will depend on the thickness of the fillet. Once cured, rinse under cold water, pat dry and keep in the chiller. TRUFFLE YUZU DRESSING 250ml Truffle oil (for better results mix one part of white truffle oil and one part of black truffle oil) 26g Garlic, Microplane 240ml Yuzu jus 400ml Light soy 200ml Mirin or white balsamic 2g Xanthan (whisk into warm soy sauce if you need a thick dressing) Mix all ingredients.

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COD FISH MOUSSE 400g Codfish filet (already blanched and desalted) 300ml Whole milk Dill 10g Salted butter Cut the codfish into cubes. Put the milk in a saucepan with butter, milk, dill and the cod. Bring to a boil and cook for 20-25 minutes on low heat. It should be creamy. Season with salt and pepper. Let it cool. HOMEMADE YOGURT 1l Whole milk 35g Probiotics Melt the probiotics well in a bowl with 2 spoons of milk and add the rest of milk. Simmer at 40°C and pour into glass jars. Cool and put in the fridge.

BACCALA MANTECATO, YOUGURT, VODKDA, UOVA DI LOMPO LUCA ROSATI SAN GIMIGNANO TUSCANY, ITALY

MARINATED VODKA LUMPFISH ROE 100g Black Lumpfish roe 2 shots of Vodka Clean the roe under running water and put it in a bowl with the vodka for maximum 30 min. just the time for assorted the flavors. Drain and put in the fridge. WFirst, put the yogurt at the bottom of the plate and add the marinated roe on top. Put the codfish mousse into a pastry bag and place 3- 4 cones around the yogurt. Garnish with a bit of coffee powder and rosemary leaves.

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POACHED CANADIAN LOBSTER FRA DAIAVOLO GEL, CRISP SEAWEED AND BABY HEIRLOOM TOMATOES JAMES OAKLEY ALIBI, CORDIS HOTEL HONG KONG FRA DIAVOLO FLUID GEL 500g Fra Diavolo sauce 8g Agar 100g Lobster stock Bring Fra Diavolo sauce to a simmer in a pan. Once simmering add in agar and whisk until agar is fully dissolved. Remove from heat place into a container and allow to cool and set. Once set and cold, dice the Fra Diavolo gel and blend with the lobster stock until smooth, then pass through a fine sieve. CRISP SEAWEED 100g Boiled white rice 100g Good quality sushi nori 10g Light soy sauce 10g Mirin 300g Water

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Add rice and water in a pan. Bring to a boil and continue to cook until rice is very soft and starts to break down and is very thick in consistency. While it is still hot add the sushi nori, soy sauce and mirin and blend until smooth. Spread a thin layer evenly onto a silicon mat and dehydrate for 12 hours at 56°C. Allow sitting uncovered at room temperature for a further 12 hours. Deep fry at 180°C until crisp. HEIRLOOM CHERRY TOMATOES 200g Tomatoes 5g Sugar 5g Sea salt 10g Extra virgin olive oil 8g Xeres vinegar (sherry vinegar) 10g White balsamic vinegar In a pan of boiling water poach tomatoes for 10 seconds and immediately refresh in ice water. Keeping the tomatoes whole, remove the skins and pat dry with a towel. In a bowl add all remaining ingredients and mix together. Add tomatoes and lightly dress. LOBSTER 1 Whole Canadian lobster Remove tail and claw from the body (retain head and body for the stock). Tie a long metal stick to the tail to ensure it remains straight during cooking. Cook the claws in boiling water for 4 minutes and then immediately plunge into ice water. Cook tail in boiling water for 40 seconds and immediately plunge into ice water. Remove shell from lobster tail and tightly wrap into a cylinder using cling film. Cook tail at 56°C for 12 minutes, plunge into ice water and retain for later use.


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LOBSTER ORZO TIM NEWTON OPA DUBAI, U.A.E. SEAWEED BUTTER 1500g Butter 21g Dry seaweed 21g Furikake (a seasoning - the salt and pepper of Japan) Blend the furikake and seaweed in spice mixer along with soft butter. LOBSTER 600g to 800g Lobster Season the lobster in a big pan of water and bring to boil. Separate the lobster claws and knuckle. Cook the lobster body for 1 minute and claws for 3 minutes in salted boiling water, drain and then put them straight on ice. Once cold cut the shell in half-lengthwise and clean, keep the shell and meat separate. Clean claws and knuckle, keep the meat and discard the shells. Cut the lobster meat into medium size pieces then stuff it back into the cleaned shell with seaweed butter. Keep in the chiller. ORZO (a short-cut pasta) Cook orzo in salted boiling water for 9 minutes. Strain, drizzle with olive oil, making sure there are no lumps and cool down in blast chiller. Portion the cooked orzo pasta into 250g each.

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ORZO SAUCE 5l Tomato sauce 100g Red harissa 25g Dashi powder 100g Butter 3l Chicken stock 500ml Cream Heat butter in a pan, add the red harrisa and cook for 2 minutes. Add the rest of the ingredients and cook the sauce till it’s ready. Adjust seasoning with salt and sugar. Finishing ½ prepared lobster 250g Orzo pasta 40g Dry cherry tomato 2g Chopped parsley 160g Orzo sauce 90g Lobster stock 4g Confit lemon- finely chopped. 10g Olive oil Season the lobster and put it on a tray, drizzle olive oil on top. Mix the orzo pasta with rest of the ingredients, check seasoning then transfer to the serving dish. Place lobster and orzo inside the Josper and bake for 6 minutes. Take the orzo and lobster out and place the lobster on top of the baked orzo. Pour all the butter from cooking tray over it. Garnish it with parsley cress.


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orn in Milan to Calabrian parents, Simone decided to begin his culinary career at 17. He spent five years at Carlo Porta, the hotel and culinary school in Milan and during summer he managed to get the opportunity to do his first kitchen stage at Cracco-Peck restaurant in Milan, under the direction of Carlo Cracco. After graduating from Carlo Porta, Simone decided to apply to Gualtiero Marchesi’s restaurant in Erbusco. Gualtiero promised to give him a place as a commis before the interview but the situation changed when he arrived at the restaurant. The only job available was to work as service staff. Disappointed, he thought it was pointless for him to wear the service uniform but his father intervened and convinced him to take the role. This was the start of his culinary career. France was the next stage at 21 with Georges Blanc at his three Michelin-starred restaurant in Vonnas. He started from the bottom and in six months he was able to learn French. With Georges Blanc at one of the best classic French restaurants, besides learning how to make sauces, cooking meats and fish, he learnt French hierarchy and strict rules. Georges Blanc helped him by contacting Laguiole and he was given a chance to try out for a few days. This was the beginning at Bras Laguiole France, and now Simone has worked for the family for almost 10 years.

SIMONE CANTAFIO MASION BRAS TOYA JAPAN NAGANO-KEN, JAPAN

As chef director of Masion Bras Toya Japan, Simone lived in the middle of a magical place on the island of Hokkaido, in the north of Japan, near the village of Toya. The restaurant offers a different interpretation of this ‘cuisine of the moment’, still based on the same principles: the use of local produce, deference towards traditions and a profound respect for nature. Two countries, two styles of cuisine, guided by one concept and one standard of excellence, which enables Sébastien Bras to build culinary bridges between Laguiole and Toya, based on encounters and discoveries. His approach in the kitchen is to follow his heart. As a young chef, it was more about trying to make a beautiful dish but growing up with Michel Bras, he realised that the kitchen is not only about the visual, it’s much more deeper than that. With a focus on ingredients, he realised it’s important to work with the best of everything - ingredients, cooking techniques, service and the hospitality. His approach to a good dish is having great balance between product, creativity and technique.

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arime López is chef de cuisine at Gucci Osteria da Massimo Bottura, which the three-Michelin-starred Chef opened in January 2018 within the iconic Palazzo della Mercanzia in Florence’s Piazza della Signoria. In November 2019, Gucci Osteria da Massimo Bottura was awarded its first Michelin star, less than two years after its opening. At only 37 years of age, Karime became the first Mexican female chef to be awarded the recognition, and only the second chef in Mexico. Born and raised in Querétaro, north of Mexico City, Karime demonstrated a keen interest for food and the art of cooking since she was a child. After moving to Paris to study plastic arts, Karime fell in love with the beautiful Parisian pâtisseries windows and understood food can be a form of art. She has then worked at some of the best restaurants around the world, building experience with the most exciting avant-garde master chefs. Her career started in Spain at Sant Celoni with whom she considers her first mentor, the late chef Santi Santamaria, next came Mugaritz with Andoni Luis Aduriz, followed by Enrique Olvera at Pujol in her native Mexico. She then worked with René Redzepi at Noma and moved to Japan, where she worked at Ryugin, the three-starred temple of cuisine in Tokyo. In Peru, she spent five years as Virgilio Martínez’s right hand at Central. While there, she met Takahiko Kondo: Massimo Bottura’s sous-chef at Osteria Francescana. They married and Karime Lopez moved to Italy. Her fruitful collaboration with Massimo Bottura began in Modena. She was responsible for refining, testing and writing the recipes for his book ‘Bread is Gold’. Massimo Bottura was “so impressed with her dedication, professional skills and talent” that he invited her to take up the position of Chef de Cuisine at the Gucci Osteria in Florence on the very day the book went to print. Karime’s menu is inspired by her international career and culinary travels, the global origins and experience of her team, as well as her passion for art and music. She challenges the traditional perception of Italian cuisine, creating playful takes on classic dishes. Her signature culinary flair and avant-garde way of mixing styles are a perfect match for Bottura’s vision and the concept behind Gucci Osteria, which is to remind people that “Florence has always been a centre of cultural exchange, particularly during the Renaissance. It brings the most diverse traditions, trends and styles together”.

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KARIME LÓPEZ GUCCI OSTERIA DA MASSIMO BOTTURA FIRENZE, ITALY


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cclaimed Chef Li Chi Wai brings over two decades of culinary expertise to Rosewood Hong Kong in his position as Chinese Executive Chef at The Legacy House, specializing in refined Cantonese cuisine, including gastronomy from the Shunde region of southern China’s Guangdong province. A master of traditional Cantonese cuisine, Chef Li has served in senior management positions at several toptier international luxury hotels in the region, most recently including MGM Macau and MGM Cotai. In his position as Chef de Cuisine at MGM, he managed significant new openings, menu development and operations for the hospitality group. Throughout his career, Chef Li has played pivotal roles in several of Macau’s most prestigious events, including ceremonial banquets for the fourth and fifth International Economic and Trade Forum in Macau. Later, in 2014, he prepared a welcoming dinner for Xi Jinping, President of the People’s Republic of China, during the 15th anniversary celebrations of Macau’s reunification with China. Prior to joining Rosewood, Chef Li also held positions at InterContinental Hong Kong’s Yan Toh Heen restaurant and Maxim’s Catering.

LI CHI WAI THE LEGACY HOUSE HONG KONG, CHINA

The pursuit of exquisite food and culinary prowess drives him as a chef, he loves love Canton-style ingredients and cooking methods. By using seasonal and exceptionally fresh ingredients and likes to let the flavours shine through in his dishes. He loves to visit Hong Kong’s many wet markets, where he always find inspiration, fresh insights and a varied selection of the best local produce. Li’s culinary skills don’t begin and end with southern Chinese cuisine. He’s garnered a reputation as a highly versatile chef, having prepared everything from Jinglu to Sichuan, Mongolian and Huaiyang cuisines. He loves all kind of cuisines from different countries and hopes to understand the customs and specialties from around the world in order to meet the needs of every discerning guest Rosewood Hong Kong.

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orn in Italy and as long as he can remember, Luigi always wanted to be a chef. His inspiration for food came from home, from his ‘Nonna’ (grandmother), who made the most delicious food. She is the one who helped Luigi discover his passion for cooking and to this day, the taste, smells and textures of his grandmother’s food. He first stepped into a professional kitchen at the age of 14, he knew this was his calling. He started out as a pot washer, but even so, the kitchen was his comfort zone, a happy place where he knew he belonged. Even today, he stills get a sense of belonging in any kitchen, his passion for cooking running through his veins. Luigi was fortunate to work with some of the most highly respected people in the industry, first with Chris and Jeff Galvin in London and Dubai and with Gordon Ramsay. Chris and Jeff taught him a great deal about French cuisine which he fell in love with. “The first day I stepped into Gordon Ramsay’s kitchen, my life changed forever and I was catapulted into a different league. This helped me so much throughout my career.” Embracing every moment of his beautiful culinary career, as Executive Chef of the Waldorf Astoria Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC), he and his team are constantly looking at what the market can offer in terms of seasonality, quality, and sustainability. The dining experience at Waldorf Astoria DIFC offers three very unique outlets. The signature restaurant Bull & Bear offers an imaginative cuisine with a global twist. The rooftop bar, St. Trop brings you a Mediterranean-infused menu with regional accents; and the iconic Peacock Alley lounge is the ideal spot for a freshly brewed coffee, amazing pastries and afternoon tea. “Help the ingredients to be the star of the show” is Luigi’s philosophy to food. He is much more focused on the sensory elements of the dish, it has to look right, but it must also smell and taste delicious too. He uses a simple technique which has never let him down – Taste It, ReTaste It, and Taste It Again. His attention to the acidity levels of a dish is very important “especially when we think about what guests will pair their dish with, perhaps a glass of white or red or another beverage, how that impacts the overall sensations and taste. Food and drink must be well-balanced and complement each other, not fight or compete for the senses.”

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LUIGI VESPERO WALDORF ASTORIA DIFC DUBAI, U.A.E.


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he 2019 Executive Chef of the Year, James Knight-Pacheco, Executive Chef at ME Dubai grew up in in a culture based on family and food, so predominantly the most of his household were are all female. The weekends were family gatherings and it was all about sharing, cooking and laughing, so from a very young age, he learnt from his grandmother, his mother, even his uncles. The kitchen and cooking were not on his mind and it did not even think that one day that this would shape his career. It was at the age of nine that he moved to the southwest of England. Here he was only about half an hour from the beach and half an hour from the mountains. Being geographically situated like this was an excellent environment for great produce, fresh seafood, and incredible dairy products. James started in the restaurant industry by doing small, odd jobs at first—like many, doing dishes. But after receiving a three-year hotel management food degree, James went on to work with some culinary icons including Raymond Blanc, Gordon Ramsay, Michael Caines, Jason Atherton, Peter Gorton, and Andre Garrett. Working with Raymond wasn’t just about the food, James learnt to respect the produce, the farmers, the process of how long this has been grown, and how will the guest see this? It was all about Respect, Respect, and Respect. It was the toughest kitchen in which James has ever worked—not physically, but mentally. In the kitchen, it was extremely quiet—only two voices—Gary Jones, his executive head chef and the pastry chef. It was all about being focused. Combining his South American roots with an upbringing in South West England, James has developed a unique cuisine. Featuring locally sourced produce and refined flavours, James has designed a unique balance of flavours and now uses his ‘flavour pyramid’ to create new dishes. “This flavour pyramid is quite straightforward,” he says. “At the very top of the pyramid, you have your superstar flavour, and then below that, you have two supporting flavours. Then you have the texture and finally, the presentation. Once I have all of these components, then it’s about finding that perfect balance through exhaustive trial and error.”

JAMES KNIGHT PACHECO ME DUBAI DUBAI, U.A.E.

Quality ingredients are of paramount importance to James, and the creativity follows. “Without good produce, it’s an immediate challenge. As a chef, you have to be creative—not only on the plate but in your mind. The best thing about being a chef is that you have an opportunity to keep learning. You learn from other people, you learn from an idea—you can learn from virtually anything. So creativity is a huge thing for me,” adds James. “Finally, the technique. Technique comes with time and learning from mistakes. These are skills that you pick up along the way.” James is fiercely committed to his craft. He is someone who always wants to keep pushing himself as hard and as much as possible.

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aving discovered his passion for cooking at a young age, Oliver Marlow first settled into his calling with a specialised culinary arts programme at Bournemouth & Poole College. He began working in the kitchen of Chewton Glen in Hampshire, upholding the high quality service of a Relais & Châteaux property as chef de partie. In 2012, Oliver kicked off his first stint as chef de partie at the then-popup restaurant Roganic, the Simon Rogan establishment he would later lead to its honorary one Michelin star status upon its permanent return in 2017. Over the next six years, Oliver continued to climb up the culinary ladder and hone his skills through a string of impressive tenures across the world. His early experiences included three Michelin-starred Eleven Madison Park in New York City, three Michelin-starred Maaemo in Oslo as Sous Chef, and three Michelin-starred The Fat Duck in Bray as sous chef, before finally, landing back at Roganic in London as head chef. There, he recalls the thrill of heading a young and dynamic team with access to Simon Rogan’s own farm in the Lake District of England’s stunning northwest region. Applying the signature style of cooking he developed over years of training, Oliver’s renewed focus on ingredients and uniquely minimalistic approach to food earned Roganic its first coveted Michelin star. In the year that followed, Roganic also received its 4 AA Rosettes rating under Marlow’s helm. In early 2019, Oliver moved to Hong Kong to assume the role of executive chef at Simon Rogan’s first overseas restaurant venture in Asia, Roganic Hong Kong, which opened alongside Rogan’s development kitchen Aulis in the heart of Causeway Bay. Roganic Hong Kong officially opened in February 2019 to high critical acclaim, often described as one of the best restaurant openings of the year by celebrated food critics and publications such as Hong Kong Tatler, South China Morning Post, Lifestyle Asia and was also awarded by Foodie Hong Kong as Best New Restaurant Opening of 2019.

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OLIVER MARLOW ROGANIC - HONG KONG & LONDON AULIS HONG KONG


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eresa’s aunt and uncle were her biggest inspirations when she was young. They were highly aware of the value of fresh, wholefoods, and creating dishes that were straight from their garden. The day-old rye bread from the pantry was used to make a rye porridge for breakfast. This was as simple as breaking up chunks of bread into a bowl and pouring steaming hot milk and coffee over it—and she loved it! To this day, she continues to be inspired by their simplicity and how just a few ingredients can become something spectacular. At only fourteen, Teresa got a part-time weekend job at the local bakery. Here she was inspired by the bakers and all the beautiful creations that came out of the oven. After leaving school, she trained for quite a few years while working under many great chefs in Perth. She then gained an apprenticeship with Neal Jackson in his fivestar kitchen. Here she spent the next few years creating hot and cold entrees, main courses, desserts and cooking rich, French-style sauces and pastries. She was soon promoted to an assistant pastry chef and would go on to win a gold medal at Salon Cullinaire for her creation of a magnificent Indonesian layer cake designed to resemble an ancient bible. In 2006, she opened her first café in Sydney, Australia named The Healthy Chef. She wanted the restaurant to emulate the feeling she experienced in her great aunt’s home. It was one of the first cafés in Sydney to offer healthy, plant-based, delicious food that appealed to the masses. After selling it in 2012 amidst health challenges, Teresa decided to use her knowledge, experience, and passion to create a range of nutritional products made from clean, organic ingredients. Additionally, she developed a collection of cookbooks, whose research was designed to not only help with her own health but for others who are on a wellness journey.

TERESA CUTTER THE HEALTHY CHEF SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA

A regular columnist with the prestigious TIME magazine (USA), and the author of several international awardwinning cookbooks, Teresa is the founding director of The Healthy Chef Functional Food Range that consists of organically sourced proteins, superfoods, teas, and nutritional whole food products. The Healthy Chef is also a boutique media and publishing company producing quality, healthy cookbooks for the Australian and worldwide market. She looks back at her great aunt and uncle. They had it right. There are fresh fruit and vegetables, there’s protein, and there are healthy fats, nothing overcomplicated. Teresa believes getting the perfect harmony of flavours can just come from the use of straightforward, fresh whole-food ingredients, sticks to using fresh food and focus on plant-based ingredients, creating dishes that are naturally gluten-free, vegan, sugar-free, and most importantly, delicious.

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he 2018 and 2019 Illustrado 100 Most Influential Filipinos in the Middle East, John B brings a modern look and elevates Filipino cuisine to a new level in the Middle East. Born in the Philippines and grew up surrounded by family and culture in love with food. His grandmother cooked rice cakes to pay for his father’s schooling and his mother helped her mother with the cooking. The entire family including the aunts and uncles would prepare extravagant feasts at family gatherings and eventually, John fell in love with cooking. From the Philippines to the Maldives, to Abu Dhabi and The Atlantis in Dubai, he was exposed to different kinds of properties and operations helped him a lot in his career. From working in a Michelin star restaurant to being the chef of a catamaran cruise ship in the Maldives, to running a steakhouse at the Atlantis. “The experience was priceless and no culinary school can ever teach you. I worked with some great chefs for over a decade and a half and eventually, I streamlined my style, my cuisine after learning all the techniques and philosophy from these great chefs.” “Being exposed to different types of properties and operations has helped me significantly in my career. From working in a Michelin-star restaurant to being the chef of a catamaran cruise ship in the Maldives, to running a steakhouse at the Atlantis—these experiences were priceless and ones that no culinary school could ever teach. I have worked with great chefs for the past 15 years of my career, and eventually, I streamlined my own style.” Adding colour to Dubai’s culinary landscape, in 2017, John opened “Cuisinero Uuno an Urban Tapas Bar.” This is where he expressed himself. He had the tools to do what he does best and he drew his motivation and drive from the urge of being deprived earlier of doing what he wanted to do. Unfortunately, due to market difficulties, he closed Cuisinero Uuno, “The market was tough and brutal, and a business cannot be fuelled by passion.” John B was then appointed Executive Sous Chef as part of the pre-opening team of Waldorf Astoria DIFC where he and his team handle the F&B of the restaurants and dining concept. Recently John was appointed as Cluster Executive Chef of the Al Seef Hotels - Hampton by Hilton Dubai Al Seef, Canopy by Hilton Dubai Al Seefand Al Seef Heritage Hotel Dubai, Curio Collection by Hilton. John B follows a simple golden rule “Simple & Straight forward”. Good produce, modern cooking methods with a lot of love and passion. Whenever he creates a dish, his focus is on locally sourced ingredients. From there he works around the flavours, looks at different components that would complement the main ingredient. “Flavour, texture, scent and visual appeal must be balanced to make a complete dish. Ingredients inspire me are black cardamom, dry-aged beef, smoked paprika, garlic and cumin seeds, they are so interesting and complex. There are lots of ingredients I have not mastered, I think cooking is something that will always require constant growth and learning. You will always find new ways to use a specific type of ingredient as you grow. Every new ingredient is a challenge, I never stop innovating and experimenting.”

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JOHN BUENAVENTURA CANOPY BY HILTON DUBAI DUBAI, U.A.E.


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orn in Cagliari, Italy. Giorgio did not start wanting to be a chef, his family owned a construction company and they wanted him to be an engineer. But his childhood passion was cooking and to eat. He changed his direction when he was 12. He started engineering school not before switching to his true path and joined the Antonio Gramsciculinary School. He was blessed with an amazing professor who helped and gave him direction. Surprisingly at the same time his father influenced him and actually helped me throughout his career especially when failing to see the significance of what he wanted him to do, his son striving to prove himself in front of him was a powerful motivation. And, as a result by the age 17 he left to follow his dream. He went to Germany to improve his skills and learn from the best. This is where his culinary career started where he wanted to be one of the best. His culinary journey has been through love and passion. “When, starting my first job it turned out that it was not a job but a hobby you practice day in and day out. You make mistakes and errors but you learn something new with every mistake you make adding into your ability and skill.” Giorgio worked is some of the best restaurants in Germany, where he gained experience working with Giovanni Marchesani and further enhanced his culinary experience working with Bobby Bräuer, Shane McMahon, Andrea Fadda and Claudio Turrin. From beginning of his career he didn’t want to work in restaurants only, but also wanted to explore cultures and cuisines. To study people’s mentalities and life styles around the world. His dream was to be the best in gastronomy and for him this was achieved outside the kitchen starting at a young and early age. This has influenced him a lot, as now it’s almost 21 plus years in the kitchen in 12 different countries that has helped him to apply different methodologies and recipes, all the previous experiences built his own signature style in gastronomy.

GIORGIO DIANA ATICO FAKHRIDDIN GROUP JORDAN

Giorgio’s philosophy is based on a worldwide experience, studying the culture, clientele, the market, and colleagues that he has worked with or competed against. So, he can achieve a unique experience in each and every country he has worked in. When he create a new dish, he considers the season and the local market, the environment around and the product freshness that inspires him. When the fish for example arrives it has some seaweed around it, this sparks a spontaneous action that is triggered by an inner intuition that runs through his blood and leads him to create his own version of nature and reality.

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orn in Siena, Italy, Luca grew up in the medieval town of San Gimignano in the heart of beautiful Tuscany, father of two beautiful girls, a professional photographer and yes, a chef. After finishing high school, Luca did his selective service in the army as a sharpshooter. This is an experience that he recalls rather fondly, as it was at this time that thanks to his army mates, he was coerced into the kitchen for the very first time. Luca is an extremely creative, dynamic, curious individual who loves to travel and explore new cultures— the traditions in their cuisine. Passionate about music and a drummer since the age of 16, he is a true renaissance man. Luca discovered his passion for photography throughout his travels, especially during his time in Japan. His interest in food photography was sparked by his appreciation for the beauty and perfection of the cuisine that he came across, as well as the artisans who created it. It was 15 years ago that Luca decided that it was time to follow his dream and he entered a professional kitchen in Florence for the very first time. Driven by curiosity, passion, and the sheer determination to succeed, it was here that he met Francesco—his first real mentor. After this initial experience, Luca was fortunate to move on to a Michelin star restaurant in Certaldo Alto. This is where he met Sara (the chef and owner) who pushed him beyond his perceived limits encouraging his creativity and passion in haute dining. It was here that he developed his vision of modern cuisine, his interest in rare ingredients and the composition and art of plating. His experience in a 20-seat tavern in the Chianti area was his first as the only chef in a kitchen. Featuring a small menu, attention to detail, locally sourced ingredients, and everything made from scratch was the key to his success. It was during his three years here that his skills and style evolved—developing his unique combination of tradition and innovation. Luca Rosati’s passion for cooking and photography are immutably connected. Luca believes that every chef loves to immortalize his works with photography. The love of beauty and perfection in the kitchen brought him from the pots and pans, to the lens of the camera. He found his way over the years by studying, working, and repeatedly experimenting. Learning from his mistakes, and every day, he became better at what he was doing. Progress and positive results have constantly motivated him to continue working. He started his career as a chef using complex ingredients and several combinations of flavours. Today, looking back 10 to 15 years, as a chef, he is very different. Now he uses no more than three to four ingredients for a perfect combination of taste, flavour, and presentation. Similarly, as a photographer, he seeks a minimal and clean look for a pristine and refined composition. The constant desire to evolve and to continually grow is at the core of Luca Rosati’s drive. Curiosity and creativity are consistently present in all of his endeavours. In both his cooking and his photography, he strives to create things that are uniquely recognizable as his own.

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LUCA ROSATI LUCA ROSATI SAN GIMIGNANO, ITALY


SPAGHETTI MACKEREL CARPIONE STYLE MACKEREL BRINE 500g White wine Niagara 550g White wine vinegar Nigara 100g Salt Dissolve the salt in the wine and the vinegar and bring to boil and chill. Cut the mackerel into diamond shape (approx. 1 in). Marinade the fish in the wine and vinegar brine for 20 minutes. Remove the fish from the brine, then place it inside a tray and cover it with extra virgin olive oil. Cover the tray with a plastic wrap that touches the oil, and cook inside a steam oven at 85°C for 8 minutes. TUNA SAUCE 20g Extra virgin olive oil 12g Balsamic vinegar 190g Callipo tuna 14g Maille Dijon mustard 14g Anchovies 75g Water 1g Salt 0.5g White pepper Place all the ingredients inside vita mix and blend at high speed until smooth.

SAVERIO MACRI DON ALFONSO 1890 TORONTO, CANADA CRISPY BREAD 200g White bread 100g White onions brunoise 50g chopped pine nuts 30g minced parsley 2g salt Extra virgin olive oil Caramelize the onion with extra virgin olive oil. Cut the bread in small cubes (approx. 0.5 cm side). Pan-fry the bread on a non-stick pan, with extra virgin olive oil, until it turns golden brown. Add to the pan the caramelized onions, the parsley, the pine nuts and the salt and mix all together. Dry the mix on a paper towel and place it inside the dehydrator overnight at 60°C. Store in an air tight container and place it in the fridge. PARSLEY SAUCE 70g Picked, blanched and shocked parsley 30g Raw parsley 450g Sparkling water 1g Absorbic 5g Olive oil 3g Salt 4.5g Xanthan 3pcs Ice cubes

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RED MULLET 200g Red mullet 250g Capriccioso sauce 3 Cherry tomatoes 100g Dry white bread 3g Fresh basil 1tbsp Pesto 2tbsp Extra virgin olive oil Clean and fillet the red mullet, making sure that you remove all of the bones. Heat the Capriccioso sauce. Mix part of it with the dry bread and make 3 small balls of “pappa al pomodoro.” Boil the cherry tomatoes for 4 seconds in salt water. Remove the skins. Cook the skins for 10 minutes at 180°C with salt, oil and part of the fresh basil. Remove the skins and reserve. Deep fry half of the tomato skins to use later as a garnish. At 100°C bake the rest of the stalk of basil and the rest of the tomato skins for 1 hour. Mix them separately in the blender so you can have a green and a red powder. Cook the red mullet in olive oil. Spread the skin side with the Capriccioso sauce and the pesto.

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ALFREDO RUSSO DOLCE STIL NOVO TURIN, ITALY


PLANCHA DE MARISCOS TAMARA CHAVEZ TONO CEVICHERIA SINGAPORE 250g Prawns 250g Squid 250g Fish 250g Baby squid 2pcs Yellow zucchini 2pcs Green zucchini 2pcs Eggplant 2pcs Baby roman lettuce 1pcs Lemon 50ml Balsamic vinegar 20g Chopped parsley 20g Chopped coriander Olive oil Salt Black pepper Clean the seafood and cut the fish & squid into cubes. Cut the vegetables in thickly slices. Grill the vegetables with olive oil until everything become golden brown. Grill the seafood in a different pan with salt, pepper and lemon juice. Mix all the vegetables and seafood in a bowl with parsley, chopped coriander and balsamic vinegar. HUANCAINA SAUCE 300g Spanish onions 20g Garlic 1 Red chilli 180g Evaporated milk 150g Halloumi cheese 300g Yellow capsicum 225g Olive oil 30g Crackers Salt Sautee the onion, garlic, red chilli. Keep aside to cool down. Mix everything to blend, reserved for use after Plating Micro greens Cooked quinoa Once the vegetables and seafood are ready, arrange in a plate. Tap with Huancaina sauce, micro greens and quinoa.

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CURED PARROTFISH 500g Fillet of parrotfish / 5g Sea salt / Gelburger SOSA / 30g Wakame seaweed / 5 Sheets nori

CEVICHE NIC VANDERBEEKEN APÉRITIF BALI, INDONESIA 60ml Lemon juice / 60ml Lime juice / 1pc Green tomato / 1 Red tomato / 15g Celery / 25g Red onions / 6g Red chillies / 10g Coriander leaves / 3g Galangal / 16ml Yuzu juice / 18ml Mirin 200ml Fish stock / 2pcs Kaffir lime leaves / Salt / 80ml Coconut milk Blend all ingredients except coconut milk in a thermomix and let sit for an hour. Press the ingredients through cheesecloth and add the coconut milk. Season it with salt and reserve for later use.

Toast the nori and wakame in oven set to 160°C for 10 minutes, blend to a fine powder. Cure the fillet of parrotfish with sea salt for 1 hour. Wash off the cure and pat dry. Cut the fillet of parrotfish to 1.5-2cm thick strips and roll in the seaweed powder. Using a fine sieve, sprinkle a thin layer of gelburger on all sides of the fish strips. Lay plastic wrap measuring 40cms x 80cms, stack the fish strips starting with 4 strips at the bottom of the layer, then 3, 2 and finally the last strip on top like a pyramid. Roll the plastic wrap over the stack of fish and gradually pull back the plastic while tucking in the fish so that it forms a cylinder. Keep rolling until the stack of strips looks like a circle from the side and pull the side of the plastic taut and tie. Rest the fish for at least 1 hour in the fridge before slicing. AVOCADO CREAM 1 Avocado / 20ml Double cream / 5g Coriander leaves / Lime juice of one lime / Salt Half the avocado and scoop out the flesh, discarding the stone. Place the avocado, coriander and cream in a blender, blitz and pass through tamis lined with cheesecloth. Season with lime juice and salt. FINISHING 10pcs Hijiki seaweed / 5pcs Chilli strips - julienne / 5pcs Purslane leaves / 3pcs Bronze fennel leaves / Lemon oil

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ESPRESSO INFUSED FIELD MUSHROOM BISQUE, RASPBERRY POINT OYSTERS, CUCUMBER RAITA 500g Button mushrooms 300g Cremini mushrooms 150ml Heavy cream 200ml Mushroom stock 50g Shallots 20g Garlic 1g Thyme 8 Fresh oysters 80g English cucumber 50ml Yoghurt 50g Whole coffee beans 1 Lemon 100ml Olive oil 50g Hazelnuts Salt and pepper to taste

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GRANT MACPHERSON SCOTCHMYST LAS VEGAS Heat olive oil in a pan and add chopped shallots, garlic, and thyme. Continue to cook with mushrooms and coffee beans. Cook the mixture for an hour. Add the cream and continue to cook for 30 minutes and blend. Shuck the oysters without losing the juice inside. Make the raita by blending the cucumber and yoghurt with lemon juice in a bowl and add salt and pepper to taste. Finish the soup with cracked hazelnuts, crushed coffee beans and a drizzle of olive oil.


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3 pcs Scallops 60ml Olive oil 100ml Marinara sauce 50ml Chardonnay 50g Quinoa 20ml Vinegar 30g Sugar 300ml Water 400ml Corn Oil 100ml Whole milk 10g Thyme sprigs 3g Soy Lecithin Salt and black pepper to taste

SCALLOPS WITH CRISPY QUINOA AND THYME BUBBLES JORGE RIVERO MÖVENPICK HOTEL JUMEIRAH LAKES TOWERS, DUBAI

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Season the scallops with salt and pepper and sear with olive oil in a non-stick pan until golden brown. Add the wine and reduce. Then add the Marinara sauce until fully heated. Cook the quinoa with water, vinegar and sugar. Once it is done, fry in a medium-heat oil until crispy. Add the lecithin into the milk and mix until it is dissolved. Warm the milk to 70°C and infuse with the thyme sprigs for at least 10 minutes. Remove the thyme and with a hand mixer, blend to obtain the foam. To serve, put the Marinara sauce on the bottom, arrange the scallops and garnish with the crispy quinoa and foam.


INGREDIENTS 1 Red Shrimp - Carbinero / 250g Red shrimp heads / 60g Cappriccioso sauce / 50g Butter / 50g Curacao / 15g Shrimp essence / 250g Shrimp consomme / 5g Vegetables gelatine / 2g Gellan / 5g Squid ink / 5g Extra virgin olive oil 10g Shrimp head essence Peel the shrimp, remove the intestines and reserve. With the heads, prepare the shrimp essence by cooking them with 20% of their total weight of butter, really slowly until the heads release almost all of the juices. Blend it and pass though a fine sieve in order to obtain a paste that will be used as the essence. Reserve the part that won’t go through after sieving. Place the remaining pieces of shrimp head shells into a pan, and cover with one liter of mineral water, and two-thirds of the Capriccioso sauce. Cook it slowly as if it was a chicken consommé for about one hour. Seep the soup again and filter through a stamen to remove all of the sediment. Cool it down and remove the fat that will become solid on the top. Reserve. Place half of the shrimp essence on a silicon mold with a half sphere shape and freeze it. Meanwhile prepare a vegetable gelatin bath that will be used to create the membrane to cover the shrimp coolant. Mix the squid ink with 100 grams of shrimp consommé, boil it and add the gelatin mixing well all the time. Once the half sphere is frozen, stick it with a needle and dip it into the gelatin bath twice, being careful to do not let it fall. Reserve the coolant in the refrigerator. With the remaining gelatin prepare on top of a non-stick surface a few drops or pearls that will used to create the illusion of Miro’s dish. Now to prepare the blue carpet that will be the base for the dish, mix 125 grams of lobster consommé with 2 grams of gellan and the curacao. Boil everything and extend on an oven tray or a flat surface keeping an inclination of 10 degrees to let it flow down all along the surface to create a thin layer. Once this is cooled down, cut to a size of 18 x 12.5 cm. On a glass tube place put half of the remaining shrimp essence and cover with the olive oil. Reserve it in a warm place such as a Bain Marie.

To finish the dish place the blue gelatin on the bottom. On top of that, following Miro’s design, the coolant and the small black pearls. The remaining shrimp essence mixed with the remaining Capriccioso sauce goes under the shrimp and before serving, place the grilled shrimp on top of the essence and place the glass tube on the side. The best way to enjoy this recipe is to roll the gelatin around the shrimp and then eat this as a cannelloni, using the sauce in the tube as a dressing.

RED SHRIMP “BLAU II” DANIEL NEGREIRA HIDDEN BY DN TAIPEI 140


INGREDIENTS 1lb Spaghetti alla chitarra 2 Lobster tails par cooked & peeled (8-10 oz ea.) 1 cup Dry chardonnay 3 cups Fra Diavolo sauce 1 ½ tbsp Italian parsley (chopped) ½ cup Brandy 4tbsp Regular olive oil 1tbsp Raw pine nuts Salt and ground black pepper to taste

LOBSTER FRA DIAVOLO OVER SPAGHETTI ALLA CHITARRA CARLA PELLEGRINO BIANCO RESTAURANT GROUP LLC LAS VEGAS, U.S.A.

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METHOD Cut the lobster tails into ¾ inch slices (medallions). Place a large sauté pan over medium-high flame and let it heat for about 2 minutes. Add in 2 tablespoons of olive oil and let it heat for another minute. Add the lobster medallions and sauté for 2 minutes and then add the brandy and let it evaporate (about 2 minutes). Add the chardonnay and the pine nuts and cook for another 2 minutes. Stir in the Fra Diavolo sauce and let the sauce simmer for 5 minutes. Stir in the cooked pasta and let cook for 1 additional minute. Serve immediately. COOKING THE PASTA Fill a medium stock pot with hot water (about 3 quarts). Add sea salt, or kosher salt and a tablespoon of vegetable oil. Place it over medium-high flame and bring it to a boil. Add the Chitarra Spaghetti, lower the flame and let it cook for about 7 to 8 minutes; strain it and set it aside. Note: The Spaghetti alla Chitarra can be replaced with tagliatelle, taglierini or dry linguine.


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Slow-cooked salmon with blood orange, buffalo mozzarella cheese and roasted black cabbage in coffee aroma

BENVENUTO CASA FRANCESCO GUARRACINO ROBERTO’S DUBAI & ABU DHABI The idea behind this dish was to use ingredients that represent Italian regions – black cabbage from Florence, buffalo mozzarella cream from Naples and blood orange from Sicily. These are combined with ingredients, such as salmon, which aren’t present in Italy and coffee is the element that we all have in common.

SALMON 120g Salmon fillet / 10ml Blood orange juice / 2g Coffee powder / 2/3ml Italian espresso coffee / 5ml Extra virgin olive oil / Maldon salt to taste Cut a fillet of salmon to create three triangles. Place the salmon in vacuum bag with all the ingredients and cook in a water bath for 12 minutes at 65°C. The salmon will then be seared for few minutes on the Josper oven to crisp the skin. BUFFALO MOZZARELLA CREAM 50g Buffalo mozzarella / 10ml Hot water / Orange zest as needed Salt and black pepper to taste / Xantana as needed Take the mozzarella and place for 1 minute and 30 seconds in a microwave in a bowl covered with cling film. The mozzarella will release all the water and juices. Place in a Thermomix with all the other ingredients and blend until smooth. Strain with a sieve and reserve the cream for plating. BLACK CABBAGE 90g Black cabbage / 60g Vegetable stock or fish stock 5g Italian extra virgin olive oil / 5ml Blood orange juice Salt and black pepper Sauté the black cabbage with olive oil, add all the other ingredients and let it cook until the cabbage is soft and almost all the liquid is gone. Take the mix from the pan, place it on a silpat and in the dehydrator until it’s completely dry. Once dry, blend to obtain a powder which will be used in the final plating. GARNISH 30g Baby fennel / 20g Red baby radish / Sakura leaves Coffee powder PLATING Cook the salmon for a few minutes in the oven being careful not to overcook it. Place it in a serving tray ready to plate. Take the mozzarella cream and place three quenelles on the plate. Sprinkle the cream with the cabbage powder and a touch of coffee powder. Place the salmon on top. In a pan sauté the two baby fennel bulbs cut in half and previously blanched for five minutes, adding a touch of blood orange juice. Place the fennel upright against the salmon. Finish with slice of red radish and sakura leaves.

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SCALLOPS, IODIZED FOAM WITH PINK CURRY 3 Scallops 2 Withered carrots 1 Zucchini 1 Fennel 1 Pink radish 3 turns of Timut pepper mill Borage flower EMULSION 40cl milk 1tbsp Pink curry 1 Sprig of lemon thyme 1cl White wine 1.5g Sucro Emul Sosa COCONUT CREAM WITH CORAL 50g Fresh ginger, chopped 50cl Coconut milk 20g Grated lemongrass 1tsp Fine salt

JÉRÔME JULIEN SAINT RÉMY DE PROVENCE, FRANCE Open and rinse the scallops in clean water, separate the coral from the muscle and rinse the bards to remove the sand. Rest the scallops and keep them cool until it is cooked. Put the bards to heat gently with the milk, white wine, lemon thyme and pink curry, especially without boiling. In a pan with salt water boil the vegetables, cook them separately al dente as it will be easy to slice them with a mandolin. Allow 3 minutes for the zucchini and fennel and radish and 5 minutes for carrots. Once cooked, immerse them in ice to stop cooking and keep the color of the vegetable. For the coconut cream, brown the corals in butter with the ginger, lemongrass, salt and 2 turns of the pepper mill. Pour the coconut milk then mix to obtain a fine and light cream, and keep warm. Sear the scallops on both sides. Slice the vegetables on a mandolin. On a plate with a little fleur de sel, dress the coconut cream to coat. Add the bards and make an emulsion using a hand blender to obtain a nice scum then dress with a spoon. Garnish with borage flowers and lemon thyme and a round of pepper mill.

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TORTELLI PAPPA AL POMODORO CON GAMBERI ROSSI E SAPORI DI MARE 100g Fresh pasta dough 100g Fra Diavolo sauce 50g firm bread 5g Lemon zest 5g Orange zest 2 pcs Red mazzara shrimps 30ml Lobster bisque 30ml Salicornia puree 30ml Black squid ink purée Salt, pepper, extra virgin olive oil and basil TORTELLI For the stuffing, put 3 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil, garlic and fresh basil in a pot. When the extra virgin olive oil is infused add the firm bread and stir for 2-3 minutes and then add the Fra Diavolo sauce. Cook until the mixture sticks to the pot, cool it down and add lemon zest, orange zest, fresh basil, salt and pepper. Once done, put the mixture inside a pastry bag. With the help of a pasta machine, prepare 2 fine sheet of pasta, 2 mm size for the tortelli. Fill the fresh pasta with the stuffing and prepare a classic tortelli.

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FEDERICO TERESI ROME, ITALY SALICORNIA PURÉE Parboil the fresh salicornia in salty water for 7 minutes, then cool it down it in ice water. Put the salicornia in a pacojet pot with extra virgin olive oil and freeze it overnight, and then blend it. For the squid ink purée, put extra virgin olive oil, garlic, white onion and fresh tomato in a pot. Cook for 15-20 minutes and then add a tablespoon of squid ink and mix it until smooth. PLATING Put the 3 sauces inside 3 different squeezers and bring them to temperature. Drop the fresh tortellini in salt water for 3 minutes and then sauté it with fish stock and butter. Plate the 3 sauces in a white plate along with the tortelli and the marinated red shrimps. Garnish with baby basil leaves and extra virgin olive oil.


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MUSSELS, ENDIVE AND LARDO MANOELLA BUFFARA MANU CURITIBA, BRAZIL ENDIVES 4 Endives 400ml Orange juice 100g Noisette butter 50ml Citrus caramel 50g Cultured butter in cubes 8 Slices of ardo 8 Slices of sheep milk cheese (hard one, curated) Cut the endives in half. Grill the middle part in a fry pan, with noisette butter. Turn them over, add orange juice and let it reduce. Pour the citrus caramel and put the butter cubes, little by little, until it deglaze. MUSSELS SAUCE 50g Noisette butter 150g Chopped onions 3g grated garlic 200ml white wine 600g Mussels (cleaned, pre-cooked, no shelves) 400g Coconut milk 400g Whole milk 100g Heavy cream In a pan, braise the onions in noisette butter. Add the garlic and mix well. Add the mussels and cook well, until all the liquid evaporates. Pour the white wine and let it reduced. Add the coconut milk and whole milk and bring to a boil for 20 minutes. Remove it from the pan and blend it with the heavy cream for 10 minutes on high speed. Strain and let aside. CITRUS CARAMEL 2 Oranges 1 Grapefruit 1 Lemon 1 Lime 2 Mandarin orange 1 Canton lemon Make a juice from all citrus and reduce to half. PLATING Heat the mussels’ sauce. At the bottom of the plate, place the mussels’ sauce and put half endive glazed and cover it with its own sauce. Place the cheese slice and lardo slice over the endive. Serve immediately.

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SMOKED SALMON WITH RHUBARB AND CITRUS GRIBICHE STEVEN SMALLEY HILTON DUBAI JUMEIRAH HILTON DUBAI THE WALK 200g Irish smoked salmon 20g Fresh dill, ¾ cut, ¼ nice picked leaves 200g Fresh rhubarb 2g Agar agar 10m Shortcross 75g Castor sugar 50g Romanesco and purple cauliflower 20g Capers 10g Quinoa 1 Lemon, zest and juice 10ml Olive oil 1 Hardboiled egg, diced 10g Gherkins 10g Chopped parsley, chervil and tarragon 60ml Mayonnaise Salt and Pepper

SMOKED SALMON: Coat the smoked salmon in chopped dill, then cut into 50g slices. RHUBARB GEL AND CHIPS: Slice six thin slices of the rhubarb and place to one side. Cut the rest into 1 cm pieces, place it in a pan and cook it with 200ml of water for 20 minutes, when soft add the sugar and cook it for another 30 minutes till it is soft. Blend and pass it through a fine sieve. Add the Shortcross and agar - 1.1gr for 100ml of purée. When the sugar is added also place the sliced rhubarb for 2 minutes. Dry it in a low oven or under heat lamps till it is dry and crisp. Refrigerate until it sets, re-blend and place it in a squeeze bottle. CAULIFLOWER: Cut into small clean pieces and blanch separately in salted water. Chill in it ice water starting with the white, green and the purple. Toss in a little lemon juice with olive oil, salt and pepper. GRIBICHE: Dice the gherkins and mix the hardboiled egg, ½ of the capers and herbs with the lemon juice, mayonnaise. Add salt and pepper to taste. deep fry the remaining capers until crisp and then drain off excess oil. QUINOA: In a pan fry the quinoa till it starts popping and a nutty aroma comes from the quinoa, place aside to cool. SERVING SUGGESTIONS Place the salmon in the centre of the plate. Arrange the cauliflower at the side of the salmon. Add the capers, chips and dill leaves. Add the rhubarb gel in the spaces in between and the gribiche on the other side with the lemon zest and quinoa on top.

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KING CRAB AND SEA SNAIL TARTAR CRAB JUS, CHERVIL OIL AND BELUGA CAVIAR 1 leg of Alaska king crab 20g Pine nuts 20g Capers 20g Challotte onions 10g Chives 2 Sea snails 50g Chervil 20g Beluga caviar Mirepoi - 50g celery, 50g carrot, 50g red onion Salt, olive oil, white pepper, tarragon 2tbsp Tomato paste 50ml Chardonnay 50ml Crema 1tbsp Butter Vegetable oil TARTAR Bring water to a boil with little salt, add the king crab leg and the sea snails, cook it for 4 minutes. Cool it in an ice bath. Open the crab leg in two with a scissor, save the shell to finish the dish, the rest of shells will be used for the crab jus. Remove the meat inside the sea snails and wash the shell properly. Cut the crab meat and snail meat in julienne. Put it in a bowl and add the pine nuts, capers, challotte, chives, and season it with the chervil oil, salt and pepper.

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GIORGIO DIANA ATICO FAKHRIDDIN GROUP JORDAN CHERVIL OIL Bring water to a boil, blanch the chervil for 1 minute. Mix the boiled chervil in a long glass with the help of a hand blender and add slowly the olive oil. Strain it with a towel and the oil is ready. CRAB JUS Roast the rest of the crab shells into a pot with little oil and butter, add the mirepoi and slowly continue to roast. Add the tomato paste and mix all ingredients together till it is red. Add the wine, reduce it. Add the tarragon and slowly let it reduce. Strain it, add the crema and let reduce it very slowly till we have a nice jus. Serve it cold. PRESENTATION Place some charcoal dust in the middle of the plate and rest the crab shell. Fill have the shell with tartar and cover it with the other half shell. Fill the sea snail shells with crab us and add the caviar on top. Use some of the chervil as garnish. This dish is an amuse bouche and you do not require any cutlery. Open the crab shell, pour the jus from the sea snails with caviar. Use the other crab shell as a spoon to eat the tartar.


TUNA TIRADITO NIKKEI DANIEL CHAVEZ OLA COCINA DEL MAR SINGAPORE 400g Yellow fin tuna loin 100ml Citrus vinaigrette 50g Tuna marinade – 25g Salt 25, 25g Sugar and 1 Lemon. Mix the salt and sugar. Zest the skin of one lime and add to the mixture. GARNISHES 1 Avocado 8 Cherry Tomatoes ½ Orange 2 Radish 2tbsp Crispy capers 2tbsp Crispy garlic 1tbsp Chives Micro greens NIKKEI TIGER’S MILK 100g Water 8g Bonito flakes 40g Lime juice 20g Orange juice 40g Mustard 100ml Extra Virgin Olive Oil Simmer the water in a pot, add the bonito flakes and remove from the fire. Cover and infuse for 60 minutes. Strain and squeeze as much water as you can. Mix the lime juice and orange juice together with the bonito flakes infusion. In a bowl, mix the mustard with the olive oil until smooth. Slowly add the mixture of bonito broth and citrus until properly emulsified. CRISPY CAPERS 3tbsp Capers in brine 200ml Canola oil Drain the brine but do not rinse. Fry it in Canola oil at 180°C for 1to 2 minutes until it’s crispy. CRISPY GARLIC 10 Garlic cloves 200ml Water 200ml Canola oil Peel and chop the garlic until it is very small. Bring the water to a boil, add the garlic and blanch it for 2 minutes. Drain and make sure to remove as much moisture as possible and fry it in the canola oil for 10 minutes at 180°C until golden crispy. PLATING Marinate the tuna loin with the tuna marinade for 1 hour and then rinse under cold water and pat dry with a paper towel. Slice the tuna thinly and arrange on the plate. Dress the tuna with the Nikkei Tiger’s Milk. Garnish the plate with avocado, sliced cherry tomatoes and dress the dish with Tiger’s Milk one more time. Finish the plate with crispy capers, crispy garlic and micro greens. Serve immediately. The success of this dish will be in serving it as cold as possible.

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CHARCOAL PRAWNS 300g U-15 Tiger prawns 15g Garlic 10g Smoked paprika 2g Sea salt 2g Black pepper 15ml Corn oil CRAB FAT RAGOUT 50g Crab fat 10g Roasted garlic 150g Fra Diavolo sauce TOMATO SALSA 20g Shallots 5g Coriander leaves (cilantro) 5g Mint leaves 10ml Lime juice 5ml Corn oil 100g San Marzano tomatoes Peel the prawns leaving the head and tail intact. Marinate the prawns in chopped garlic, smoked paprika, black pepper, sea salt and some corn oil. Set aside in the refrigerator for 30 minutes. In a small pot heat some oil and sauté some garlic until golden brown in color. Reduce the heat to low and add the crab fat. Melt the crab fat and add the Fra Diavolo sauce. Season the mixture to taste with salt and pepper. Set aside and keep warm. Prepare the tomato salsa by chopping the San Marzano tomatoes into small thin strips. Add in the chopped shallots, coriander leaves (cilantro) and mint. Season the salsa with salt, pepper, a dash of lime juice and corn oil. Assemble the dish by grilling the prawns over charcoal. Scoop the crab fat ragout on the plate and carefully place the grilled prawns on top of it. Finish the dish off with some tomato salsa and fresh herbs for garnish.

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JOHN BUENAVENTURA CANOPY BY HILTON DUBAI

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aniel Negreira’s unlikely foray into the culinary world stemmed from a desire to imitate Conan the Barbarian—he sincerely wanted to play with knives. As a child, the only way for him to even get close to a knife, was to assist his grandmother in the kitchen. It was this unusual premise that was the genesis of what became a lifelong career. A Galician, Iberia native, Daniel was fortunate to learn alongside some of the best chefs in the business in the culinary mecca of San Sebastián. He experienced success early on, earning accolades such as the Best Young Chef of the Basque Country in 2006, as well as taking the silver medal in the Bocuse d’Or competition in 2007. He then journeyed to Taipei and opened El Toro, a small restaurant that ultimately landed amongst the Top 500 of Asia on the 2009 Miele guide. Looking to expand his footprint significantly, DN Innovación was launched to rave reviews and earned quite a few accolades in a short time. This included being named the best foreign restaurant in the nation in 2013 by the Miele Guide. As CEO and Founder of DN Group, Daniel has been successfully managing Shanghái’s Marina by DN, which was awarded the Best Spanish Restaurant in China by El País. Additionally, Alma by DN was included in the Michelin Guide, Shanghai in 2017 as a Bib Gourmand selection. His latest project in the heart of Taipei, Hidden by DN, has been recommended in the first edition of the prestigious Michelin Guide Taipei 2018, and is the only Spanish restaurant to have this recognition in Taiwan.

DANIEL NEGREIRA HIDDEN BY DN TAIPEI, TAIWAN

Daniel worked in some of the best kitchens with Ferran Adria, Juan Mari, and Elena Arzak. His style is rooted in a solid foundation of Basque cuisine and is influenced by his significant experiences in Asia. Always keeping a delicate balance between tradition and modernity has been just as important to him, as the balance between complexity and simplicity. Respecting the ingredients and transforming them only when the outcome will enhance the guests’ experience is genuinely his end game—a noble goal for sure. Daniel Negreira has become a culinary icon in his own right. A multi-faceted chef, author, and businessman. His culinary prowess and vision have carved a unique path to the pleasure of many. His artful approach makes the unusual fusion of Basque and Asian cooking traditions seem incredibly natural, delivering a unique cuisine that is truly memorable.

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orn in Rio de Janeiro to a Portuguese father and a second-generation Italian mother, Carla was only ten years old, when she started cooking daily for her family and assisting her mother in her catering business. She grew up in a very low-income household. Her mother used to cater for local birthday parties and such to help my father with the bills. However, she was alone in this process. So every time that there was a party to cater, Carla was her “sous chef,” skipping school on those days in order to assist her mum. So growing, up relating food with love and care, since helping her mum in the kitchen was Carla’s labour of love. She still to this day likes to cook for friends, family, or anyone she wants to show love, respect, or gratitude. This young start put Carla’s feet on solid culinary ground and laid the foundation for her education in the preparation of traditional Brazilian, Italian, and Portuguese cuisine. At the age of 16, she moved to Liguria, Italy, where she owned a small store where her passion for cooking inspired her to conduct daily cooking demonstrations. She lived in the countryside of Liguria, where her uncle grew his own olives and grapes. Taking advantage of all of those bountiful harvests and made everything from scratch like our fresh-pressed olive oil. The amazing aromas in that home are still vivid in her memories. She fell in love with Italian food on that farm, and Italian aromas will always be her inspiration for food. In 1997, Carla’s travels brought her to the United States. Here she attended the French Culinary Institute in NYC and in 2000, she graduated with honours. That same year, she and her husband, Frank Pellegrino, Jr., successfully established Baldoria Restaurant in the heart of New York City’s theatre district. At the end of 2006, another of her dreams became a reality, and Carla led a culinary team as the executive chef to open Rao’s Las Vegas—an outpost of the world-famous Rao’s in New York. She took ten of the original recipes from the legendary East Harlem Italian restaurant, added her own traditional Northern Italian cuisine, and built a high volume menu while remaining true to the family-style food served by Rao’s at its ten-table restaurant since 1886. Carla has been featured on Top Chef, Today Show, CBS Morning Show, Fox News, Throwdown with Bobby Flay which she won, Bon Appétit and multiple other national and local news outlets. With a proven track record of success and restaurants from New York City to Las Vegas, Carla Pellegrino is a shining star on the epicurean landscape. She has been serving up her inspired dishes at renowned restaurants for more than a decade, combining award-winning cuisine with a magnetic personality that has made her a favourite with food critics, restaurant patrons, and the media alike.

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CARLA PELLEGRINO BIANCO RESTAURANT GROUP LLC LAS VEGAS, U.S.A.


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teven Smalley began his culinary journey from his home country of England, a rich food upbringing from his grandmother, an excellent cook from Lithuania. Steven’s career was down to luck as he was supposed to pursue a career in Electronic Engineering but thankfully, he ended up going to catering college where he found his true passion. With over two and a half decades of experience, Steven took up positions in London, Lincolnshire, and Cambridge, working with the Crowne Plaza brand, followed by a series of posts in France, Italy, Ireland, and the Netherlands. It was after building his experience around the world, he then made his move to the Middle East, where he worked with Atlantis The Palm, Madinat Jumeirah, and Damac Hospitality Management.Working with several talented chefs, David Fitzpatrick and Tony Wright in England, Eamon O’ Reilly and Maurice Fitzgerald in Ireland, Jean Joel Bonsons and Martijn Van Roon in Amsterdam, have helped him be the chef he is today. Taking all the elements he has learned from each chef, he has inherited a number of characteristics and styles but still constantly evolving as he learns every day in the kitchen. Working in several countries, with different nationalities, plus the number of outlets he has overseen over the years, has had an impact on his cooking. Appointed as the Cluster Executive Chef at Hilton Dubai Jumeirah and Hilton Dubai The Walk, Steven oversees the daily operations of all the dining venues, in-room and banquet services, and stewarding operations at the two hotels and ensuring seamless interactions amidst all the staff and the highest quality of service. “Another big part of the position is hiring and training personnel, planning menus, optimizing the use of seasonal produce, overseeing product purchasing, and managing the culinary budget for the resort. I manage a team of 164 colleagues, who ensure smooth operations across 12 restaurants.”

STEVEN SMALLEY HILTON JBR AND HILTON THE WALK DUBAI, U.A.E.

His inspiration comes from the DNA of the concept, where food needs to match, so guests get fully immersed in the dining experience. Quality ingredients are the key as he brings out there natural flavour, combined with other ingredients that balance the flavours and textures, but never overriding the key ingredient of the dish. Stevens’s creations starts with the main ingredient and from there, it is a dance between flavours and textures that only serve to complement the main ingredient. Depending on the style and restaurant concept, Nods to tradition or family recipes, classic combinations, with a twist is a great way to draw his guest into the dish and spark an emotional connection between the guest and the dish.

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athan Green kicked off his career at the young age of 14 working at a local British pub. Upon graduating culinary school, he joined the kitchen brigade of the highly acclaimed two Michelin-starred Gidleigh Park where he trained under the legendary Chef Michael Caines. He then moved to London, where he held positions in some of London’s finest kitchens such as Tom Aikens, The Square, Arbutus and Restaurant Story. Nate was lucky enough to grow up in a family where a home cooked meal was always on the table. He grew up in rural midlands just north of Birmingham. His parents grew vegetables and fruits in their garden, and eggs and milk from down the road. His whole family loved food and loved to cook, they loved to entertain and have friends around them and food was a massive part of that. He did reasonably well at school but Nate never really enjoyed academics. When he left school he wanted to join the Royal Marines but due to hearing loss he suffered when he was born it wasn’t an option. Nate wasn’t just the working with food that attracted him to the kitchen it was also the military style discipline he enjoyed at the top level and always felt a t home in a kitchen. In 2014 Nate moved to Hong Kong to take the helm of celebrity chef Jason Atherton’s vibrant tapas bars 22 Ships and Ham & Sherry, and it was there that he first partnered with Yenn Wong’s hospitality firm, JIA Group. In 2016, they joined forces to open Rhoda, named after Nate’s grandmother, and the restaurant focused on unpretentious home-cooked food from the heart. The restaurant allowed him to indulge in two of his biggest passions – sustainable nose-to-tail cooking and live-fire grilling. At Henry, Nate channels the same passion into delivering a delicious homage to the American barbeque and steakhouse tradition. Equipped with live-fire ovens, charcoal grills, butcher’s shop and world-class meat lockers, Nate settles into his element to provide the city’s ultimate destination for meat-loving epicureans. It is an unapologetically American steak and smokehouse, paying tribute to the southern traditions. Think about smoked meats, steaks carved and served table-side, American Bourbon, Mangum wines and more, this is what Henry is all about.” His focus is always simplicity, how can he show case this incredible ingredient without affecting the integrity of its flavour. He believes in using modern science to understand stand why things work, but then he applies it to traditional techniques for example dry aging meat, fermentation, pickling / preservation, smoking, cooking with fire. What he ends up with is that balance of acid, salt, fat, sweet, bitter and umami but we try and get this through all these natural techniques. “I’ve been very blessed to work with some of the best chefs to come out of the UK and to have been able to work with them all side by side - Michael Caines, Tom Aikens, Adam Byatt and Phil Howard, Richard Turner, Anthony Demetre and Jason Atherton. It’s this collection of great chefs who have made me who I am today as a cook.”

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NATHAN GREEN HENRY HONG KONG, CHINA


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rowing up in a Peranakan family in Singapore meant that being in love with good food is a given trait. Jean Winter started her culinary journey in her early 30s after deciding to give up her successful career as a government scholar to follow her love for cooking and hosting dinners. Given her lack of experience, this decision to restart her career in the food and beverage industry raised many eyebrows. But Jean proved her naysayers wrong by building what was an accidental business from scratch to the success story that it is today. Family gatherings and dinner parties with friends were never without tasty, proper, home-cooked dishes by her mom. Jean always loved helping her mother and grandmother prepare meals. She was always the only child in the kitchen preparing the vegetables, peeling the prawns and pounding the spices using a mortar and pestle while other children were playing in the backyard. Even at this age, food preparation for her was fun and engaging. To be surrounded by the different smells, colours, and textures of all of the spices, vegetables, and meats was intoxicating and fun. It was through her mum that Jean learned how to cook traditional Peranakan food through the art of taste, sight, and smell. Nothing was ever taught in precise measurements; her mother would make her taste the food and gauge the amount of seasoning needed through ‘the feel.’ This is where Jean learned to cook through her senses, and it did not matter if she was preparing for two or 200 people because the taste would always be just right. After her husband, Andrew, was transferred to Genoa, Italy and living in a foreign country with no family, friends, or house help for the first time in her life meant having to fend for herself. It was here that she discovered the amazing flavours of simple, down to earth Italian cuisine. Surrounded by fresh ingredients from the Ligurian region, Jean learned to prepare delicious food from her friends in this area. She learned to understand that magic in the kitchen with just a few, fresh, local ingredients.

JEAN WINTER JEAN’S PRIVATE KITCHEN DUBAI, U.A.E.

It was when her husband was transferred to Geneva, Switzerland, that Jean founded Jean’s Private Kitchen. This highly lauded project started as an underground dining concept cooking the same traditional Peranakan recipes she learned from her mother from the privacy of her home. It began with a simple dinner for seven friends and led to a private guest list of more than 700 people within two years. In 2016, moving to Dubai, Jean expanded her business from Jean’s Private Kitchen, to include Jean Winter Events Management and Jean Winter Consultancy. While continuing to fly around the world, cooking her highly coveted Peranakan cuisine for private clients, Jean Winter continues to expand her ever-growing impact on the culinary world. She is genuinely a food ambassador for Singapore, always sharing a slice of Singaporean culture, heritage and cuisine everywhere she goes.

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ith over 20 years of experience, Nic started work in a kitchen as a steward as he wanted to become more independent. He did this for a year, and knew that the atmosphere of the kitchen was something that he liked and gravitated towards. It was a place that he felt that he wanted to grow up in and to be a part of. After that, it was just all about learning as much as possible, keeping his head down and doing the work, after which he slowly moved up. Nic leads the team at Apéritif restaurant and bar, an elegant fine dining space serving contemporary global cuisine in the lush valleys of Ubud while touching on the archipelago’s diverse culinary heritage and ingredients. An advocate for cross-cultural collaborations, Nic’s one-of-a-kind creations are a nod to his progressive and eclectic cooking philosophy. His cuisines is inspired with what is available around him – where he can find the best quality produce that also showcases the right flavours? He works closely with suppliers; those who already understand what he is looking for. “A product needs to be respected for its own complex flavour, and in Apéritif, we always try to elevate the flavours using the right techniques. This can extend from pickling and fermenting to preserving. The whole menu actually builds all these flavours up so that diners can truly enjoy each and every flavour to the fullest. We also make flavours more complex by introducing spices. Most dishes are unique because of their sauces.” At Apéritif, he serves a cuisine that is inspired by different cultures and countries around the world. Taking the commonalities between each culture’s culinary history, and merge it in a holistic and harmonious way to create unique dishes that can be a fusion of even three countries. That is how he got to define global eclectic cuisine at Apéritif. Prior to Apéritif and his past 5 years at Viceroy Bali’s CasCades restaurant, Nic worked in Vietnam consulting and developing the bistronomy concept he pioneered as Chef-Owner of Bistro Biggles in Belgium. These experiences truly connected him to the bounty of Asian produce and the unique flavours available in this part of the world. He spent time in the kitchens of Michelinstarred restaurants including Restaurant Berto in Waregem, Belgium; Restaurant‘t Convent in Lo-Reninge, Belgium; and celebrity chef Wout Bru’s two Michelinstarred restaurant in France.

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NIC VANDERBEEKEN APÉRITIF BALI, INDONESIA


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s a teenager, Daniel’s family moved from their homeland of Peru to Florida. It was here that he discovered his passion and natural talent for cooking, which started him on a journey of learning and exploration— ultimately taking him to kitchens all over the world. Once they arrived in Florida, Daniel’s parents sat him down and suggested that he takes a look at his options. They recognized that he greatly enjoyed cooking with friends and family, so Daniel decided to give it a try. After a week in culinary school, he was hooked. He never felt so much interest and intense passion before in his life—it was amazing. After Florida, his culinary journey took him to Spain. He landed in the city of Valencia at La Sucursal—his first experience in a Michelin star restaurant where he was introduced to fine dining techniques, as he learned about Mediterranean flavours and culture. Next, he was off to Barcelona to start work in the kitchen of the three Michelin star restaurant, Can Fabes. Headed up by the prominent avant-garde Spanish Catalan chef, “Santi” Santamaria, this experience opened his eyes to the importance of seasonal produce. It was here that his creativity truly started to flourish. “For sure that was my biggest influence with Santi Santamaria. At the time I joined his restaurant, I was not fully aware of what his cooking style was all about. I fell deeply in love with the way that he approached seasons. His style of traditional cooking, his use of ingredients, and every single detail he put in into running a restaurant is admirable. I understood that food should remain, as much as possible, simple yet flavourful.” The time Daniel spent in the kitchens of Les Amis, under Gunter Hubrechesen, introduced French cooking techniques. It was pivotal in helping him genuinely understand the food-loving culture of Singapore. These lessons are also clearly reflected in his cooking style today. He then went on to open Ossiano in Dubai at the Atlantis Hotel, and Santi in the Singapore Marina Bay Sands Hotel for Chef Santi Santamaria.

DANIEL CHAVEZ OLA COCINA DEL MAR SINGAPORE

In 2017, Daniel founded Tono Cevicheria, the first authentic Peruvian cevicheria in Singapore. Tono Cevicheria has received numerous accolades from journalists and caters to a very discerning clientele with constant visits from both local and international chefs. Daniel is also the owner of Ola Cocina del Mar, a lowkey Spanish eatery in Singapore’s Marina Bay Financial Centre. Here he offers his loyal patrons dishes that are focused on fresh, sustainably-sourced ingredients. His latest effort, Tonito is the little brother of Tono Cevicheria. Tonito serves comfort dishes that are much more than just Peruvian cuisine. Also showcasing authentic and exciting tastes from the regions of Mexico, Cuba, Argentina, and Venezuela.

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orn in Naples, Giuseppe started his culinary career at the age of 14 in the family restaurant learning the Neapolitan tradition. It was natural to him as he watched his father cook, and started to think that this is what he want in his life. Thanks to his family, he started this beautiful journey of my becoming a chef with his father as inspiration. The starting point of his journey was culinary school at IPSSAR De Medici in Ottaviano, being in the kitchen and cooking has always been his forte, for him being a chef was not a job, it was way of life with passion. After graduated from the catering school, Giuseppe went on to continue learning in various restaurants in Campania: Villa Smeraldo, Il Chiostro, Le Arcade catering, where he could combine classic and innovation skills. Ireland’s Sapori Italiani was his first experience outside Italy for a year and a half and then moving to the kitchen of Santi Santamaria. At El Raco De Can Fabes, Giuseppe took his first steps knowing how to respect a treat raw material of the highest quality. This was a very big learning curve for him as he learnt what it meant to work as and in a team. The discipline, cleaning, long hours, the non-stop pressure and above all reaching the objective as a team member. Even though at the beginning it was very difficult, it was a new perspective of what it means to be a chef and cooking at the highest level that just made him want more and more. The burning desire in him to learn and always do better. After 2 years, he wanted to extend his knowledge from the classic kitchen to something more experimental and moved to work with Heinz Beck. It was here with Heinz Beck he learnt to put together aesthetics and taste, and discovering new techniques. He found new ingredients and combinations to give life to new taste. And thanks to Heinz Beck, he was able to widen his knowledge working at different restaurants of Heinz Beck – the three MichelinStarred restaurant La Pergola, Michelin star Les Paillotte in Pescara, Michelin star Gusto by Heinz Beck in Portugal, Social by Heinz Beck in Dubai, Sensi by Heinz Beck and as Executive Chef at Restaurant Heinz Beck. In every country, he researched for quality ingredients, to the understanding the local market, and what grown in the country, seasonality and then to transform all this in to flavours with the ingredients and the taste all working in perfect harmony together. Working on a menu based on the season, the base product is the most important thing. Being able to become a chef today, Giuseppe lauds Heinz Beck. He has been able to use all his skills to the best of his ability, organizing the team, the creative process and discipline. Today, Giuseppe brings his cuisine to Contaminazioni Restaurant, a restaurant he started in 2019.

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GIUSEPPE MOLARO CONTAMINAZIONI RESTAURANT SOMMA VESUVIANA, ITALY


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orn in Ipswich, England, and growing up in London, James’ passion for food and cooking was significantly inspired by his grandmother, who lived in the Suffolk countryside for most of her life. His fondest childhood memories are that of his grandmother’s cooking and more importantly, her relationship with food. It was she who helped him to understand where food truly comes from and the love required to create great tasting dishes. From a very young age, he began to cook with her, and as all of her meals were made from scratch—the tasks of baking bread and roasting meat were front and centre. James remembers that his grandmother had a Bramley apple tree in the garden. She would grow strawberries in summer and kept chickens, so they always had great tasting, fresh eggs. Together, they would venture out into the woodlands and hedgerows to pick fresh, wild ingredients. This was always a very magical experience for James and created the understanding and importance of fresh, local produce, and ingredients. James started his first part-time job at the tender age of fourteen, and to this day, he has never done a day’s work outside of the kitchen. He would work weekends and after school as much as possible. Starting at the very bottom washing pots and pans, he would make sure that he finished as quickly as possible. This would free him up to watch the chefs and to be available to assist t with any job that they would allow him to do. He started by peeling onions and carrots and worked his way up—by the time he left school; he was assisting with the pastry section.

JAMES OAKLEY ALIBI HONG KONG, CHINA

During his time at the De Vere, James worked under executive chef, Jeremy Medley, who was an extremely welcoming force. He was almost like a father figure to James and took me under his wing. Ultimately, James trained in some of the finest kitchens, including Gordon Ramsay at Claridge’s. He worked for Gordon Ramsay at his Claridge’s restaurant under head chef Mark Seargent. This was his first full-time position upon leaving school at the age of sixteen and was honoured to have had this opportunity. He was cooking the best food in London, and Mark Seargent was a fantastic chef with whom to work. James also worked closely with Richard Allen at Tassili restaurant at Grand Jersey and was part of his team when he gained his Michelin star. When Tassili was awarded a Michelin star, there were only four in the kitchen. They worked like a well-oiled machine. The experience in these kitchens have influenced James’ style of cooking massively and very much in a similar way, to treat ingredients with love, show the food with genuine heartfelt respect and always take the time to do things correctly. James is currently the chef de cuisine at Alibi – Wine Dine Be Social where he blends Asian and European styles and techniques, creating delicious and innovative menus.

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orn in the north of Argentina, in a small city called Clorinda, most of Jorge Rivero’s childhood memories are related to food. From regional festivals to religious celebrations, to family gatherings—he was inspired by how every one of these events had particular types of cuisine for the occasion. Like many families, dining was a focal point, so it was very close to his heart. During a brief stint studying computer engineering at the university in Cordoba, Jorge was amidst an “amateur experimental period” in his home kitchen. He realized that he was able to cook a decent meal. So he started to collect recipes and buy cookbooks. He was doing as much as his student budget allowed him. It was a fun period and marked the beginning of his cooking. On the way to the university, Jorge used to pass by a culinary school, which eventually captured his attention. One day when his mum was visiting him, he told her about the culinary school, and together, they went to take a look. Both finding it very intriguing, she told him that she would pay for his culinary education with one condition—Jorge had to convince his father. Speaking with his father, Jorge promised him that after finishing two years of culinary school, he would then go back to engineering—his father agreed and his professional career started to take shape. Jorge was still cooking for my family and friends to practice—showing them what he learnt at school and absorbing the feedback. After a few years of long hours, restless days and hot kitchens, in both good and bad restaurants in Argentina, Jorge made a move to the US. Here he started training at 5-star hotels. Working for many years in different countries like Argentina, the US, and Dubai, in both restaurants and hotels, made me the chef that he is today. “Having all of these points of view is truly helpful. I love to work with a charcoal grill—it is so basic yet so tricky at the same time. You can deploy many different techniques if you know how to use it well. I use the good habits, techniques, and knowledge that I’ve learned through my experiences under other chefs, while simultaneously seeking my own identity. Spending time in other cultures gives you a true appreciation of your own. I think I am from the old school of chefs. Of course, I am interested in the new trends and techniques, but using them with balance. So my cuisine is traditional—not that I create traditional recipes, but in my use of flavours. To create a new dish, I start by researching and truly understanding the main component. I test it in different ways and with different techniques, ultimately choosing the one that most predominantly compliments the dish.” Today, Jorge is exercising his culinary prowess at Mövenpick Hotel Jumeirah Lakes Towers in Dubai. “My culinary philosophy is to cook with passion and use the best products—but modify them as little as possible to minimally alter their original taste. Learn every day, from everyone, and never stop cooking.”

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JORGE RIVERO MÖVENPICK HOTEL JLT DUBAI, U.A.E.


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SMOKED FISH ALFREDO RUSSO DOLCE STIL NOVO TURIN Fresh fish Salmon, Sturgeon, Eel, Octopus (steamed) & Red Mullet Sea Salt Sugar Fresh herbs Charcoal Food has been smoked or cured throughout history as a means of preserving. People in many cultures and societies around the world have relied on smoking fish and meats as a method of long term storage. Until the 1940s, all smoked fish was referred to as “cured” and was produced using the traditional method of hanging the fish in chimneys above slowly smouldering wood shavings. But today, of course, we are smoking to add that recognisable flavour rather than for the sake of preserving it. Fresh Salmon, Sturgeon, Eel, Octopus (steamed) and Red Mullet Sea Salt Sugar Fresh herbs Charcoal Make a brine with mixing water, sugar, salt and fresh herbs. In a plastic container, cover the salmon with the mix and refrigerate for 4 hours. You will need to cure your salmon for at least 4 hours, even for thin fillets, but never go more than 8 hours or your fish will be too salty. Take the fish out of the brine and dry it with a kitchen cloth. Set the fillets on your cooling rack, skin side down. Heat the charcoal grill, piling coal on one side to set up direct and indirect heat zones. Set a drip pan under the grill grate in the indirect heat zone and smoke your fillets. You must be careful about the heat. The biggest problem in smoking is heat being high. Smoke the fish until cooked through but not dry. Serve the smoked salmon directly on top of a bed of herbs.

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IMPERIAL DE SOLOGNE DE LA MAISON NORDIQUE BRITTANY RAZOR CLAMS “A LA MARINIÈRE” AND PRESSED MAISON NORDIQUE CAVIAR CREAM OLIVIER ELZER L’ENVOL HONG KONG A French caviar - Maion Nordique to make the caviar paste at the bottom, this helps bring out a stronger flavour of the caviar paired with the refreshing and light razor clams that’s been slightly steamed in white wine sauce with butter and shallots – very simple ingredients. And we add a Chinese caviar on top to act as garnish as well as adding another flavour into the dish Clean the razor clams thoroughly, slice, set aside. Cook the razor clams a la marinière, a sauce of white wine, shallots, and thyme. Creating the caviar cream - first use the razor clam juice, add thick cream (1/4 of overall razor clam juice) and caviar. PLATING First lay the pressed caviar cream on the razor clam shell, add sliced razor clams and garnish with caviar.

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160g Red snapper 60g Black grape 20g Capucine flower 200g Red capsicum Green oil Salt Pepper

RED SNAPPER CARPACCIO JUNIOR NADJE RUE ROYALE DUBAI, U.A.E.

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Wasabi dressing 70ml Rice vinegar 400g Oyster sauce 35g Lemon juice 500ml Olive oil 150g Wasabi 50g Lemon zest Clean and fillet the red snapper and remove the skin. Rub coarse salt and rinse the fillets after 25 minutes. Cut think slices and dress it with the other ingredients. Cut the grapes into thin slices and serve it with the wasabi dressing. Garnish it with edible flowers and red pepper powder.


400g Salmon cut into 100g portions butterfly / 113g Otah–Otah farce divided into 28g portions / Julienne 85g Carrots, 85g Onions and 85g Celery / 1 tbsp Chopped parsley / 1g Butter / 3 stalks of Spring onion bais cut for garnish Over medium heat sweat the carrots, onions and celery in butter. Add a pinch of salt, cook al dente and reserve. Season the salmon with salt and pepper. Sear the salmon portions over medium-high heat approximately for 2 ½ minutes on each side, careful not to overcook it. Reheat the vegetable mixture. Otah - Otah 350g Mackerel filets cut into small pieces / 240g Grated coconut 20g Grated galangal / 20g Grated lemongrass / 2 Stalks of lemongrass bias cut 8 cm / 2 Garlic cloves / 2 Red chilies pounded 80g Shallots / 1 ½ tbsp Cumin powder / 1 ½ tbsp Curry powder / 20g Salt / 35g Grated ginger / 20g Sugar Mix all ingredients in a food processor, pulsing until combined, transfer to a bowl and chill it in the fridge until ready to use. Use 28g of the mousse in the palm of your hand to form a small ball and skewer it to the stalks of the lemongrass which will be used as a skewer. When ready to serve, sear it in a medium-high heat pan until golden brown. LIME PICKLE 5 Limes / 85g Salt / 70g Chili / 70g Cumin seed pounded / 57g Mustard seeds roasted and skinned / 1 1/3 cup Sesame oil / ½ cup Vinegar / 43g Whole garlic / 57g Fresh ginger sliced Place one-inch of salt on the bottom inside a glass jar. Wash and dry the limes and place them in the jar for one month. Cut the salted limes into four parts but not clear through. Mix oil vinegar, garlic and ginger, pour over the salted limes, place in the jar.

KING SALMON “OTAH OTAH,” MACKEREL MOUSSE LIME PICKLE GRANT MACPHERSON HAKKASAN GROUP LAS VEGAS

SERVING SUGGESTIONS Plate the seared salmon with the lime pickle in a small ramekin, with the Otah-Otah skewers on the side and add the spring onions on the salmon as a garnish.

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NIYATI RAO MUMBAI MUD CRAB WITH COCONUT TOMATO SOUP INGREDIENTS CRAB SOUP 500g Black mud crabs 100g Fra Diavolo sauce 50g Leeks 1g Marjoram 2g Black pepper Salt to taste SEA CRISP 6 Obulato sheets 10ml Egg whites 10g Nori 5g Dried mentaiko roe (pollack) 2g Seasame seeds Garlic salt to taste GARNISH 100g Malto powder 40ml Coconut oil

METHOD CRAB SOUP Wash and process the crabs thoroughly. Sever the legs and claws and put aside. Steam the crabs lightly for 7 minutes. Take out the sweet crabmeat very tenderly and store for later garnish. Steam the shells further and collect the liquid that is extracted during the process—this is the essence of the crab. Heat butter in a pan and sauté finely chopped leeks and marjoram. Add the Fra Diavolo sauce and the crab liquid and adjust the seasoning. Give the soup a quick blend for a smoother texture. TRANSPARENT CRISP Take the obulato sheet and brush it lightly with egg white and attach the other sheet onto it. Then add some mentaiko roe powder, cut nori and sesame seeds. Stick another sheet onto this layer and repeat process. Heat the oil and fry the sheet for 5 seconds in a quick flash. Put the sheet on blotting paper and sprinkle with garlic salt. GARNISH Take the coconut oil and pour gradually into the malto powder and mix, making coconut snow. Add the coconut snow and the reserved sweet crabmeat as a garnish. Serve with the transparent crisp on the side.

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SPAGHETTINI GRILLED MARINATED PRAWNS REIF OTHMAN KUSHIYAKI DUBAI 160g Spaghettini 2tbsp Olive oil 1tbsp Minced garlic 2tbsp Chopped celery 150g Fra Diavolo sauce 2g Chopped chives MARINATED PRAWNS 200g Tiger prawns 2g Lemon thyme 70g Lemon oil 4g Lemon zest 1tbsp Salt GARNISH Basil leaves Sun-dried tomatoes Heat the oil in a pan. Add in the garlic and celery and cook for 1-2 minutes, then follow with the tomato sauce and let it simmer. While the sauce is simmering, grill the marinated prawns. Blanch your pasta, drain it and add it into the tomato sauce with the chopped chives and toss it well. After plating the pasta, place the grilled prawns on top of the pasta and garnish it with basil leaves and sun-dried tomatoes.

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SEA BASS DAVID TOUTAIN RESTAURANT DAVID TOUTAIN PARIS SEA BASS 20 Slices of sea bass 200g Flower of salt 200g Sugar 40 Grains of coffee (smashed into small bits) CONSOMMÉ Bones from the sea bass 30 Roasted coffee grains 1/6 Celeriac branch ¼ Celeriac bulb ¼ Onion ½ Carrot CLARIFICATION 3 Egg whites 20 Grains of coffee COFFEE OIL ¼ Grape seed oil 30 Grains of coffee TOPPING 12 Blueberries 8 Gooseberries Ground coffee Caraway leaves Sage flowers Nasturtium leaves Melisse leaves SEA BASS Prepare the sea bass with the Ikejime technique. Keep it during 4 days in a fridge at 3°C. Remove the fillets and the skin, and cover fillet in a mixture of salt, sugar and coffee for three hours. Rinse the fillets in cold water, dry them carefully with a cloth and slice them at an angle against their grain. Reserve in the fridge. CONSOMMÉ With the fish bones, prepare a fish stock. In a saucepan, add the fish bones and the aromatic garnish (celeriac, onion and carrot). Pour water to the top and cook for two hours at 60°C. Allow to rest for two hours, strain and clarify with a mix of egg white and coffee grains. Cook slowly during 20 to 30 minutes and then strain again. Roast the coffee grains, add them to the mix and allow to infuse for six hours. Strain through a chinois and reserve in the fridge. COFFEE OIL Cook the coffee and grapes seed oil sous vide for one hour at 70°C. Keep for seven days in the fridge. PLATING Roll the fish slices, sprinkle them with ground coffee and place them in the middle of the plate. Add the fruits, the herbs, and then the consommé. Drizzle coffee oil around plate.

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CLAMS IN SHERRY WINE PACO PÉREZ MIRAMAR GIRONA, SPAIN CLAMS 599g Galician clams Sea water: 35g of table salt for every 100g of water One clam per person. Scald the clams in boiling sea water not more than three seconds. This action is done in order to facilitate the clams to be opened. Open the clam with the tip of a sharp paring knife without damaging its form. CLAM AND SHERRY SAUCE 12g Fresh garlic 90g Fresh onions 7g Parsley: 7g 30g Kombu 500g Blonde Galician clams 6g Fresh red chilli 500g Mineral water 80g Sherry wine 80g Extra virgin olive oil Salt in flakes to taste Kuzu - 8g for every 250g of sauce

Heat a deep walled cocotte on top of the coup de feu. Once it is hot, pour in the extra virgin olive oil to heat. Once the oil is hot, add the fresh onion and garlic (in Brunoise) and poach ensuring that the onion and garlic do not turn brown. Then add the clean red chilli and Kombu. Cook for 5 minutes. Add the clams all at once and move with a spatula in constant intervals. Cover and cook until all the clams have opened and sweated their water. Add the sherry and let it simmer until all the alcohol has been evaporated. Add the parsley leaves, mineral water and salt. Let it cook for about twenty minutes simmering after it has come to a boil once. Take the pot off the coup de feu and let the sauce repose for another twenty minutes. Strain the sauce through a super fine muslin bag. Once the sauce is cold add the kuzu and bring to a boil whilst moving it constantly with a whisk in order to obtain the desired density and texture. CODIUM POWDER 100g Fresh codium 6g Jang sauce Sempio Sea water Scald the codium for thirty seconds in boiling sea water and cool down immediately in ice water with salt. Chop the codium roughly and add it to a PacoJet cylinder along with the Jang sauce. Make sure that the contents inside the cylinder are tightly compressed without leaving any air gaps in the middle. Freeze inside a blast chiller and pass through the PacoJet. Pass this frozen powder through a sieve with the help of liquid nitrogen to ensure it does not defrost during this process. Lyophilize this powder for forty-eight hours. As a final touch of this dish add a generous spoon of caviar.

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CAVIAR CONE REIF OTHMAN KUSHIYAKI DUBAI CAULIFLOWER PURÉE 3 Cups of cauliflower 1 Cup milk 1 Cup cream 50g coffee beans 2tbsp Butter 2tsp Salt Place all the ingredients in a pan and cook until the cauliflower is soft. Remove the beans, place the remaining mixture in a blender until smooth and pass through a fine sieve. Transfer to piping bag and chill. Take the spring roll sheets; shape them with metal cones and deep fry until golden brown. Set aside to cool. Pipe the cauliflower purée in the cones, top with a spoonful of caviar (your choice) and finish with gold leaf.

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MACKEREL TARTARE OYSTER CREAM, GREEN APPLE AND SHISO GARY FOULKES ANGLER - SOUTH PLACE HOTEL LONDON, U.K. 480g Raw mackerel - diced 2 Banana shallots - finely diced 60g Pickled pink ginger - finely chopped 50g Chopped chives 1 Granny Smith apple 5ml White soy sauce 10g Crème fraîche Zest of one lemon 250ml Oyster cream 1 punnet Purple shiso cress 1 punnet Green shiso cress Wakame powder to finish OYSTER CREAM Place three opened oysters into a high-powered blender with the juice of two lemons and a little salt. Blend until completely smooth and emulsify with grape seed oil and finish with a squeeze of lemon. Pass through a fine sieve, place into a squeezable plastic bottle and set to one side. MACKEREL TARTARE Place the diced mackerel into a bowl and add the shallots, pink ginger, white soy and crème fraiche, chives, lemon zest and mix together. It is important to taste the mix as you can add more of each ingredient should your palette desire. TO FINISH Place a circular mould on the plate and carefully place the correct amount of mackerel into each plate. Gently smooth the mackerel down with the back of the spoon before placing five equal size dots of the oyster cream on top of the mackerel. Finish the dish with batons of the apple, shiso cress and wakame powder.

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MERLUZZO NERO E PISTACHIO CON SALSA BLOODY MARY FEDERICO TERESI ROME, ITALY

150g Black cod 35g Pistachio powder 90ml Sunday Sauce 10ml Lemon juice 5ml Tabasco sauce 5ml Worcestershire sauce Extra virgin olive oil Salt and pepper In a lightly oiled cast iron pan, cook the black cod (seasoned with salt and pepper) on both sides. Then roll it in the pistachio powder and finish it in the oven for 5 minutes at 180°C. For the Bloody Mary, heat the Sunday Sauce, tabasco, lemon juice, Worcestershire sauce, salt and pepper (to taste) until it reaches 80°C. Transfer it into a vessel for pouring.

LA MADERNASSA GUARENE, ITALY

PLATING Arrange the black cod on a plate and serve it with the warm Bloody Mary directly on the side. Garnish with edible flowers.

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CRITMUM MARITIMUM MICHELANGELO MAMMOLITI LA MADERNASSA GUARENE, ITALY FENNEL AND STAR ANISE FOR JOHN DORY FILLET 300g John Dory fish fillet 100g Fresh fennel 100g Pastis 20g butter 10g Crème fraiche 1 Star anise 2g Wild fennel fronds Clean and wash the fennel. Cut into julienne strips in the direction of the fibre. Put the fennel in a pot with a part of butter, add the star anise and the pastis. Flambé the alcohol and add the John Dory fillets. Cook for 20 minutes at power 6 of the induction cooker. Add the crème fraiche and cook for 10 minutes. Reduce to desired consistency. Blend and adjust the flavour of the sauce. Place in a 1/9 container and lower the temperature until it reaches 4°C. Place in the refrigerator. Whip with butter when serving.

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FENNEL MOUSSE 100g Rock samphire herb 100g Fresh fennel 10g Pastis 20g Butter 50g Crème fraiche 2 Star anise berries 2g fennel fronds Clean and wash the fennel. Cut into julienne strips in the direction of the fibre. Put the fennel in a pot with a part of butter, add the star anise and the pastis. Flambé the alcohol and add the Rock Samphire herb. Cook for 20 minutes at power 6 of the induction. Add the Crème Fraiche and cook for 10 minutes. Reduce to consistency. Blend and filter the regular flavour sauce. Place in a 1/9 container and lower the temperature until it reaches 4 ° C. Place in the refrigerator. Whip with butter when serving. ASSEMBLY Place the John Dory fish fillet on a Japanese plate and salt it, in a pan put olive oil, lemon oil and Irish alpha moss, cook the fish under the Salamander, ensuring that the core temperature does not to exceed 37°C. Arrange the capers, the caper leaves and the salicornia on the John Dory fillet, finish the lemon seasoning with the glacial flakes and finish the caper with the fennel mousseline and the infusion with the pastis.


EEL, APPLE CIDER AND SPINACH ANTONIA KLUGMANN L’ARGINE A VENCÓ GORIZIA, ITALY 400g Eel 0.5l White wine vinegar 0.5l White wine 0.5l Apple cider 1 celery 1 carrot 1 onion 1 garlic clove 1/2 fermented apple laurel leaves Salt to taste 1 cabbage ½ Granny Smith apple Sugar 2 leaves of spinach and 6 leaves of baby spinach Alternate the apples and the cabbage, chopped in half, in a glass jar with the same weight of salt. Ferment for approximately 10 days. After removing its pins and skin, fillet the eel. Marinate with wine and apple cider, the celery stick, the onion, the carrot, the garlic clove, some black pepper grains, the laurel leaves and the rosemary. After 6 hours salt the fillets. Roll and tie them up with a string. Cook in a pan for 6 minutes with some marinade liquid and some apple vinegar and white wine vinegar drops. Turn off the stove. Leave the rolls into the liquid for 10 more minutes, until they are soft. Reduce the remaining marinade liquid to prepare a dense sauce. Cook the Granny Smith apple, previously chopped in four pieces, into a large pan with some water, a tablespoon of sugar and some lemon juice. When it is overcooked, drain and reduce the cooking water to obtain a syrup. Prepare a broth with the pins and all the other discarded parts of the eel. Cook them in bain-marie with a carrot, one onion, some laurel leaves, rosemary, pepper and juniper grains until they have released all their juices. Filter and reduce the broth adding a small part of the marinade liquid (without the vinegar) until a dense sauce has been obtained. Sautèe the large spinach leaves in an iron pan adding some oil and a pinch of salt; at the last minute add the baby spinach. Deglaze with the eel and cider sauce and apple cider. Serve 3 eel rolls, with a couple of spinach leaves and some slices of fermented apple. Season the rolls with the Granny Smith apple sauce, the marinade syrup and apple cider. On top, add a couple of fried eel skins (before frying them, boil the skin for a couple of minutes and let dry).

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BLACKENED SALMON FILLET SMOKED CORN SALAD AND CHIPOTLE AIOLI 200g Salmon fillet On a skillet over medium heat, drizzle corn oil. Season the salmon with salt and shallow fry it on the pan for approximately 3 minutes on each side. Once you turn over the salmon add in a knob of butter to finish it off and to give the salmon a creamy smooth scent and flavour.

JOHN BUENAVENTURA CANOPY BY HILTON DUBAI

BLACKENED SPICE 30g Paprika / 20g Smoked paprika / 10g Cumin / 10g Coriander powder 10g Garlic powder / 10g Onion powder / 5g Black pepper powder Mix all the powdered spices and cook it in a small pan over low heat for 5 minutes until the spices naturally give out their scent and aroma. Once the blackened spice is cold, carefully rub a generous amount of the spice over the salmon fillet. Keep the salmon in the fridge for 30 minutes and ensure to add salt before cooking the salmon. SMOKED CORN SALAD 100g Grilled yellow sweet corn / 30ml Corn oil / 20g White onions / 10g Coriander leaves / 2g Cumin powder 30g Cherry tomatoes / 20g Pomegranates / 30ml Lime juice / Salt to taste / Black pepper to taste In a mixing bowl combine the grilled sweet corn, chopped white onions, tomatoes, coriander leaves and pomegranate. Season the salad with cumin powder, salt, pepper and a splash of lime juice. Add a drizzle of corn oil to balance the tartness of the dish and set aside in the fridge. ADOBO AIOLI 100ml Corn oil / 1 Egg yolk / 20g Guajillo chilli / 20g Ancho chilli / 5g Coriander seeds / 10g Garlic / 15ml Red vinegar / 5g Cumin / 5g Black pepper / 5g Oregano Soak the dry chillies in water for 30 minutes. Once the chillies are soft, place it in a food processor together with the garlic, cumin seeds, coriander, black pepper and oregano. Blend the mixture until it forms a paste. If the mixture becomes too thick use the leftover water from the soaking of the chillies to loosen it up. Prepare the base mayonnaise by whisking the egg yolk over a bain-marie / double boiler until it fluffs up. Once the egg yolk is pasteurized, slowly pour in the corn oil and whisk it. You need to emulsify and incorporate the oil with the egg yolk to form the mayonnaise. Once you have the mayonnaise ready, mix it with the premade adobo aioli sauce and season it with salt and pepper. You can add more adobo paste to suit your personal preference. SERVING SUGGESTIONS

Plate the dish by placing the corn salsa at the bottom of the plate, add in the seared salmon on top and finish it with a scoop of adobo aioli and a slice of lime.

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GIORGIO DIANA ATICO FAKHRIDDIN GROUP JORDAN 160g Scottish salmon filet / 50g Artichoke / 30g Celery / 1 Spring onion / 1pcs Tonka beans / 0.4g Saffron / 500ml Cream 4pcs Red bell pepper / Rosemary / Tarragon / Pepper / Olive oil / Salt / Butter / Dijon mustard with seeds / 3 Pepper mint leaves and some celery leaves for decoration FOAM & PURÉE Preheat the oven by 180°Cs and bake the bell peppers for 30 minutes till they are roasted. When they are ready and still hot, incorporate them with the cream in a pan and bring it to a boil, add some salt, pepper, tarragon & the saffron. Wait until it is cold and cover it with cling film. Leave it overnight in the fridge. Separate the liquid and the bell peppers, remove the skin of the bell pepper and with a hand blender make a very fine purée, add some salt and pepper if needed. In a pan, pour the liquid and heat it to 80°C. With a hand blender mix it until it turns to a consistency of foam. Add 20g of cold butter inside and mix it for 3 minutes. The foam is ready MARINATED SPRING ONION Preheat the oven to 75°C. Wash, dry and clean the spring onion, place it in a porcelain plate. Season it with olive oil, salt, pepper, some rosemary and grate the tonka beans on top. Cover it with and add it to the salmon. Before serving pan fry it for 1 minute on either side.

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SCOTTISH SALMON WITH BELL PEPPER PURÉE, MARINATED SPRING ONION WITH TONKA BEANS, ROASTED ARTICHOKE, CELERY AND CAPSICUMSAFFRON FOAM SALMON Preheat the oven to 75°C. Cut the salmon filet in two and marinate it in a stainless tray with some oil, salt, pepper and some tarragon on the top of the salmon. Cover it with foil and cook it for 8 minutes. Before serving pan fry it for 1 minute on either side and spread some Dion mustard on the top. Artichoke and the celery In a pot add 2 liters of water to a boil with a little salt. Wash and cut the celery in 5 mm pieces and add it to the boiling water for 2 to 3 minutes. With a knife, clean the artichoke, only the heart is required. Cut it in half and cut each half in three wedges. Roast them in a very hot pan with some olive oil and little butter for 3 minutes till they are very crispy but not burnt. Season it with salt, pepper, mint julienne. PRESENTATION Cook the salmon together with the spring onion. Heat the foam and the purée. Heats the celery in a pot, add the artichoke wedges. Pan fry the salmon and the spring onion. Season them. Add a spoon of the bell pepper purée in the middle of the plate. Place the spring onion on one side and add the celery and artichoke wedges. Place the salmon fillet on top and garnish it with the saffron foam and the celery leaves.


FILLING 400g Mackerel 50g White bread 50g Boiled potatoes 1 Egg white Fresh fennel Lemon zest 1 Pod garlic 1 Small bunch parsley Extra virgin olive oil Salt and pepper to taste PASTA 300g All-purpose 00 flour 3 eggs 1tbsp Extra virgin olive oil Pinch of salt

STUFFED CAPPELLACI WITH MACKEREL ON A MARINARA SAUCE AND LEMON SCENT SILVIA BARACCHI IL FALCONIERE CORTONA

PASTA Mound about 300 grams of flour on a board and make a well in the center. Break the eggs into the well and with a fork slowly mix the flour into the eggs. Adding extra virgin olive oil and salt, work until the dough comes together into a ball. You are aiming for a soft but not sticky mix. Cover loosely with a plastic wrap and set aside for 30 minutes. When ready to proceed, unwrap the dough and cut out 2 or 3 pieces. Roll out the dough on a lightly floured board, or put it through a pastry machine, gradually decreasing the setting until you reach the thinnest. FILLING Clean the fish and chop finely. Add the mashed potato, egg white and bread previously soaked in water. Season with salt and black pepper, lemon zest, parsley and fresh fennel. Fill a pastry bag and form your favorite shape of raviolis for filling. In a blender mix the Marinara sauce with a generous spoonful of extra virgin olive oil, and blend into a very smooth and creamy sauce. Drop the ravioli in salted boiling water and cook for about 7 minutes. Strain the raviolis and put in a pan with extra virgin olive oil and aromatic herbs (thyme, oregano and fennel). Sauté for a while adding lemon zest. PLATING Put 2 tablespoons of Marinara sauce in the centre of a plate, place the raviolis and garnish with aromatic herbs and flowers.

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Born to parents who were Portuguese immigrants from Madeira, Veronica grew up in the small farm town of Wellington in Boland, Western Cape. As a child she would go to Madeira with her mother every year to visit family. She caught the travel bug and believed that if she had a career in hospitality, it would enable her to travel. Cooking was a hobby that she enjoyed and this changed the day she walked into The Victoria and Alfred Hotel as a waitress in 1997. She landed a summer job in Cape Town and was completely inspired by how a proper restaurant kitchen operated. She was intrigued by how a brigade of chefs came together and ensured that food became a work of art. To say, she fell in love would be an understatement and hotel management was no longer an option but becoming a chef was now her goal. After studying business at Stellenbosch University, she took another holiday job in 1999 at The Mount Nelson Hotel and that’s where she began her culinary career. She was fortunate enough to be chosen as a culinary apprentice and there was no looking back. She honed her culinary skills with Garth Stroebel and then went on to work in some of the best kitchens in the UK, France and in South Africa. Garth was the first person she ever called chef. He saw her passion and potential and helped start her career. Working for him changed the course of her life. He set her on her path and working with him opened several doors for her. Even during her training, she was sent to Portugal to work in Quinta do Lago in the Algarve and this was a wonderful learning curve for her. Her internship at the Mount Nelson Hotel had incredible opportunities and many of the chefs she worked with and met there are doing amazing work in South Africa. In the late 90s early 2000s, Garth was the pioneer of modern South African cooking. When she started working with him, her culinary background was not in any way refined or defined. Garth taught her to think as a professional, to look at a dish and to work out how to prepare it in a beautiful, consistent manner.

VERONICA CANHA-HIBBERT THE SILO HOTEL CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA

After five years being the executive chef at Ellerman House, a trip was organised by Relais & Châteaux to France at Jacques Chibois’ La Bastide Saint-Antoine. Jacques showed Veronica French flair at its best. When it came to sourcing produce, he used to go to the markets around Grasse himself and choose the best ingredients. He taught her to use the finest and freshest ingredients to render a refined product. Veronica is inspired by Cape Town and South Africa which is evident in her menus.

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rowing up in a big family in Rome, it was all about food. Federico Teresi was lucky—on his father’s side, he learned the flavours of Rome from his grandmother. On his mother’s side, his grandmother taught him about the cuisine of Milan and Northern Italy. At the time Federico started his first job in the culinary world, this was all of the kitchen experience that he had. He was just 18 at the time and was studying engineering at a university. To make some extra money, he took a job at a restaurant where they needed help in the front of the house. After six months of being in this environment, he had made up his mind and informed his parents of his decision to halt his studies and pursue a career as a chef. With a fire in his belly, Federico started sending his resume to various restaurants. Although filled with ambition, his experience was rather lean. He recalls, “I sent my CV all around Europe, with the final one being sent off to Alain Ducasse’s company in Monte Carlo. I remember it was 11:30 at night when I arrived home and I found mail from them. The letter stated that they would test me with a group of 20 people for six months and the best of us would be kept on to join one of Alain Ducasse’s restaurants. I was excited—I packed a bag and took a flight to Monte Carlo.” He continues, “This was the start to my culinary journey. The chef at the Italian Bistro of Alain Ducasse was very demanding. He used to work with Marco Pierre White and Gordon Ramsay so you can imagine the strong character of the person—the shouting—but he was amazing. He taught me in great detail, and after two months, I was a Commis Chef. A short two months later, I became Chef de Partie.” Federico completed his testing period as Chef de Partie, and in September of that year, he returned to Rome awaiting a call from Alain Ducasse’s office. It was a month later when he learned that he was one of only two people that had been selected and was being assigned to work at Le Jules Verne at the Eiffel Tower in Paris. He packed his bags, and armed with little English and not a word of French, Federico arrived in Paris to take on his new role. It was difficult for Federico at the beginning. Not knowing much about French cuisine and working at a Michelin star restaurant proved to be a challenge. But after only 18 months, Federico had worked in all the stations of the kitchen. He received a promotion and headed off to another Michelin star French bistro owned by Alain Ducasse. Here he would continue his education and get a better understand of the basics of French cooking. Missing his homeland of Italy, Federico wanted a change and was referred by his current chef to Heinz Beck. After receiving another highly anticipated phone call, Federico was off to Rome where he met with Heinz Beck at La Pergola. However, Rome was not in the cards, and life took an unexpected turn as Heinz placed him at Dubai’s Taste of Italy.

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FEDERICO TERESI ROME, ITALY


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on Alfonso Toronto Executive Chef Saverio Macri is a native Italian and raised by first generation Italian parents, Saverio Macri’s passion for Italian culture and cuisine were nurtured from a very young age. Saverio’s first years in the kitchen were spent training in various trattorias in Tuscany, Italy which has immensely influenced and shaped his culinary journey. With an interest in culinary arts and science, Saverio began his professional studies in the United States at Virginia’s Averett University, where he graduated with an Honours Bachelor of Science Degree, specializing in food and nutrition. His culinary voyage led him north soon after, and he enrolled in the ulinary Management Program at George Brown College in Toronto, Ontario. His science foundation combined with his enthusiasm for Italian gastronomy, proved to be a powerful force in the kitchen. Saverio has immersed himself in all facets of culinary arts, competing in many prestigious Canadian competitions alongside world renowned chefs. Most notably, Saverio has displayed his talents in the National culinary competitions, Gold Metal Plates, which celebrates excellence in Canadian cuisine, wine, arts and athletic achievement and the Grand Cru Culinary Wine Festival, a spectacular culinary event that raises money for the University Health Network in Toronto.

SAVERIO MACRI DON ALFONSO 1890 TORONTO, CANADA

The philosophy at Don Alfonso is using the best quality ingredients, and creating a dish that’s balanced, that has some traditional elements as well as some modern elements. “In Toronto there are many great restaurants which use French techniques, however At Don Alfonso it’s very unique and interesting because we have a very Italian style kitchen with very high technical executions. We are not just a simple Italian restaurant.” Cuisine created at Don Alfonso is very organic, natural and based on inspirations. At Don Alfonso Toronto, they follow the same standards as Saint Agata and use the same philosophies as Chef Ernesto, but using different ingredients. All the dishes are very modern and technical, but still have traditional flavors.

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orn in Mexico City and growing up in a family of musicians and cooks, Tamara Chavez Lopez’s culinary journey started at her family’s restaurant. This is where she learned the basics, and it was here that her love of service

was born.

Determined to enter the food industry, at 16, she left school, and her first job was with a fast-food chain. From day one, there was an adrenaline rush, and even in this limited environment, she knew that this was her world, and she had indeed found her calling. She quickly decided that it was time to engage her entrepreneurial spirit, so she ventured off on her own with the mission of selling tacos—and selling she did. She recalls it as “one of the best experiences” as she travelled through Mexico City in a car full of ingredients to make and sell tacos. It was her mum who encouraged her to study culinary arts and wanting more, Tamara went on to get a degree in gastronomy. She had a genuine love for reading about different chefs from around the world and the amazing things that they would do with food. She found that many of these chefs, at some point, had practiced abroad. So, armed with this knowledge, a plan was hatched. Tamara first learned about Singapore through an uncle who was working as a chef in the ‘Lion City.’ She was presented with an opportunity at El Mero Mero as a Chef de Partie, by Executive Chef Remy Lefebvre. She would be preparing contemporary Mexican cuisine using French techniques. Significantly sparking her interest, Tamara hit the ground running and was off to Singapore. Her career started in Asia which was not easy work. Coming to a very competitive country, and the only thing that was on her mind was that she was not returning to Mexico. Eventually, she ended up in Singapore’s Latin Quarter and meeting Daniel Chavez, a Peruvian chef who at that time had a restaurant called Ola Cocina del Mar. After the initial interview and spending some time speaking with him, he told her about his new project Tono Cevicheria. Daniel suggested that she travel to Peru to gain some experience and understanding of Peruvian cuisine. She loved the idea and without hesitation moved to Lima, where she worked with Rafael Osterling at El Mercado. Tamara had a fasttrack education in Peruvian cuisine before heading back to Singapore, where she became Daniel’s sous chef and ultimately, the head chef at Tono Cevicheria.

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TAMARA CHAVEZ TONO CEVICHERIA SINGAPORE


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ianluca Renzi approached the culinary field an early age, his father was passionate about cuisine and they usually went together to Campo de Fiori to buy fresh ingredients. Gianluca liked to get lost inside the market and stop to look at fresh fruits and vegetables, dreaming of combinations, of tastes and incredible recipes. So he decided to focus on food and its culture.

GIANLUCA RENZI LOCALE FLORENCE, ITALY

After attending hospitality school in Rome, Gianluca Renzi started gaining experience as a stagiaire in Roman restaurants, until he had the chance to enter La Pergola where he started working as commis de cuisine. Being from Rome, he was fascinated by Heinz Beck who came to the city and started learning everything about its gastronomy. From him Gianluca learned discipline, strength and humility. The young chef is heavily influenced by Heinz’s point of view through his vision of healthy and well-balanced Mediterranean cuisine. Having worked for years under his supervision, he was chosen by his mentor to be the resident chef of Attimi by Heinz Beck in Milan. Ginaluca’s culinary process starts from ingredients available according to seasons. From there, he employs innovative techniques to enhance different components of each dish, combining them to create unexpected flavours, while always respecting the Italian traditional recipes. Today, Ginaluca heads the kitchen Locale in Florence where cuisine and mixology merge together.

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rowing up in the United Kingdom and having an Asian background, Raymond Wong’s passion for cooking developed through growing up within the industry. His father had a few Chinese restaurants around Edinburgh, and his first real job was a kitchen porter at the age of 15. As a child, he wanted to become a fireman but as he got older he was interested in becoming a graphic designer. He wanted to express his creativity which he now does it in the kitchen. He dabbled with graphic design at college in Aberdeen and ended up going back home to Edinburgh to figure out what he was going to do with his life. His mother then suggested to take up a culinary course at Telford College. The art of cooking came naturally to him, having been exposed to Malaysian, Hong Kong, British and French cuisines, which gave him the amazing capabilities to create a culinary fusion. As chef de cuisine of Seafire Steakhouse in Dubai, Raymond has spent most of his career in hotel properties - a demi chef de partie at Santini in Edinburgh, sous chef at MJ’s Steak House at Madinat Jumeirah’s Al Qasr Hotel in Dubai, from there he went on to the all-day dining restaurant The Arboretum at Al Qasr and the chef the cuisine at the Sheraton Grand Dubai. Raymond has worked in all areas of the hotel kitchen from fine dining to mass banqueting to a brasserie to all-day dining even room service and a steakhouse, and his cooking style and flavours embody all of this experience. With a culinary philosophy to cooking with passion, he believes “being creative is the key to being a good chef; you need to love what you do in the kitchen.” His inspirations come from several sources; it could be from travelling, eating out, and learning something new from team members or suppliers introducing new products. Once he gets an idea, that’s when he starts to play and create new dishes.

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RAYMOND WONG SEAFIRE STEAKHOUSE DUBAI, U.A.E.


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oberto Segura is bringing his passion for Peruvian flavors to Dubai. This love of Peruvian food started at a young age as he would watch his father combine flavors, textures and tastes. This experience ignited a drive that got him started on his future path by cooking every weekend. Soon after graduating from high school, Roberto landed his first job as a chef in one of Lima’s top Peruvian eateries with one of Peru’s acclaimed chefs. He then moved on to expand his resume by working with Moma Adrianzen who owned multiple restaurant concepts. After sharpening his skills, he traveled to New York where he would master the art of Mexican fusion at Richard Sandoval’s restaurants Pampano, Maya and ultimately joining his opening team of Toro Toro in Dubai. The experience working with these chefs built a significant foundation from which to build his future. “My cuisine is adventurous and free. There are many details, but it is always based on one main ingredient which is reflected on the plate. Everything starts in my mind as an idea. I then research this idea and explore my options. From there it’s all about the product and I start with the first trials to see the results. Many times the idea does not show on the plate and I have to go back to the beginning. It commonly takes me several attempts to bring me to a great dish with which I am satisfied. The key elements of my dishes are based on the mix of flavors, the texture and the surprise element.”

ROBERTO SEGURA DUBAI, U.A.E.

Roberto’s culinary philosophy starts with respect for the products used in preparing his dishes. This is followed by the love put into the process of preparing and finally the passion when it comes to serving his customers. Respect— Love—Passion. This is his mantra. “Behind every dish, the real inspiration is always the passion that drives your menu to be creative—the ability to surprise people with your food and an overall desire to make people happy when they are eating.” Since 2012, Roberto has represented Peru at Taste of Peru and Dubai’s Gulf Food. In 2013 he joined The Act as the head chef and then in 2015, he joined Three Hospitality as a co-founder and group executive chef. He continued by launching his first all-day café concept Craft Café in Dubai’s Design District to a take on Peruvian-Japanese fusion and he conquered Latin American cuisine with Waka.

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ith over 15 years of culinary experience both locally and further abroad, Grand Millennium Business Bay Executive Chef Mohamad Chabchoul has a wealth of expertise in the F&B and catering industry. Originally from Lebanon, Mohamad began his career as commis 1 at Le Brasserie restaurant at Le Meridian Hotel in Damascus. He then relocated to Dubai where he took a more senior role of chef de partie at InterContinental Dubai Festival City as part of the hotel opening team. Two years later, Mohamad joined the Belgian Beer Café Kitchen and Bistro Madeleine at InterContinental and then went on to Fairmont Bab Al Bahar in Abu Dhabi as the s room service chef. In 2010, he returned to Dubai to become the garde manger de cuisine at The Ritz Carlton DIFC where he stayed for almost three years. And from there, he worked at a range of restaurants within the IHG Group in Dubai Festival City and left as the cluster chef de cuisine before embarking on his next role as executive chef at Fauchon Paris. Taking up new challenges, he went to head the Bin Hendi Enterprises hospitality division as executive chef. Mohamad has continued to set the culinary pace throughout his career in terms of both quality and growth. His passion for kitchen operations and innovative concepts knows no bounds and in his role as executive chef at Grand Millennium Business Bay, he brings his wealth of culinary knowledge to seven different restaurants. He is highly experienced, creative and dedicated to the food and beverage industry; his drive is certain to keep each and every outlet within the hotel ahead of its competitors.

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MOHAMAD CHABCHOUL GRAND MILLENNIUM BUSINESS BAY DUBAI. U.A.E.


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rowing up in Paris, Junior Nadje’s passion for cooking came from his aunt who lived in Italy and travelled to Paris over the weekends. While in Paris, she would create some brilliant dishes for the family and it simply fascinated him. “She used to give me lots of tips, advice and all of her secret recipes. This inspired and motivated me to continue cooking and spend hours in the kitchen. I knew I wanted to cook, it was my passion and I definitely wanted to be a chef.” After working in restaurants in Paris, he moved to the South of France where he worked at Chateau de la Chevre D’or and then moved on to Monte Carlo and London. His next stop was Dubai where he worked with Yannick Alléno for 3 years before moving to Rue Royale Dubai, a restaurant by Mathieu Viannay. All of these experiences helped form him as a young chef. He was influenced by their cooking, their iconic dishes and their product choices.

JUNIOR NADJE RUE ROYALE BY MATHIEU VIANNAY DUBAI, U.A.E.

Junior’s philosophy is that nothing is impossible and that there is no limit to creating a dish. It starts with the inspiration of an idea and then he imagines how the dish is going to be. The taste, the use of natural products— this process comes naturally to him. When creating a new dish, he never gives up. He will stay at it until he gets it just right. It’s all about taste and flavour derived from simple ingredients. It is the raw taste and the intensity of the ingredients where he seeks the perfect balance until it creates an emotion. He finds most of his inspiration through his travels—the people around him and the different cultures. Simplicity is the key and sometimes difficult to achieve. Recently Junior created a journey with vanilla—a unique 4-course menu featuring vanilla from Madagascar and Tahiti that was paired with three mocktails. Passion, creativity and Haute gastronomy is something that has always been a driving force.

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orn and raised in the dream city of Mumbai, India, Niyati Rao was privileged to have the opportunity to travel and be exposed to many different cultures of the world. She was a very curious child who had a natural inclination toward art, literature, and history. Throughout her youth, she simply loved painting and cooking elaborate family meals with her mother, who is a “brilliant cook.” It is safe to say that this is where she found her calling. However, it was simply her hard work that drove her to secure acceptance at IHM Mumbai, a top hotel management institute in India. In her last year of study, she was chosen by the Taj Group of hotels for a prestigious two-year culinary management training program. At the Taj Mahal Palace in Mumbai, she had the fortune to work at the prestigious French fine dining restaurant, The Zodiac Grill, but ultimately moved on to fulfil her goal of becoming one of the chefs at Wasabi by Morimoto. After experiencing her next opportunity, to work alongside Hemant Oberoi as a sous chef. Coming from a family of gastronomes where everything revolved around food. Niyati remembers an incident when she was a little girl. A cold December morning at the Tsukiji market in Tokyo, and she was walking around the bustling market with my father. They stopped into a quaint sushi restaurant that was flooded with people. Her father insisted on making her try the fatty tuna nigiri along with everything else that was best in season. Seeing the skilful work of the chef, serving customers with the utmost love, respect, and pride with which he was handling the food. She fixated to the idea of learning and practicing how to cook for others to express herself. After this, she was engulfed in the world of food, ingredients, and cooking. She saw the same things in a very different light. She would borrow cookbooks from the library; steal some from my mother’s collection and reading culinary encyclopaedias written by the masters of the gourmet world and research ingredients and cooking techniques. Niyati realized how strong the language of food is. From the humble warmth of a meal made by her mother to an incredible gourmet experience presented by an expert chef—all touching lives in some way. Something in her changed for the better. She entered the kitchen and never looked back. Niyati’s cuisine is inspired by her life, memories, and people with whom she has interacted. It is designed to trigger memories of a time, place, or person. Hers is a cuisine genuinely delivered with a personal touch.

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NIYATI RAO MUMBAI, INDIA


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CLARIFIED LAMB REDUCTION Legs of lamb / 1 Carrot / 2 Celery stalks / 1 Onion / 2 Egg whites Lamb reduction / Kuzu / Fennel

LOIN OF LAMB WITH A CEREAL CRUST FENNEL AND GOAT CHEESE PEARLS HEINZ BECK LA PERGOLA ROME WILD FENNEL FILLING 200g Chicken breast / 200ml Liquid cream / 2 Egg whites / Wild fennel powder / Salt Cut the chicken breast into small pieces and mix it with the cream, egg whites, salt and pepper. Pour the mixture into the pacojet glass, freeze and paco jet it. Add the wild fennel powder last. LAMB WITH A CEREAL CRUST 320g Saddle of lamb - clean / Wild fennel filling / 200g Corn flakes / 200g Oatmeal / Salt / Pepper

FENNEL PURÉE 2 Fresh fennels / Star Anise / Salt / Extra virgin olive oil Clean the fennel and take care to remove the tough outer parts and filaments. Cook the fennel in a steam oven at 63°C for 1 ½ hour with oil, salt and the star anise. Remove the spices and blend to get a purée. Add salt, if necessary. FENNEL BRUNOISE 1 Fennel / 25ml Pernod / 125ml Italian white grape / Star Anise Vegetable broth / Clarified lamb reduction / Chervil / Tarragon Clean the fennel, remove the tough parts, and cut the rest into brunoise. Stir fry the brunoise in a pan with the Pernod, Italian white grape, vegetable broth and the star anise. Let the liquid evaporate and season it with salt. Tie the fennel with the clarified lamb reduction. Add chopped chervil and tarragon.

Put the lamb in a vacuum bag with salt, pepper and cook for 25 minutes in a steam oven at 63°C. Dry and cut the lamb saddle into medallions and sprinkle each piece with the wild fennel stuffing. Bread the meat in cereals fry it in extra virgin olive oil. Dry on paper towels and keep warm until use.

GARNISH Shiso / Edible flowers

LAMB REDUCTION 1.5kg Lamb bones / 50ml Tomato paste / 1 Carrot / 2 Celery stalks / 1 Onion / Fresh thyme / 2 Garlic cloves / 125ml Fortified red grape / 125ml White grape / Ice / Salt / Extra virgin olive oil

Soften the gelatine in milk, add the goat cheese and bring to a boil at 80°C. Blend and dissolved it in a little corn starch and cold water. Pass it through a sieve and let it cool. Pour the mixture into a pastry bag and squeeze in liquid nitrogen to get the pearls. Lyophilize (freeze dry) the pearls for 1 day.

Toast the bones in the oven at 180°C until they are gold in colour. In a pan, fry the chopped vegetables with extra virgin olive oil. Add the garlic, thyme and tomato paste. Deglaze it with the red grape, taking care to let the liquid evaporate. Transfer the vegetables in a large pot, add the bones, water, ice and cook for 4 hours.

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Strip the flesh off the legs of lamb, mix the meat with the vegetables, the egg whites and salt. Pour the mixture into a pan with the reduced lamb and bring to a boil and maintain a gentle boil for 30 minutes. Once clarified, filter out the reduced lamb and bond it with the kuzu.

GOAT CHEESE PEARLS 500g Milk / 250g Goat cheese / 3 Gelatine sheets / 2g Cornstarch

SERVING SUGGESTIONS Spread the fennel purée on the bottom of the plate. Put the medallions of crusted lamb and finish it with the fennel brunoise in lamb reduction. Garnish with shiso, edible flowers and at the time of serving add the goat cheese pearls.


SWEETBREAD SIMONE CANTAFIO MAISON BRAS JAPON HOKKAIDO, JAPAN 300g Sweetbreads of veal 300g Water 300g Milk 200g Sweet white onions 300g Savoy cabbage 2 Cloves of garlic 15 Fresh spinach leaves (large) Sage leaves to taste 50g Butter Classic veal reduction 6 Shelled walnuts Toasted rapeseed oil to taste Blanch the veal sweetbreads in a solution of water and milk (50/50) for a few minutes, then cool them in water and ice to stop cooking and make them more tender. Remove the sweetbreads from their surface skin and cut the sweetbreads into pieces of about 2 cm and brown them in a pan, with a knob of butter. Once golden, add some sweet onion and savoy cabbage, both finely chopped with a knife. Cover with a lid and cook gently at low heat. After about 1 hour and 30 minutes of slow cooking, we will obtain a sort of ragu of onion, cabbage and sweetbreads. Carefully stuff the spinach leave with the onion-sweetbread and make them into packages, which you then close by tying them with kitchen twine. Brown the stuffed spinach leaves with a clove of garlic and some fresh sage leaves to taste. Make a classic veal reduction, also using the leftover cooking sauce of the stuffing, obtaining a rich and enveloping sauce. Add a drizzle of toasted rapeseed oil to give a slightly smoked note to the dish. We will finish the dish by placing the hot stuffed spinach in the center of the dish, a strip of sauce and finish off with a generous sprinkle of grated of walnuts.

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An all time classic of mine, the Sayadieh of black cod, a favourite at Q’bara, and still asked to make it. 1.6kg Black cod fillet, skinned and boned 800g Medium grain or basmati rice 2ltr Fish stock 750g White onion (large), thinly sliced 8g Garlic purée 4 Garlic cloves 10g Fresh ginger 10g Green cardamom pod (whole), cracked 10g Cumin seeds 10g Cloves 2 Cinnamon sticks 10g Black peppercorns 10ml Vegetable oil SPICY FISH SEASONING 12g Garlic purée 5g Ground cumin 8g Coriander powder 5g Paprika 2g Maldon sea salt, to taste 2 g Black pepper - freshly ground, to taste GARNISH Sautéed pine nuts Picked coriander Berbere butter Garlic chips Fresh lemon zest Fresh yogurt

SAYADIEH OF BLACK COD WITH GARLIC AND SPICES COLIN CLAGUE RÜYA DUBAI

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Wash the rice in cold water, until the water stays clear. Slice the onions and garlic thinly, heat the oil in a large pan, and sauté until caramelized (not burnt) reserve one third for garnishing, then add the sliced garlic to the pan, sauté for one minute, add the fish stock and all the spices wrapped in a muslin cloth and simmer for 15 minutes. Strain and remove the caramelized onions, blend the onions to a puree and add back to the stock. Add the rice to the Kama Meshi pots and cover with the stock, bring to the boil for four minutes, then reduce to a simmer for a further four minutes, cover and allow to stand for another four minutes or until the liquid has evaporated and the rice is cooked. Take the fish fillets and brush with the garlic paste, season with the spices and grill over charcoal. When just cooked place on top of the rice, and garnish with the pine nuts, sautéed onions, a little butter, zested lemon, fried garlic and picked baby coriander leaves. Serve fresh yogurt on the side.


CURED TENDERLOIN AND FERMENTED CHERRIES MIKAEL SVENSSON KONTRAST OSLO

Cut the cherries in half and take away the stone. Weigh the cherries and add 3% salt of the total weight. Mix in a vacuum bag and seal. Leave at room temp for three to five days until you see the bag blow up and the fermentation is going. Cut the cherries in half again. BLOOD CRACKER 160g Blood / 40g Oil / 20g White flour / Salt to taste / Extra oil for frying

INGREDIENTS

Wisk everything together, fry the batter in oil to form round crackers. Dry off on paper towels before serving.

COFFEE CURED TENDERLOIN 200g tenderloin, from free range organic / 12g Coffee / 8g Salt / 8g Sugar / 2g Cocoa nibs / 2g Black pepper

BLOOD CREAM 150ml Coffee flavoured porter / 100ml Blood / 10g Coffee beans (crushed) / 40ml Cream / 30g Egg yolks / 20g Butter

Grind the dry ingredients to a fine powder, rub the tenderloin with it, vacuum pack it and refrigerate it for three weeks flipping the bag every second day. After three weeks, rinse and pat dry. Can be eaten directly or air dry in fridge on racks for up to three weeks. Slice thinly before serving.

Reduce the hops to 15ml and add the cream. Bring to a boil, infuse with coffee for 30 minutes and strain. Combine all the ingredients except butter. Heat everything up while whisking until it thickens, then whisk in the butter and pass through a fine sieve. Keep warm until serving.

FERMENTED CHERRIES 40 Cherries / 3% Salt

GARNISH Blue corn flowers and oxalis leafs.

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CURED WAGYU 500g Wagyu fillet 2tbsp Ground black pepper 5tbsp Ground coffee 1pcs Kombu (enough to wrap the fillet) CURED MARINATION 1ltr Soy sauce 300g Sake 20g Sugar 30g Rice vinegar 3g Yuzu powder

CURED WAGYU AND TRUFFLE PONZU REIF OTHMAN KUSHIYAKI DUBAI

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TRUFFLE PONZU 400ml Ponzu 75ml Lavazza coffee 30g Truffle oil 6g Garlic 60g Yuzu peeled 50ml Light soy 5g Chopped fresh truffle 200ml Truffle juice Mix the black pepper and Lavazza coffee on a tray, roll the fillet and wrap with the kombu, securing with butcher’s string. Mix all the marinade ingredients in a bowl. Add the wrapped fillet and leave to infuse for two days. After two days, remove the kombu and heat a non-stick pan with 1tsp of grape seed oil. Lightly sear the cured fillet and set aside to rest. Slice thinly and plate with a drizzle of truffle ponzu and shaved Alba truffle.


HEINZ BECK LA PERGOLA ROME

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VEAL ON AMARANTH GRAIN WITH PRESSED CAVIAR AND HERBS AMARANTH 60 gr Amaranth Extra virgin olive oil Fry the amaranth in extra virgin olive oil at 180°C. Dry the amaranth on absorbent paper. MAYONNAISE WITH MUSTARD AND TABASCO 1 Yolk 210ml Extra virgin olive oil 1 tsp Mirin 1 tsp Mustard ½ tsp Tabasco Put the yolks in a bowl with a pinch of salt, mirin, mustard, Tabasco and mix the ingredients with an immersion blender. Incorporate the oil gradually and emulsify. GROUND POTATOES 4 Potatoes Extra virgin olive oil Clean the potatoes and boil them in salted water until tender. Peel them, mash and spread the potatoes on a non-stick baking paper. Dry it in the oven at 80°C for 15 minutes. Fry the ground potatoes in extra virgin olive oil, dry them on absorbent paper.

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VEAL 150g Fillet Extra virgin olive oil Salt Pepper Edible gold flakes Cut the meat into pieces and place it in a paco jet glass and paco jet it. Sift and season with olive oil, salt and pepper. Lay half of the meat between two sheets of paper to obtain a thin sheet and shape it with a rectangular mould 5x7cm. With the other half make small meatballs, a part of which will be breaded with the potatoes and the other in edible gold flakes. GROUND VEAL HAM 80g Ham Cube the veal ham and fry it in a pan without oil until crispy. Dry it on paper towels and keep it warm. GARNISH Pressed caviar Shiso Tarragon Basil SERVING SUGGESTIONS In the centre of the platter, draw a strip of mayonnaise with mustard and tabasco sauce. Put the crispy amaranth over it and lay the beef veal with the meatballs. Pour a bit of extra virgin olive oil and garnish with ground ham and slices of pressed caviar. Decorate with herbs.


MILLEFEUILLE OF VEAL FILLET COOKED AT LOW TEMPERATURE, FOIE GRAS AND GLAZED APPLE WITH REDUCTION OF CALVADOS AND BLACK TRUFFLE. TANO SIMONATO TANO PASSAMI L’OLIO MILAN, ITALY VEAL FILLET 600g Veal fillet Sage and thyme Medium extra virgin olive oil - Marche, Garda Salt, sugar and freshly ground pepper Clean the veal fillet and make it a perfect cylinder. Put the fillet in clingfilm with salt, sugar, freshly ground pepper, sage, thyme and extra virgin olive oil to taste. Tighten the ends well, then put the fillet under vacuum and place in the blast chiller for at least 2 hours. Remove from the blast chiller and put in the freezer overnight. Remove from the freezer the night before. Bake at 61°C for 8 hours. To regenerate the fillet put in hot water at 60°C. Cut the fillet with a thickness of about 1 cm and make 2-3 slices per serving. FOIE GRAS 160g Foie gras Calvados Vegetable broth Corn flour Salt and sugar Slice roughly 120g of the foie gras which was previously kept in the freezer and 40g a little finer to make a cream. Cook the 120g in a pan, dabbing it with a piece of absorbent paper with a little extra virgin olive oil on it. Once cooked, flambé with Calvados. Now put the 40g in another pan with the same system, always flambé with a little Calvados, add a little vegetable broth and bring to the desired density with a little cornstarch. Adjust the salt and sugar in the two preparations. GLAZED APPLE 1 Granny Smith apple 1 Lemon Sugar and salt Water Wash and peel the apple and keep it in water with squeezed lemon. Make a sugar syrup with 200 ml of water and 150 g of sugar, a pinch of salt. Cut the apple to match the size of the fillet, cut the slices with a thickness of ½ cm and make 1-2 slices of apple for each serving. Blanch the apple for 1-2 minutes in the syrup. Leave to cool. t the time of service, heat for 20 seconds in the microwave. CALVADOS REDUCTION Calvados Sugar, salt and water Put 150 ml of Calvados in a pan, 100ml of water, 200g of sugar and a pinch of salt. Reduce to desired density. BLACK TRUFFLE Wash the truffle under running water, dry it well and peel it PREPARATION Prepare the millefoglie by placing a slice of veal fillet underneath, then a slice of glazed apple, then the foie gras and close with another slice of veal fillet. Put a little foie gras cream, 2-3 turns with a reduction of Calvados and finally decorate with a very thin slice of the black truffle.


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BEEF KUSHI WITH BLACK PEPPER TERIYAKI BASE SAUCE 1ltr Mirin 1ltr Soy sauce 1ltr Water 3 White onion 2 Carrot 200g Ginger 1 Kombu 2 Garlic cloves Bring all to a boil and set aside. Black pepper sauce 200g Base sauce 1tbsp Black pepper crushed Mix well and transfer to squeeze bottle. Cut the beef striploin into strips - 50g per skewers. Season it with salt, and grill it on a charcoal grill. SERVING SUGGESTIONS Garnish with spring onion & Drizzle the black pepper sauce.

REIF OTHMAN KUSHIYAKI DUBAI, U.A.E.

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CLASSIC MEATBALLS CARLA PELLEGRINO BIANCO RESTAURANT GROUP LLC U.S.A. Sugo della domenica (Sunday Sauce) is the dish that has characterized the childhood of many Italians. In most Italian homes, the smell of the Sunday Sauce would permeate the air even before the aroma of morning coffee. In fact, on Sunday mornings, Italian women commonly would immediately begin the preparation of the sauce—getting them ahead of the long cooking time needed to perfect the taste. Today many families have lost this custom, but sometimes I still repeat this ritual on Sundays, which takes me back in time to my childhood.

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1 lb Ground lean beef ½ WWlb Ground veal 2 Large eggs 1 cup Freshly grated Pecorino Romano cheese 1 ½ tbsp Chopped Italian parsley ½ small Garlic clove (peeled and minced) 2 cups Bread Crumbs 2 cups Lukewarm water ¾ cup High-quality olive oil 3 cups Sunday Sauce Salt and pepper to taste Combine the beef and veal in a large bowl. Add the eggs, cheese, parsley, garlic, and salt and pepper to taste. Mix the ingredients using your hands or the mixer with a paddle attachment on low speed. Add the breadcrumbs into the meat mixture and slowly add water (1 cup at a time) until the mixture is quite moist. Shape meat mixture Heat oil in a large sauté pan. Once the oil is very hot but not smoking, fry meatballs in batches. When the bottom half of the meatballs are very brown and slightly crisp, turn and cook the top half. Remove from the heat and drain on paper towels. Place cooked meatballs into simmering Sunday Sauce for 30 minutes. Serve hot in the sauce. Note: In place of bread crumbs, you can use stale Italian bread (white part only) that has been lightly soaked in lukewarm water.


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KAPI (COFFEE) LAMB CHOP CASHEW UPMA, SHITAKE MUSHROOM AND CORIANDER CORAL VINEET BHATIA RASOI BY VINEET GENEVA INGREDIENTS LAMB CHOP MARINADE 8 Bone lamb rack – French trimmed, cut into single bone / 50 ml South Indian filter coffee concoction, warm (Substitution: 1½ tbsp Good instant coffee dissolved in warm water) / 2tsp Muscovado sugar / 1tsp Soya sauce / 1tsp Red chilli powder / 1tbsp Olive oil / 1tsp Chilli-garlic paste / 1tbsp Coriander stalks, finely chopped / 1tsp Ginger, finely chopped / 1tsp Garlic, finely chopped / Salt to taste In a bowl mix together all the other ingredients of the marinade except the lamb chops. Rub the lamb chop with this marinade and allow it to infuse for at least six hours or preferably overnight. Remove the extra marinate and cook the lamb chops on a flat grill until medium. Transfer to a roasting tray, baste with the marinade and roast for a further three minutes in a preheated oven at 200˚C to forma glaze on the lamb chop. CASHEW UPMA 3tbsp Vegetable oil / 1½tsp Mustard seeds / 1tsp Finely chopped fresh ginger / 1tsp Finely chopped fresh green chillies / 8 Curry leaves, coarsely chopped / 80g Coarse semolina / 150ml Thick coconut milk / 1tbsp Lemon juice 1tsp sugar / 1tbsp Roasted broken cashew nuts / Salt to taste Heat oil in a pan, add mustard seeds, and as they splutter, add ginger and chillies. Add curry leaves, semolina and sauté. Cook the semolina until it releases a nutty aroma, and then pour in coconut milk and about 150ml of water. Keep stirring and bring to boil. Reduce the heat; add lemon juice, sugar and salt and cook until the semolina is smooth and velvety akin to mash, stirring continuously. Lastly add the chopped cashew nuts, butter and remove from heat. CHILLI SHIITAKE MUSHROOMS 2ml Vegetable oil / 6 Curry leaves (chopped) / 1tsp Chopped garlic / 2tbsp Sliced shallots / 1tsp Red chilli paste (dried red chillies soaked in warm water and blended to form a paste) / 100g Shiitake mushrooms (sliced) / Salt to taste Heat the oil in a saucepan; add the curry leaves and sauté for a minute. Add the chopped garlic, sliced shallots, red chilli paste and sliced mushrooms and sauté over low heat for about three minutes or until the mushrooms are tender. Season with salt. CORIANDER CORAL 80g Water / 20g oil / 10g Plain flour / 5g Coriander paste (fresh coriander leaves blended into a thick paste with little water) Mix all the ingredients in a bowl. Heat 4-inch diameter non-stick pan and spoon two tablespoons of the coriander coral mixture, in a circular shape into the pan. As the batter cooks, the water evaporates forming a green net like disc. Remove this coriander coral and place on absorbent kitchen paper to soak the extra oil. Spoon rest of the mixture likewise forming the required additional coral discs. Store in an airtight container.

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PORK INFUSION 3kg Smoked ham 3ltr Cream Chopp the ham into small pieces. Bring to boil, simmer for 30 minutes, cool down on room temp, strain and reserve. BRÛLÉE 600ml Pork infusion 40g Sugar 160g Yolk 5g Salt Heat pork infusion to 70°C, wisk yolks with sugar until dissolved. Slowly pour pork infusion into the egg mixture to temper it, add salt. Strain. Bake in oven on convection 100% humidity 80C for 45min. Cool down in ice bath.

(R)EVOLUTION OF KOBARIŠKI ŠTRUKELJ SMOKED PORK CRÈME BRÛLÉE ANA ROŠ HIŠA FRANKO KOBARID, SLOVENIA

PLUM JAM 500g Dried plums without pit 25g Sugar 300ml Red wine 5g Salt Caramelise the sugar, add plums, deglaze with red wine, add salt. Simmer for 30-40 minutes. Cool it down and cut it into dices (should look like paste with dices). Before pouring the pork brulee, insert plum jam into the corner of each jar. PLATING OF CRÈME BRÛLÉE Use demerara brown sugar to caramelise top of brûlée, grate fresh horseradish on top and finish with woodsorrel.

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COCTAIL 10ltr Fresh apple juice 3 Sticks of cinamon 3pcs Star anis 150ml Whiskey single malt Reduce 10ltr of apple juice to 3l, cooking with 3 sticks of cinnamon and 3 star anis. Cool it down. To make a coctail, combine 500ml reduced apple juice and 150ml of whiskey. Finish with a smoked ice cube. STRUKLJI DOUGH 270g Flour 150g Starch 200ml Water Mix the dry ingrediance in a standing mixer by adding the water. Mix it for 10 minutes and let the dough rest in a frige minimum for 2 hours. FILLING 180g Semi-dried apples (dices) 220g Soted parsnip dices 16g Caramelized pork craklings 60g Wwalnut crumble Caramelise 50g of sugar and 150g of ground walnut, deglaze with 300ml of cream and add filling. Cook it for 5 minutes until the mixture has combined. Make a small thin rounds from the dough and oplace the filling in the center Final plating of the whole dessert 100g Ppork fat Steam štruklji and dress them with pork fat (instead of butter from original recipe). Serve together with apple coctail and pork crème brûlée with grated horse radish on the top.

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GYOZA FILLING 100g Minced beef / 10g Lotus root / 14g Chopped spring onions / Salt and pepper to taste Mix well and set aside. 4 Thin slices of beef striploin BASE SAUCE 1ltr Mirin / 1ltr Soy sauce / 1ltr Water / 3 White onions / 2 Carrots / 200g Ginger / 1 Kombu / 2 Garlic cloves Fill the gyoza skin individually with 20gm each of the mix and shape it as per your liking. Steam the gyoza for two minutes and sear it on a plancha (flat heated surface) till it gets brown. SERVING SUGGESTIONS Drizzle some of the base sauce and the lightly seared beef on top of the cooked gyoza. Finish it off with chopped spring onion.

BEEF GYOZA REIF OTHMAN KUSHIYAKI DUBAI, U.A.E.

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8 1.5cm Grass fed short ribs MARINADE 200g Brown sugar / 250ml Soya sauce / 125ml Water / 75ml Miren / 1pcs Small onion / 1pcs Pear / 40g Crushed coffee beans / Salt and pepper to taste KIMCHI 300g Kale (trimmed) / 100ml Fish sauce / 100g Ginger / 20g Garlic / 10g Sugar / 4 Scallions / 5g Pepper flakes

COFFEE BEAN CRUSTED KOREAN BBQ RIBS WITH SUN GOLD TOMATO SALAD AND ORGANIC PURPLE KALE KIMCHI GRANT MACPHERSON SCOTCH MYST LAS VEGAS

TOMATO SALAD 100g Tomatoes (cut in half) / 20g Mustard / 50ml Red grape vinegar / 150ml Olive oil GARNISH 4 Snap peas Coat the ribs with brown sugar and let them sit for one hour. Blend the marinade ingredients, add them to the ribs and let sit overnight in a sealed plastic bag. Boil all ingredients for the kimchi and leave overnight. Grill the ribs on a BBQ on high heat for two minutes on each side and allow to rest. Make the dressing for salad and toss in the tomatoes. PLATING Place the kimchi on plate with the ribs and the salad. Garnish with the snap peas.

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LINGUINE WITH GINGER, VEAL AND COCOA NIBS VALENTINO CASSANELLI LUX LUCIS FORTE DEI MARMI, ITALY VEAL 1 Veal head 2 Onions, roasted 2 Cloves 1 Bay leaf Salt White vinegar (80g /litre or water) Place the veal head into a sauce pan and roast for 45 minutes at 190°C. Make a broth by adding roasted onions, cloves and a bay leaf. Add the water and white vinegar to cover and simmer for 4 ½ hours, adding the tongue 45 minutes before the end. Once everything is cooked, remove the meat, discarding any excess fat and nerves. Roll it up until you have a cylinder of roughly 6cm and cut the meat into 3cm pieces. Warm the meat up in the broth before serving. LINGUINE 280g Durum wheat linguine 40g Ginger, juiced 1 Clove of unpeeled garlic 5g Extra virgin olive oil 600g Vegetable stock 20g Butter 15g Parmesan Salt to taste Ginger as needed Brown a clove of unpeeled garlic with a little extra virgin olive oil. Remove the garlic and add the vegetable stock and ginger until it starts to boil. Add the linguine until cooked and season with salt. Take the pan off the head and add the Parmesan, butter and some grated ginger, stirring together until it reaches a creamy consistency. TO COMPLETE THE DISH Cocoa nibs Ginger sprouts Veal jus Place a piece of veal in the centre of the dish and cover with a nest of linguine. Finish with cocoa nibs, veal jus and ginger sprouts.

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CEP BONE MARROW 50g Bone marrow / 100g White onions / 30g Unsalted butter / 100g Cep mushroom / 40g Flat parsley / 30g Breadcrumbs LYONNAISE Slice the onions and sweat it in a pan with butter on medium heat, do not burn the onions. Cook until the onions are translucent and caramelized. MUSHROOM & MARROW Cut the mushrooms in half and sear with butter, garlic and thyme. Cut the marrow in slices and blanch it. PREPARE PARSLEY CRUMB Take off the crust of the brown bread, chop it and cook it in a pan with the butter. Chop the parsley and mix it with the crumbs.

CARROT PURÉE 1lt Basic vegetable stock / 250g Large carrots / 1 Star anise 50ml Whipping cream / 80g Unsalted butter / 1 Sprig of thyme 10g Salt / 2g Pepper powder Peel and clean the carrots and slice them thin. Melt the butter in a pan, sweat the carrots and star anise. Add the stock and cook it until it is very tender. Add cream and blend it in a food processor until it has a smooth consistency. Season and pass it through a sieve. PICKLED MUSHROOM AND CHERRY TOMATOES 50g Shimeji mushrooms / 50g cherry tomatoes, blanched and peeled / 200ml Olive oil / 200ml Nut or vegetable oil / Juice of 1 lemon / 1tsp Salt / 50ml Sherry vinegar / ¾ tsp Pepper cracked Add all the ingredients into a pan, except tomato and mushrooms and bring to a boil. and bring it to a boil. Let it cool down to 85°C. Add the liquid to the mushrooms and tomatoes and leave it to cool down completely.

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RED GRAPE SAUCE 15 Shallots / 30g Butter / 1 Full garlic / 50g Demerara sugar 1500ml Red grape / 800ml Veal or meat stock / 1 Sprig of thyme Sweat the shallots and garlic in butter. Add sugar and let the shallots caramelize. Add the red grape and reduce it by half. Separately reduce the veal or chicken stock by half. Add the stock to the reduced red grape and bring to a boil, simmer for around 10 minutes. Remove it from the heat, add the thyme and cover with cling film for 15 minutes. Pass it through a fine sieve. SERVING SUGGESTIONS Grill the steak to your desired temperature, I recommend it medium-rare. If you are using a meat thermometer then cook the protein to a core temperature of 46°C. Warm the mushrooms and onion mix and place it in the marrow, and gratin it under the salamander. Warm the carrot purée and using a table spoon place two quenelles on the plate. Place the marrow in between the quenelles so to keep it still on the plate. Add the tomatoes and mushroom around the bone marrow. Quick flash the steak in the oven and place it on the plate, meanwhile bring the sauce up to a boil and serve in a saucier on the side.

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GRILLED BEEF TENDERLOIN ONION, MUSHROOM BONE MARROW AND CARROT PURÉE LUIGI VESPERO WALDORF ASTORIA DIFC DUBAI


BUFFALO ADOBO SHORT RIBS ROASTED PINEAPPLE & CASSAVA PURÉE JOHN BUENAVENTURA CANOPY BY HILTON DUBAI ADOBO SHORT RIBS 500g Buffalo short ribs 300ml Beef stock 100ml Coconut vinegar 50ml Soy sauce 30ml Coconut oil 30g Garlic 3Pcs Fresh bay leaves 20g Brown sugar 10g Mixed peppercorns (Red, White & Black) Sear the short ribs on a hot pan with Coconut oil over high heat until all the sides are dark brown and crusty. Lower the heat of the pan and add in the crushed garlic. Sauté until it becomes light brown in color. Add in the bay leaves, peppercorns and deglaze the whole dish with the coconut vinegar. Reduce the mixture to half and add in the soy sauce. Reduce it again in half and add in your beef stock. Cover the pot with a lid and simmer it in very low heat for 45 minutes or until the short ribs are fork tender. Keep adding stock if necessary. Once the beef is soft, take it out and strain the remaining liquid on a separate pan, reduce it further into a sauce like consistency and finish it off with a drizzle of coconut oil. Set aside. SAFFRON PINEAPPLE 200g Sliced pineapple rounds 50g White sugar 100ml Water 10ml Calamansi juice 3g Turmeric powder 1g Saffron (Kasubha) On a shallow pan combine the water and the white sugar. Bring it into a simmer then add in the turmeric powder, saffron stems and lemon juice. Slowly add in the pineapple and poach them in the mixture for 5-10 minutes. Transfer the poached pineapples on a baking tray lined with baking paper and roast them in the oven for 15 minutes at 170°C. Set aside. CASSAVA PURÉE 250g Cassava 400ml Buffalo milk 10g Black cardamom 10g Butter In a deep pot, add in the cut cassava with some fresh buffalo milk and a few black cardamom pods. Bring it to a boil and lower it to a simmer until the cassava becomes soft enough for you to mash it. Strain the cooked cassava into a blender and add a little bit if the milk used to cook it. Blend the mixture until smooth and finish it off with butter, salt and white pepper. Keep warm and Set aside. ASSEMBLY Assemble the plate by scooping out some cassava puree on the plate, add in one piece of roasted pineapple on to of it then place one short rib. Garnish the dish with a basic tomato onion salsa and drizzle in some of the sauce on top. You can sprinkle the dish with some toasted garlic at the end. Serve immediately.

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ANY DAY WITH MEATBALLS JEAN WINTER JEAN’S PRIVATE KITCHEN DUBAI, U.A.E. Sunday Sauce Zoodles (Zucchini noodles) Meatballs Salt Black pepper MEATBALLS 500g ground beef 1/2 cup bread crumbs (or substitute with a gluten-free option) 1tsp garlic powder I minced onion 1 egg 1tbsp oyster sauce 2tbsp soy sauce Salt and black pepper to taste

Mix all the ingredients of the meatballs in a big bowl, shape them into balls and shallow fry them with some olive oil on all sides until golden brown. Add the Sunday Sauce into the pan with the meat balls and leave to simmer. Prepare the zoodles using a spiralizer. Boil a pot of hot water and add a generous pinch of salt (roughly 1 tablespoon). Add the zoodles to the pot and cook just until their green color deepens, no more than 2 minutes to keep the vegetables crunchy. Drain the zoodles. Plate your zoodles with meatballs and a generous serving of the delicious sauce. Top with some chopped parsley and a nice amount of freshly shaved Parmesan if desired.

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200g Trimmed Snake River Farm Gold Label Striploin, 45 days dry aged / 200g Trimmed Brandt USDA Prime Flank Steak, 45 days dry aged / 200g Trimmed 44 Farms USDA Prime Tenderloin, 45 days dry aged / 30g Diced shallots / 30g Small Capers / 40g Diced cornichons / 40g Pickled jalapeno / 20g Diced fermented radish / 1tbsp Parsley - chopped / 100g Egg yolks purée or 4 fresh organic egg yolks TARTARE DRESSING 35g Dijon mustard / 100g Heinz tomato ketchup / 35g Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce / 50g Fermented Serrano hot sauce or green tabasco / 50ml Extra virgin olive oil

HENRY STEAK TARTARE NATHAN GREEN HENRY HONG KONG

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Place all the dressing ingredients in a bowl and mix them. Dice all of the trimmed beef, it should be about ½ cm dice. Place the beef on a tray and cling film, taking a smoke gun smoke the tray of beef and seal it with the cling film, leave it until the smoke disappears. Once the beef is smoked, place it in a bowl and add the shallots, parsley, cornichons, capers, radish and jalapeno. Mix it well. Add enough of the tartare dressing to lightly bind in together, check the seasoning and adjust with salt and pepper Plating Dress the tartare on a plate and either pipe in the egg yolk purée into the middle of the tartare or place an organic egg yolk on top. Serve with freshly toasted sour dough bread


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LAMB WITH EGGPLANT TOMATO AND SALTED RICOTTA HEINZ BECK LA PERGOLA ROME TOMATO SAUCE 400g Cherry tomatoes 1 Sprig of basil 1 Garlic clove ¼ Chilli pepper Boil 300 grams of the cherry tomatoes. Remove the skin, cut them into 4 halves and remove the seeds. Blend the rest of the cherry tomatoes, pass it through a sieve and add extra virgin olive oil. Put the cherry tomatoes and the sauce in a jar. Add basil, garlic and chill pepper. Seal the jar and immerse it in a water bath for 2 hours. Remove and blend it with the basil, garlic and chilli pepper. LAMB 1 Lamb saddle 1 Sprig of basil 1 Sprig of rosemary 1 Sprig of thyme 2 Garlic cloves 10 Pepper shells Extra virgin olive oil Bone the lamb and remove all the fat. Marinate the lamb for 24 hours with extra virgin olive oil, basil, rosemary, thyme, garlic and pepper shells. Remove the lamb from the marinade and brown it in a pan with a bit of extra virgin olive oil. Bake it at 170°C for 20 minutes and cut into 8 pieces. EGGPLANT 1 Eggplant, small Cut the eggplants into wedges and season it lightly with salt. Grill them on both sides. GARNISH 60g Salted ricotta 1 Sprig of basil, small leaves SERVING SUGGESTIONS Pour the tomato sauce in the middle of the platter and place 2 pieces of lamb on it. Put the grilled eggplant on top of the lamb and garnish it with grated salted ricotta, a bit of extra virgin olive oil and basil leaves.

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SMOKED BEEF CAP AND PIQUILLOS DANIEL NEGREIRA HIDDEN BY DN AND ALMA TAIPEI

Simplicity at its best, my homemade dry-aged beef with these red wonders, the aromas enhanced with olive oil and sugar.

CONFIT PIQUILLOS 150g Piquillo peppers 15g Sugar 10g Salt 5g Dry chilli 300g Extra virgin olive oil

SMOKED BEEF CAP 250g Clean Prime Beef Cap

Place all the ingredients in a pot and simmer for about two hours, the piquillos shall look slightly sundried like texture after it’s done.

SMOKED OIL 1.6 ltr Sunflower oil 300g Coconut charcoal

SERVING SUGGESTIONS Grill the steak, adding sea salt flakes on both sides, and let it rest for a couple of minutes after it’s done. I strongly recommend cooking the beef to medium as in my opinion that is the best texture for this cut of beef. Add freshly grounded black pepper. Place a little bit of smoked oil in a tray and add the piquillos, then bake it at 165°C for a couple of minutes, serve immediately with some sea salt flakes. Slice the cap and set the piquillos aside, sprinkle some chopped parsley and just enjoy the delicious simplicity.

Place the oil in a large pot with at least 10 litres capacity. Heat the coal until it is on fire and immediately place it in the pot with the oil and cover it with a lid. Keep it, then filter and decant, discard the sediments and set aside. Once cool, place the beef cap and the same amount of smoked oil into a vacuum bag and seal it right. Infuse for 8 hours.

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CHEEK TO CHEEK CHEEK OF CHIANINA AND CHESTNUTS KARIME LÓPEZ GUCCI OSTERIA DA MASSIMO BOTTURA FLORENCE, ITALY 600g Chianina Cheek 1000g Coarse salt 700g Sugar 400g Chestnuts 200g Cannellini bean water Chards 2000g Beef bones 100g Balsamic vinegar 1 Green celery 200g Carrots 200g White onions

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Trim the cheek of chianina by removing the excess fat and connecting tissue from the surface. Prepare a marinade with coarse salt and sugar and let the meat rest for 30 minutes. After 30 minutes, dry the meat and vacuum pack it with extra virgin olive oil. Steam for 10 hours at 82°C, then chill it in water and ice up to +3°C. Remove the cheek from the bag, make a 5x5 cm cube and lacquer it with the beef bottom with balsamic vinegar three times using a conventional oven at a temperature of 180°C. CHESTNUT CREAM Peel and clean the chestnuts, boil them with cannellini bean water until completely cooked (add water if necessary a little at a time). Mix some extra virgin olive oil and add more flavour with salt and pepper. REDUCTION OF BEEF AND BALSAMIC VINEGAR Toast the bones and vegetables in the oven at 200°C until golden brown, then dip everything in a saucepan and cover with water. Skim and degrease if necessary, reduce over low heat for 6 hours. Filter and add the balsamic vinegar and reduce to a honey consistency. PLATING Place the warm chestnut cream and the lacquered cheek close to it and finally put a leaf of chard on top of the chianina. Pour the balsamic vinegar reduction when the dish is on the table.


SLOW COOKED RACK OF LAMB - WITHOUT THE RACK, HONEY AND MINT GEL, CARAMELIZED ARTICHOKE WITH LEMON AND MINT RICOTTA MOUSSE RACK OF LAMB 600g Loin of lamb already cleaned off the rack / Extra virgin olive oil Puglia, Tuscany / Mint, bay leaves and salt Remove the loin from its bones, place it on a film and season it with salt, mint leaves, bay leaf and strong extra virgin olive oil. Roll into the film forming a cylinder and tighten ends to seal. Then also vacuum seal all together. Bake at 57°C for 7 hours. At the end of cooking, put in the blast chiller for 2-3 hours and then in the freezer. Thaw the day before serving and regenerate in hot water at 60°C at the time of serving. Cut the 4 cm medallions. HONEY-MIN GEL PRIMER Bones of the rack of lamb after having removed the loin / Celery, carrots and courgettes / Strong extra virgin olive oil / Sage, thyme, bay leaf and mint leaves / Juniper berries, peppercorns, cloves and salt / Vegetable broth / Red wine Corn flour / Honey / Agar Agar

ARTICHOKE 4 artichokes / Strong extra virgin olive oil / Salt and sugar Clean the artichokes and remove the internal fuzzy choke fibers. Cut them in half, put them in water and lemon juice, then cook them in boiling water for the necessary minutes, the cooking time is based on the type of artichoke, from 2-3 minutes to 4-5 minutes. Place in an airtight container with sheets of absorbent paper. At the time of serving, sear the artichokes in extra virgin olive oil in a pan until golden brown, then caramelise them with the right amount of sugar and sauté with a gas torch and add salt to taste. LEMON AND MINT RICOTTA MOUSSE 150g Ricotta - cow / 150g Fresh cream / 75ml Milk / 1 Lemon / Mint leaves / Gelatine / Salt and sugar Sift the ricotta. Whip the cream. Bring the milk to a boil and add 15g of gelatine. Leave to cool and add to the ricotta. Chop the mint very finly and grated lemon zest from one lemon and add to the ricotta. Combine the cream and ricotta, by stir slowly from bottom to top with a spatula. Store in the refrigerator for at least 2 hours.

Put the lamb rack bones in the oven at 200°C for about 15-20 minutes. Sauté the cleaned and chopped vegetables with strong extra virgin olive oil and add the bones and the leftovers from the rack of lamb and sauté again for 5 minutes, blend with 1 glass of red wine. Add the vegetable broth. Now put the herbs and spices in a garnì bouquet and add to the fond. Leave to cook on low heat for the whole day, skimming the residues from time to time with a skimmer. At the end of cooking, pass through a sieve and keep only the liquid. A smaller part is put asside and thickened with some cornstarch, adding salt, acacia honey and very finly minced mint and then put in a bottle. This is used at time of plating. The larger part, is put back into a cooking pot, adding salt, honey and very finely chopped mint. Add the 8 g agar agar per liter. Put on very smooth plastic trays, cover with cling film and refrigerate until it thickens. Once the fond gel has thickened, cut into strips to wrap the loin only at the moment of service.

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TANO SIMONATO TANO PASSAMI L’OLIO MILAN, ITALY

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VERONICA CANHA-HIBBERT THE SILO CAPE TOWN COFFEE SOUS VIDE OSTRICH FILLET Ostrich is a healthy alternative to beef and works well with strong bold flavours such as coffee. The creamy celeriac and sweet caramelised pears bind a flavourful dish without the traditional heaviness of a smoked main course meal. COFFEE SOUS VIDE OSTRICH FILLET 400g Trimmed ostrich fillet / Maldon salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste / Canola oil as needed / 2 Garlic cloves peeled / 15g butter / 8g Roasted coffee beans / 1 Sprig of thyme / 50ml Pinot Noir or similar demi-glace CELERIAC PURÉE 2 Heads of celeriac, approximately 500g / 4 Garlic cloves peeled and sliced / 15ml Olive oil / Maldon salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste / nutmeg to taste / 1l Vegetable stock / 15g Butter / 100ml Cream CONFIT LEEKS 6 Baby leeks (washed and trimmed)/ 50g Butter / 25ml Olive oil blend / 100ml Water / 1 Garlic clove (crushed) SALT BAKED BEETROOT 200g Coarse sea salt / 200g Fine salt / 2 Egg whites, lightly beaten / 250g Plain flour / 125 ml Water / 2 Rosemary sprigs, de-stalked / 6 Medium beetroots / Extra virgin olive oil to serve CARAMELISED PEARS 20g Butter / 400g Packham pears (peeled and cut into equalsized wedges) / 50g Light brown sugar COFFEE SAUCE 125ml Pinot Noir or similar demi-glace / 5g Roasted coffee beans / 25ml Gin / 1 Sprig of thyme / 1 Clove of garlic crushed / ½ White onion, sliced / Canola oil as needed COFFEE SOUS VIDE OSTRICH FILLET Generously season the meat on all sides with the salt and pepper. Place in a large vacuum-pack bag with the coffee beans, thyme and 50 ml demi-glace and vacuum-pack on medium. Cook in a water bath at 60˚C for 35 minutes. Remove the bags from the water and let the meat rest for 10 minutes. Heat a sauté pan and brown the meat on all sides, add the thyme and rosemary to the pan and a knob of cold butter. Baste the meat with the butter. Remove the meat and let it rest before slicing.

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CELERIAC PURÉE Brush excess dirt off of the celeriac. Cut off the bottoms and tops, cut into quarters and peel. Cut into rough cubes. Heat the olive oil in a heavy based saucepan over low heat. Add the celeriac, garlic, salt and pepper and cook, stirring frequently, just until it begins to soften, approximately five minutes. Increase the heat to medium-high and add the vegetable stock. Bring to a boil and cook until the celeriac is tender and easily pierced with a fork, approximately 20 minutes. Drain the celeriac through a colander and return to the pot and steam till all the moisture evaporates. Add the cream and the butter, and bring to the boil. Transfer to a blender and blend till smooth. Transfer into a plastic piping bag and keep warm. CONFIT LEEKS Melt the butter in a large pot over a medium-low flame. Once the butter is melted, add the leeks and olive oil and stir to coat the leeks. Add the water and salt and stir to combine. Place a lid on the pot and reduce flame to low. Cook, stirring often, for approximately 25 minutes or until leeks are tender. Remove the lid and cook for two to three minutes or until the remaining liquid has evaporated. Serve warm. SALT BAKED BEETROOT To make the salt crust, place the two salts, egg whites, flour, rosemary leaves and most of the water in a food processor and whiz until combined. Add the remaining water until the mixture forms a firm dough that isn’t too sticky. Tip out the dough and squeeze into a ball, cover with plastic wrap and set aside for two hours. Heat the oven to 170˚C. Scrub the beetroot and closely trim, but do not peel. Roll out the dough on a bench and cut into six pieces. Place a beetroot on top of each one, and press the dough up and over each beetroot until completely sealed. Bake for one and a half hours, then crack open the crust, brush the beetroot with olive oil and cut into quarters. CARAMELISED PEARS Heat a large sauté pan over medium heat. Melt the butter, and then add the pears, cut-side down, cooking until they are slightly golden brown, approximately five minutes. Add the brown sugar and continue cooking until caramelised, approximately five minutes. COFFEE SAUCE Sauté the onion and garlic in a heavy-based saucepan. Once the onions are a golden brown colour, deglaze the pan with the gin. Add the demi-glace.


THE CACHETERO TOUCH At Cachetero we use the entire carcass, extracting both loins and tenderloins. Either of these cuts is perfect for this recipe, and we are then able to use the bones to provide potent flavor in our sauce. Game meat has for a long time been appreciated and used in La Rioja. The deer population in several geographical points of our region has enabled the preparation of numerous recipes such as this one, in which red wine is another key ingredient. 1kg Venison loin or tenderloin 16 Smoked bacon or “tocino” slices 2dl Arbequina extra virgin olive oil 125g Dried strips of apricot or peach 12 Shallots 50g Plums or raisins 90g Walnuts 1tsp Butter 1 pinch Curry powder ½ cinnamon stick Salt THYME SAUCE 1 Onion 1 Leek 1 Garlic clove 2 Carrots 3ltr Game broth (can be prepared with the venison bones) 1ltr Red wine 1tsp Honey Thyme Salt Wrap the venison loin in the bacon and set aside in the refrigerator. SAUCE Cook the onions, leek, garlic and carrots, minced, over low heat in a pot with oil. Once golden, add the thyme and red wine, reduce over low heat for 10 minutes, and add the broth. Cook over medium heat for 30 minutes then strain with a fine colander to achieve a smooth sauce. Return to heat and reduce until the sauce is thick and flavorful. Salt to taste. GARNISH Hydrate the dried apricots or peaches in water for three hours. Boil for 40 minutes then blend with a hand mixer. Strain through a fine colander to achieve a smooth purée. This sweet accompaniment contrasts very well with the game. Blanch the shallots and immediately submerge in an ice bath. Drain and dry them, then cook in a pan with butter over very low heat for 30 minutes with the cinnamon. Finally, add the raisins, curry powder, honey and walnuts. Salt to taste. Cut the venison into 125g medallions. Brown on both sides in a pan with oil. You can finish them either in the pan or in the oven for five minutes at 180°C. PLATING Place two medallions on the plate and cover with thyme sauce. Garnish with three glazed shallots and the fruit purée.

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VENISON TOURNEDO WITH THYME SAUCE JOSÉ LUIS VICENTE GÓMEZ RESTAURANTE CACHETERO LA RIOJA, SPAIN

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INGREDIENTS BEEF BOLOGNESE 300g Ground beef 100g Finely diced shallots 30g Finely dice the garlic 30g Fresh thyme 300g Sunday sauce 30g Sliced fresh parsley In a pan with olive oil lightly shallow fry shallot, garlic and thyme with no color. Add ground beef, shallow fry until evenly browned. Add Sunday sauce and gentle simmer until sauce has reduced by 20%. Season with salt and pepper, add parsley and serve. PORCINI PASTA 400g OO pasta flour 350g Organic free range egg yolks 100g Dried porcini powder In a Robo coupe (food processor) blend all of the ingredients. Place into a sous vide bag and vacuum, removing all air to compress the dough. Allow it to rest in the refrigerator for 4 hours before rolling. Using a pasta machine, roll it to 1 mm in thickness and cut into lasagna-size sheets. When ready to serve, prepare a pan of well-seasoned water with extra virgin olive oil. Take the water to a rolling boil and cook pasta for 30-45 seconds.

DECONSTRUCTED BEEF LASAGNA JAMES OAKLEY ALIBI, CORDIS HOTEL HONG KONG

PORCINI AND COMTE CHEESE SAUCE 500g Milk 500g Cream 150g Butter 50g Sherry 5g Tarragon 75g Comte cheese 250g Mushroom stock 15g Dried porcini 10g Thyme Reduce cream and milk by half, set aside. In a pan place mushroom stock and dried porcini, reduce by half and set aside. In a pan reduce sherry by half. In a pan mix together the cream and milk reduction, mushroom stock, porcini reduction and sherry reduction. Return to heat and bring to a gentle simmer. Whisk in butter and Comte cheese a little at a time until all butter is fully incorporated and all cheese is fully melted. Remove from heat, add thyme, tarragon and set aside to infuse for 30 minute. Strain through a fine sieve and place into an espuma CO2 charger and charge with 2 CO2 canisters. CRISP BEEF TENDONS 100 g Beef tendon Place Beef tendon into a pan and cover with water. Simmer gently for 6 hours, until the tendon is transparent and a firm jelly-like consistency. Remove tendon from water and allow to cool. Once cool thinly slice tendon and place onto a silicon mat. Dehydrate at 56°C for 12 hours. Once dehydrated allow it to sit uncovered at room temperature for a further 12 hours. Fry and season. CONFIT PORCINI 200g Fresh porcini mushroom 10g Garlic 15g Fresh thyme 150g Beef dripping Clean porcini keeping whole and intact. Melt the beef fat. Place all ingredients into a sous vide bag and vacuum pack being careful not to crush the mushroom. Cook at 90°C for 4 hours.

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DRY AGED RIB EYE JOHN BUENAVENTURA CANOPY BY HILTON DUBAI 350g Dry Aged Rib eye 30ml Olive Oil 1 Lemon Sea salt to taste Black pepper to taste PIQUILLO SOFRITO 100g Cherry tomatoes 100g Piquillo peppers 50g White onions 10g Basil 10g Garlic 40ml Olive oil 5g Sweet smoked paprika 2g Cumin powder Sea salt to taste Black pepper to taste In a small saucepan, drizzle some olive oil and sauté the white onions, tomatoes and piquillo peppers. Add the garlic, smoked paprika and cumin. Stir while cooking it over medium heat until most of the liquid has evaporated. Season the sofrito with salt and pepper once the mixture is done. Add the chopped basil leaves at the last minute and drizzle some olive oil to finish. Set aside. CORIANDER CHIMICHURRI 50g Coriander 30g Parsley 10g Tarragon 5g Garlic 30ml Red vinegar 30ml Olive oil 5g Lemon zest Sea salt to taste Black pepper to taste In a mixing bowl, combine the chopped herbs, vinegar, olive oil, garlic and lemon zest. Season the dressing with salt and pepper and keep chilled. GRILLING THE STEAK In a tray, marinate the rib eye steaks with some olive oil, crushed black pepper, cumin powder and a bit of smoked paprika. Add salt just before cooking the steak. Set aside for grilling. On a hot grill, sear the steak until it forms a nice crust, carefully move the seared steak on the cooler side of the grill to cook it slowly either rare, medium-rare or well done. I suggest to cook at medium-rare to taste the flavours of the dry-aged meat. Make sure to rest the steaks for 5 minutes once it is off the grill and flash it back before slicing them. Serve the steak on a wooden board or plate with some piquillo sofrito on top and serve the chimichurri on the side with a slice of lemon.

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200g Irish Beef Short rib 20g Honey 50g BBQ Sauce 2pc Soft brioche bun rolls 100g Cheddar cheese PICKLED APPLE COLESLAW 1pc White cabbage 1pc Carrot 2g Honey 1pc Green apple 1pc Lime 60g Mayonnaise

SAVORY SHORT RIB DONUTS RAYMOND WONG SEAFIRE STEAKHOUSE DUBAI

Preheat the oven to 200°C. Season the short ribs generously with salt and black pepper. Place it in a coverable baking vessel. In a saucepan, bring the beef stock to a boil. Add the stock to the baking vessel until the short ribs are covered. Cover and place it in the oven for 30 minutes. Drop temperature to 170°C, and cook for 2 to 3 hours until the beef is falling apart. Add more stock as needed to keep the short ribs partly submerged. Once tender enough, pull the beef into pieces. Keep the beef stock for the next day to make the onion soup. APPLE COLESLAW Shred the carrot, cabbage, and apples into a bowl and add some fresh lime to stop the apples from browning. This will also add a freshness to the coleslaw. Mix the mayonnaise and some honey. CHEDDAR CHARCOAL DUST Grate the cheddar cheese onto a nonstick baking tray, add in some plain flour and black coloring. Mix well and bake it for 10 minutes until the cheese has melted and turned into a crisp consistency. Leave it to cool. The cheddar mix will get crisp once cooled. Once cold, blend it into a powder and set it aside for dusting the donuts. SHORT RIB STUFFING Add BBQ sauce to the short rib mix and transfer it into a piping bag. SOFT BRIOCHE BUN ROLLS Insert a knife into the bun and carefully hallow out the center, this allows the short rib mix to be piped into the center. FINISHING THE DONUTS Put some honey onto the top of the buns and dust it with cheddar dust, garnish with the apple coleslaw, celery and chopped onions.

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PRIME BEEF TARTAR WITH WASABI MUSTARD SUNNY SIDE QUAIL EGG AND SESAME RICE CRACKER GRANT MACPHERSON HAKKASAN GROUP LAS VEGAS 180g Lean beef chopped small / 4 Quail eggs / 1 Egg yolk ½ cup Grapeseed oil / 1 tbsp Wasabi powder / 3 Shallots - 2 sliced and 1 minced / ½ tbsp Dijon mustard / 1 tbsp Chopped Parsley / Salt and Pepper to taste / 35g Ginger minced / 3 Garlic cloves / 35g Lemongrass minced / 28g Rice vinegar / 28g Water Arugula for garnish Pour ½ cup of grapeseed oil in a cold pan and add the sliced shallots. Place over medium heat until golden brown. Drain the oil into a new pot and reserve, put the fried shallots on a dry paper towel and season it with salt. Repeat the process with garlic and reserve oil to garnish the tartar. Blend the beef, ginger, shallots, lemongrass, parsley, add salt and pepper. WASABI AIOLI Combine the egg yolk, Dijon mustard, rice vinegar, salt, pepper and wasabi powder. Blend the mixtureit slowly adding ½ cup of grapeseed oil until it is emulsified into Aioli. SESAME RICE CRACKER 1 cup Sushi rice / 2 cups Water / 28g black and white sesame seeds 1 tbsp Soy sauce / 1 tbsp Sesame oil / Salt and Pepper to taste Start by rinsing the sushi rice until the water is clear and not cloudy then drain completely, place it in a pot and add 2 cups of water and cook over medium heat for 20 minutes or until overcooked with a porridge-like consistency. In a blender put the rice, soy sauce and sesame oil until the mix is a fine paste. Spread the mix on parchment or Silpat, sprinkle it with the sesame seeds, place it in the oven at 135°C until it is crisp and dry. Cut into the desired size. SERVING SUGGESTIONS Put the beef tartar into a ring mould and garnish it with fried shallots, garlic, arugula and oil. Season it with salt and pepper. Add small dots of the Wasabi Aioli (as seen on the image) on the plate. Serve the tartar with the rice cracker.

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100/150g Suckling pig / 10g Extra virgin olive oil / 5g each Rosemary, thyme and wild fennel Cut the suckling pig shoulder into 100/150 g pieces and cook them inside a vacuum bag with oil, rosemary, thyme and wild fennel in a steam oven for 12h at 58°C. When cooked, cool it in water and ice. When the other ingredients are also ready, put one portion in the steam oven for 5 min at 64°C and then sear both sides. Season it with salt and cut it in smaller pieces. 200g Yuzu fresh juice / 30g Soy sauce / 10g Lemon juice / 5g Chili powder / 5g Salt / 40g Extra virgin olive oil Mix all the ingredients in a blender excepts chopped lemongrass and grated ginger to add in infusion at the end. Pour the sauce in centre of the plate as a base for the piglet. 100g Potatoes / 1g Salt / 1g Pepper Boil the potatoes n water and salt, remove the skin and blend in a mixer until smooth and creamy with salt and pepper. To serve, place some little quenelles with two spoons. 20g Celery / 15g Extra virgin olive oil / 5g White vinegar / 1g Salt / 5g Sprouts and herbs Clean an peel the celery and marinate it with extra virgin olive oil, salt and white vinegar. Roll every strip and place it. Add some sprouts and fresh herbs.

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LITTLE PIGLET WITH YUZU SAUCE AND POTATOES GIANLUCA RENZI LOCALE FLORENCE, ITALY


STUFFED CHICKEN BREAST WITH VINE LEAVES JOE BARZA

ZA’ATAR LISBON

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VINE LEAVES 65g Chopped parsley / 12g Egyptian rice / 2 g Chopped tomatoes / 3g Chopped mint leaves / 10g Chopped onions 25g Chopped capsicum / 5g Chopped garlic / 20 Tomato paste / 6g Chilli paste / 2½g Citric acid / 70g Lemon juice / 50g Olive oil / 50g Corn oil / ¼ Lemon, zested fine / 25g Pomegranate molasses / Salt to taste / 1g All spice powder / 2½g Sugar / 38g Peeled tomato juice / 1½g Coffee powder For the filling, combine all the ingredients except vine leaves in a large bowl. Season with salt and pepper. Set aside for half an hour. Strain the filling and reserve the liquid from filling in a bowl. Meanwhile, in a large saucepan, add the vine leaves, cover with water and bring to a boil. Boil for 10 minutes, then drain. Place a vine leaf, smooth-side down, on a work surface and place two teaspoons filling in the centre along the base of the leaf. Fold in both sides, then roll up tightly to enclose the filling. Repeat with remaining leaves and stuffing. Tightly pack stuffed vine leaves in a pot. Strain reserved liquid over pan, then weigh down stuffed leaves with a large plate; this will help to prevent the leaves from unravelling and keep their shape. Pour enough water around plate to just cover vine leaves, then simmer over low heat for 90 minutes, until the rice is cooked. Allow to cool. FREEKEH SALAD 125g Boiled freekeh / 40g Boiled chickpeas / 20g Carrots boiled and diced / 20g Cucumbers diced / 20g Tomatoes diced / 20g Frozen peas / 20g Red cabbage shredded / 3g Parsley chopped 3g Mint chopped / 1tbsp Labneh / Olive oil / Salt and pepper to taste / Lemon zest

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Combine all the ingredients together. Season with salt and pepper. Add the olive oil and lemon zest. Place the salad in the mould. Garnish with edible flowers, dried apricots, radish and purslane leaves. CHICKEN BREAST WITH ROASTED SESAME AND SUMAC CRUST 2 Chicken breasts / 75g Sumac / 75g Roasted sesame seeds Season both sides of the chicken breasts with salt and pepper. Use a sharp knife to cut a slice through the middle of the chicken breasts, but not all the way through, creating a pocket for the filling. Flatten the chicken. Stuff the chicken with the vine leaves. Roll up the chicken into a sausage shape and wrap in cling film tightly. Repeat with the other chicken breast. Steam the chicken at 70°C until it’s cooked. Keep it aside to cool then spread the mustard over the chicken and coat with sumac and roasted sesame. Cut into slices. HUMMUS 500g Cooked chickpeas / 200g Tahina / 8g Salt / 6g Citric acid 50ml Corn oil / 25g Ice cubes / 50g Cold water In a food processor put the chickpeas, tahina, citric acid and salt (it should become homogenous). Add the ice cubes and cold water then add the oil gradually. PLATING Place two slices of chicken stuffed with coffee-scented vine leaves. Place aside the freekeh salad. Spread a spoon of hummus in the middle.


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is passion as a chef has grown over time and the reason why Stefano became a chef is really curious. After a year of accounting school, Stefano asked himself how much of a chance he had to find a job, so he decided to change school and to choose one that guaranteed him a job. His maternal grandfather was a chef and it always fascinated him and thus was Stefano’s future decided. Having learnt from some of the great chefs and working in some of the best kitchens in the world with Alain Ducasse, Pierre Gagnaire, Joan Roca, Ferran Adrià, Andoni Luis Aduriz, Pascal Barbot, Raymond Blanc, Quique Dacosta, Seiji Ymamoto and Yoshihiro Murata - these chefs helped him figure out what he wanted to be. In 2004, when he entered Villa Feltrinelli the stately home on the western banks of Lake Garda, he fell in love with it and he said “this is the perfect place for me”. It took three years to get the first Michelin star. It was like lightning in the sky, he did not think about it because on that day he was presenting his cookbook, when he started to receive congratulating messages, at first he thought it was a joke, he received the second and when he received the third message he realized it and in 2014, he was awarded the second star.

STEFANO BAIOCCO VILLA FELTRINELLI GARGNANO, ITALY

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Stefano’s creations are all unique, inspired by a combination of the finest produce and herbs from his flower garden. The herbs are selected to provide a special, unusual combination which lends each dish its own individual touch of imaginativeness. A cuisine which combines Stefano’s creative approach adding a personal touch to his dishes as he blends his ingredients – noble or poor with another ingredient. It is a composition of flavours which is complex and modest yet impeccably balanced, and a delight to the eye when presented with elegance and style. His cooking philosophy can be explained in three words: Passion, Determination, and Humility. He loves the cleanliness of flavours and the clear perception of tastes, he looks for beauty in colours and shapes and he tries to combine these elements. “I let myself be guided by my instinct, but every intuition should be put on the plate with trials and teamwork, only in this way we can reach a point that really satisfies us. Inspiration does not come exactly from one thing, it can come from a trip, a walk, a painting, a landscape, in practice from everything that surrounds me. “Creativity in our world, is essential: it is that flame that makes us get up in the morning and that gives us motivation during the whole day that we spend in the kitchen.”


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rancesco Acquaviva grew up in Rome with a passion for food in his blood. An extrovert and incredibly curious with a touch of craziness, always wanted to be a chef since he was a child, thanks to his mother who inspired him to become a chef. He was also inspired by famous chefs and used to dream of working in a three Michelin-starred restaurant. He looked up to chef Beck in particular at sent his CV to La Pergola several times before finally getting the opportunity to work with him. His dream, as a child, was to arrive at La Pergola. Eventually, as a result of the young chef’s determination, Heinz Beck answered him seven years later and took him to La Pergola, the three Michelin star restaurant in Rome where Francesco showed his passion for the sweet side of the meal. For Francesco, being mentored by Heinz Beck was a great motivation and he’s always had the opportunity to freely share his ideas. Heinz Beck’s inspiration is to surprise guests with something that they never tried before. The team follows Chef Beck’s philosophy to offer guests wellbalanced, Mediterranean, Italian-inspired dishes without sacrificing taste.

FRANCESCO ACQUAVIVA SOCIAL BY HEINZ BECK DUBAI, U.A.E.

Francesco’s remarkable drive took him far away, to Dubai,since December 2013, he’s the pastry chef and in 2018, he moved up to chef de cuisine at Social By Heinz Beck at the Waldorf Astoria Palm Jumeirah in Dubai. This was an impressive career move for someone who wasn’t born into the business, coming from a family of nurses. Growing up, his only professional link to the culinary world was his uncle Orazio, the soul behind a small restaurant in Basilicata, Vecchia Matera, who every time he came to Rome, always had a present for his nephew. One time it was Nobu’s book, another it was Ducasse’s, and the third was a book on French pastry making. Francesco has passed through the kitchens at La Taverna Angelica, Giuda Ballerino, Splendid Royal, Jolanda Ristorante, Hotel De Russie, Casa del Jazz, Il Convivio Troiani, l’Hosteria dell’Orso with Gualtiero Marchesi, Open Colonna and La Pergola with Heinz Beck.

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he Tasting Class pastry and brand development chef, Liz Stevenson’s journey was a gradual one, she studied music and visual arts when she was young and did an undergraduate degree in fine arts at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in Halifax, Nova Scotia. After graduating she struggled to make ends meet as a young artist, and took jobs in kitchens to supplement her income. Liz ended up loving the culinary process since it was very similar to the process used in any other creative discipline. She was using her hands, engaging her senses, and feeding people. It was a wonderful feeling and very empowering to her as a young person. At some point, she made the decision to ‘do’ cooking as a career and put all her focus in this area. Moving to Montreal, then to London where she worked for a very well-known chef whose kitchen was brutal. The pastry section was the quietest, and she found that she could work very effectively there without getting yelled at (as much). She preferred the methods used in pastry, and so for her next job she specifically sought out a pastry position. The rest is more or less history. She has always preferred working in restaurants, probably because of the rush, but also because she loves the delicate balancing act of service; the skills required to make it a successful night after night like performance arts. Self-taught in cooking and pastry, Liz started out with zero ability, working from books. She worked as Executive Pastry Chef for Qbara, an award-winning arabesquethemed restaurant in Dubai; spent several years in London between The Boxwood, J Sheekey, Scott’s and The Ivy, as Executive Pastry Chef for Caprice Holdings in Dubai, and Rüya in both Dubai and London. At Rüya, her unique creations were creative and complex, especially Tavuk göğsü –the chicken dessert. Her desserts always start with a vague inspiration of some kind – an image, colour, shape, and ingredient or flavour profile. This is then elaborated to form the basis of a dish, and usually, she strives to provide context – whether historical, social or place-based. For her, this is very important, because it makes the difference between something that people can engage with, rather than simply an inanimate object on a plate.

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LIZ STEVENSON THE TASTING CLASS DUBAI, U.A.E


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rowing up in Argentina, Samanta’s favourite childhood memories are food-related. She started cooking when she was 7, this was right after she received her first cookbook as a gift from her parents. She loved the desserts her grandmother made and every Sunday whiles she was growing up, her grandma would bring a home-cooked dessert that was always so delightful. For her, food has a meaning of communication and plays an important part of her culture and identity. She recalls moments from her childhood, the aromas of her mum’s coffee every morning - the reason why she loves coffee that she even took a coffee roasting class to learn more about it. She’s fond of her mum’s chocolate salami as her mum would make it for every school fete.Always been interested in food for as long as she remembers but her culinary career started after a few detours. She spent two years at university studying some careers that were not related to food, but felt heavy-hearted and took a leap of faith signing into a culinary school which she never regretted her decision. As a kid she was always experimenting with flavours and textures, trying to turn mistakes into opportunities. She thinks that been exposed to different cultures helped her to grow up as a curious and open-minded chef. In 2005, she moved to Australia. While she was working, she managed to attend courses in Japan, Switzerland, Italy and France. And she now holds a master’s degree in chocolate. Winner of four ICA awards for her chocolates, a bronze medal for a Bean to Bar Vegan Milk Chocolate, two silvers for an innovative Australian Plum Vegan Chocolate and another silver for her Peach Melba Chocolate. In 2019, she went to Papua New Guinea to learn more about traceability, cacao harvest and fermentation. Always trying to learn more and never stops educating herself.

SAMANTA BAKKER MONSIEUR TRUFFE MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA

For Samanta, a dessert is a living thing, always evolving and changing. She likes desserts that are like symphonies, a well-planned, well-executed, capturing and engaging. “It doesn’t need to be complicated but it needs to work. My approach is to make something that combines emotions and like to have altering textures or playing with taste contrast or different temperatures. I try to find an emotion to connect with others through what I put on a plate.” Her motto is ‘desserts should always put a smile on one’s face’, her creativity is very emotional, and with no favourite flavour combination yet her taste is in continuous evolution, seeking to discover new textures and flavours. “Work is always challenging and you would only enjoy it if you love it and you feel passionate about it.”

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y day a Pastry Chef; by night a foodie, Instagrammer and photographer who is always planning his next travel adventure. Ryan’s culinary journey began in his grandmother’s kitchen, where he helped her make the best pastries. This sparked his interest to formally train at Le Cordon Bleu Institute of Culinary Artsin Classical French Pastry. His professional journey continued in prestigious hotels in the United States, the Bahamas which led him to the vibrant scene in Dubai. He got a taste of the consulting life, lending support to develop newly opened restaurants’ pastry programs. It was only a natural step for him to work for himself. Today he helps entrepreneurs and organizations achieve their vision, making his varied experience their very own. It’s been a great journey so far and still inspired by hope and dreams. After having refined his skills and palate, he served as Pastry Chef at Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s restaurant, the three Michelin star restaurant at the iconic Atlantis, Bahamas. He was honoured to work for him, the vast knowledge and experience coupled with Jean-Georges zest for cooking really inspired Ryan. He remembers how Jean-Georges was ready to share, mentor and motivate the team, and Ryan hopes to emulate him every day. “Make good food, use good ingredients and listen to what clients and guests want” is Ryan’s culinary philosophy. His believes that “Chefs need to adapt, I like to look back at classic dishes I have done or even done by other chefs, and then challenging myself to see how they can be made relevant and re-imagined to today’s taste.” Ryan always wants the final plate to be simple yet powerful. The influence of good ingredients shines through as they perform consistently to his precise actions. The plate he presents has gone through many taste tests, experience, great ingredients and passionate people to make it seem effortless and balanced. Ryan gets to do something he loves every single day, “I jump out of bed waiting to start the day. It’s never a boring day since I get to change hats to express the specific client’s brand in the pastry program it puts forward. I find being in charge of my work, I get to pick interesting projects, sometimes even across borders which is very exciting. Finally, I also get to prioritize myself, I get to develop my skills with external training, and find time to enrich my soul with travels exploring the world. I am a pastry chef; I love to see people’s eyes light up!”

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RYAN HARRIS RH CONSULTANCY DUBAI, U.A.E.


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rowing up in the British Island of Jersey, Channel Islands, Glenn spent his young days with his grandparents who grew most of their fruit and vegetables. Spending time with them in the garden, looking after the fruit and vegetables; and then going into the kitchen to cook them has been a special memory for him. His first job was at 14 in a local café which gave him the real first experience of the industry, after that he took up a role in a local hotel called the Royal Yacht where his passion and hunger for learning bloomed. His interest for different cultures and cuisines led me to spend time in the UK at The Hand & Flowers, with Valrhona in France, with Jordi Cruz at the three Michelin star restaurant ABaC in Barcelona, in Copenhagen with Noma and now in Dubai. His first fine dining experience was at 17, he started working at the Michelin-Starred restaurant at Atlantic Hotel, and this moulded him and taught him to look at the finer details whiles working with a talented team that pushed him to be better whilst learning better ways to work. “Back at the time we had a great team, Mark Jordan and the head chef Matt took me under their wing and took the time to teach me. Mark had a big influence on me in the kitchen, he put me straight on the pastry section when I arrived whilst also working with him closely plating up on the pass. Mark also started as a pastry chef and then turned to cuisine and winning a Michelin star. He taught me to taste everything before it goes on the plate, developing the palate which I’m lucky to have today. On the Island of Jersey, we have amazing local produce, his philosophy was to keep it simple, let the produce do the talking.” As one of L’ecole Valrhona Pastry Chef Instructor IMEA, the most important part of any dessert for Glenn is Taste. So it starts from there. The perfect desserts using chocolate are ones which aren’t too sweet, have the correct texture and don’t leave us feeling full. Once he has an idea in his head then he goes from there, a balanced dessert always needs to stimulate the tongue with sweet, salty, acid, bitter and umami. He then works on other elements to bring textures and also maybe a sauce just to round off the dessert. “One of the great things about Valrhona is our diversity in our products, from Couverture to Pralines and even our new Inspiration range, means the mind can run wild with creativity.”

GLENN NOEL L’ECOLE VALRHONA MIDDLE EAST, INDIA, AFRICA

One of Glenn’s favourite desserts that he created was with Inspiration Almond and Apricots. It was an Iced Parfait using Inspiration Almond, a compote of Apricots and a Buttermilk Sorbet, finished with a warm slightly salty sauce of almond and Thyme. This recipe was inspired whiles in the middle of the Apricot season and he received some amazing Apricots, it was at the same time Valrhona released Inspiration Almond and Almond Apricot goes great together. “The future trends I see coming through are reduced sugar, and going back to the source and working directly with producers.”

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ealizing his passion late in life and before putting on the chef’s jacket, it was economics at university for Balazs and after completing his sergeant’s training at the military academy he felt that there was something missing. He decided to take a break and moved to the UK to brush up on the language and to make a bit of money. He landed his first job as a dishwasher in a gourmet restaurant and he was then determined to work his way up from the bottom in the restaurant world. He then made it to a commis and then went on to become the chef de partie. In 2009, he got his first job as the head chef at The Meadows in Stamford. He then moved to Austria and because his German skills weren’t great he settled for a position as chef de partie. It was by chance that he landed himself in the pastry section, which is where he found his true calling. Two years later Armin Leitged offered him a job as a head pastry chef and having learnt the tools of the restaurant trade, it became clear that he wanted to focus on the pastry kitchen. He started attending various international patisserie courses, trying to learn all that he could about the sweetness in life and working with desserts has allowed him to travel the world, learning new taste and new techniques. Armin Leitged and Ryan Clift have been really crucial to Balazs’ career. Since 2012, Balazs as chef de patisserie in France and Austria, and since the summer of 2016, he has been based in Barcelona, working at one Michelin-starred restaurant Hoja Santa with Albert Adrià. In the last years, the pastry chef extraordinaire has found the time to do master classes on a regular basis in Vienna, Budapest, London, South America, Singapore, U.A.E. and pop-up events in New York, Singapore, Bali and Austria. He brings a little bit of himself to each of his dishes - a memory, a feeling, a taste that he carries “It’s hard to explain, but I don’t feel like every dessert needs to have every element like crunchiness, sponginess or acidity. I think if I followed a checklist like that, all my desserts would end up being the same. One of the key things for me, especially when I am developing new recipes, is music. Music sets the mood and somehow kick-starts my imagination. I owe a lot of my signature dishes to Depeche Mode.”

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BALAZS ENZSOL BALAZS ENZSOL PÂTISSIER SOMLÓ, HUNGARY


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inner of the 2019 F&B Masters Pastry Completion, Dwiyanti grew up in Bandung, Indonesia. As a child, she always had a passion for baking. She helped her mother prepare special homemade cookies during the Holy Month of Ramadan, as it was a tradition visiting other families and gifting them these cookies. This was the starting point for her to understand how flour, butter, an egg can turn into something delicious. Once she graduated from senior high school, she wanted to enhance her pastry skills and decide to continue her studies in catering management at the Indonesia University of Education. She then went on to work with some of the best five-star hotels - St. Regis Saadiyat Island Abu Dhabi, The Address Boulevard, Dubai, Fairmount The Palm Dubai and Sheraton Dubai Creek; and currently the pastry sous chef at the Waldorf Astoria DIFC, Dubai. Her influence and inspiration comes from people. People who she works with, their passion and knowledge motivate her to experiment with flavours, to try different techniques. Dwiyanti is grateful to have worked with some talented chefs and pastry chefs. “All these chefs have their styles and techniques. Learning basic recipes, learning how to develop seasonal fruits in the menu, composing different elements on a plate, using fine chocolate garnish techniques and learnt that delicious dessert can be delivered by something simple by just focusing on the taste.” Today, she loves the feeling of making something beautiful that puts a smile on people’s faces after tasting her desserts. The science and creativity of creating dessert keep her motivated; the value of her mentors who she worked with in the past plays a major role in her career.

DWIYANTI CINTANINGRUM DUBAI, U.A.E

Her greatest influence comes from the French chefs she has worked with, learning several French classic styles which inspired her to create her desserts with brilliant products and the finest chocolate – Valrhona. One of her favourite flavour combinations is acai, yoghurt and white chocolate ivory. This combination creates a deliciously balanced flavour between sourness which comes from the red grape flavour of the acai, the acidity from the yoghurt and sweetness from Valrhona Ivoire White Chocolate. Valrhona has always been a favourite ingredient, so versatile with unlimited creations.

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orn in Toulouse, Gaël is the third child of a working family. He schooled in Toulouse, Southwest of France and known for its culinary specialities and gastronomy. After the third year of the secondary school, he chooses a National Vocational Qualification in Patisserie and Confectionery, as well as in ice-cream making. At the age of 14 after his brother passed away, Gaël follows his father’s advice and goes to work at a local bakery. This is where the future “Dali of Patisserie” learned the fundamentals and the basics at Donati’s bakery in the Southwest of France. After finishing from Donati’s, he left home and settled in Paris where he refined his skills working at Fauchon and at Maison du Chocolat. Eclectic and open-minded, porous in many ways regarding the cultures and the world, he fed his personal development and insatiable curiosity in the capital city. He even studied theology. Today, at the L’hôtel de Matignon as the Prime Minister’s Pastry Chef, Gaël shakes up his comfort zone, each day is different and thus, a new challenge. His primary mission is to respond to all the commissions he receives, whether they are planned or at the last minute, such as lunches or dinners, as it often happens. He doesn’t have a dessert menu, he has to question himself, rely on his imagination for not suggesting the same pastry twice. It all takes some time, requires a lot of energy but it’s the kind of challenge that he likes. Nature is an inexhaustible source of inspiration - the scents, the colours, the shapes, and the change of season and the arrival of new fruits. According to Gaël, to find balance, you have to know, select and most importantly respect the food. He uses fresh products of great quality because those raw materials have more taste and are more interesting. The chef also greatly values his creative process - breathing, touching, thinking, tasting, harmonizing the colours and stimulating his imagination. “For me, the Patissier is an artist because he’s a creator of emotions expressing himself through his creations. I keep this as a priority in the heart of my culinary vision sharing, aestheticism and especially taste. It doesn’t matter that the pastry is traditional or avant-garde, gourmet or staged, it always has to awaken the gourmets’ senses. I add to this philosophy my desires, shaped by all the things that surround me and my sensitivity.”

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GAËL CLAVIERE L’HÔTEL DE MATIGNON ET DU PREMIER MINISTRE PARIS, FRANCE


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ouel grew up in a family that has a very discriminating taste for food. It was largely influenced by his grandparents who take cooking seriously. His mum owned a restaurant while he was growing up and he started to learn how to cook alongside her before it became clear that he was going to end up as a full-fledge pastry chef. The culinary world for him was a big mission at a personal level. He wanted to be a chef not because he needed to survive but passionate about food. He learnt that if you let your passion drive people will see and feel that and the numbers will naturally work out in the equation. He wanted to experience more of the world and to learn new flavours and ingredients, Nouel left the hotel industry yet unsure what kind of a chef he wanted to be. Having lived in the Middle East for the longest period of his career, he had been constantly challenged in defining who he should be in the industry. What was always sure was that he loved experimenting – unafraid of the outcome no matter how much time and resources it took; and wanted his world to be free-flowing, inspiring and creative. The question still remained - So, what kind of a chef did he want people to know Him for? When he wrote his first book, the process slowly opened up the realization, he needed to return to his roots. He believed if he keeps following the footsteps of other chefs and aim to be just a copy of celebrity chefs he would end up nowhere – a plain doppelganger, a forgettable statistic. In the recent years when asked to share about himself, he would simply say “I am a heritage chef – one who values heritage, my own and others”. Combine that with his past experiences, the knack to be out of this world and to stay different coupled with an open mind, the path to becoming a successful, self-defined chef became more clear and certain.

NOUEL OMAMALIN NIFTY CHEF DUBAI, U.A.E.

Having returned to his Filipino heritage, he felt it is a duty to keep pushing to elevate what the Philippines has to offer in the culinary world. And with the same drive, he couldn’t have been happy to be well recognized by discerning entrepreneurs in the Middle East where he could turn the key for them to succeed. Nouel’s name may not ring a bell in the greater expatriate scene for what he has accomplished in the continuously emerging homegrown businesses in the GCC but it is pride enough for him to be seen as one of the major influencers or players in the world of desserts for the local Arabic market. Two years on and he runs his own business - Nifty Chef, as an innovation chef and consultant for several new and existing brands in the Middle East.

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ecognized internationally as one of South Africa’s best chocolatiers, Stephanie Ceronio’s mother was an influence, allowing her to always taste and experience ingredients in their raw and baked forms. Always baking treats for the house, fetes and fundraisers. Her mother made personal sacrifices to make sure that Stephanie travelled the world, saw and tasted as much as possible while travelling and always reminded her to keep an open mind when tasting and experiencing new flavours. But she also showed her the importance of hard work and dedication. Her baking career started early in life, cracking eggs into the mud and receiving a suitable spanking for it. But it didn’t stop her. She was not bound by the pragmatic advice to “just focus on the job and stop worrying about cookies”. So slowly, the world in her head and on the internet, she linked up with creative bakers and confectioners in South Africa and offered her time, to learn from them. She decided to take it a step further. Today, she is seen as a qualified professional chocolatier creating artisanal chocolates and confections. Her creativity and dedication is a channel in bringing her customers delightful alternatives. Stephanie believed that she has an aptitude for pastry. Imagining and remembering combinations, although sometimes can’t remember what happened a few months ago in her real life. However, she remembers the way she felt when she smells or tastes something. She remembers the combinations that she would have preferred when dining out. When trying new things and reading a recipe book. When she sees images online and in books or magazines, she tries to remember each of the tastes that she has experienced, memory banks each one as she creates an archive of experiences that she can look up later. Stephanie’s inspiration behind the desserts is creating easy and accessible desserts. She knows combinations with the use of chocolate and the use of some uniquely South African flavours to compliment the other elements in the desserts. “Anyone can follow a recipe but it takes time and effort and practise to understand the importance of the smells, textures and consistencies of what you want the product to achieve.” Usually, she follows recipes loosely, as a guide and makes each item according to her feel. Learning the smell of chocolate at each stage of temper, the look and feel of a perfectly elastic and balanced ganache, the sound of that perfectly tempered chocolate crack, and mouth feel when all elements come together. Her aspiration for professional growth for herself and the Jack Rabbit team keeps her motivated. Everything she has done and accomplished has been with trying to find creative alternatives and by teaching herself through trial and error, and by trying to network and ask questions. She loves the creativity and freedom that comes with being a chocolatier. Stephanie believes that desserts and chocolate, specifically, should not be limited. This allows her to create magical experiences with desserts and enjoy the daily challenge of creating flavour combinations.

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STEPHANIE CERONIO JACK RABBIT CHOCOLATE STUDIO PRETORIA, SOUTH AFRICA


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native of Catania, an ancient port city on Sicily’s east coast, Salvo Sardo comes from a simple family that loves gathering around a table full of good food. His grandmother used to wake up every Sunday at sunrise to start preparing a 7-course meal for approximately 20 family members. “I watched her move around the kitchen with ease, elegance, passion and love; and this amazed me so much that I decided I wanted to be a chef.” Salvo started working at the age of 15 during the summer school break as an intern in a five-star hotel with Chef Giuseppe Laudani who showed him how to respect the product and the traditions of Italian cuisine. He moved to London when he was 21 where he met Giorgio Locatelli. Here he started working as a commis and quickly climbed the ranks going from commis to junior sous chef of the best Italian Restaurant in London in just under 16 months and eventually to chef de cuisine at Atlantis The Palm Dubai. “Since I started working with Giorgio 12 years ago, he taught me his life philosophy and unconditional love for the product.”

SALVO SARDO RONDA LOCATELLI DUBAI, U.A.E.

Salvo’s culinary philosophy is to take traditional dishes and elaborate on them with new techniques, adding new elements to improve the flavor without compromising the original taste. “For every dish that I create, I always ask my wife’s approval. She’s probably the toughest food critic that I know because she’s always honest and gives me a different point of view that helps me achieve the best results.” He loves to keep his food simple with different textures, adding color and creating a wow a factor on the plate. In 2018, Salvo was bestowed with the title of ‘Best Italian Speciality Chef,’ in the Pro Chef Middle East Awards as well as ‘Italian Restaurant of the Year’ at the Middle East Hospitality Excellence Awards. 2019 also saw Salvo lead Ronda Locatelli in launching the city’s largest vegan menu, boasting more than 60 vegan Italian dishes including pizza, pasta and the celebrated avocado chocolate mousse dessert.

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ince young Christophe wanted to be a pastry chef, every weekend he would make a cake for his mum and started to build on his culinary skills. His career started working in Paris at Plaza Athénée with Christophe Michalak and Michael Bartocetti, Nicolas Berger who used to create the chocolate for Alain Ducasse in Paris and Cedric Grolet and Maxime Frederic at Le Meurice. This influenced Christophe and later he took on the position as the overseas corporate pastry chef for Alain Ducasse. His passion for chocolate as he involves different elements to create a combination of soft, spongy, crisp and others, to surprise and stimulate the palate “I love to use cocoa nibs or kasha seed to add that crisp to a dessert, tonka beans is good touch with chocolate and coffee, dark chocolate disc, cylinder or just decor to add power to the chocolate, infused with a ganache, milk Chantilly in order to have the right thickness of a flourless, chocolate sponge. Using sea salt, hazelnuts, orange blossom or chili adds that crunch, mild heat and just the right amount of acidity to round of a good dessert.” It’s all about flavour combinations for Christophe adding a savoury element to a touch of sweetness to a perfect dessert, however a perfect dessert to him is subjective as it needs to have the right balance of crispiness, creamy, tasty, acidity, not too sweet with the perfect ripeness of fruits with the right season, no strawberry for Christmas as an example. A true lover of an old fashioned dessert which is perfectly done, like a Vanilla Napoleon or a Strawberry Tart or a Mont Blanc but not a big fan of an overloaded dessert with 15 elements.

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CHRISTOPHE DEVOILLE ROYAL ATLANTIS DUBAI, U.A.E.


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successful pastry chef, creator of impressive varied and delicious chocolate based desserts who expresses himself as an chocolate artist. Javier Guillén started his career as a pastry chef with graduating from the School of Hotel Management and Tourism in Madrid. His first job was at the two Michelin star Casino de Madrid where he got the opportunity to be assisted by Ferran Adrià. Javier then went on to Amparito Roca in Guadalajara as a pastry chef and moved back to Barcelona where he worked for the next five years with Oriol Balaguer. It all started 20 plus years ago, when a friend of Javier invited him to spend the summer in his pastry shop and since then Javier has never stopped finding the excellence of chocolate making.

JAVIER GUILLÉN JAVIER GUILLÉN BRAZIL

In 2006, he spent a year working with Pierre Herme, in Saint Sulpice, Paris, and that was his last job before joining Valrhona, at first at l’Ecole du Grand Chocolat at Tain L’Hermitage, where he received training in order to assume his position as Pastry Chef Responsible of Valrhona in Spain and Italy, and from 2007 he has been demonstrations and courses all over the country. His desire to teach led him in 2013 to open Cacau Noir, consulting on pastry concepts, master classes in Brazil and consulting around the world. His 27 exclusive recipe book Macaron is light yet sophisticated and with taste, here you discover different techniques and flavours like Roses and Olive Oil types of flavours and also the basics like Chocolate, Vanilla and exotic fruits like Pineapple and Coconut.

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orn in Cannes, France, Gregory’s apprenticeship started at the age of 15, discovering this new world which he admired most. The passion for work set out to be the perfect platform to express himself. Over time with practice and continuous commitment, this passion for pastry grew with every step was amazing, thus focusing on the best and from that moment he knew that it was a start to his professional goal. After a few years of training, he was allowed to work at the two Michelin star restaurant La Bastide Saint Antoine, Grasse. He continued to invest in his personal and professional development until a new challenge and responsibility which came in Cote d’ Azur with Chef François Raimbault at his two Michelin star restaurant L’ Oasis in Mandelieu- La- Napoule. A few years later, Gregory moved to Palace Hotel Martinez, located on the Croisette, discovering a new perspective to restaurants. I started to get closer to my dream of expanding my knowledge, skills, techniques, and methods; on the other hand, Chef Fabrice Meynet was a great mentor. He was then relocated to Abu Dhabi, the United Arab Emirates as Chef Fabrice was opening the Rocco Forte Hotel. He was always looking for innovation, perfection, and here he experienced the world of hospitality on a big scale – besides fine dining, the events such as the F1 and the Airshow. Gregory then went on to open Palazzo Versace Hotel- Dubai and the Mandarin Oriental Jumeira, Dubai. His passion for chocolate, and involving different elements to create a combination of flavours and textures, he always found chocolate very fascinating. Nature inspired him to explore, strive to understand, build relationships, create products and he learnt this. “Each step of the process is important and chocolate is all about relationships, where one engages all their senses and discovers a magical dimension, the art of chocolate.” His secret is simple, he never compromises on quality and at the end, and you have a miracle. He wants people to discover what is the real Patisserie a la Francaise?

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GREGORY CHRISMANT MANDARIN ORIENTAL JUMEIRA DUBAI, U.A.E.


WHITE CHOCOLATE BAVAROIS 250g Cream 35% 250g Milk 100g Egg yolk 50g Sugar 15g Gelatine 850g White Chocolate 900g Semi whipped cream Bring the cream and the milk to boil in a saucepan and pour them over the yolk, previously mixed whit the sugar. Finish cooking by bringing everything to 82°C. Remove from the heat and wait for the temperature to drop To 60°C. Then add the gelatine previously softened in a cold water. Melt the White chocolate, and add it to the English cream. Semi whip the cream and add it to the English cream, mixing gently. HEART WITH PASSION FRUIT 500g Passion fruit Puree 5g Xantana gum Mixi Xantana and the Passion purée with the hand blender without incorporating air. Dress it in small rectangular molds measuring 3x1 cm .Then put it in a blast freezer. Once it is frozen remove from the molds and reserve in the freezer. CRUNCHY BASE 200g Flour T45 300g Corn flour 250g Soft butter 200g Toasted almonds 20g Bitter almonds 100g Egg yolk 250g Sugar

LINGOTTO STEFANO BAIOCCO VILLA FELTRINELLI GARGNANO, ITALY The creation of this dish dates back a few years ago, and as often happens over the years it evolves. The idea was immediately to make a gold bar, no matter what was inside, but we wanted to do something that symbolized opulence and elegance at the same time. Initially inside there was foie gras, then a cream of vegetables but then at the end we thought of a dessert. This dessert is composed of a soft white chocolate mousse with a passion fruit jelly and a crumbly biscuit with almond flour at the base. The second step, it was glazed with chocolate and gold powder. For the last two tears we have been serving this dessert, covering it with golden leaves, crushed almond grains with gold powder and Maldon salt. It’s a dish that our guests like, initially its choreographic aspect, then when you eat it and its inside your mouth it’s very greedy and at the end the passion fruit with its acidity cleans your palate.

Blend the almond in a termomix, then mix that with the rest of the ingredients in a planetary mixer whit leaf and mix well. Roll out the dough between two sheets of backing paper at a height of 3mm. lightly incise 1X5 CM rectangles with a knife. Bake at 180°C for 6 minutes, remove from the oven and cut it completely. Finish to cook it. Chill and store in the freezer. GLAZE 200g White chocolate 200g Cocoa butter Melt the chocolate and cocoa butter and mix together. Use it at 45°C. GOLDEN ALMOND NIBS 200g Almond nibs 6g Gold powder Mix the two ingredients well until the powder has completely colored the nibs. CREATING THE GOLDEN BAR Dress the white chocolate bavarois in a bar silicone mold. Insert the heart of the passion fruit in the center and cover with another bavarois. Then place the crunchy base and freeze it. Once it is frozen, take it off from the silicon mold and glaze it, and reserve it in the fridge. Completely cover the bar whit edible gold leaf. Then Place the Golden bar in the center of the plate, pour over a little bit of gold almond nibs and few maldon salt crystals.

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This luxurious chocolate cake is brimming with health benefits and antioxidants to boost energy and promote wellbeing. I love that it’s super-moist and rich in heart-healthy essential fats. This cake is gluten-free, dairy-free and refined sugar-free, making it the perfect healthy treat for everyone. This exclusive recipe is from my NEW cookbook Earth To Table, and is the perfect cake for any occasion. Best enjoyed with a generous lather of chocolate avocado frosting! 125ml (½ cup/4 fl oz) Olive oil or avocado oil 125ml (½ cup/4 fl oz) Almond milk 125ml (½ cup/4 fl oz) Pure maple syrup 4 Organic eggs 2tsp Vanilla extract 3tsp Gluten free baking powder 60g (½ cup/2 oz) Dark cocoa powder 300g (3 cups/10½ oz) Almond meal Avocado frosting to serve (see inspiration)

THE WORLD’S HEALTHIEST CHOCOLATE CAKE TERESA CUTTER THE HEALTHY CHEF SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA

PREHEAT your oven to 160°C (320°F) fan forced. COMBINE oil, almond milk, maple syrup, eggs and vanilla into a bowl. ADD the baking powder, cocoa and almond meal and mix through until combined. BAKE for 45 minutes until cooked then remove from the oven to cool. COMBINE frosting ingredients until smooth then ice the cake generously. STORE in the fridge until ready to serve. DOUBLE the recipe if making a double layered cake with frosting. NOTES AND INSPIRATION To make the avocado frosting combine the flesh from 2 ripe avocados, 125 ml (½ cup/4 fl oz) pure maple syrup, 125 ml (½ cup/4 fl oz) coconut cream, 2 teaspoons vanilla extract, 60 g (½ cup/2 oz) dark cocoa powder and a generous pinch of sea salt. Blend until smooth and use as the frosting for the cake. To learn more about Teresa Cutter, The Healthy Chef, please visit thehealthychef.com

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TSUBAKI FLOWER BASE SYRUP 5 Tsubaki (Camellia) flower 12g Water 38g Honey 20g Yuzu juice Separate the flower petals from base. Put the pollen in boiling water for 30 minutes, until water turns fragrant. Strain through kitchen paper. Boil once more, add flower petals and Yuzu juice, until water turns red. Add honey. SYRUP FOR TSUBAKI FLOWER CONFIT 150g Tsubaki flower base syrup 38g Honey 20g Yuzu juice Combine the Tsubaki flower syrup with Yuzu juice and honey. TSUBAKI FLOWER CONFIT Syrup for Tsubaki flower confit as needed Tsubaki flower (Used for making Tsubaki flower base syrup) 25~30 petals Vacuum seal confit syrup with flower petals. TSUBAKI LEAF VEIN 10g Baking soda 100g Water 20-30pcs Tsubaki leaf Boil baking soda and water in a high-pressure pot, add the Tsubaki leaves. Cook for 3 hours over low heat. Remove the leaves from pot, then wash it under running water. Place the leaves in warm water and gently remove the leaf parts from in between the veins. Wash under water. TSUBAKI LEAF VEIN CHIP 20-30pcs Tsubaki leaf vein Komeame syrup 50g Komeame (sweetener from malt-fermented rice) 50g Water Mix all ingredients. Vacuum seal the leaf veins with Komeame syrup. Line up on cooking sheets, then dry in oven for 7 hours at 60°C. TSUBAKI JELLY 200g Tsubaki flower base syrup 9g Agar (Gel extracted from sea grass. Solidify at room temperature without cooling in the fridge)

FERMENTED RICE 150g Sticky rice 250g Water 150g Rice Koji 140g Water Cook sticky rice in 250g of water. Combine cooked sticky rice with 140g of water and lower temperature to 60°C. Add rice Koji and ferment at 55°C for 10 hours. FERMENTED RICE JAM AS REQUIRED Put fermented rice in the evaporator. Reduce until 30hpa and boil down at under 40°C not to destroy enzyme produced by fermentation. SAKEKASU SAUCE 100g Sakekasu (Sake lees) 100g Fermented rice Water as required Combine the Sake lees, fermented rice, and water in a juicer and mix until paste-like consistency. YUZU PEEL AND TSUBAKI CHACOAL 1kg Yuzu 2pcs Tsubaki branch 50psc Tsubaki flower Peel the Yuzu and grill slowly over charcoal at distance to make black charcoal. Put the Tsubaki branch and leaf in the oven at 200°C to carbonize completely. Mix 3g of Yuzu charcoal powder and 0.2g of Tsubaki charcoal powder. YUZU JELLY 160g Water 44g Yuzu juice 30g Honey 9g Agar Boil water and Yuzu juice together, then allow to cool. Lightly combine the honey and agar, then combine with Yuzu water. Cook to 80°C and allow to cool.

Combine syrup with agar powder and boil. Chill.

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TSUBAKI & KOJI YOSHIHIRO NARISAWA NARISAWA TOKYO, JAPAN

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ESPRESSO ICE CREAM 115ml Milk / 15g Ground coffee / 12g Egg yolk / 35g Caster sugar / 50g Cream / 10ml Pedro Ximénez sherry

CHOCOLATE, COFFEE, PRUNES SAM AISBETT SINGAPORE 2l Liquid nitrogen 100g Large fresh macadamia nuts PX PRUNES 125g Prunes 35g Pedro Ximénez sherry 20g Caster sugar 2g Pedro Ximénez vinegar 30ml Espresso coffee Soak prunes overnight in enough water to cover. Next day, remove the seeds and add all the ingredients to a pot big enough so the prunes are in one layer. Cook until sticky and shiny. Set aside in fridge until needed. CHOCOLATE SHAVING GANACHE 100g Illanka chocolate chopped 75ml Cream 10g Butter Bring the cream to a boil and pour over chocolate. Whisk together then cool to 30-40°C. Once cooled, whisk in the butter. Line a shallow container with baking paper. Place the chocolate in a container and allow it to cool in refrigerator. Freeze overnight before use.

Boil the milk and coffee. Whisk egg yolks and sugar in a bowl. Pour the coffee milk mixture on top of the yolks and whisk over a water bath until the temperature reaches 80°C. Cool down over ice. Once cooled, add the cream and Pedro Ximénez sherry. Pass again but don’t press the coffee, just let it fall through the strainer. Churn the ice cream in an ice cream machine. SUGAR COATED MACADAMIA NUTS 50g Caster sugar / 25ml Water / 135g Macadamia nuts Boil sugar and water. Add macadamia nuts and cook until they caramelise. Separate the macadamia nuts when hot. Once separated and cooled, keep in the freezer until needed. MACADAMIA AND CHOCOLATE CAKE 90g Butter / 95g Caster sugar / 2 Whole eggs / 90g Illanka chocolate, melted / 25g Flour /40g Roasted macadamia nuts Blend roasted macadamia nuts and flour until the mix resembles a fine powder. Cream the butter and sugar. Add in the eggs one by one, then the melted chocolate followed by the nut mixture. Pour into a lined baking tray. Bake the cake at 160°C for 15 minutes. The cake should be soft and fudgy. Once cooled, cut into 1cm squares. COFFEE CARAMEL CREAM 125g Caster sugar / 85ml Cream (cold) / 30ml Espresso 25g Butter (soft) / 3g Sea salt / 100g Crème fraiche Caramelise the sugar until a dark caramel forms. Add in cream and coffee. Cool the mixture to 40°C. Add in the butter and salt and emulsify with electric hand blender. Add crème fraîche with coffee caramel mix and whip to soft peaks. PLATING Place a spoonful of the coffee caramel cream in the bottom of your serving bowl. Place 4 prunes on top of the coffee cream. Add 6 pieces of chocolate macadamia cake on top of the cream and prunes. Place caramelized macadamia nuts in between the cake for texture. Scoop the coffee ice cream and place in the centre of the bowl. Using a sharp mandolin, thinly slice fresh macadamia nuts. Place the shaved macadamia nuts on top of one side of the ice cream. On the other side, grate the frozen chocolate ganache directly into a bowl of liquid nitrogen. Freeze for 15 seconds then cover the other side of the ice cream with the liquid nitrogen frozen chocolate. Serve immediately.

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SUPER BAR COMBINED CHOCOLATES AND FRUIT COUVERTURES WITH SUPER INGREDIENTS TO ADD SOME VARIETY TO YOUR FLAVORS AND TEXTURES. GLENN NOEL L’ECOLE VALRHONA

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This bar blends exceptional chocolates and health-boosting ingredients to create moments of pure indulgence. The trick to it is pairing up the right ingredients, such as Opalys and spirulina, or acai berries and Raspberry Inspiration. The possibilities are endless! ACAI BERRY AND RASPBERRY INSPIRATION 100g Raspberry Inspiration 30g Acai berries Temper the couverture Raspberry Inspiration, then mix with the acai berries. AMARANTH AND PASSIONFRUIT INSPIRATION 100g Passionfruit Inspiration 15g Amaranth grain Temper the couverture Passionfruit Inspiration, then mix with the amaranth seeds. BEE POLLEN AND ABINAO 85% 100g ABINAO 85% 10g Bee pollen Temper the couverture Abinao, then mix with the pollen. SPIRULINA AND OPALYS 33% 100g OPALYS 33% 10g Spirulina Temper the couverture Opalys, then mix with the spirulina. SUNFLOWER SEED AND ALMOND INSPIRATION 100g Almond Inspiration 13g Sunflower seeds Temper the couverture Almond Inspiration, then mix with the chopped sunflower seeds. ASSEMBLY AND FINISHING Place one of the superfoods in each section of the mould. Finish off by filling up the entire mould with the couverture. Leave to set. Turn out.

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CHEWY TOFFEE 120g Salted butter 180g Light brown sugar 1tsp Maldon salt In a medium saucepan over medium heat, melt the butter, brown sugar, and salt, stirring until evenly incorporated. Continue to cook, stirring constantly, until the Toffee reaches 145°C about 10-15 minutes. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper, and spray lightly with spray. Pour the toffee onto the prepared baking sheet and spread out slightly with a spatula. Freeze for about 45 minutes. COOKIE 225g Salted butter 180g Granulated sugar 330g, Dark brown sugar, packed 2tsp Espresso powder 2tsp Maldon salt ½ tsp Baking soda 2 X-large eggs 2tsp Vanilla 350g All-purpose flour 150g 50-70% Dark chocolate, chopped 80g Caramel blonde chocolate, chopped or bits Flaky sea salt, for sprinkling

BEURRE NOISETTE TOFFEE COOKIES STEPHANIE CERONIO JACK RABBIT CHOCOLATE STUDIO PRETORIA During this time of lock down, I find that cookies are really comforting, and can be frozen and then baked directly from frozen whenever a cookie emergency arises!

Add the butter to a medium saucepan over medium-high heat to create the beurre noisette, until the butter turns dark brown and smells nutty. Watch carefully so the butter does not burn. Set aside to cool. Combine the granulated and brown sugar, espresso powder, salt, and baking soda into your mixer bowl. Pour the brown butter into the sugar mixture and mix until combined. Add adding the eggs one at a time and then the vanilla, whisk until glossy and smooth. Add the flour and fold in till full incorporated. Take frozen toffee out and smash into tiny bite sized pieces Fold the crushed toffee and chopped chocolate into the dough Break up into cookie sized pieces, either by using a medium ice cream scoop, place onto a baking sheet and Let the dough rest in the refrigerator for at least 36 hours. When ready to bake, preheat the oven to 165°C. Arrange the cookies on the baking sheets, leaving at least 5 cm of space between the cookies to allow for spread. Bake until the cookies are golden brown with crispy edges, but are still slightly soft in the centre, approx. 15 minutes. Immediately sprinkle the cookies with flaky sea salt. Then let cool completely. The cookies will be very hot inside because of the toffee bits inside. Allow to cool completely before eating.

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A simple milk chocolate mousse recipe, combined with a chocolate crunchy streusel. Using great chocolate from Valrhona dark, milk and white make a great balance and combination. STREUSEL CACAO 141g Unsalted butter / 141g Cassonade sugar / 0.9g Fleur de sel / 176.2g Ground almonds / 7.6g Cocoa powder Mix the butter and sugar until it is combined. Mix all dry ingredients and mix it with the butter and sugar mixture. Allow to fully combine and place the mixture in the chiller to be used later. BISCUIT CHOCOLATE SPONGE 140g Egg whites / 140g Inverted sugar / 100g Egg yolks / 20g Flour / 40g Cocoa powder / 50g Valrhona Caraibe Dark / 10g 66% Liquid clarified butter Whip the egg white, inverted sugar and egg yolks together until it is smooth. Combine the flour and cocoa powder and fold into the egg mixture. Melt the dark chocolate and butter together, and fold into the mixture. Spread onto a 60x40 tray with a Silpat. Remove the streusel from chiller and crumble on top of the sponge and bake at 170°C for 10-12 min just until the sponge is firm to the touch. Allow sponge to cool for later use CREMEUX VANILLA 469g Cream 35% fat / 2g Vanilla bean / 58g Egg yolks / 5g Gelatine powder 200 blooms / 30g Water / 234g Valrhona Ivoire 35% Chocolate Bloom the gelatine in water and set to the side. Warm the cream and vanilla over medium heat. Temper in the egg yolks and cool until 80°C, add the gelatine and mix until it is all incorporated. Pour over the Valrhona Ivoire Chocolate and use a hand blender to create a smooth emulsion. Pour into 14cm flexi rings and freeze for inserts for mousse cakes. MILK CHOCOLATE MOUSSE 348.4g Cream 35% fat (1) / 1.7g Vanilla bean / 7.5g Gelatine powder 200 blooms / 44.8g Water / 348.4g Valrhona Jivara 40% / 749.1g Cream 35% fat (2) Bloom the gelatine in water and set to the side. Warm the cream and vanilla over medium heat. Add the gelatine and ensure is fully melted and dissolved. Warm the chocolate to no more than 45°C, pour cream mixture into the chocolate in multiple stages mixing well to create a smooth emulsion. Whip cream (2) to soft peaks and fold into chocolate mixture when ganache reaches 35°C. Keep to the side ready to use later.

VALRHONA GLACAGE NOIR MILK CHOCOLATE MOUSSE AND CACAO STREUSEL RYAN HARRIS RH CONSULTANCY DUBAI

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GLACAGE MIROIR NOIR 300g Sugar / 300g Glucose / 150g Water / 20g Gelatine powder 200 blooms / 120g Water / 200g Sweetened condensed milk / 300g Valrhona Caraibe Dark 66% / 1g Raspberry red powdered colour Bloom the gelatine in water and set to the side. Warm the sugar, glucose and first water together just until boiling. Remove from the heat and add the bloomed gelatine and sweetened condensed milk. Pour over the top of the dark chocolate and while using a hand blender mix until it is smooth and until there are no air bubbles. Mix in the colour powder as desired. Cover with a thin layer of cling film until ready to use. Use the glaze below 45°C. SERVING SUGGESTIONS: Using a 16cm ring cut disks of chocolate sponge and place it on the bottom of an 18cm ring. Pour halfway up the ring with chocolate mousse, followed by cremeux insert and top with remaining chocolate mousse. Freeze until it has fully set, remove the ring and place it on a glazing rack and pour a thin layer of colour glaze on the cake. Allow the cake to sit in the chiller to fully defrost before cutting or garnishing.


DONUT BATTER 700g Cake, plain or all-purpose flour 522g Soft dark brown sugar 140g Valrhona cocoa powder 6g Cinnamon powder 4.5g Sea salt 12g Baking soda 12g Pure vanilla extract 280g Whole fresh egg 375g Sour cream 233g Full fat milk 224g Vegetable oil Oil for frying Place the flour, sugar, cocoa powder and baking soda in the bowl of a tabletop mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. Mix on low speed to combine. In a separate bowl, combine the sour cream, egg, milk, oil and vanilla. Blend until smooth with a whisk or hand blender. Fold the wet ingredients into the dry and mix well. Scrape down the bottom and sides of the mixing bowl to incorporate any unmixed batter. Allow the batter to rest at room temperature for 30 minutes before using. Preheat your donut hopper or fryer to 180C. Alternatively, pre-heat an electric donut maker to 160°C. To cook, pour the batter into the donut hopper, or drop the batter into a fryer using a sauce gun or piping bag. Fry on 180°C until done (about 90 seconds). Alternatively, pour the batter into a donut maker and bake for 8-10 minutes. Remove from the fryer and drain on a paper towel to absorb any excess oil. Cool completely before glazing.

DARK CHOCOLATE CAKE DONUT LIZ STEVENSON THE TASTING CLASS DUBAI A lovely dark and rich donut which is not overpowering. The cinnamon, dark brown sugar and sour cream give the batter a warm depth while the dark chocolate ganache glaze takes it to another level of chocolatey.

DARK CHOCOLATE GANACHE GLAZE 100g Full fat milk 20g Liquid glucose 200g Whipping cream 480g Valrhona Equatoriale 55% 20g Olive pomace oil Place the chocolate in a large bowl and set aside. Place the milk, cream and glucose in a saucepan and bring to a simmer. Pour onto the chocolate and let it sit for one minute. Stir to combine and continue to mix until the mixture is smooth and glossy. Add the oil and blend with a hand blender for best results, being careful not to incorporate air. Cool to 36°C and use immediately, or place in the chiller until needed. SERVING SUGGESTIONS Dip each donut halfway into the liquid glaze. Note: the glaze should not be hot, or it will not coat properly. 36-45°C is best. Place the donuts glazed-side up on a glazing rack. Sprinkle with your favourite topping, or leave plain. Once the glaze is set, eat them.

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TRUFFLE-CHEESE CAKE ICE CREAM 120g Philadelphia cream cheese 18g Caster sugar 25g Hungarian Heritage Acacia Honey with Black Truffle 30g Milk3.5% 20g Elle&Virecream 35% 1.5g Louis FrancoisPectagel Rose stabilizator Heat up milk, cream, truffle honey and 10g of caster sugar. At 40°C, add the 8g sugar plus 1.5g ice cream stabilizer mix, and cook it until 85°C. Take it off from the heat and add the cream cheese. Emulsify it well. Let it cool at room temperature and churn it in the ice cream machine.

TRUFFLE-HONEY ICECREAM BALAZS ENZSOL BALAZS ENZSOL PÂTISSIER SOMLÓ

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BRIOCHE 100g Water 55g Caster sugar 8g Salt 240g Plain flour 160g Whole eggs 20g Dry yeast 90g Butter Egg wash to glaze Use the food processor to knead the plain flour and butter together. Stir in the salt, sugar and yeast to the mixture. Add the eggs and knead for 2 minutes at medium speed until the dough is soft. Butter the brioche mould. Place the dough into the mould. Leave to rise for 1 hour in a warm place. Pre-heat the oven to 190°C. Use a pastry brush to glaze the dough. Bake for 21-22 minutes until it is golden brown. Unmold the brioche and place it on a cooling rack.


UBE MADELEINE NOUEL OMAMALIN NIFTY CHEF DUBAI UBE MADELEINE 20g Dehydrated ube powder 120g Coconut milk, 3% fat 80g Coconut oil, cold-pressed, melted 120g Whole eggs 120g Caster sugar 5g Vanilla paste, pure 50g Wildflower honey 1g Ube essence, oil-based Purple colour 100g Patent flour (10.3%) 6g Baking powder 2g Salt, non-iodized Oven: 180° C Prepare the ube paste by mixing together the dehydrated ube powder with the coconut milk in a pot and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly with a rubber spatula, until it thickens and the moisture is reduced as much as possible. Cool down to 30°C. Add the melted coconut oil but do not mix. In a mixing bowl, whisk the third batch of ingredients at high speed until very thick and stiff. Sift together the dry ingredients and fold in batches into the egg mixture. Take 25% of the batter and mix with the melted coconut oil and ube paste until well combined and smooth. Fold it back to the batter carefully mixing until well combined. Chill for at least an hour before baking.

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RONDA STRAWBERRY CHEESECAKE SALVO SARDO RONDA LOCATELLI ATLANTIS THE PALM DUBAI CHEESECAKE MIX 1800g Philadelphia cheese 600g Sour cream 300g Buffalo mozzarella cheese 600g Icing sugar 15 Gelatine leafs 4 Vanilla pods Strawberry powder Wild strawberry Frozen strawberry coulis for the insert Soak the gelatine in cold water. Melt Philadelphia with sour cream and mozzarella blended together in a mixer, add the vanilla seeds. Once you obtain a homogenous mixture you can add the icing sugar. Melt the gelatine in some mixture and once it is completely melted then add it to the total mixture. Split the mixture in to the mould; put a heart of strawberry coulis inside of the sphere and freeze it. CRUMBLE 3 packets Digestive biscuits 250g Butter Crush the biscuits. Add the soft butter and mix it together. Bake it at 180°C for 6 minutes, the crumble should be golden. Finish the dish with a dust of strawberry powder on top and garnish with strawberries.

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LEMON FLUID GEL 50g Lemon juice 18g Sugar 18g Water 2g Agar agar Lemon extract Agave simple syrup

PRICKLY AFFAIR SAMANTA BAKKER MONSIEUR TRUFFE MELBOURNE DARK CHOCOLATE SOIL Crystallised Chocolate 200g Sugar 50g Water 100g 55% CT Noir Selection In a pot, bring the sugar and water to the boil and continue cooking until 135°C. Remove from the heat and rapidly stir through the chocolate until the mix crystallizes. Put out onto a tray lined with a silicon mat to cool down. SOIL 100g Cacao powder 300g Crystallized chocolate Oil s/q for wet look Gently combine all the ingredients in a bowl. For a wet soil look fold through a small amount of canola oil. TEQUILA AND LEMON CARAMEL 100g Sugar 50g (50/50) Tequila and lemon juice 25g Cream 1tsp Butter Heat the sugar until you obtain a caramel with the desired colour. Deglaze the caramel with the citrus mixture and the cream. Mix in the butter.

Mix all the first 4 ingredients and bring to the boil. Pour into a wide tray and leave to set in the fridge. Blend into a smooth gel and season with a dash of lemon extract. Add some agave syrup if necessary. AGAVE AND MILK CHOCOLATE SPONGE 3 Eggs 70g Agave syrup 20g Buckwheat flour 105g Milk chocolate Gently melt the chocolate. Add the eggs and syrup. Add the flour. Whisk with energy ensuring no lumps. Sieve the mixture into the ISI cream gun and charge the gun with 2 gas canisters. Shake and expel into disposable cups about half full. Microwave the sponge for 1 minute on High. Let it cool down before unmolding. COCONUT AND CHIPOTLE CHILLI CREMEUX 200g Coconut cream 100g Agave 3g Agar agar 25g Water ¼ tsp Chipotle chilli Mix everything and bring to the boil 100g White chocolate Pour the cream over the chocolate. Homogenise with the stick blender. Pour out on a tray. Leave to set. COCONUT MACAROON 125g Egg whites (room temperature) 100g Sugar 200g Shredded coconut In a stand mixer, on medium, whip the egg whites until they are frothy. Steady add the sugar. After you added the sugar, place the stand mixer and whip until the sugar is fully mixed. Add the coconut. Spread the macaroon on a mat and cook for 15 minutes at 180°C.

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RASPBERRY CRUNCH 150g Sugar 150g Flour 150g Butter 130g Almond powder 40g Lyophilized raspberry powder 30g Entire lyophilized raspberry In the blender with the spatula, mix all the ingredients. Bake at 150°C for 20 minutes. Mix the 2 raspberries once the mixture is cold. Reserve in a cool and dry place. CREAMY APPLE 350g Baked apple 450g Apple pulp 1 Vanilla pod 40g Sugar 8g Pectin 3.5g Gelatine Chop the apple into irregular cubes. Place in the oven at 100°C for 20 minutes. Heat the pulp and incorporate the vanilla, sugar, gelatine and finally the pectin. Bring everything to a boil. Store it in the refrigerator. YOGURT MOUSSE 160g Milk 12g Gelatine 340g Natural sugar free yogurt 400g White chocolate 610g Semi-whipped cream Heat the milk and incorporate the previously hydrated gelatine. Pour over the chocolate and pass through the Turmix. Incorporate the yogurt. When the mix is at 30°C, add the semiwhipped cream. Use immediately. SPRAYING 400g Cacao butter 450g White chocolate

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DUKATTI

Mix and heat the cacao butter and chocolate up to 55°C. Spray the frozen desserts with an air pistol to obtain a velvety texture.

JAVIER GUILLÉN FRANCE

ASSEMBLY Make the mousse and fill half of the round mould with it. Place it in the freezer for 3 minutes. Insert the creamy apple and fill the mould to the top with the mousse. Place the raspberry crunch and freeze. Spray and decorate to taste with chocolate sheets.


CAVIAR INSPIRATION FRAMBOISE 300g Water 75g Maltitol powder SOSA 200g Raspberry Inspiration 3g Agar agar SOSA Grapeseed oil required ASSEMBLY AND FINISHING Bring to the boil the water, maltitol and agar agar. Pour the liquid over the couverture in 3 stages, making sure to create an emulsion with a shiny elastic texture. Keep the ganache at 50°C. Place a deep container filled with oil in the freezer. Place the liquid in a squeezy bottle and let little droplets of ganache fall into the oil creating the ‘caviar’. Leave to set then strain and wash with cold water. Serve in a caviar box.

GLENN NOEL L’ECOLE VALRHONA

CAVIAR INSPIRATION YUZU 300g Water 75g Maltitol powder SOSA 230g Yuzu Inspiration 3g Agar agar SOSA Grapeseed oil required ASSEMBLY AND FINISHING Bring to the boil the water, maltitol and agar agar. Pour the liquid over the couverture in 3 stages, making sure to create an emulsion with a shiny elastic texture. Keep the ganache at 50°C. Place a deep container filled with oil in the freezer. Place the liquid in a squeezy bottle and let little droplets of ganache fall into the oil creating the ‘caviar’. Leave to set then strain and wash with cold water. Serve in a caviar box.

CAVIAR CHOCOLAT GUANAJA 300g Water 75g Maltitol powder SOSA 200g Couverture Guanaja 70% 3g Agar agar SOSA Grapeseed oil required ASSEMBLY AND FINISHING Bring to the boil the water, maltitol and agar agar. Pour the liquid over the couverture in 3 stages, making sure to create an emulsion with a shiny elastic texture. Keep the ganache at 50°C. Place a deep container filled with oil in the freezer. Place the liquid in a squeezy bottle and let little droplets of ganache fall into the oil creating the ‘caviar’. Leave to set then strain and wash with cold water. Serve in a caviar box.

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BONBONS STEPHANIE CERONIO JACK RABBIT CHOCOLATE STUDIO PRETORIA 150g Cocoa butter Lipo soluble colouring powders - various colours CHOCOLATE SHELLS 500g White chocolate FILLING 100g Yuzu purée 80g White chocolate 50g Sosa Yuzu concentrate 60g Cream 33% fat 10g Butter 82.5% Prepare our moulds. Heat cocoa butter to 45°C. Divide it between small tubs and colour each tub with colour of choice. To colour the cocoa butter, using about 10% of the cocoa butter mass as the reference for the quantity of colouring powder, and add that to the cocoa butter. Blend each colour, adding white to create a blank background. Not adding white will cause your cocoa butter to be more translucent, and not solid. Be careful when adding white as this will alter the viscosity of your cocoa butter, you may have to add more cocoa butter should it become too thick. After blending, sieve each colour into a new container and then heat back up to your T1. Temper cocoa butter before applying it; cool it to 27°C and then heat it to the working temperature 31–32°C. Don’t overheat cocoa butter higher than 32°C before applying with brushes in artistic style. Remove the excess cocoa butter from the top of the mould after the application either by brush or airbrush by wiping the mould upside down on a soft clean and dry cloth on a table. The cocoa butter layer applied on the mould must be really thin. A large amount of cocoa butter will inhibit the release of the chocolate perfectly, which would result in dull and broken cocoa butter layers, which are not nice to look at. If your ambient temperature is quite cold, your cocoa butter will start setting in the bowls, as it is solid at room temperature, should your cocoa butter start setting you can either place it on a warming mat, in a bowl of warm water not exceeding 25°C or by using a heat gun on a low setting heat it slightly. TEMPERING CHOCOLATE You need to temper the chocolate and make chocolate shells. Temper the chocolate according to the temperature guidelines of the couverture you are using. Using white which has a much lower melting point than dark, and can easily burn. Heat the chocolate to T1, stirring continuously and always making sure that you are not allowing any contact with water. Pour 2/3 of your chocolate out of the bowl onto your working counter (usually granite) and then using 2 scrapers, temper the chocolate down to your second temp (T2). Keeping the chocolate moving, and making sure to scrape it back onto itself, so that the chocolate cools evenly, and does not over crystalize. Once you have reached your T2, transfer your chocolate back into your bowl as quickly and neatly as possible, leaving any already crystallised chocolate out of your bowl as this will affect your final product.

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Mix your chocolate and measure your temperature. This should be your warm T1 chocolate + your cooled T2 chocolate = your T3 chocolate. Should it be too warm, you can still tip a small amount out onto the workbench and cool it a little more, and return it back into your bowl. Should it be too cold, you can heat it slightly using a heat gun on low setting while stirring. Using a ladle, Fill the cavities with chocolate mould- and then scrape the top of the mould clean to take away excess chocolate. Tapping the mould with your spatula on the side and swirling your mould around to allow any air bubbles that are trapped to rise to the surface of your chocolate cavity. You do not want air bubbles trapped underneath to create a hole in your finished product. Turn the mould upside down and let the excess chocolate drip out into your bowl. Remove the excess again. Put the mould aside and let the chocolate crystallise. Let the chocolate crystallise at room temperature. If your working environment is hot you can place the mould on a cold surface, or on a fridge shelf, for example, or a cold baking tray. You can even put the chocolate into the fridge (but you can do it only after the chocolate has started to crystallise), when it is getting matte. YUZU FILLING In a thermo mix, or saucepan heat your purée, concentrate and cream to 90°C, allowing it to completely melt. Add your chocolate to the cream mixture and allow to start melting. Blend at 45°C for 5 minutes on medium speed to emulsify. Add butter halfway through the process. If you do not have a thermo mix, you can use a hand blender to create the emulsion. What is really important is that you create a mayonnaise like emulsion. Allowing your components to really bind together to create a smooth and elastic ganache. Put your filling into a piping bag. Fill our chocolate shells with the yuzu filling once the filling has come down in temperature under 24°C. You should fill the cavity so that 1 mm – 2mm from the top of the cavity is left. You will need this space in order to create the cap of the chocolates. In case your filling has turned up to be too thick and it’s difficult to fill the chocolate shells with it you can dilute ganache with cream until the desired consistency is reached. Leave for 2–3 hours in the fridge to allow the filling to set slightly and create a thin skin. After you have re-tempered the chocolate, take your chocolate mould and very slightly heat the top of this with a heat gun on the lowest setting. You do not want to melt or untemper the chocolate in the mould, you only want to very slightly increase the temperature of the mould so that we can create a very clean and flat cap on the chocolate, allowing a perfect join to seal the bonbon. Using a ladle, pour chocolate onto one side of the tablet and tilt it so that chocolate runs down, and then scrape the chocolate to create a rough first cap. Allow this to slightly set, and then repeat the process this time closing it with a transfer or acetate guitar sheet. This allows you to create the perfect bottom of your bonbon which is smooth and shiny. Allow to set for at least 1 hour in the fridge, or if you are in a hurry you can pop this into the freezer for 15 to 20 minutes. Pull the transfer sheet back, gently tap chocolates out onto a clean silicon baking paper sheet.


SUNSHINE “AWAKEN THE SUNSHINE WITHIN YOU” DWIYANTI CINTANINGRUM DUBAI Inspired by the sun, a daily reminder that we too can rise again from the darkness, that we too can shine in our own light. The citrus combination is a sweet treat for the senses. The scent and taste hels to invigorate the mind, body, and soul. FORMANGE BLANCYOUGHURT DOME 500g Formage Blanc 2pcs Vanilla bean 625g Whipped cream 140g Sugar 50l Water 5g Gelatine 100g Egg yolks 30g Yogurt powder sosa 20g Yogurt crunch sosa Make a pate bombe, cook the sugar and water 115- 118°C, add the sugar to egg yolks whisk until egg yolk turn light then add the gelatine. Add the cream cheese into mixture, mix well and fold in the whipped cream. Pour in silicon moulds and freeze. MANDARIN CAVIAR 200g Mandarin purée 25ml Water 2.5g Agar agar 25g Sugar Mix agar agar with sugar. Boil the water and purée and add the agar agar mixture. Pipe in cold grape seed oil in a squeeze bottle, strain the oil, and wash in cold water. LEMONYUZU CURD CREMEUX 225g Eggs 40g Yolks 100g Sugar 25g Lemon juice 175g Butter 1pcs Gelatine 100g Yuzu pure Bain-marie, combine eggs, yolks, sugar and lemon juice, cook till 86°C, then add butter cook again till 86°C, add gelatine and reserve in the fridge for 24 hours.

SPICE CAKE 1000g Butter 800g Sugar 320g Yolks 480g Flour 40g Baking powder 16g Cinnamon powder 8g 4 spices 720g Egg whites 200Sugar Combine the soft butter and sugar; add egg yolks, the flour, baking powder and spices. Whip the egg whites and the 200g sugar and combine it to the mixture. Pour 650g in a medium mould and bake at 170°C. WHITE CHOCOLATE DIP 300g White chocolate 300g Coco butter Melt the white chocolate and cocoa butter. Dip the spice cake whiles it is frozen. DEHYDRATED CITRUS ZEST 1 Orange zest 1 Lemon zest 1Grapefruit zest 1 Lime zest 250g Sugar 250g Water Make sugar syrup. Slice all the zest and remove the white part. Put it in a steel container and add water. Cover with aluminium foil. Bake it at 160°C for 20 minutes. Strain and keep it in the dehydrator overnight. YELLOW GLAZE 12g Gelatine leaves 100g Granulated sugar 250ml Whole milk 200ml Heavy cream 780g White chocolate Yellow food colour as required Boil the milk and mix the sugar and glucose. Bring it to a boil. Pour in the chocolate to obtain a good emulsion. Use a hand held mixer to give some more consistency and add the yellow colour. PLATING / SERVING SUGGESTIONS Make segment from the orange, lime, grapefruit, lemon. Glaze the dome and place it on top of spice cake. Assemble the entire citrus segments on top of spice cake. Pipe the lemon curd and garnish with dehydrated citrus zest.

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CHOCOLATE AND HAZELNUT TART CRUNCHY SEA SALT COCOA NIBS CHRISTOPHE DEVOILLE ROYAL ATLANTIS DUBAI CHOCOLATE SUGAR DOUGH 250g Butter 200g Sugar 70g Yolks 320g Flour 40g Cocoa Powder 160g Almond Powder Make a classic sugar dough, then keep in the chiller. Roll the dough and ring it properly. Bake it at 160°C for 15 minutes. CHOCOLATE GANACHE 380g Cream 160g Milk 400g 70% Dark Chocolate 120g Yolks Boil the liquids then pour over the chocolate, mix well then add the yolks and mix properly. Add this mixture in the chocolate tart shell, then bake it in a 200°C oven but switch off after 20 minutes. HOMEMADE HAZELNUT PRALINE 150g Sugar 500g Hazelnut 1 Vanilla Pod Caramelised the sugar with the vanilla beans. Then cool down Toast the hazelnut then when all the element will be cold Blend in the thermo mix until the desired consistency. Kee it in a piping bag.

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CARAMELISED COCOA NIBS 100g Sugar 25g Water 350g Cocoa nibs 5g Sea Salt Cook the water and sugar in a pan until 118°C. Then add the cocoa nibs then slowly caramelised it. Cool down in a silpat and keep big pieces for decoration DARK CHOCOLATE GEL 400g Water 120g Sugar 40g Cocoa Powder 8g Agar Agar Warm the water, half of sugar and cocoa powder. At 50 degrees add the second sugar with agar agar and boil. Cool down then put the mixture to the thermo mix and blend until a gel consistency, keep in piping bag. MILK CHOCOLATE CHANTILLY 250g Cream 25g Glucose 25g Trimoline 250g Milk Chocolate 600g Cold Cream Boil the cream with glucose and trimoline. Pour over the milk chocolate, mix properly. Add the cold cream and mix again, keep it in the chiller overnight before using. The day after, whip the Chantilly then pip some different sizes of balls in a silpat then freeze it GARNISH DARK CHOCOLATE DISC AND GOLD CHOCOLATE DISC Bake the chocolate tart with the chocolate ganache. When it is cold, pip a spiral of hazelnut praline, add a large disc of dark chocolate then add the milk chocolate Chantilly upside down. Pip some dots of chocolate gel, add large chunks of caramelised cocoa nibs, and finish the tart with different size of chocolate disc.


HEART FOR ITALY FRANCESCO ACQUAVIVA SOCIAL BY HEINZ BECK DUBAI ORANGE CREMOUX 250g Cream 250g Milk 45g Sugar 43g Yolks 2g Gelatine 220g Orange peel 35g Sugar 315g White chocolate Blanch in hot water for around 20 second the orange peel for 7 times and each time make sure to use a new pot ,then blend until create a purée. Place the orange purée in a pot with the 35g sugar and simmer for few minutes. Heat the milk, cream and orange purée. Whisk the yolks with the remaining sugar and add it to the liquid and mix until 82°C. Add the soft gelatine, chocolate and mix until it has a smooth consistency. Keep it in in the fridge overnight. CHOCOLATE MOUSSE 250g Cream 250g Milk 35g Sugar 33g Yolks 350g Dark chocolate 330g Cream Heat the milk and the 250g of cream, whisk the yolks with the sugar, add to the liquids and mix until 82°C. Add the chocolate and mix, add the remaining cream previously whipped and mix until it is smooth. Keep it in in the fridge overnight.

RICOTTA CREAM 350g Ricotta cheese 35g Icing sugar Mix the two ingredients and pass it through a sieve at least 4 times. Keep it in in the fridge overnight. PISTACHIO SPONGE 250g Egg whites 210g Sugar 135g Yolks 60g Corn flour 140g Pistachio powder Work the egg white with the sugar until is duplicates in size. Add the yolks and immediately after the corn flour with the pistachio powder. Work it until it is nice and smooth, and place it in an oven tray. Cook it at 200°C for 8 to 9 minutes. Let it cool down and keep in the fridge overnight. MIRROR GLACE 100g Water 135g Sugar 11g gelatine 75g Cocoa powder 90g Cream Place the water, cream and sugar in a pot and heat it at 35°C, add the cocoa powder and reheat until it reaches 77°C. Add the gelatine and mix with a hand blender for 2 minutes. Strain and let it cool down use it at 36°C. ITALIAN CHOCOLATE HEART 200g White chocolate 3g Green colour powder 3g White colour powder 3g Red colour powder

PISTACHIO GANACHE 310g Cream 45g Sugar 43g Yolks 2g Gelatine 220g Homemade pistachio paste 35g Sugar 315g White chocolate

Temper the chocolate and divide in 3 small bowls, in each one place a colour and mix until is dissolved. Take an acetate sheet and place a line of green chocolate, repeat with the white and in the end the red, let it set and cut with a heart shape cutter.

Heats the cream, whisk the yolks with the sugar, add to the liquids and mix until 82°C. Add the soft gelatine, the pistachio paste and the chocolate, mix until it is nice and smooth. Keep it in in the fridge overnight.

FINISHING Place a 5.5 cm round mould on a tray and with the help of a piping bag place 5mm of orange cremoux on the base and let freeze in a blast chiller. Repeat the operation in this order with the chocolate mousse, pistachio ganache, choco crunch, ricotta cream and pistachio sponge. When they are completely frozen remove and place upside down,with the orange cremoux on the top. Glace with the mirror glace and keep in the fridge to get soft. Place in a plate, decorate with the raspberries at the top and the pistachio segments at the base and finish with the Italian chocolate heart.

CHOCO CRUCK 110g Milk chocolate 220g Feuilletine 70g Homemade hazelnut paste Melt the chocolate with the hazelnut paste, add the feuilletine, mix and keep it in in the fridge overnight.

FRESH RASPBERRIES CUT IN QUARTER PISTACHIO SEGMENT

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EXOTIC CHAI SEED PUDDING DWIYANTI CINTANINGRUM DUBAI, U.A.E.

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EXOTIC CHAI SEED PUDDING 300g Passion fruit pure / 300g Mandarin pure / 300g Pineapple pure / 130g Sugar / 1g Vanilla pod / 300g Coconut milk / 30g Gelatine / 15g Chai seeds Boil pineapple pure, passion fruit pure, and coconut milk with sugar, add the chia seeds and vanilla bean, add gelatine then add remaining mandarin pure and pass allow to cool to setting point. Set in the chiller. MATCHA YUZU CURD CREMEUX 225g Eggs / 40g Yolks / 100g Sugar / 25g Lemon juice / 175g Butter / 1pcs Gelatine / 100g Yuzu pure / 30g Matcha powder Bain-marie, combine eggs, yolks, sugar and lemon juice, cook till 86°C, then add the butter and cook again till 86°C. Add the matcha powder and gelatine. Pour in to a desirable mould. Set it in freezer. ALMOND ICE CREAM 1000g Milk / 65g Milk powder / 15g Butter / 200g Sugar / 90g Egg yolks / 65g Trimoline sugar / 8g Stabilizer / 130g Almond milk / 1g Almond flavour Prepare the ice cream with Anglaise method at 84°C degree then add the almond milk and flavour. Let it rest for 12 hours in the fridge then prepare to frozen the ice cream. Keep it in the freezer overnight and pacojet when needed. YOGHURT MICROWAVE SPONGE 240g Egg whites / 160g Egg yolks / 160g Sugar / 40g Mediterranean yogurt powder sosa / 40g Flour Mix all ingredients with a hand blender. Put in the siphon gun and let in the fridge for at least 1 hour to rest. Charge the siphon with 2 gas caps. Fill the plastic glasses until ¾. Cook in the microwave at maximum power for 40 seconds. Let to cool in chiller and take out of the glasses. Plating Assemble the matcha yuzu curd on top Exotic chia seed pudding. Quenelle the almond milk ice cream. Garnish with yoghurt microwave sponge and kumquat.

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CHOCOLATE CREMEUX ‘PALET’ 100g Whole milk 1.5 Gelatine leaves 135g Caraibe 66% 200g UHT milk (cold)

WAKAYAMA GAËL CLAVIERE L’HÔTEL DE MATIGNON ET DU PREMIER MINISTRE PARIS COCOA JELLY COATING 100g Water 60g Sugar 8g Cacao powder 7g Veggiegel Gelée Sosa Boil the water with the sugar and cacao ingredients and freeze it. Take the pre-frozen chocolate sauce inserts and dip them in the veggiegel gelée Sosa to coat them. Once coated, put them on a spoon and leave it at room temperature. FRIAND SPONGE 210g Almond powder 560g Icing Sugar 225g Flour 7g Baking powder 50g Inverted sugar 7g Vanilla bourbon - Liquid 525g Egg whites 315g Brown butter – buerre noisette Cook the butter to ‘buerre noisette’ and leave it to cool. Whisk the egg whites and combine all of the other ingredients. Fold in the meringue and buerre noisette. Spread it on a baking sheet and cook in an oven at 180°C for 12 minutes. CHOCOLATE SAUCE INSERT 200g UHT cream 100gr Whole milk 25g Caster Sugar 100g Dark chocolate Heat the milk, cream, and sugar. Pour it over the chocolate and continue to mix to create an emulsion. Blend it with a hand blender and pipe into a small half-sphere mould. Freeze.

Heat the milk. Melt the pre-soaked gelatine leaves in the warm milk. Pour it over the chocolate and continue to mix to create an emulsion. Blend it with a hand blender then add the cold cream, blend it again and pour into a silicone mould and leave to crystallise in the fridge. FROMAGE BLANC MOUSSE INFUSED WITH SANSHO BERRY 330g Fromage blanc 130g Caster sugar 6g Sansho berries 420g Whipping cream Fleurette 3 Gelatine leaves Mix the sugar with the dried sansho berries. Lightly heat the Fromage blanc, add the pre-soaked gelatine leaves to the sugar and sansho mix. Blend and fold in the pre-whipped cream. WHITE CHOCOLATE GLAZE 600g UHT cream 15g Gelatine 400g Absolu Cristal Nappage Neutre 1kg Valrhona Ivoire White Chocolate Boil the cream and the Absolu Cristal Nappage Neutre. Pour it over the white chocolate in three stages simultaneously mixing to create an emulsion. Blend it in the pre-soaked gelatine and again blend with the hand blender and leave to crystallise in the fridge. CARAMELISED TUILE SHAPED LIKE A COROLE 500g Sugar 250g Glucose 250g Flour 250g De Pommade butter Mix all of the ingredients, make small balls and cook in a preheated oven at 170°C. The tuile will caramelise. Keep it aside for the plating. SERVING SUGGESTIONS Pipe the mousse in into a half-sphere mould, place the palet insert into the mousse followed by the friand sponge and freeze it. Once it is frozen, glaze it with the white chocolate glaze. Place the chocolate sauce bubble on top. Place the entremet on top of the caramelised corole tuile. Make a chocolate decoration and place around the base of the entremet.

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Light Chocolate Mousse 100g Water 100g Cream 30g Cocoa powder 80g Dark chocolate 65g Sugar 450g Whipped cream 5g Gelatine

CHRISTOPHE DEVOILLE ROYAL ATLANTIS DUBAI

Boil the water, cream then add the sugar, cocoa powder and chocolate, boil it again then add the gelatine. Cool down to 50°C and add the whip cream. Put 3 cm of the mousse in a cake ring then add the sponge with the marmalade, and then freeze it. KIRSCH WASSER CHANTILLY 400g Cream 80g White chocolate 20g Kirsch wasser Boil the cream then adds the chocolate. Mix well and add the Kirsch. Keep overnight in the chillier before using. The day after, whip the Chantilly then pip some different sizes of balls in a silpat then freeze it.

CHOCOLATE MOELLEUX SPONGE 125g Butter 12g Icing sugar 5g Cocoa powder 25g 100% Chocolate 200g Eggs 165g Almond Powder

CHERRY GEL 200g Cherry juice 20g Sugar 2g Agar agar Boil all together then cool down. Pour over the mixture in the thermomix and mix well until you will obtain a smooth gel. Put in a piping bag.

BLACK FOREST RASPBERRY AND CHERRY

Mix the butter and icing sugar, then add gradually eggs, almond powder and cocoa powder. Warm a bit with blow torch then add the melted 100% chocolate. Spread in a tray then bake it at 180°C for 12 minutes. RASPBERRY AND CHERRY MARMALADE 200g Cherry 200g Raspberry 60g Sugar 6g NH Pectine 30g Lemon juice Mix all together in a pan and cook slowly as a jam. Keep it in the chillier before using. Spread a thick layer of marmalade on the chocolate sponge and keep in the freezer

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DARK CHOCOLATE GLAZE 240g Cream 30g Milk 180g Cocoa powder 60g Milk chocolate 8g Gelatine Boil the milk and cream then add the cocoa powder and chocolate; and boil it 5 min then add the gelatine and mix well Strain and keep in chillier before using. Warm the glaze until 45°C, and then glaze the chocolate cake (Sponge + Marmalade + Chocolate mousse). Add on the top the kirsch Chantilly upside down as the picture then pip the gel, add some milk chocolate curls and glazed fresh cherries as decoration.


INGREDIENTS COFFEE SPONGE CAKE 250g Egg whites 200g Egg yolks 120g Caster sugar 50g Wheat flour 120g Almond flour 50g Soluble coffee Whip eggs, coffee and sugar. Mix almond and wheat flour. Sift the flour and gradually add to the eggs and sugar. Put in to a tray that has been floured and buttered. Bake the cake at 165°C for almost 30 minutes. Once baked, cut out discs, height 0.5cm diameter 4cm. SYRUP 300g Caster sugar 30ml Water Mix all the ingredients. Boil for six minutes. Chill at 2°C. LAVAZZA COFFEE ICE CREAM 25ml Syrup 100g Soluble coffee 200ml Double cream 80ml Water Mix all the ingredients together. Put in to a Pacojet container. Freeze and blend in the Pacojet.

RICETTA ZUCCOTTO ALFREDO RUSSO DOLCE STIL NOVO TURIN, ITALY

COCOA SAUCE 150g Cocoa powder 45ml Water 150ml Double cream 200g Caster sugar Mix the water double cream and sugar. Bring them to the boil. Add the cocoa powder. Reheat at 100°C then chill at 2°C. CHANTILLY FOAM 90ml Double cream 100ml Whole milk 50g Powder sugar 2 Charges of gas Mix all the ingredients together. Put in to a siphon. Add 2 charges of gas. CRAQUELINE 50g Butter 60g Brown sugar 60g wheat flour Mix all the ingredients together. Stretch to the height of 3mm and make discs of diameter 6cm. Freeze. PÂTE À CHOUX 1l Water 400g Butter 500g Wheat flour 750g Eggs Craqueline discs N.66

Sift the flour. Boil the water with the butter. Add the flour to the mix. Cook the dough for almost two minutes. Remove from the fire and chill at 45°C. Add the eggs, one by one. Dress on a tray as a big bigné (35 g each). Put on top of each bigné n.1 frozen disc of craqueline. Bake at 180°C for 18 minutes and then 160°C for 18 minutes.

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CLASSIC SACHER 95g Dark Chocolate Ecuador 65% 80g Clarified butter 235g Egg whites 120g Powdered sugar 300g Almond powder 235g Granulated sugar 250g Egg yolks 90g Egg whites 100g Loose flour 45g Pure cacao powder In a blender, place the powdered sugar and almonds. Little by little, incorporate the egg yolks and whites. Whip the other egg whites with granulated sugar. Mix both and blend, and incorporate the previously melted together with the chocolate and butter. Finish adding the previously sifted flour and cacao powder. Bake in a 2cm high, 14cm diameter circle for 8 minutes. In order to obtain a crunchier texture, incorporate the cacao streusel before cooking, APRICOTS COMPOTE 300g Sliced and salted apricots 800g Apricots pulp 90g Lemon pulp 50g Lemon pulp 80g Liquid glucose 17g Pectin Slice the apricots and salt them in a little butter. Set aside. Mix the pulps and heat with the glucose. When the mix is warm, incorporate the pectin and bring everything to a boil. Mix with the salted apricots. Set aside and refrigerate. 65% AND EGG WHITE MOUSSE 650g Milk 800g Dark chocolate Ecuador 65% 30g Gelatine 250g Egg whites 80g Powdered glucose 80g Inverted sugar Boil the milk with the previously hydrated gelatine. Make an emulsion with the chocolate, with the help of a Turmix. Whip the egg whites with the powdered glucose and inverted sugar (heat the bain-marie before start). When the chocolate mix is at 32-35°C and the merengue is warm, mix. Pour in the bubbles moulds. SPRAYING 400g cacao butter 450g Dark Chocolate Ecuador 65%

SACHER JAVIER GUILLÉN FRANCE

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Mix and heat it to 55°C. Spray the frozen desserts with an air pistol to obtain a velvety texture. ASSEMBLE Once the classic sacher biscuits are made and cold, incorporate the apricots compote and freeze. Prepare the egg white mousse and pour it halfway in the bubble mould. Place the first frozen preparation and fill the rest of the mould with the mousse. Ultra freeze everything. Unmold. Spray. Decorate.


CAMERALISED APPLE PINE APPLE RIBBONS 20 Red apples, large (makes 45 tarte tin) Use Japanese Mandolin and roll tight in to Ribbons. Keep in the fridge for 5 days. RUFF PUFF PASTRY 280g Cold water / 10g Salt / 600g T45 flour / 600g Unsalted butter, diced Mix everything together in Robot Copue. Blend until crumbly, add water slowly. Leave to rest in fridge for 1 hour. Fold into single book 4 x, rest the dough in the fridge with cling film, and fold every 30 minutes. Portion. CARAMEL 1200g Sugar / 320g Unsalted butter / 12g Sea salt Make a light caramel with sugar, add butter then the salt. Leave the pot on stove on a low heat. Scale 20g of caramel for each mould. CARAMEL SAUCE 350g Sugar / 160g Water / 3g Sea salt Make a light golden caramel, add water, salt and mix well. Pass and keep for 5 days. CRUMBLE 200g T55 flour / 200g Sugar / 200gGround almonds / 200g Butter / 4g Salt Mix everything together and blend in Thermomix until crumbly. Bake at 165° for 12 minutes, turnaround and bake for further 12 minutes until golden brown. GLUTEN HONEY SABLE 400g Sugar / 720g Rice flour / 8g Salt / 8g Gluten free baking powder / 100g Vegetable oil / 450g Vegetable margarine Mix all ingredients together. Roll between 2 parchment papers. Leave in the fridge to set then bake at 160°C for 2 minutes until golden brown. Cut into medium size discs. Blend the rest of the mix in Thermomix until crumbly. Keep for 1 month. PINE ICE CREAM 3kg Milk / 450g Double cream / 28g Pine powder / 165g Milk powder / 450g Gold Billington sugar / 600g Egg yolks / 2g Sea salt In a large pot, bring milk, cream and pine powder to the boil. Cover with cling film and leave on the side to infuse for 30 minutes. Add milk powder. In a kitchen aid, whip the sugar and egg yolks until fluffy. Add the infusion. Cook at 85°C, pass, add salt and chill over ice bath. PINE POWDER 300g Freshly picked pine Put in dehydrator for 4 hours. Blitz in Vitamix and vacuum pack. Keep for 1 month. PINE ICE CREAM 1000g Soya milk / 20g Pine powder / 6g Stab 200 / 40g Honey 2g Sea salt / 10g Dextrose / 120g Sugar In a large pot, bring the soya milk and pine to the boil. Cling film, leave to one side and leave to infuse for 30 minutes. Pass through super bag, add the rest of ingredients and cook to 80°C. Pass and chill over ice bath.

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OLIVER MARLOW ROGANIC HONG KONG / LONDON AULIS HONG KONG

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BERRY RHUBARB SENSATION MIX BERRY RHUBARB BALSAMIC VINEGAR BASIL CYLINDER SERVED WITH BLUEBERRY MADAGASCAR VANILLA ICE CREAM STRAWBERRY WHIPPED GANACHE 110g Strawberry purée / 10g Glucose / 10g Inverted sugar / 1 pcs Gelatin / 170g Strawberry Inspiration Valrhona Chocolate 300g Cream 35% Boil the strawberry purée, inverted sugar and glucose, add the gelatin to the strawberry inspiration chocolate. With a hand blender, blend the cream and let it rest in the chiller for 3 hours and place the desirable mould. RHUBARB BERRY BALSAMIC VINEGAR AND BASIL INSERT 100g Strawberries / 100g Raspberries / 100g Rhubarb / 50g Balsamic vinegar reduction / 50g Sugar / 25g Fresh basil / 1 pcs Gelatin In a saucepan combine the rhubarb, sugar water. Simmer over low medium heat for about 10 minutes or until all the sugar dissolved and rhubarb has broken down. Add the strawberry, raspberry, balsamic vinegar reduction and chopped basil. Add the gelatin and place in the silicon mould and freeze to be used as insert with the whipped ganache. RASPBERRY INSPIRATION RICE CRISPY CRUNCH 175g Raspberry Inspiration Valrhona Chocolate / 60g Rice crispy 10g Butter Melt the raspberry inspiration chocolate, add melted butter and fold in rice crispy. Spread it on top of the orange sponge. ORANGE SPONGE 1.5kg Fresh orange / 750g Water / 2kg Sugar / 24 Eggs / 1kg T45 Cake flour / 1kg Almond powder / 40g Baking powder Cut the oranges into quarters and boil it in water until soft. Blend it until it becomes a purée, let it rest until it cools. Beat the sugar and eggs until its fluffy, add all dry ingredients. Fold in the orange purée in a baking tray and bake it 170°C for 15-18 minutes. BLUEBERRY VANILLA ICE CREAM 450g 35% Cream / 450g Water / 125g Glucose powder / 8g Ice cream stabilizer / 1k Frozen blueberries / 20g Lemon juice / 2pcs Vanilla bean Combine the cream, water, lemon juice and vanilla bean and make an Anglaise at 84°C. With a hand blender, blend the blueberry, glucose powder and stabilizer. Keep it in the freezer overnight. RASPBERRY CRUMBLE 75g Sugar / 75g Butter / 75g T45 Flour / 75g Almond powder 25g Sosa raspberry powder Make a crumble with mixing the butter with sugar and adding the almond powder, raspberry powder and flour. Keep it in the chiller for 15 minutes before baking it at 170°C for 10-12 min. SERVING SUGGESTIONS Assemble the cylinder by piping the strawberry whipped ganache followed by the rhubarb berry balsamic vinegar and basil insert. Layer it with feuilletine last and close it with the pistachio light sponge. Set in freezer. Spray it with cocoa butter and serve it with the crunchy pistachio crumble.

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This is a typical Tuscan dessert served on Sundays. It is made with sponge cake that has been lightly soaked in liqueur and accompanied by cream, coffee, and chocolate. Its unique red tonalities come from the Alchermes. The use of this liqueur dates back to the Renaissance: its bright red color comes from a pigment that was extracted from the cochineal. The liqueur used to be prepared by the monks of Santa Maria Novella church in Florence, and thus became a delicacy of Tuscany.

ZUPPA INGLESE A TUSCAN COFFEE AND ALCHERMES SILVIA BARACCHI IL FALCONIERE CORTONA 310


PASTRY CREAM 2 Egg yolks 2tbsp Sugar ½tbsp Flour Lemon peel 250ml Milk 1 Vanilla pod 100ml Whipping cream DIPPING 1 cup of espresso coffee 1 small glass of Alchermes 50g of melted dark chocolate 1 sheet gelatine (divided into two pieces)

Place the milk, the vanilla and the lemon peel in a small pot and bring to a boil. In the meantime, beat the eggs with the sugar in a small mixing bowl. When smooth, add the flour and mix well. Add the boiling milk to the egg, sugar and flour, and mix again, then transfer everything to a new pot and bring it to a boil over medium heat, stirring continually. Let it boil for about five minutes until thick. Interrupt the cooking of the cream by immersing the pot into a basin of cold water. Let it cool down, stirring now and then. Once cool, add the whipping cream. Dissolve half the gelatine sheet in the half of the hot coffee, pour the mixture onto a small flat dish so it is half a centimetre thick and allow it to solidify in the fridge. Warm up the Alchermes, dissolve the other half of the gelatine sheet in it and then pour it onto a small plate to solidify in the fridge. Cut two squares out of the sponge cake and dip it into the remaining coffee. Place each one on a plate. Cut out discs of the Alchermes and the coffee gelatines with a round cookie cutter and place one of each on each of the squares of sponge cake. With a pastry pocket fill in the other areas of the sponge cake with the cream. Decorate the cake by adding drizzles of melted chocolate. Add a wafer, a cookie, mint or flowers to the design.

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PLAYFULL SHOW REIF OTHMAN KUSHIYAKI DUBAI, U.A.E. IEGGLESS CHOCOLATE CHILLI CAKE 300g Sugar/ 450ml Water / 132g Dark chocolate / 112g Butter 38g Cocoa powder / 285g Cake flour / 9g Baking powder / 9g Baking soda / 100g Coffee beans / 600ml Cream / 500g Dark chocolate Melt the butter and chocolate, warm the water to 50°C. Mix in the flour, sugar, cocoa powder, baking soda and baking powder. Combine the chocolate mix and cake mix. Spread the mixture into a tray and bake at 190°C. Ganache: boil the cream infused with red chilli. Strain and pour over the chocolate. Sandwich the cake with the ganache.

Roast the white chocolate at 135°C for about 23 to 30 minutes until caramelised. Boil the water, remove from the heat and add in the coffee beans. Let it rest for an hour, strain and cool. Warm the water to 40°C, add the dry ingredients and bring to 60°C. Add in trimolene and heat to 85°C. Cool down the mix to 60°C then add in the roasted white chocolate and salt. Blend with a hand blender, pass through a chinois and chill overnight. Spin using a Pacojet when needed.

FROZEN BITTER CHOCOLATE MOUSSE 240g Egg whites / 300ml Milk / 30ml Acacia honey / 400g Dark chocolate 70% / 3 Siphon cartridges

PINK PEPPER ANGLAISE 250g Cream / 250g Milk / 100g Egg yolks / 75g White chocolate 35% / 40g Pink peppercorns

Prepare bain-marie. Melt the chocolate. In a bowl combine the milk, honey and egg white. Slow cook over the bain-marie with medium heat up to 70°C. Strain and pour into a siphon bottle charge with 3 cartridges. Prepare paper cups and pre freeze in the blast freezer. Spray the foam into paper cups and freeze rapidly.

Boil the cream, milk and crushed pink peppercorns and infuse for one hour. While the cream is heating, whisk together egg yolks until smooth. Gradually add egg yolk mixture back to remaining milk mixture, whisking constantly. Continue to cook, stirring constantly, until the mixture coats the back of a spoon.

CRISPY CHOCOLATE SHARD 150g Egg whites / 40g Caster sugar / 40g Egg yolk / 80g Dark chocolate 55% / 80g Dark chocolate 70% / Cacao nibs

COFFEE FLAVORED ESPUMA 150g Cream / 250g Milk / 80g Sugar / 5g Gelatin / 77g Equatorial noir 55% / 57g Guanaja 70% / 100g Roasted coffee beans / 3 Siphon cartridges

Melt both chocolates. In a separate bowl, whip the egg whites and sugar until stiff and add in the egg yolk. Fold chocolate into the eggs. Spread onto the silpat, sprinkle with cacao nibs and dry overnight. Break into shards once it’s dry.

Boil the cream, milk and infuse with earl grey for 30 minutes. Add the soaked gelatin and sugar into the cream mix. Strain and pour into the chocolate. Chill the mixture, pour into a siphon and charge with 3 cartridges.

AERATED MILK CHOCOLATE CLOUD 50g Milk chocolate / 100g Lemon oil / 3 Siphon cartridges

CHOCOLATE AND CINNAMON STREUSEL 160g Flour T45 / 100g Sugar / 40g Dark brown sugar / 110g Butter / 30g Cocoa powder

Melt the chocolate and mix with lemon oil, temper to 27°C. Fill into siphon and charge with 3 cartridges. Spray into microwaveable plastic container and leave it to set in a cool room.

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CARAMELISED WHITE CHOCOLATE SORBET 350g White chocolate 35% / 25g Milk powder / 171g Trimoline / 15g Sugar / 869ml Water / 100g Roasted coffee beans / 7g Super neutrose / 1g Salt

Combine all the ingredients except instant coffee powder and work until it forms a crumbly texture. Add in the ground coffee and bake at 170°C for 10 minutes.


SERVING Simply blowtorch the sides of the metal mould, then lift the mould, lightly place the cold chocolate fondant on the plate. CHOCOLATE BASE 100g White chocolate 125g Praline paste 50g Cocoa powder 50g Cocoa butter 250g Feullatine

SWEET & SOUR JAMES KNIGHT-PACHECO ME DUBAI DUBAI, U.A.E. CHOCOLATE MOUSSE 300g Dark chocolate – 70% 6 Egg yolks 150g Water 170g Caster sugar 500g Double cream 100g Full fat milk Place the milk and the cream on the heat, bring up to 80°C, ensuing you probe to ensure that it has not gone any higher, otherwise the mixture will be bitter. Take it off the heat, begin to slowly add the chocolate, and keep whisking to make sure the chocolate melts all throughout the milk, keep to one side for later use. In a separate bowl, place the egg yolks, sugar and water, whisk over a Bain Marie, and whisk it until a light ribbon consistency. Once nice and thick, slowly fold the egg mixture into the melted chocolate. Keep the chocolate mousse at room temperature. To construct Pipe the mousse into the required mould, pipe just below halfway, then add the raspberry gel right in the centre, then cover with the mousse until the top of the mould. Leave it in the fridge to set overnight.

Place the white chocolate, cocoa butter, praline paste, and cocoa powder in a bowl. Place over a Bain Marie, then slowly begin to melt, ensuring the sides are well scrapped, keep doing this until the mixture has fully melted and all of the ingredients have emulsified. Take off the heat, then add the feullatine, keep folding the mixture until all of the ingredients are well mixed. Roll the mixture in between 2 sheets of baking paper until flat, then refrigerate for 4 hours. Once fully set, cut to the desired shape, use as the base of the fondant. RASPBERRY CONSOMMÉ 400g Raspberries 350g Water 50g Raspberry vinegar Place the raspberries and the water in vac pack bag, seal it tight, and leave to soak for 48 hours. Blend it at high speed. Strain it using muslin cloth and a fine strainer, gently pour the liquid into the cloth, and letting the clear liquid come through. It is really important, that you are patient with this, as no solids should be squeezed, as you only want the clear juice of the berries. Once the consommé is ready, add the vinegar, and keep chilled until needed. BASIL OIL 100g Fresh basil 100g Pomace oil Blanch the basil in hot water for 10 seconds, the refresh in iced cold water. Repeat this method 3 times. Dry the basil well, then place in a high speed blender, blend for 30 seconds to a minute. Strain through a muslin cloth, this will help not to get any green sediment in the oil. Keep chilled until needed.

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SHOOTING STARS GRANOLA BAR - PEANUT BUTTER, CRANBERRY AND CANDIED BACON DWIYANTI CINTANINGRUM DUBAI, U.A.E. Legend has it that wishing upon a shooting star makes the wish come true. After so many trial my wish to combine two of my favorite breakfast items granola and bacon come true. Start the day with a bar of Granola with combination of Peanut Butter, Cranberry and candied bacon which combines the sweet, fattiness and salt.” CANDIED BACON 250g Cured and smoked beef bacon 20g Caster sugar 20g Brown sugar 5g Cinnamon powder Heat a cast-iron or other heavy skillet over medium heat. When hot, add bacon strips in a single layer. Flip bacon, using tongs, and cook until browned on both sides, about 2 minutes and lace it on a paper towels. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. In a medium pan combine sugars and brown sugar, make light caramel combine with the crispy bacon until well combined. Add the cinnamon powder and stir the cinnamon until it’s evenly coated. Spread the bacon mixture onto prepared baking sheet in an even layer. SHOOTING STARS GRANOLA BAR 100g Old fashioned rolled oats 50g Almond flakes 50g Rice crisps 50g Candied bacon 50g Chocolate chips 50g Dry cranberries 25g Pistachio 25g Goji berries 25g Whole almonds 85g Maple syrup 57g Unsalted butter 65g Brown sugar ¼ tsp Salt Combine the butter, maple syrup, brown sugar, and the salt in a small saucepan over medium heat. Cook and stir occasionally until the butter melts and the sugar has completely dissolved. Simmer for 5 minutes and pour in the butter mixture in to a bowl with the toasted oats, almonds and rice crisps. Mix well. Let it cool about 5 minutes then add the cranberries and chocolate coated bacon. Stir to combine. Press the mixture into the pan, cover and then refrigerate for 1 hour before cut to a desirable size.

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CARAMELISED APPLES 60ml Olive oil / 400g Apples (peeled and diced) / 5ml Rose water / 25g Brown sugar / 3g Cinnamon / 1g Nutmeg powder Sprinkle of coffee powder In a non-stick pan, sauté the apples with olive oil. Add the rose water and the brown sugar. Sprinkle the cinnamon and nutmeg powder. Add a dusting of coffee. MOUHALABIEH 1l Liquid milk / 150g Sugar / 70g Corn flour / 100ml Fresh cream / 1g Mastika Arabic gum / 4ml Orange blossom water 4ml Rose water / 100ml Raspberry coulis / 100ml Apricot coulis Put the milk, fresh cream and sugar in a large pot and whisk until sugar is dissolved. Bring to a boil on medium heat, stirring constantly. Dissolve corn flour in water, add to the boiling milk and whisk. Add the rose water, orange blossom water and mastika. Remove from heat and set aside to cool. PLATING Pour the raspberry coulis evenly in the bowls. Place in the fridge to cool. Then add the apricot coulis and cool. Top with a layer of mouhalabieh and chill. Spread a layer of raspberry coulis. Garnish with caramelised apples and a dust of coffee powder.

COFFEE SCENTED MOUHALABIEH JOE BARZA ZA’ATAR LISBON, PORTUGAL

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COFFEE GEL 50g Ground coffee / 100g Sugar / 460ml Water / 8g Agar

COFFEE AND TABACCO CHEESECAKE JAMES OAKLEY ALIBI, CORDIS HOTEL HONG KONG TOBACCO CREAM CHEESE 20g Chewing tobacco / 20ml Martell or similar / 200g Cream cheese / 100g Sugar / 200ml Water Bring sugar, water and the Martell or similar to a boil. Remove from the heat, add tobacco while still warm and allow it to infuse for two hours. Pass through a fine sieve and reduce the tobacco syrup to 100ml. Allow to cool then beat the syrup into the cream cheese and place in the fridge to firm a little.

In a pan add the coffee, sugar and water and boil until the sugar is dissolved. Pass through a fine sieve. Return to the heat and boil again. When boiling, whisk in the agar and continue to boil until dissolved. Pass through a fine sieve and set in a square container. Once set, carefully slice a thin layer to place over the cheesecake. CRISP VANILLA CAKE 1 Whole egg / 2 Egg whites / 40g Sugar / 2 Vanilla pods (seeds only) / 20g Flour In a bowl beat together all ingredients. Pass through a fine sieve. Place into an espuma and charge with 3 c02 chargers. Place mix into paper cups and microwave on full power for 30 to 40 seconds or until the egg proteins set the cake. Allow to cool and remove the cake from the paper cups. Break the cake into smaller pieces and bake in oven at 150°C for 10 minutes until golden colour and crisp (the cake should resemble honeycomb in appearance and texture).


70 % GUANAJA BITTER CHOCOLATE CAKE BITTER CHOCOLATE CAKE SERVED WITH SPICY CHOCOLATE CREMOUX AND CAMEL MILK CHOCOLATE PARFAIT 70% BITTER CHOCOLATE CAKE 600g Fresh cream 40g Corn flour 600g Guanaja Chocolate 70% 200g Egg yolks 400g Egg whites 200g Caster sugar 200g Almond flakes Chop the chocolate and place into a bowl. Boil the cream and corn flour until a béchamel texture pour onto the chocolate stirring from the centre until all chocolate melt. Add egg yolks and whisk well. The mixture should be smooth, shiny and elastic. Whisk egg whites and sugar to a smooth peak and gently fold in. Bake at 160°C for 15-20 minutes. Let it cool and roll reserve it in freezer before spray with dark chocolate spray. CHOCOLATE SOIL 100g Dark brown sugar 125g Almond powder 75g Bread flour 50g Cocoa powder 1g Salt 65g Melted butter 1g Coffee powder Mix butter and sugar until incorporated and add all the dry ingredients until become crumble. DARK CHOCOLATE SPRAY 250g Dark Chocolate 250g Coco butter Melt Dark chocolate and cocoa butter. Spray the cake whiles it frozen. CAMEL MILK CHOCOLATE PARFAIT 1000g Camel milk 12g Cream 60g Butter 50g Trimoline 100g Yolks 230g Sugar 420g Chocolate 57% 30g Coco paste 5g Cardamom Make an Anglaise by boiling Camel milk and cream with Cardamom, infused for min 15 minutes strain the cardamom, whisk yolks and sugar together, pour hot milk and cream over and whisk lightly return to the pan and cook to 83c for 3 seconds strain and chill well on ice. Add chocolate and blend, keep it overnight in chiller, turn on ice cream machine or freeze it in a pacojet container and turn.

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LIZ STEVENSON THE TASTING CLASS DUBAI YUZU AND MADAGASCAN VANILLA DONUT

VANILLA WHIPPED GANACHE 580g Whipping cream / 208g Valrhona Ivoire / 1 each Madagascan vanilla bean, split & scraped or 1gm pure vanilla bean powder / 9g Bronze gelatine leaves

This is a decidedly ‘high end’ donut – certainly not your everyday variety. The acidity of the yuzu is tempered by the softness of the vanilla, and the white chocolate crumb adds a delightful hit of salt. To simplify assembly, make all of your batch recipes a day in advance and let your donut dough proof quietly in the chiller – otherwise, it becomes fussy and temperamental. Makes about 12 donuts.

Bloom the gelatine in cold water. Place the chocolate in a large bowl. Bring the cream to a simmer with the vanilla and pour onto the chocolate. Add the gelatine. Stir to combine, until the mixture is smooth. Strain to remove the vanilla bean and blend with a hand blender. Place in the chiller to set firm, at least 4 hours.

DONUT DOUGH 5g Active dry yeast / 490g All-purpose, brioche or mediumstrength flour / 60g Caster sugar / 10g Salt / 2g Lemon zest (use a microplane) / 215g Fresh eggs (not pasteurized) / 122g Unsalted butter, cubed, room temperature / 100g Water Place all of the ingredients minus the butter into the bowl of a tabletop mixer fitted with a dough hook. Mix on medium speed for 8 minutes, or until the dough starts coming away from the sides. Turn off the mixer and allow the dough to rest for 3-4 minutes. Return the mixer to medium speed and slowly add the butter, a little at a time until fully incorporated. Increase the speed to high and mix for a further 5 minutes, until the dough is glossy and elastic. Place the dough into a large greased bowl and cover with cling film. Place in the chiller and allow it to rest and proof overnight. The next day, place the dough onto a well-floured work surface and roll to a 1cm thickness. Cut into rounds using a 7cm diameter cutter. Slide a well-floured spatula underneath each donut and carefully lift and place onto a floured tray. Cover loosely with cling film and place in the chiller. Ready for the next steps. YUZU CURD 98g Pasteurized egg yolk / 207g Caster sugar / 16g Freshly squeezed lemon juice, strained / 90g Yuzu puree or juice / Pinch of sea salt / 2g Lime leaf / 85g Unsalted butter, cubed, room temperature / 4g Bronze gelatine leaves Bloom the gelatine in cold water and set aside. Mix the egg yolks and sugar in a bowl. Bring the yuzu juice to a simmer and stir into the egg yolk. Add the lime leaf. Place the mixture onto a bain-marie/double boiler and cook gently, stirring often with a spoon or spatula. Cook until the mixture reaches 81°C. Remove from the heat and add the bloomed gelatine. Cool to 45°C, then add the butter, stirring well after each addition. Strain, then blend with a hand blender. Place in a piping bag and into the chiller to set firm. Ready for the next steps.

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YUZU SOUR CREAM GLAZE 400g Icing sugar / 165g Sour cream / 36g Yuzu puree or juice Sift the icing sugar. Place in a bowl with the sour cream and yuzu juice and mix thoroughly. Place in the chiller until ready for use. WHITE CHOCOLATE MILK CRUMB 76g Milk powder / 76g All-purpose flour / 23g Cornflour / 47g Caster sugar / 2g Sea salt / 105g Unsalted butter, melted / 40g Milk powder / 143g Valrhona Ivoire Place the milk powder, flour, cornflour, sugar and salt into a bowl and mix to combine. Add the melted butter and mix with a spatula until the mixture starts to come together and form small clumps. Spread the mixture evenly onto a tray lined with a Silpat or baking parchment. Bake on 120°C for 20-30 minutes, until golden brown. Remove from the heat and cool. Once cooled, break into large clusters and place in a bowl. Temper the white chocolate and pour onto the crumbs. Add the additional milk powder. Toss the mixture until all of the crumbs have been enrobed in the chocolate and coated with the additional milk powder. Continue until the clusters harden and are no longer sticky. Break or chop into small crumbs. Use immediately, or store in an airtight container until ready for use. SERVING SUGGESTIONS: First, fry the donuts. Remove the cut donuts from the chiller and allow to prove at room temperature, about 30-40 minutes. Preheat a fryer or large saucepan with a shallow layer of oil to 180°C. Fry the donuts on both sides, until golden brown. Remove from the oil and place onto a layer of paper towel to absorb any excess oil. Cool completely. Once cooled, fill the donuts with both the whipped vanilla ganache and the yuzu curd, by piping them through a small hole in the side of each donut. Loosen the yuzu glaze with a whisk or spatula. Dip each filled donut into the glaze to coat the tops and place on a glazing rack with a tray underneath to catch any excess glaze. Sprinkle with white chocolate crumbs. Garnish with candied citrus zest, or zest some fresh citrus zest onto the top, if desired.


FIRE CIDER JELLY 300g fire cider – Union Libre / 3g Agar agra / 2g Bovine gelatine In a saucepan heat half of the fire cider. Pour in the agar and make a broth. Add the rest of the cider and the gelatine previously soften and mix well. Pour in a film container and keep it cold to detail the discs. MACAROON COOKIE ALMOND PASTE 310g Almond powder / 310g Icing sugar / 120g Egg whites ITALIAN MERINGUE 310g Caster sugar / 85g Water / 120g Egg whites / 14g Caster sugar Sift the icing sugar and almond powder. Work on the mixture by adding the egg whites. Make a syrup with the sugar and water at 118°C to make the Italian meringue/ pour the syrup over the whipped egg whites. After cooling, whisk it with a blender, add the meringue to the almond paste and macaroon. Pour it on a baking sheet and bake it for 14 minutes at 145°C.

MACARON DE FEU GAËL CLAVIERE L’HÔTEL DE MATIGNON ET DU PREMIER MINISTRE PARIS

SOFT CREAM WITH TAHITIAN VANILLA 330g Liquid cream to heat / 280g Whole milk / 55g Egg yolks / 1 Tahitian vanilla pod / 40g Caster suga / 30g Flour / 200g Valrhona White Chocolate / 2g Bovine gelatine leaves / 800g Whipping cream 35% fat Heat the milk in a saucepan with the liquid cream. Whisk the egg yolks and sugar until the mixture turns white. Add the flour and pour over the hot mixture, little by little without ceasing to stir. Return the fire to low heat and stir until the mixture thickens. Pout the cooked cream over the chocolate and add the gelatine which was previously softened in cold water. Mix well and cool to 30°C. Add the cold cream 35% fat with the whipped cream and incorporate the vanilla pastry cream. Mix well and set aside. TO SERVE Place the macaroon shell on the plate, place a disc of fire cider jelly in the centre. Using a pastry bag, put the vanilla cream around the jelly. Close it with a macaroon shell on top. You can use the vanilla cream to decorate the plate.

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BOUNTY COCONUT AND MILK CHOCOLATE GREGORY CHRISMANT MANDARIN ORIENTAL JUMEIRA DUBAI COCONUT MOELLEUX 240g Almond powder / 240g Icing sugar / 120g Coconut powder 240g Eggs / 40g Corn flour / 160g Butter / 40g Caster sugar / 120g Egg Whites Put the almond powder, icing sugar, coconut powder, egg whole, and cornflour in a Robot Coupe and blend until it is a smooth mixture. Make the meringue with the white eggs and caster sugar. Mix the mixture with the meringue and add the butter. Pour it on tray and frame it with the biscuit.Bake at 180°C 12-15 min. CRUNCHY COCONUT 150g Feuillentine / 100g Praline coconut almond / 60g Butter 25g Coconut powder Mix the feuillentine, praline coconut almond, coconut powder and butter. Pour it on top of the biscuit. MILK CHOCOLATE CREMEUX 200g Cream 35% / 120g Coconut milk / 80g Milk full fat / 80g Egg yolks / 40g Caster sugar / 450g Valrhona Tanariva Milk Chocolate / 50g Coconut powder / 80g Gelatine mass

In a saucepan put together the cream, coconut milk, fullfat milk, egg yolk and sugar and bake at 85°C. Add the gelatine to the custard. Pour the milk chocolate and coconut powder and blend it until it is smooth. Pour it in a mould. COCONUT MOUSSE 1kg Coconut puree / 200g Caster Sugar / 180g Gelatine mass 1kg Cream 35% Heat 200g of the coconut purée with the gelatine and caster sugar. Add the whipped cream and put it in a mould and freeze it for 2 hours. CHANTILLY TANARIVA 132g Cream 35% / 112g Glucose Syrup / 16g Inverted Sugar 158g Valrhona Tanariva Milk Chocolate / 28g Gelatine mass 316g Cream 35% Fat In a saucepan, boil the 132g of cream, glucose and inverted sugar. Add the gelatine mass. Blend it with the chocolate until it has a smooth texture and add the cold cream. Keep overnight in the fridge. GEL COCONUT 500g Coconut purée / 50g Caster sugar / 5g Agar agar Boil all the ingredients in a saucepan and allow it to cool. Put the mixture in a blender until it has a smooth texture. Pass the mixture thru a sieve and remove any lumps. Use immediately.

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MOLTEN CAKE REIF OTHMAN KUSHIYAKI DUBAI, U.A.E. MOLTEN CAKE 12g Valrhona 60% 125g Butter 5 Eggs 4 Yolks 120g Sugar 75g Gluten free flour Mixed all the ingredients in a piping bag. Spray the mould with oil and pipe the mixture into the mould. Bake it at 180°C for 7 minutes. Serve it with ice cream.

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BASIC BUT PERFECT PASTA DOUGH STEPHANIE CERONIO JACK RABBIT CHOCOLATE STUDIO PRETORIA 2 cups All-purpose flour, or half 00 and half semolina or a combination of all-purpose flour and semolina Large pinch of salt 2 Whole XL eggs 6 XL yolks 2tsbp Olive oil Crush salt and add into flour, make a well inside the flour and add all the eggs and yolks into the well. Slowly with a fork mix the eggs and start incorporating the flour into the egg mixture. Mix till a messy dough forms, then slowly kneed to form a cohesive dough. Only fold small bits over onto itself, and then rotate it so that when you lift your hand a spiral forms on the top of the dough. With the bottom being very smooth and soft, continue folding the dough onto itself until the dough is completely formed, soft and springy to the touch. Wrap in cling film and allow to rest in the fridge for at least an hour. This is a really soft dough, and needs quite a lot of flour when rolling, but makes for a really delicious al dente bite if you combined semolina flour with the all-purpose. Roll out to desired thickness, and cut into shapes and sizes. Add a tiny amount of sage and thyme leaves with edible flowers in between 2 sheets of dough and rolled them through the pasta machine. Cut into thick strips of Pappardelle.

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COVER: © FLAVEL MONTEIRO INSIDE COVER AND END PAPER: © CHEFS PORTRAIT IMAGES – PHOTOGRAPHERS OF CHEFS IMAGES PAGE 7: © JACKRABBIT CHOCOLATE STUDIO PAGE 8: IT ALL COMES TOGETHER © REIF OTHMAN PAGE 10: ELENA ARZAK © SARA SANTOS PAGE 11: © COURTNEY BRANDT PAGE 14: © DOUG SINGER PAGE 16-17: ELENA ARZAK © SARA SANTOS PAGE 18: PACO PÉREZ © MIRAMAR PAGE 19: HEINZ BECK © ALBERTO BLASETTI PAGE 20: NIKO ROMITO © BRAMBILLA-SERRANI PAGE 21: ANA ROŠ © SUZAN GABRIJAN PAGE 22: SEBASTIAN FRANK © WHITE KITCHEN PAGE 23: ANDONI LUIS ADURIZ © ALEX ITURRALDE PAGE 24: THOMAS BÜHNER © THOMAS BÜHNER PAGE 25: YOSHIHIRO NARISAWA © NARISAWA PAGE 26: VINEET BHATIA © VINEET BHATIA @CAVALIERLONDON PAGE 27: KONSTANTIN FILIPPOU © PER-ANDERS JÖRGENSEN PAGE 28: VALENTINO CASSANELLI © LIDO VANNUCCHI PAGE 39: MIKAEL SVENSSON © LARS PETTER PETTERSEN PAGE 30: ADAM REID © SIMON PANTLING PAGE 31: OLIVIER ELZER © L’ENVOL PAGE 32-33: IL PROFUMO DI CAFFE © EKATERINS IVANKINA PAGE 34-35: GRATINÈ CAULIFLOWER © BRAMBILLA-SERRANI PAGE 36: CAVIAR AND ARTICHOKE © THAI TOUTAIN PAGE 38-39: WRONG TONNATO © MARCO VAROLI PAGE 40: POTATO FORM © THOMAS BÜHNER PAGE 42-43: CELERY “RIPE” AND “YOUNG” © WHITE KITCHEN PAGE 44-45: RISOTTO PIZZA MARGHERITA © ALFREDO RUSSO / DOLCE STIL NOVO ALLA REGGIA PAGE 46-47: PIRARUCU Á BRAZ © BEL COELHO/CLANDESTINO RESTAURANTE PAGE 48-49: POTATO CYLINDERS © TANO PASSAMI L’OLIO PAGE 50-51: RAVIOLI OF FIVE HERBS © CAESARS BLUEWATERS DUBAI PAGE 52: DAVID TOUTAIN © THAI TOUTAIN PAGE 53: ALFREDO RUSSO © ALFREDO RUSSO / DOLCE STIL NOVO ALLA REGGIA

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PAGE 54: SAM AISBETT © EDMOND HO PAGE 55: SILVIA BARACHI © SILVIA BAGLIONI PAGE 56: TANO SIMONATO © TANO PASSAMI L’OLIO PAGE 57: TONI KOSTAIN © TONI KOSTAIN PAGE 58: ANTONIA KLUGMANN © MATTIA MIONETTO PAGE 59: RICCARDO CAMANINI © LIDO 84/LIDO VANNUCCHI PAGE 60: MICHELANGELO MAMMOLITI © DAVIDE DUTTO PAGE 62: MANU BUFFARA © RUBENS KATO PAGE 62: MARCO MARTINI © BRUNO D’AMATA PAGE 63: GIUSEPPE IANNOTTI © ANDREA DI LORENZO PAGE 64: GRANT MACPHERSON © BILL MILNE PAGE 65: GARY FOULKES © ANDREW TWORT PAGE 66-67: ALMOND CRUSTED VEGETABLE TIKKIS © EARL SMITH PAGE 68-69: FALAFEL © JULIET DUNNE PAGE 70: PIAC MANGALICA RAGOUT © MATILD PALACE PAGE 72-73: CARAMELIZED SILVER ONION PIE © TONI KOSTAIN PAGE 74-75: TATER’ASH © SIMON PANTLING PAGE 76: ASPARAGUS SALAD © ALFREDO RUSSO / DOLCE STIL NOVO ALLA REGGIA


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PAGE 77: COLD PEA SOUP © JÉRÔME JULIEN PAGE 78: BRASSICA © JULIET DUNNE PAGE 80: WATERMELON CEVICHE © CAROLINA REY DE CASTRO PAGE 81: SPAGHETTONI BURRO, LIEVITO DI BIRRA © LIDO 84/LIDO VANNUCCHI PAGE 82: JERUSALEM ARTICHOKES © LARS PETTER PETTERSEN PAGE 83: SHITAKE AND RISOTTO © GIUSEPPE MOLARO PAGE 84-85: RIGATONI AL SUGO DI CODA © ANDREA DI LORENZO PAGE 86: GOAT CHEESE CRÈME BRÛLÉE © MOHAMAD CHABCHOUL PAGE 87: PICKLED PAPAYA SALAD © MANJU JISTO PAGE 88-89: A TOUCH OF FOREST © THOMAS BÜHNER PAGE 90-91: LOBSTER AND MOZZARELLA RAVIOLI © TANO PASSAMI L’OLIO PAGE 92: BEL COELHO © BEL COELHO/CLANDESTINO RESTAURANTE PAGE 93: COLIN CLAGUE © RITA TESSANDORI PAGE 94: TIM NEWTON © TIM NEWTON PAGE 95: ESZTER PALÁGYI © MATILD PALACE PAGE 96: JOE BARZA © LOUKMAN NASREDDINE PAGE 97: REIF OTHMAN © IMAGE BY VIVEK KUMAR FOR WG MAGAZINE PAGE 98: FRANCESCO GUARRACINO © EKATERINS IVANKINA PAGE 99: JÉRÔME JULIEN © JÉRÔME JULIEN PAGE 100: CRAIG BEST © CLAIRE MCDONALD PAGE 101: JOSÉ LUIS VINCENTE GÓMEZ © ABEL ALONSO PAGE 103: LOOKING FOR CRABS © SARA SANTOS PAGE 104-105: LOBSTER MEDALLIONS ON PEA PURÉE © JANEZ PUKŠIČ PAGE 106-107: TEMARI © NARISAWA PAGE 108-109: SUSPENSION – SQUID SILK © JOSE LUIS LOPEZ DE ZUBIRIA PAGE 110- 111: TUTTO IN CONTRASTO © THE WINDSOR HOTEL TOYA RESORT AND SPA PAGE 112-113: ZANDER, HAZELNIT, TRUFFLE, DASHI AND COFFEE OIL © ALAN KAVCIC PAGE 114: STIR-FRIED FISH NOODLES © THE LEGACY HOUSE PAGE 115: A FISHY MIX © MANJU JISTO PAGE 116-117: CURED SALMON © LUIGI VESPERO PAGE 118: BACCALA MANTECATO © LUCA ROSATI PAGE 119: POACHED CANADIAN LOBSTER © BEN WONG PAGE 120-121: LOBSTER ORZO © TIM NEWTON PAGE 122: SIMONE CANTAFIO © THE WINDSOR HOTEL TOYA RESORT& SPA, HOKKAIDO- JAPAN PAGE 123: KARIME LÓPEZ © COURTESY OF GUCCI PAGE 124: LI CHI WAI © THE LEGACY HOUSE PAGE 125: LUIGI VESPERO © LUIGI VESPERO PAGE 126: JAMES KNIGHT PACHECO © JULIET DUNNE PAGE 127: OLIVER MARLOW © ROGANIC PAGE 128: TERESA CUTTER © LI CHI PAN PAGE 129: JOHN BUENAVENTURA © PHOTO FOR ILLUSTRADO MAGAZINE 100 BY ALEX CALLUENG PAGE 130: GIORGIO DIANA © GIORGIO DIANA PAGE 131: LUCA ROSATI © BARBARA BACCIOTTINI PAGE 132: SPAGHETTI MACKEREL CARPIONE STYLE © DON ALFONSO TORONTO PAGE 133: RED MULLET © ALFREDO RUSSO / DOLCE STIL NOVO ALLA REGGIA PAGE 134-135: PLANCHA DE MARISCOS © ANIL RIARD PAGE 136: CEVICHE © APÉRITIF RESTAURANT & BAR PAGE 137: ESPRESSO INFUSED FIELD MUSHROOM BISQUE, RASPBERRY POINT OYSTERS © BILL MILNE PAGE 138-139: SCALLOPS WITH CRISPY QUINOA © SANOOB PARAMBATH PAGE 140: RED SHRIMP “BAU II © HIDDEN BY DN PAGE 141: LOBSTER FRA DIAVOLO © GARY JAMES PAGE 142-143: BENVENUTO CASA © EKATERINS IVANKINA PAGE 144: SCALLOPS, IODIZED FOAM WITH PINK CURRY © JÉRÔME JULIEN PAGE 145: TORTELLI PAPPA AL POMODORO © IMAGE BY VIVEK KUMAR FOR WG MAGAZINE PAGE 146-147: MUSSELS, EDVIVE AND LARDO © MANU BUFFARA PAGE 148: SMOKED SALMON © STEVEN SMALLEY PAGE 149: KING CRAB AND SEA SNAIL TARTAR © GIORGIO DIANA PAGE 150-151: TUNA TIRADITO NIKKEI © ANIL RIARD PAGE 152-153: CHARCOAL PRAWNS © JOHN BUENAVENTURA / SAJAN GOLAY PAGE 154: DANIEL NEGREIRA © HIDDEN BY DN PAGE 155: CARLA PELLEGRINO © GARY JAMES PAGE 156: STEVEN SMALLEY © STEVEN SMALLEY PAGE 157: NATHAN GREEN © HENRY PAGE 158: JEAN WINTER © PATSON WILSON PAGE 159: NIC VANDERBEEKEN © APÉRITIF RESTAURANT & BAR PAGE 160: DANIEL CHAVEEZ © ANIL RIARD


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PAGE 161: GIUSEPPE MOLARO © GIUSEPPE MOLARO PAGE 162: JAMES OAKLEY © BEN WONG PAGE 163: JORGE RIVERO © RANDY GUEVARA PAGE 164-165: SOMKED FISH © ALFREDO RUSSO / DOLCE STIL NOVO ALLA REGGIA PAGE 166: IMPERIAL DE SOLOGNE © L’ENVOL PAGE 167: RED SNAPPER CARPACCIO © JUNIOR NADJE PAGE 168-169: KING SALMON “OTAH OTAH” © BILL MILNE PAGE 170: MUD CRAB WITH COCONUT TOMATO SOUP © NIYATI RAO PAGE 171:I GRILLED MARINATED PRAWNS © IMAGE BY VIVEK KUMAR FOR WG MAGAZINE PAGE 172-173: SEA BASS © THAI TOUTAIN PAGE 174: CLAMS IN SHERRY WINE © FRANCESC GUILLAMET PAGE 175: CAVIAR CONE © REIF OTHMAN PAGE 176-177: MACKEREL TARTARE © ANDREW TWORT PAGE 178: MERLUZZO NERO © IMAGE BY VIVEK KUMAR FOR WG MAGAZINE PAGE 179: CRITMUM MARITIMUM © DAVIDE DUTTO PAGE 180-181: EEL, APPLE CIDER AND SPINACH © MATTIA MIONETTO PAGE 182: BLACKENED SALMON FILLET © IMAGE BY MANJU JISTO FOR WG MAGAZINE PAGE 183: SCOTTISH SALMON © GIORGIO DIANA PAGE 185: STUFFED CAPPELLACI WITH MACKEREL © ALLESANDRO SCHINCO PAGE 186: VERONICA CANJA-HIBBERT © THE ROYAL PORTFOLIO PAGE 187: FEDERICO TERESI © IMAGE BY VIVEK KUMAR FOR WG MAGAZINE PAGE 188: SAVERIO MACRI © DON ALFONSO TORONTO PAGE 189: TAMARA CHAVEZ © ANIL RIARD PAGE 190: GIANLUCA RENZI © GIANLUCA RENZI/LOCALE PAGE 191: RAYMOND WONG © ATLANTIS THE PALM PAGE 192: ROBERTO SEGURA © CAROLINA REY DE CASTRO PAGE 193: MOHAMAD CHABCHOUL © MOHAMAD CHABCHOUL PAGE 194: JUNIOR NADJE © UNIOR NADJE PAGE 195: NIYATI RAO © NIYATO RAO PAGE 196-197: LOIN OF LAMB WIT A CEREAL CRUST © JANEZ PUKŠIČ PAGE 198-199: SWEETBREAD © THE WINDSOR HOTEL TOYA RESORT& SPA, HOKKAIDO- JAPAN PAGE 200: SAYADIEH OF BLACK COD © COLIN CLAGUE PAGE 202: CURED TENDERLOIN © LARS PETTER PETTERSEN PAGE 203: CURED WAGYU © REIF OTHMAN

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PAGE 204-205: VEAL ON AMARANTH GRAIN © JANEZ PUKŠIČ PAGE 206-207: MILLEFEUILLE OF VEAL FILLET © TANO PASSAMI L’OLIO PAGE 208: BEEF KUSHI © IMAGE BY VIVEK KUMAR FOR WG MAGAZINE PAGE 209: CLASSIC MEATBALLS © HECTOR ANDRADE PAGE 210-211: KAPI LAMB CHOPS © MARTIN EDWARDS PAGE 212-213: (R)EVOLUTION OF KOBARIŠKI ŠTRUKELJ © SUZAN GABRIJAN PAGE 214: BEEF GYOZA © IMAGE BY VIVEK KUMAR FOR WG MAGAZINE PAGE 215: COFFEE BEAN CRUSTED KOREAN BBQ RIBS © BILL MILNE PAGE 216-217: LINGUINE © LIDO VANNUCCHI PAGE 218-219: GRILLED BEEF TENDERLOIN © LUIGI VESPERO PAGE 220-221: BUFFALO ADOBO SHORT RIBS © JOHN B PAGE 222: ALL DAY WITH MEATBALLS © MANJU JISTO PAGE 223: HENRY STEAK TARTRE © HENRY PAGE 224-225: LAMB WITH EGGPLANT © JANEZ PUKŠIČ PAGE 226: SMOKED BEEF CAP AND PIQUILLOS © COURTESY OF HIDDEN BY DN PAGE 227: CHEEK TO CHEEK © COURTESY OF GUCCI PAGE 228-229: SLOW COOKED RACK OF LAMB © TANO PASSAMI L’OLIO PAGE 230: COFFEE SOUS VIDE OSTRICH FILLET © THE ROYAL PORTFOLIO


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PAGE 232-233: VENISON TOURNEDO © RESTAURANTE CACHETERO PAGE 234-235: DECONSTRUCTED BEEF LASAGNA © BEN WONG PAGE 236-237: DRY AGED RIB EYE © IMAGE BY MANJU JISTO FOR WG MAGAZINE PAGE 238-239: SAVORY SHORT RIB DONUTS © ATLANTIS THE PALM PAGE 240: PRIME BEEF TARTAR © BILL MILNE PAGE 241: LITTLE PIGLET © GIANLUCA RENZI/LOCALE PAGE 242-243: STUFFED CHICKEN BREAST © LOUKMAN NASREDDINE PAGE 244-245: STEFANO BAIOCCO © LIDO VANNUCCHI PAGE 246: FRANCESCO ACQUAVIVA © MIKHAIL H. DE GUZMAN PAGE 247: LIZ STEVENSON © RITA TESSANDORI PAGE 248: SAMANTA BAKKER © ESTEBAN BAKKER PAGE 249: RYAN HARRIS © CHARIS THOMAS PAGE 250: GLENN NOEL © PHOTO BY JB LASSARA/GINKO PAGE 251: BALAZS ENZSOL © LINDA PREBREZA PAGE 252: DWIYANTI CINTANINGRUM © TAUFIK FATURRAHMAN PAGE 253: GAËL CLAVIERE © FLORIAN DAVID PAGE 254: NOUEL OMAMALIN © NOUEL OMAMALIN / NIFTY CHEF PAGE 255: STEPHANIE CERONIO © BETTINA BICKNELL PAGE 256: SALVO SARDO © ATLANTIS THE PALM PAGE 257: CHRISTOPHE DEVOILLE © CHRISTOPHE DEVOILLE PAGE 258: JAVIER GUILLÉN © JAVIER GUILLÉN PAGE 259: GREGORY CHRISMANT © MANDARIN ORIENTAL JUMEIRAH - DUBAI PAGE 260-261: LINGOTTO © MASSIMO LODA PAGE 262: CHOCOLATE CAKE © PAUL CUTTER @ THE HEALTHY CHEF PAGE 264-265: TSUBAKI & KOJI © NARISAWA PAGE 266-267: CHOCOLATE, COFFEE, PRUNES © EDMOND HO PAGE 268-269: SUPER BAR © PHOTO BY JB LASSARA/GINKO PAGE 270-271: BEURRE NOISETTE TOFFEE COOKIES © JACKRABBIT CHOCOLATE STUDIO PAGE 272-273: VALRHONA GLACAGE NOIR © RYAN HARRIS PAGE 275: DARK CHOCOLATE CAKE DONUT © TALA SOUBRA PAGE 276-277: TRUFFLE-HONEY ICECREAM © BALAZS ENZSOL PAGE 278-279: UBE MADELEINE © NOUEL OMAMALIN / NIFTY CHEF PAGE 280-281: RONDA STRAWBERRY CHEESECAKE © ATLANTIS THE PALM PAGE 283: PRICKLY AFFAIR © ESTEBAN BAKKER PAGE 284-285: DUKATI © JAVIER GUILLÉN PAGE 286-287: CAVIAR INSPIRATION © COOK AND SHOOT ALINE GERARD PAGE 288: BONBON © JACKRABBIT CHOCOLATE STUDIO PAGE 291: SUNSHINE © SIVANANDAM PAGE 292: CHOCOLATE AND HAZELNUT TART © CHRISTOPHE DEVOILLE PAGE 294-295: HEART FOR ITALY © MIKHAIL H. DE GUZMAN PAGE 296-297: EXOTIC CHAI SEED PUDDING © HILMI SYAMSI PAGE 298-299: WAKAYAMA © FLORIAN DAVID PAGE 300: BLACK FOREST © CHRISTOPHE DEVOILLE PAGE 302-303: RICETTA ZUCCOTTO © CARLOTTA RUSSO PAGE 304-305: SACHER © JAVIER GUILLÉN PAGE 306-307: CAMERALISED APPLE PINE © ROGANIC PAGE 308-309: BERRY RHUBARB SENSATION © YULIUS SATRIO AJI PAGE 310-311: ZUPPA INGLESE A TUSCAN © LAURA ADANI PAGE 312: PLAYFULL SHOW © REIF OTHMAN PAGE 315: SWEET & SOUR © JULIET DUNNE PAGE 316-317: SHOOTING STARS © HILMI SYAMSI PAGE 318: COFFEE SCENTED MOUHALABIEH © LOUKMAN NASREDDINE PAGE 319: COFFEE AND TABACCO CHEESECAKE © BEN WONG PAGE 320-321: 70% GUANAJA BITTER CHOCOLATE CAKE © YULIUS SATRIO AJI PAGE 322: YUZU AND MADAGASCAN VANILLA CAKE © JONAS SILVEIRA PAGE 324-325: MACARON DE FEU © FLORIAN DAVID PAGE 326: BOUNTY COCONUT © MANDARIN ORIENTAL JUMEIRAH - DUBAI PAGE 327: MOLTEN CAKE © IMAGE BY VIVEK KUMAR FOR WG MAGAZINE PAGE 328-329 PASTA DOUGH © JACKRABBIT CHOCOLATE STUDIO END COVER- INSIDE BACK COVER © CHEFS PORTRAIT IMAGES – PHOTOGRAPHERS OF CHEFS IMAGES BACK COVER: FLAVEL MONTEIRO © RÜYA




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Flavel Monteiro has been in the hospitality and F & B industry since 1991. His foray into publishing came when he purchased a franchise to publish Millionaire Magazine in Scandinavia, as well as a Filipino magazine in the Middle East. It was in 2014 when Flavel launched WG Magazine, designed to promote the top culinary experiences around the world. Then in 2018, he partnered with Chef Alfredo Russo from Turin, Italy to launch EX.IT—Extraordinary Italian. Flavel is the recipient of the 2019 Independent Publishers Award and multiple 2019 Gourmand World Cook Book Awards for his books Coffee Absolute Gastronomy and Legacy. Coffee Absolute Gastronomy was the #1 cookbook in the world and Legacy was the #2 cookbook in the world in their respective categories. Closest to his heart, three years ago, he started a foundation that helps 36 underprivileged children each year in the Philippines to attend culinary school through a scholarship program.

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“It’s an honor for me to be part of this project. Especially during this difficult time, to see people like yourself that don’t sit and cry, but make things happen—it’s admirable.” ~ Francesco Guarracino


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