It is a scene reminiscent of A Clockwork Orange: A chair, large screen and cap of brain sensors with dangling cords await the next guinea pig. In a room nearby, big vats of smelly goo are lined up on a table.
Several floors above this secure lab, a chef in a classroom plunges a green balloon full of cream cheese into a smoking bowl of liquid nitrogen, one of the teaching techniques at Spain’s Basque Culinary Center.
This gastronomy school in European culture capital San Sebastian is but one manifestation of a four-decade culinary revolution that has made the northern Basque Country famous for its traditional haute cuisine and its more controversial, experimental counterpart.
“In many places in the world, there’s a certain degree of aversion to what we come up with,” said center collaborator Andoni Luis Aduriz, whose avant-garde Mugaritz eaterie is rated the world’s sixth-best by Britain’s influential Restaurant magazine.
“It seems that often, it’s identified as an exercise that harms tradition or puts it in question, but in the Basque Country, there are a series of restaurants that have stepped out of the margins of this tradition, trying to find new options,” the 44-year-old Basque chef said.
From ice shavings with shrimp juice to apple chunks covered in a mold-like substance, Aduriz and his team like to disconcert diners at Mugaritz — using a strong dose of science.
For instance, customers have been treated to what looks like unappetising rotting bread that has actually been injected with the fungus found in French Roquefort, giving it a mouth-watering cheesy taste.
Aduriz’s experimental approach to gastronomy goes beyond his Michelin-starred restaurant near San Sebastian.
He and his chefs have worked closely with scientists of all kinds to find new cooking techniques or textures, and determine how their discoveries can be used not only at Mugaritz, but also in the wider world.
Take bubbles. The team worked with a rheologist — who studies the flow of matter — to make bubbles stable and edible.
The result? Chocolate or honey-flavored bubbles, sometimes served with soap bar-shaped ice cream.
The team soon realized that this kind of texture-changing process could be used further afield — to vary food options for people who have trouble swallowing, for instance — and are working on developing such products.
Like other chefs in the region, Aduriz works closely with the center, which apart from teaching gastronomy, also has a team of nutritionists, chemists and cooks on site to conduct culinary experiments.
They measure the effect of what diners see on their brain activity — for example by showing them food images while they eat with a sensor cap on — to try and determine what exactly gives them visual and gustatory pleasure.
The vats of goo are fermenting acorns, eaten with gusto by Spain’s pigs, but largely abandoned by humans, and the center is trying to find new edible applications for this local nut.
“We’re the result of a culinary evolution, where innovation has held a very important role,” center director Joxe Mari Aizega said. “Everything started here more than 30 years ago.”
In 1976, restauranteurs Juan Mari Arzak and Pedro Subijana met France’s star chef Paul Bocuse at a Madrid round table.
At the time, Bocuse’s “nouvelle cuisine” — characterized by lighter, more delicate dishes than traditional, sauce-heavy cuisine — had taken France by storm.
Inspired, they started shaking things up in their native Basque Country, a mountainous region known for its fierce sense of identity, which like the rest of Spain was getting its first taste of freedom after the end of Former Spanish leader Francisco Franco’s rule.
Cooking there is such a part of life that men who were shooed away from kitchens in their homes created private societies where they could cook in peace, and these exist to this day.
Arzak and Subijana fixed traditional dishes they thought were too heavy or overcooked, introduced foreign ingredients with a local twist and popularized haute cuisine in what became known as the Basque culinary revolution.
With this as a base and similarly inspired by nouvelle cuisine, Ferran Adria later pushed the revolution further in his Catalonia region — Spain’s other gastronomic stronghold in the northeast.
The man known as the father of molecular gastronomy turned cooking on its head by deconstructing and reconstructing ingredients, changing the image of Spanish cuisine and bringing it to the global fore.
Many chefs in the Basque Country followed suit, as did others in the rest of the world.
“All of a sudden, eating meant having an experience... They brought new textures, new approaches,” said Alexandre Gauthier, France’s latest star chef, who has visited Spain on numerous occasions.
Now, San Sebastian boasts the world’s biggest number of Michelin stars per square meter after Kyoto, Japan.
To those who say France is resting on its gastronomic laurels, Gauthier says that haute cuisine in Spain is still a niche compared with his own country, where there were pioneers too.
“Each era has its revolution,” he said.
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