How Danish gastronomy reached dizzying heights | Lifestyle.INQ

OCTOBER 27, 2022

danish gastronomy
(FILES) In this file photo taken on May 31, 2021 personnel of the world class Danish restaurant Noma work in the kitchen in Copenhagen. - Noma and its star chef René Redzepi and Geranium, commissioned by Rasmus Kofoed, took first and second place in the newly published ranking of the 50 best restaurants in the world held by the British magazine Restaurant. (Photo by Thibault Savary / AFP)
danish gastronomy
In this file photo taken on May 31, 2021 personnel of the world class Danish restaurant Noma work in the kitchen in Copenhagen. AFP

 

COPENHAGEN — It’s home to the top two eateries in the world and a cornucopia of Michelin stars: Denmark’s haute cuisine, non-existent 20 years ago, is making Copenhagen a top destination for gourmands.

Noma and its star chef Rene Redzepi, and Geranium headed by Rasmus Kofoed, clinched the top two spots in the 50 Best Restaurant awards recently published by British magazine Restaurant.

“They were nobody 20 years ago when Rene Redzepi started to reinvent the Nordic cuisine, focusing on local, ethical food,” says Szilvia Gyimothy, a marketing professor at Copenhagen Business School.

“It was quite unique and now he is an agenda-setter.”

With cold winters and sandy fields battered by winds from the North Sea and Baltic, Denmark is worlds away from the sun-drenched orchards of France, Italy and Spain, whose bountiful crops have served up gastronomic feasts for centuries.

Paradoxically, Denmark’s culinary successes have been partly attributed to the country having no gastronomic traditions to speak of, leaving the field wide open to innovation and creativity.

There are “many restaurants in the world where the chefs … rest on their laurels (and) are not so creative. Rene Redzepi and Rasmus Kofoed are never satisfied with what they’ve achieved,” says Bent Christensen, founder of Danish food guide Den Danske Spiseguide.

“It’s very special to have two people like that in such a small country,” he adds.

Christensen attributed the success to a vibrant culinary scene spearheaded by the two young chefs, as well as the unexpected advantages of Denmark’s geographical location.

“You’re always less than 40 kilometers (25 miles) from the sea, that’s fantastic for fish,” he gushes.

“And it’s nice with our climate — you really have four seasons and the vegetables can slowly mature.”

Creating refined, delicately flavored meals, chefs favor local specialities — such as cabbage, which Redzepi has dubbed “the coconut of the North” — honoring the country’s environmental mindset.

For example, Geranium is currently offering a three-hour “Autumn Universe” sitting featuring Jerusalem artichoke, grilled lobster, sea buckthorn and duck.

Noma’s summer menu, soon to make way for fall’s “game and forest”, meanwhile features among other things an awe-inspiring saffron caramel candle, with a lit wick made from shaved walnut dipped in cardamom essential oil.

 

‘Pushing a social agenda’

 

Redzepi is a fermentation guru — a technique he uses to makes pine cones edible — and fiercely loyal to local products, always inventing new dishes, Gyimothy says.

“He is engaged in the debate around food, climate, labour conditions, parity. He has really been using his role to push a strong societal agenda,” she says.

Shortly after earning its third Michelin star in September — finally, according to food critics — Noma clinched the top spot in the 50 Best Restaurant awards on October 5, elbowing out Mirazur in Menton, France.

Redzepi previously held the title four times in the 2010s.

But the fantastical dishes do not come cheaply: Noma’s set menu costs 2,800 kroner (380 euros, $435), excluding drinks.

“It is still a very elitist product but it also affects the way average Danes think of their food,” says Gyimothy.

Danes have become more conscious of buying locally-grown and in-season products, and reducing their climate footprint, she explains.

The effect can also be seen on other restaurants.

“Danes used to travel around, just to practice (different cooking styles) but now it’s upside down, people are coming to Denmark to study,” notes Christensen.

According to VisitDenmark, which promotes tourism to the country, 38 percent of foreigners who visited Copenhagen in 2019 did so to sample the gastronomy.

 

 

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