Liquid nitrogen and Michelin stars. The importance of tomatoes.
WORDS 听POLA ESGUERRA DEL MONTE | PHOTOGRAPHY 听CHRIS听骋础尝尝贰骋翱厂

Once upon a time, there lived The Little Chef, and this Little Chef refused to think out of the box. Instead, he placed his creativity inside one. His avant-garde 10-course tasting menu is a stack of cards placed in a box that has three holes on each of its walls. The lid shows a drawing of a planet with a rose, and the title Principito, or 鈥減rince鈥濃攁n allusion to Antoine de Saint-Exup茅ry鈥檚 novella and pi猫ce de r茅sistance, The Little Prince.
听 The Little Chef, identified by an inscription on the box as 鈥淒ani Garc铆a,鈥 is a charmingly stocky man a few insignificant inches shorter than his contemporaries, but their equal in achievements. His own little planet, an eponymous restaurant, holds two bright Michelin Stars. These stars, though tiny and mostly symbolic, are of great interest to grown-ups, who were willing to pay more than PHP10,000 to sample Mr. Garc铆a鈥檚 culinary masterpiece when he landed in the Philippines this April for Madrid Fusi贸n Manila 2016.
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During his stay, The Little Chef pulled out all the stops when he created a theatrical dinner at the New World Manila Bay Hotel. That dinner began with a box. But unlike the original tale, there was no sheep peeking through the holes. Instead, there was stack of round-edged cards, each carrying a peculiar name for a dish, as in:
听 Yellow gazpacho with nitro tomato
听鈥淣itro tomato?鈥 the curious grown-ups wondered. Liquid nitrogen鈥攁 colorless and extremely cold diatomic liquid at exactly -303潞F鈥攂egan forming a white smoke in the tense air. In this fluid chemical, The Little Chef dipped a tomato consomm茅 wrapped in clear foil. After pulling up the smoky, newly frozen cream-colored mound, he immersed it in a metallic scarlet mixture of tomato juice, coloring and vegetable gelatin which clung to the mousse like a fondant. To make it resemble an actual juicy berry, a faux stem was placed on top. Yellow gazpacho, cooled with the same chemical, was poured on the plate. It was strange, but delicious.
At the bottom of all the cards was a white piece of cardboard, which secured underneath it a delicate piece of chocolate. Written on the two surfaces of card and cacao were parts of a verse, which, when put together, read: 鈥淓ssence is invisible to the eyes鈥 but an essential part of cuisine.鈥
LIQUID DREAMS
The Little Chef hails from Marbella, a city in southern Spain situated on the Mediterranean Sea. Warm and sunny, it gained the reputation of being a destination for rich and famous tourists鈥擲pain鈥檚 answer to France鈥檚 glamorous St. Tropez.
In this, temperate playground of yacht-riding, bikini-clad adults, The Little Chef dreamed of playing with liquid nitrogen, which he discovered through a television show featuring French chef Michel Bras. A creative chef credited with inventing molten chocolate cake, Bras was making ice cream with liquid nitrogen when Mr. Garc铆a caught him on TV.听 鈥淚 started testing and trying, and saw incredible opportunities,鈥 The Little Chef recalled of this discovery, foreseeing 鈥渢he future of the freezing industry.鈥 The only bad part about it, he frowned, is its price.听 听
He justifies costs by prioritizing creativity and scientific techniques. Realize his vision for 鈥淒inner with the Stars鈥 required bringing in Ifugao rice, local squid, fish from overseas, local oxtail and local beef; the purchase of new machines, which rung in at about half a million;听 and Php11,000-worth of liquid nitrogen, which would be used for three of the dishes.
A few days after the dinner, the still sleep-deprived New World Manila Bay Hotel executive chef James Williams, who assisted during that service: 鈥淲e had a long day!鈥 鈥淒ay鈥 is an understatement since preparations began two months prior to the actual event, when Mr. Williams began liaising with The Little Chef鈥檚 right hand, Santiago Guerrero, a half-Filipino chef de cuisine. 鈥淎 lot of ingredients flown in from Europe like the truffles, were coming in last minute,鈥 Mr. Williams narrated, adding that those truffles cost about Php70,000.
鈥淢y goodness. What an issue,鈥 he recalled, chuckling. The truffles were just one item on a long list of complications. 鈥淲e just couldn鈥檛 organize,鈥 the executive chef continued. 鈥淭hey imported a machine from Hong Kong, struggled, and then we got another one, but had a problem with the attachments. We couldn鈥檛 get the liquid nitrogen in because it had to come from a depressurized hose. And they didn鈥檛 have the hose. You had to buy them overseas.鈥 Luckily, his friend who had been the chef of Shangri-La for 11 years had access to one, ending the search for the depressurized hose.
At that time of 鈥淒inner with the Stars,鈥 Mr. Williams had been installed at New World Manila Bay Hotel for only two months. He was eager to take on the rather bewildering project since he himself had dined at The Dani Garc铆a restaurant in Spain. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not a dinner,鈥 he said about his gastronomic experience. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a story.鈥 And it is this story that New World Manila Bay Hotel sought to recreate.
Before even thinking about purchasing ingredients that were not available locally, the first thing placed on the shopping list was an audio-visual (AV) room that would come at a price of about Php500,000. A film producer was hired to populate wall-to-wall LED screens with scenes of the ocean, fire, and the beach. These scenes served as ambient cues during the dinner: the ocean went with tuna; when the jamon was being set on fire, the entire AV table was also 鈥渙n fire.鈥 The beach harked to Marbella, The Little Chef鈥檚 home, which he proudly talked about.
The dinner was done for two batches in two nights, with about 95 guests, including the who鈥檚 who in Philippine society. For this crowd, only the best would do. Tomatoes, which played a major role in this menu, had to be a specific kind. According to Mr. Williams, tomatoes are different wherever you are in the world, and as such, affect the outcome.
In the culinary world, the difference between success and disaster can rest on the easily bruised skin of a squishy fruit. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 where the two Michelin stars come in,鈥 said Mr. Williams. Aside from pronouncing which tomatoes were fit to be used, The Little Chef also had the final say on each dish. 鈥淗e tastes it, then decides that it needs more vinegar, sugar, olive oil, or it鈥檚 not creamy enough. And it was him finishing everything. He had three chefs over and they were all in the kitchen all the time. And he didn鈥檛 want to be out of the restaurant, he had to be in the kitchen cooking while we were serving it.鈥 As for the hotel staff, who all had no previous experience of working with a Michelin chef, their boss Mr. Williams proudly said: 鈥淭hey thrived.鈥
鈥楥OOKING IS MAGIC鈥
“For me, this is the magic of the kitchen: that you can create a dish with your hands.鈥 听鈥 Chef Dani Garcia
The Little Chef went onstage at the SMX Convention Center to speak to more than a thousand congress delegates鈥攁 thousand gastronomic enthusiasts who were all ears as he talked about his craft. This kind of attention is 鈥渟omething new,鈥 he said as he sat himself down in the backstage lounge, after his stint under the spotlight. 鈥淲hen I decided to be a chef, it was not a very special profession,鈥 he said, leaning back as he recalled the last forty years of his life. 鈥淲hen I was a child, I remember perfectly saying to my friends, 鈥業鈥檓 going to be a lawyer,鈥 then 鈥業鈥檓 going to be a businessman,鈥 until finally, at 17, 鈥楴o, I want to be a chef.鈥欌
At 17, The Little Chef decided that he did not want to enter the university. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 like to stay in with books for hours and hours and hours. But I cooked at home with my mother and grandmother,鈥 he said about his female-dominated 鈥渉obby.鈥 After he found an article on a new cooking school in the local newspaper, he declared that he wanted to go to that school instead. His mother pleaded: 鈥淣o, please, no…鈥 But The Little Chef insisted on his dream. 鈥淔or me, cooking is magic,鈥 he said. 鈥淔rom one, two, or three ingredients, something special can be created. For me, this is the magic of the kitchen: that you can create a dish with your hands,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ecause really, it鈥檚 very artisanal work.鈥
A NEW STORY
Once upon a time, The Little Chef encountered Rafael Garc铆a Santos, a respected food critic in Spain, whose renown gives him license to call the French-made Michelin Guide 鈥渙ne of the worst in the world.鈥听 After sampling some dishes that The Little Chef created, Mr. Garc铆a Santos put down his fork, looked the young chef in the eye, and said: 鈥淵ou need to take all your books, throw them away, go to a house and think without books.鈥 This moment changed The Little Chef鈥檚 life. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the reason we can create our cuisine,鈥 he explained.听
Distancing himself from books made The Little Chef into what he has become today: an award-winning chef whose restaurant has become a holy grail of gastronomy in Marbella. At this point in his career, he can disregard Mr. Garc铆a Santos鈥檚 advice, which served him well in his youth. 鈥淣ow, I read books. I love books. I buy a lot of kinds of books,鈥 The Little Chef said. 鈥淣ow, it鈥檚 different. I am 40 and I have a clear way. Now, I can be inspired by a book but I can change that to be more like myself.鈥 He鈥檚 making up for lost time by dedicating his restaurant year to one story for an entire year. Before creating the menu based on The Little Prince, he did an Alice in Wonderland-inspired one: Cocinacontradici贸n, which included a dish of eel shavings on a savory mousse (it resembled pencil shavings).
鈥淲hen I start to think about the menu, I have to make sure that our brainstorming starts with 鈥極nce upon a time,鈥欌 he said as he thought of his creative team back in Marbella. 鈥淲hen I began this tradition, I thought that we can do stories because of the 鈥榦nce upon a time.鈥 Likewise for me, this signals a new era in my career. It鈥檚 a new story for me, it鈥檚 a new life, it鈥檚 my new own restaurant.鈥 And, in this endeavor, 鈥淚 want to do something shocking.鈥澨
When he decides on the story, the team gathers all available material, whether text or film. Then comes the most excruciating part: thinking about what to create. 鈥淲e feel the pressure and standard to create, but we want to take our time to be creative,鈥 he said.听
Fueling this creativity is curiosity, and The Little Chef acknowledges that his staff always ask questions. 鈥溾榃hy this meat?,鈥 鈥榳hy this temperature?,鈥 this is the reason why we go to university people. To science people,鈥 he narrated. Liquid nitrogen, for example, was one of the tools that they had to consult with experts about first.
But, underneath all the theatrics lies the most essential part of his cuisine, as he said: 鈥淵ou can create a wonderful and beautiful dish, and a beautiful show around the dish, but if you eat and it does not have a good flavor, then it鈥檚 not very special after all.鈥 In the same way, underneath the white uniform of a hailed culinary talent lies a simple soul. 鈥淚鈥檓 a child, you know,鈥 The Little Chef, Dani Garc铆a said. 鈥淟ike everybody.鈥
鈥淚 think that everybody has a child inside,鈥 he added. 鈥淭he most important thing you realize when you grow up, maybe, is that all the books for children really are adult stories.鈥 He is 鈥渁 very simple man,鈥 he claimed, who loves family, work, the beach, tennis, and television. 鈥淣ormally, I don鈥檛 know what people think about these things, but I eat at home very normal food like everybody. I love the small things in life.鈥 Lit by the Manila Bay sunset, Mr. Garc铆a was in a musing mood. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very difficult to forget who you are. Everyone that creates, especially in the gastronomic world, has to maintain the little child inside,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 a child, you know,鈥 he repeated, 鈥渓ike everybody.鈥



