The nose knows.

Held over three days in April at the SMX Convention Center, the third edition of Madrid Fusi贸n Manila Food attracted 1,400 local and international guests from China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Macau, Taiwan, Denmark, Kazakhstan, Switzerland, the UK, and the USA. Among this number were six Michelin-starred chefs. High Life sat down with Pedro Subijana, Paco P茅rez, Jordi Roca, Julien Royer, Magnus Ek, and Gert De Mangeleer.


WORDS 聽ZSARLENE B. CHUA

Chef Jordi Roca

Jordi Roca鈥檚 desserts aren鈥檛 sweet footnotes found at the end of a meal. Rather, they are scientific experiments that know that the way to a man鈥檚 heart is through his nose. Take his famed 鈥淪cents鈥 series, which distills the essences of classic fragrances and turns them into sensory explosions. 鈥淎romas have a lot of connection to memories,鈥 he said. 鈥淢y deepest memories are all connected to aromas. You remember better when you smell.鈥

He is fascinated by olfactory organs, including his own: he turned his prominent hawk-like nose into a popsicle at his Rocambolesc ice cream store. Exploring scents led him to fragrances like Calvin Klein鈥檚 鈥淓ternity,鈥 the fruit and herbal notes of which, according to a Time article, he captured by combining 鈥渁 mandarin orange granita with orange flower gel茅e, basil, and a vanilla cream.鈥

Aside from creating 24 fragrance-inspired desserts, he went on to formulate his own perfume, Nuvol al Limona, a scent based on a mix of milk cream, brown butter and lemon sponge cake.

The perfume is currently sold for 鈧 50 for a 100 -ml bottle. The Celler de Can Roca Web site describes Nuvol al Limona as a 鈥渃reation conceived to rekindle life-affirming childhood memories and express emotions beyond age and gender: the smell of tenderness.鈥

His novel approach to dessert-making earned him the moniker 鈥渕agician of desserts.鈥 At El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Spain, guests can try 鈥淩ainy Forest,鈥 considered a standout dish by the 2017 edition of 鈥淭he World鈥檚 50 Best Restaurants,鈥 a list compiled by the British magazine Restaurant. The 鈥淩ainy Forest鈥 dessert is presented in the form of a tree trunk and is made of sand distillate water, carob cookie, fir tree dust, anise鈥檚 ice cream, fennel, and fir tree granite. The same magazine hailed El Celler de Can Roca, which has a three-star rating from Michelin, as the best restaurant in the world in 2013. This year, it ranked third.

Rainy Forest, a tree-shaped dessert made from sand distillate water, carob cookie, fir tree dust, anise鈥檚 ice cream, fennel, and fir tree granite.

Playfulness is a big part of Mr. Roca鈥檚 dessert philosophy. Aside from popsicles in the shape of his nose, Mr. Roca鈥檚 creations include desserts resembling the golden hand of Game of Thrones鈥 Jaime Lannister, and the body of Spanish model Andres Velencoso.

During the interview for High Life, Mr. Roca regrettably lost his voice. This, however, did not stop him from expounding on his passion for scents. At one point in the interview, he rose, knelt on his seat and leaned forward as if to tell a juicy secret: He was going to continue his dessert series based on scents, he half mimed, but instead of distilling 鈥 which he did in the fragrance series 鈥 he is using effleurage, a method that uses odorless animal or vegetable fat to extract the scent from a flower, or in Mr. Roca鈥檚 case, leather and sheep wool.

鈥淚t鈥檚 better,鈥 he said of the series based on effleurage. 鈥淭here are more tools, a more novel approach. It鈥檚 a lot of work.鈥 He saw this method of scent extraction in the 2006 Tom Tykwer thriller, Perfume: Story of a Murderer, which was based on a Patrick Suskind novel of the same name. The film, which can be seen as a tutorial for making perfumes (if one discounts the series of murders and corpses turned into scents), inspired Mr. Roca to try effleurage.

After the conclusion of El Celler de Can Roca鈥檚 tour of Chile 鈥 the restaurant team is known for closing shop for months to travel and discover new ingredients and develop new dishes 鈥 Mr. Roca created a dessert in homage to Chile鈥檚 celebrated poet, Pablo Neruda. The dessert, called Oda al Caldillo de Congrio, is a dish made with edible paper printed with one of Mr. Neruda鈥檚 poems scented with the aroma of an old book. Mr. Roca said that he hasn鈥檛 yet thought of a follow-up to his effleurage series. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the best part,鈥 he said, 鈥渨here I don鈥檛 know what I鈥檓 doing next.鈥


INCIDENTAL INTELLIGENCE

El Celler de Can Roca, Can Sunyer, 4817007, Girona, Spain
+34 972-222-157
[email protected]
Rocambolesc, Santa Clara 50, 17001 Girona, Spain
+34 972-416-667