National Post

World’s best restaurant now burger, wine bar

- Laura Brehaut

At Noma, René Redzepi’s renowned Copenhagen restaurant, $500-tasting menus have given way to $25 cheeseburg­ers. While destinatio­n diners once waited with bated breath for reservatio­n openings, Noma’s post-lockdown iteration is somewhat more relaxed. The four-time world’s best restaurant, which has been closed since March 14, will reopen on May 21 as an outdoor, no reservatio­ns burger, beer and wine bar. Seafood, vegetarian and game season have been replaced, at least for the time being, by “burger season.”

With a view of the restaurant gardens in Christiani­a, Copenhagen’s freetown, guests will be able to choose from two menu items: a cheddar cheeseburg­er made with dry- aged flank steak “spiced up with beef garum ( a fermented sauce with roots in ancient Rome),” and a quinoa-tempeh veggie burger. ( The burgers cost roughly $ 25 for take- away; $30 to stay.)

“Both are juicy and packed with umami, with a little bit of magic from our fermentati­on cellar, served on a freshly baked potato bun developed by our friends at Gasoline Grill,” Noma says. The first step in its reopening, the outdoor wine bar “is something we are very excited about because it is completely new for us.”

Intended as a temporary measure, the Los Angeles Times reports that the restaurant plans to serve burgers for the next six to eight weeks. The bar will be open weekly from Thursday to Sunday between 1 p.m. and 9 p.m. Instead of the few dozen guests the restaurant once served each day, Redzepi reportedly expects to seat up to 500 — 60 at a time.

They may add other summer snacks to the menu “as ingredient­s come into season” — a fried chicken sandwich, crudités and ice cream — “but first, we open with a mighty burger,” Redzepi said.

From its high- concept food to a groundbrea­king fermentati­on lab helmed by Toronto-born chef David Zilber, Noma has become synonymous with innovation. Since Redzepi opened the restaurant in 2003, it helped shape the New Nordic culinary movement, which has gone on to influence food around the world. Shifting from a 20- course tasting menu to a two- burger wine bar may seem out of place, but going back to basics is precisely the point.

“We were like, ‘ Should we do an ant marinade with raw carrots to have that twist of who we are?’” Redzepi said. “But then I’m like, ‘ No, why should we do that right now?’ It’s about being together, it’s not about trying to be innovative.”

This isn’t the first time Noma has changed tack. In 2017, following the accolades and Michelin stars, Redzepi closed the restaurant and auctioned off all its contents with the intent of starting fresh. In the downtime, he took his team on the road for residencie­s in Mexico, Japan and Australia. Dubbed Noma 2.0, he reopened in its current lakefront iteration in 2018. Redzepi has yet to announce post-lockdown plans, and Noma isn’t accepting reservatio­ns.

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