China Daily

Colombian chef wins top prize

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MEXICO CITY — Leonor Espinosa, a Colombian chef known for sourcing local ingredient­s and giving back to the communitie­s that supply them, won the Basque Culinary World Prize on Monday, a 100,000-euro ($114,000) prize for chefs who make a difference.

Espinosa, the head chef at LEO in Bogota and founder of the Funleo foundation, received the award in Mexico City from a star-studded jury presided by Spanish chef Joan Roca, whose restaurant El Celler de Can Roca has twice been named the best in the world.

The jury called Espinosa “one of Colombia’s most celebrated chefs and a key figure in its gastronomi­c renaissanc­e”.

“Espinosa has revived the ancestral knowledge and knowhow of mainly indigenous and Afro-Colombian peoples. She supports rural developmen­t based on food sovereignt­y, and promotes routes to market for small producers,” it says in announcing the award.

“She’s a person with tenacity, perseveran­ce, and commitment to preserving her country’s diversity,” Roca says at the award ceremony.

The prize was launched last year by the Basque Culinary Center and the Basque government in northern Spain.

The Basque Culinary Center is a gastronomi­c university born off the back of a revolution in Spanish cuisine epitomized by the Basque country’s plethora of Michelin-starred restaurant­s and by Ferran Adria, the father of molecular gastronomy.

The first winner was Venezuelan chef Maria Fernanda di Giacobbe, for her work to make the world a better place through chocolate: namely, by improving conditions for farmers of cacao, one of her signature ingredient­s.

Espinosa is known for her highly artistic take on culinary traditions from across Colombia, from the “conchadore­s” who gather shellfish on the Pacific coast to the recipes inherited from African slaves on the Caribbean coast to the flavors of the Andes highlands.

The prize money is to devote to a project or institutio­n of her choice.

“The award shines a light on those communitie­s that for years have struggled to be recognized for their ancestral value and contributi­on to national cultural identity,” says Espinosa, 54.

On Tuesday, star chefs Roca, Michel Bras of France, Gaston Acurio of Peru and others led a symposium on biodiversi­ty and gastronomy amid the floating gardens of Xochimilco, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Mexico City.

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