China Daily Global Edition (USA)

The LA restaurant­s that set out to stimulate all five senses

- By VERONIQUE DUPONT in Los Angeles

At Vespertine, the last word in outlandish eating in Los Angeles, the staff are on a mission to “disrupt the course of the modern restaurant” as pioneers of the immersive culinary scene.

Something of an overnight sensation in southern California, the eatery was propelled to the top of Los Angeles Times critic Jonathan Gold’s prestigiou­s annual rankings soon after its launch last year.

From the volcanic stone crockery and chefs’ aprons woven on a loom used for making Samurai garments, to the attentive troupe of waiters dressed in monastic black, everything has been orchestrat­ed to stimulate much more than just the taste buds.

“We more or less created and synthesize­d the world that you’re stepping into,” says chef Jordan Kahn, hair swept into a raven-black curtain on one side, and shaved on the other.

“We want you to wander around and experience it however you want.”

In LA’s thriving foodie scene, Vespertine has emerged as one of a new generation of restaurant­s where the experience of eating is matched by an equally sumptuous feast for the other senses.

Dialogue, a tasting menu restaurant in nearby Santa Monica, promises an experience that “plays on the senses and emotions”, while adventurou­s diners in Beverly Hills can try Somni, which is named after the Catalan word for “dream”.

Even old hands like Austrian celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck, the head of a gastronomi­c empire, are getting in on this high-concept culinary highwire act.

His The Rogue Experience — an eight-seat counter in West Hollywood where the tasting menu changes periodical­ly — aims to “challenge expectatio­ns and push the boundaries for the future of food”.

Four-act drama

Vespertine’s Kahn says he was inspired to open up a shop when he happened upon an odd glass building in west Los Angeles with an exoskeleto­n of oxidized metal that has become known as “The Waffle”.

He contacted the architect to propose opening a restaurant where the objets d’art would serve as the inspiratio­n for the cuisine, rather than the other way around.

A meal at Vespertine is a four-act drama that begins with a welcome glass of champagne at the half-Bauhaus, half-Japanese garden inspired eatery.

Kahn greets diners in a kitchen worthy of an interior decoration magazine before they are escorted to the openair lounge on the top floor.

There, customers enjoy a sparkling wine aperitif infused with California­n pine spines and topped with an exotic flower, seaweed chips and a biscuit of charred onions and black currant.

In the dining room, guests taste 15 dishes. Kahn says his work is influenced by the molecular gastronomy of Spanish chef Ferran Adria and the avant-garde Chicago restaurant Alinea, where he cut his culinary teeth.

The menu includes scallops with marrow and slices of white asparagus and a rice pudding with trout eggs and sunflower petals.

Dessert is marshmallo­ws sprayed with a buckwheat cream, jasmine sprouts, rhubarb and a carrot confit with blackcurra­nt coulis. Everything is washed down with biodynamic wines or kombucha cocktails.

Navigating the plate can be a game of hide and seek, with diners required to lift leaves or flowers to find the turbot or turkey underneath, or plungdinin­g ing the fork blindly into bowls that are partly closed over.

Close attention

Vespertine prides itself on paying close attention to each diner, says Kahn, who encourages his waiters to assess guests’ eating habits, their dominant hand, mood and desire to converse.

Proponents lap up the eccentrici­ty of the immersive scene, but its detractors are often put off by what they see as the pretentiou­s atmosphere, a tendency for overly sweet cuisine and the exorbitant prices — up to $400 per head in LA.

But it’s not a uniquely southern California thing.

Ultraviole­t in Shanghai outdoes even the wackiest LA restaurant with its 360-degree videos and music piped into the dining room aromas for the appreciate. Spain’s El Celler de Can Roca, named best restaurant in the world in several surveys, dazzled with its El Somni banquet, a culinary “opera” on a round table surrounded by a spherical theater screen. Heston Blumenthal’s The Fat Duck, in southern England, offers diners the Sound of the Sea, a seafood dish served with an iPod that provides a soundtrack of crashing waves as they eat. Food can appear to take a back seat amid all this ostentatio­n, but Kahn insists that the dining experience is about more than what’s on the plate. “Out of the 20 meals you have had in the past six months, how many of the dishes do you remember?” he asks rhetorical­ly. “Maybe one or two and, at the end of the day, how important was the food? The important thing was the connection that you felt — and that’s longlastin­g.” along with guests to

 ?? AFP ?? Chefs prepare dishes at Vespertine restaurant in California. It’s among a new generation of restaurant­s where the experience of eating is matched by an equally sumptuous feast for the other senses.
AFP Chefs prepare dishes at Vespertine restaurant in California. It’s among a new generation of restaurant­s where the experience of eating is matched by an equally sumptuous feast for the other senses.

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