Hindustan Times (East UP)

COVID A PERIOD FOR REDISCOVER­Y, SAY STAR CHEFS

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Recognisin­g the impact of the pandemic, Michelin star chefs Gaggan Anand and Massimo Bottura, and Indian chef Ritu Dalmia discussed the lockdown as a period of reinventio­n and discovery and, most importantl­y, as a wake-up call.

“Covid-19 has been a big threat to fine dining,” Anand said. Unfortunat­ely that was neither recognised nor addressed by the government, Dalmia added. “We have to now live with what remains. These are rare and precious days, with silence and stillness, and we have to do something to deserve them,” Bottura added.

The act of cooking is an ethical choice. Let’s start asking where our food comes from, and how to secure its future. That was the Italian master chef Massimo Bottura, best known for the three-Michelin-starred restaurant Osteria Francescan­a in Modena, and his pandemicer­a Instagram series Kitchen Quarantine, speaking at the Hindustan Times Leadership Summit on Thursday.

Recognisin­g that a pandemic-era world has given everyone a newfound relationsh­ip with food — some have turned to it for comfort, others have taken to it to calm strained nerves, and many have cooked more variedly than before — Bottura, the Thailand-based Indian chef Gaggan Anand, best known for his two-Michelin-starred restaurant Gaggan, and the Indian chef Ritu Dalmia discussed the lockdown as a period of reinventio­n and discovery and, most importantl­y, as a wake-up call.

“Covid-19 [disease] has been a big threat to fine dining,” Anand said. “Restaurant­s are closing. Chefs I know are jobless.” Unfortunat­ely that was neither recognised nor addressed by the government, Dalmia added, going on to talk about how restaurant­s in India were left to bear the brunt of the panthe demic on their own. “We have to now live with what remains. These are rare and precious days, with silence and stillness, and we have to do something to deserve them,” Bottura told Dalmia, who asked him about his efforts at giving back even while running a world-class restaurant and a guesthouse.

Bottura also discussed the return of simplicity. During the lockdown in Italy, Bottura and his family — his wife Lara and children Alexa and Charlie — started a series called Kitchen Quarantine to showcase easy-to-replicate recipes. “One of the things I did during this period is ask myself a lot of questions,”

Bottura said. “What is the purpose of a restaurant in the 21st century? Is it a place to have a meal… a place that promotes culture, connects to agricultur­e, promotes education, learning, growth. These connection­s are important to keep us from being isolated in our kitchens, to keep us connected to our communitie­s and the world.”

Speaking about the soup kitchens run by the humanistic, cultural project Food for Soul started by his wife and him, Bottura said that chefs could indeed make a difference in the world by choosing what they serve at the table. “[Chefs] can affect agricultur­e, tourism, culture...” he said. Asked how the pandemic was likely to change our world view when it came to food, Anand said, “We are living in a world waiting for hope. Covid is a time to rediscover our culture. The whole idea of pickling was all about avoiding waste.” The real challenge now, he added, would be for every chef to stop and think about how they wanted to go forward. “Do we go back to what we were doing? Or do we rethink.”

“If you look at the last 20 years, social media, microwave ovens and the fast-food culture became part of society,” he added. “But people started cooking at home during Covid. Making an egg… which was difficult in modern world of the workaholic. These people can now recognise chefs as important people in society. Not just a doctor or an army man, but chefs, especially in India, where chefs are in the last category of choice in career,” he said.

Speaking of the act of cooking as an ethical choice, Bottura pointed out that we ought to “start asking ourselves where our food comes from”. “Better food education means a better future for food. [There is a need to] re-educate adults about how to shop, cook and eat. Remind the public to use their voice through what they have chosen to buy. Can we encourage a food system that favours sustainabi­lity and reinforce local production, and respect for the produce and the people who make them,” he said.

The session ended with a round of rapidfire questions posed by Dalmia, in which Anand picked a Ferrari over a bicycle, tofu over paneer and ravioli over dimsum (that last, much to Bottura’s delight). Asked to name an ingredient he hated, Bottura picked arrogance and said that his favourite secret midnight snack was defrosted pizza, and, after some initial hesitation, picked Indian over Chinese takeaway. Jesus Christ is the historical figure he would most like to cook for, he added. “I would to make the best piece of bread ever, break it and share it with him,” he said.

If you look at the last 20 years, social media, microwave ovens and the fast-food culture became part of society... But people started cooking at home during Covid.

GAGGAN ANAND,

Thailand-based Indian chef

 ??  ?? Michelin-star chefs Gaggan Anand (left) and Massimo Bottura.
Michelin-star chefs Gaggan Anand (left) and Massimo Bottura.
 ?? HT PHOTO ??
HT PHOTO

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