The Asian Age

Star chefs in Mexico to defend biodiversi­ty aside

- Yussel Gonzalez

Mexico City: Star chefs from around the world gathered in Mexico City’s ancient floating gardens for a symposium on saving the world’s threatened biodiversi­ty, a bleak subject they peppered with breaks to savour the local cuisine.

Joan Roca of Spain, Michel Bras of France and Gaston Acurio of Peru were among the big-name chefs who took part in the event Tuesday at Xochimilco, a Unesco World Heritage Site crisscross­ed with natural canals and artificial islands first created by the Aztecs.

Munching on hand-made tortillas stuffed with organic beans and quesadilla­s made from local corn, participan­ts used the idyllic setting to tackle a grim problem: the threats that climate change, industrial agricultur­e and overexploi­tation pose to the world’s plant and animal life.

“I believe that solidarity is in a chef’s DNA, along with the desire to create a commitment to preserve the environmen­t and biodiversi­ty,” said Roca, whose restaurant El Celler de Can Roca has twice taken top place on the prestigiou­s list of the World’s 50 Best Restaurant­s.

The chefs were in town to pick the winner of the Basque Culinary World Prize, a 100,000-euro award for foodrelate­d projects that have made a positive difference beyond the kitchen.

Roca presided over the jury that named this year’s winner on Monday: Colombian chef Leonor Espinosa of the restaurant LEO in Bogota, who is known for sourcing local ingredient­s and giving back to the communitie­s that supply them.

That was also a key theme at the symposium.

To illustrate the point, participan­ts toured the lettuce and cactus fields of Xochimilco’s famous “chinampas”, artificial islands created with age-old agricultur­al techniques used by the Aztecs and other Mesoameric­an peoples.

The chinampas are one of the last reminders of how the Aztecs lived 500 years ago at the time the Spanish conquistad­ors arrived in the Americas, when Mexico City was mostly covered in water.

Today, the city has become a sprawling urban area of more than 20 million people.

Xochimilco is one of the area’s last vestiges of small-scale agricultur­e amid what the Mexican academic Refugio Rodriguez called “the growing urban stain of the Mexican capital”.

Seeking to help revive a more sustainabl­e kind of agricultur­e to supply the city’s food, some Mexican chefs have started sourcing fresh, organic ingredient­s straight from the chinampas.

They include the likes of Enrique Olvera, owner of the feted restaurant Pujol, and Ricardo Munoz Zurita, of “Azul y Oro”.

Munoz Zurita, whom Time magazine has called a “prophet” of preserving culinary tradition, called for a return to niche local ingredient­s such as native Mexican corn, instead of the mass-produced basket of produce that dominates the world’s supermarke­t aisles.

“We’re going to be the ambassador­s of critically endangered products. We have to start cooking with them so people don’t forget they exist,” he said.

To get to the event, which was held under a large thatch hangar, participan­ts ventured to an artificial island by boat, a trip of about 30 minutes.

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

 ??  ?? Picture of two clay vases used to cook, taken during a symposium on biodiversi­ty and gastronomy, amid the floating gardens of Xochimilco, a Unesco World Heritage Site in Mexico City
Picture of two clay vases used to cook, taken during a symposium on biodiversi­ty and gastronomy, amid the floating gardens of Xochimilco, a Unesco World Heritage Site in Mexico City

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India