The Borneo Post

Not just pea soup: Restaurant award sparks pride in Dutch grub

- Richard Carter, Julie Capelle

AMSTERDAM: Best known abroad for its herring, deep-fried croque es, and sickly-sweet stroopwafe­ls, it’s fair to say the Netherland­s has not historical­ly been world-renowned for its cuisine.

But for the first time, a Michelin-starred restaurant in Amsterdam has been voted the world’s best on TripAdviso­r, further proof the food scene in the country is on the rise, according to its head chef.

With the exception of Irish oysters and Japanese wagyu beef, everything on the menu at the Bougainvil­le restaurant is local Dutch produce, chef Tim Golsteijn told AFP in his bustling kitchen just off Amsterdam’s main square.

“Dutch gastronomy has really been growing in the past 10 years, also because Amsterdam is becoming more and more of a big internatio­nal city,” said the 36-year-old, who was born and raised in the capital and describes himself as “100 percent Dutchie”.

“You can’t compare it to London or New York or Tokyo but we are ge ing there,” he told AFP, as his sous chefs chopped, sliced and stirred ready for another busy dinner service.

In 1958, there were only eight Michelin-starred restaurant­s in the whole country. But now the Netherland­s has forced its way into the world’s top 10, with 123 restaurant­s boasting a coveted star.

Golsteijn uses North Sea fish, local lobster and Dutch lamb, but also draws on culinary inspiratio­n from around the world -- reflecting the Dutch people’s history as seafarers and colonisers.

“From ages ago, we were travellers... we came back with spices, with coffee, with chocolate. We took that into our food culture,” he said.

But he is also taking down-toearth Dutch staples and elevating them to Michelin-star level.

For example, the restaurant serves kibbeling, a humble, deepfried fish bite snack found in beach cafes around the country, but with sea bass instead of the usual cod belly.

‘Heavy dishes’

Dutch food has an undeserved reputation, insists Isabelle Nelis, who runs culinary tours around Amsterdam.

“Most people think about heavy dishes like pea soup, or the dishes that we do in winter with the mashed potato, cabbage, sausage, but there is so much more,” she told AFP.

It’s not just food. Land reclaimed from the sea in the Netherland­s contains excellent minerals for wine-producing grapes and there is even a burgeoning champagne industry, said Nelis.

The food scene has changed greatly over the years and is now “alive and buzzing”, she said, helped by the cosmopolit­an nature of melting-pot Amsterdam.

Restaurant­s are serving some 180 different types of cuisine in Amsterdam, she said. “You can eat in every nationalit­y” in the world.

Eric Toner, the owner of the Bougainvil­le, said the quality of the Dutch food scene had changed beyond recognitio­n in recent decades.

“When I was young, decades ago, it was maybe one or two restaurant­s with a star in

Amsterdam. Maybe six or 10 in the whole of the Netherland­s. Now we have 24 or 26 in Amsterdam alone,” he said.

As a child growing up in the Netherland­s, “we ate a lot of meatballs, potatoes, vegetables and a lot of gravy over it. That was a normal dinner.”

But the next generation has much more refined tastes, helped by a greater choice of cuisines from around the world, he said.

“We have gone from a normal small country when everyone eats a big potato pan on the table... to an internatio­nal food culture,” he said.

The award made headlines around the Netherland­s but both Toner and head chef Golsteijn acknowledg­e that the TripAdviso­r award, based on customer reviews rather than profession­al critics, does not catapult their restaurant to the highest echelons of global gastronomy.

For Toner, it’s all about meeting customer expectatio­ns.

“I was completely flabbergas­ted. It’s an honour to win every prize,” he said.

“But I know also the downside of it. Expectatio­ns go up and when I say ‘What is the best restaurant in the world?’, I would not say my restaurant, I would say a three-star restaurant.”

The restaurant, within a hotel overlookin­g the Dam Square in Amsterdam, offers a five-course menu priced at 130 euros ($137).

For food guide Nelis, the Dutch should take more pride in their produce.

“We tend to complain a lot. We complain when it’s raining. When it’s nice weather, we say it’s too hot. And that’s the same with the food. We don’t pat ourselves on the back enough.” — AFP

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