The Peak (Singapore)

SOUNDS GOOD

Fine dining chefs rewriting festival grub standards.

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Trade up soggy nachos and lukewarm beer for gastronomi­cal delights at your next music festival.

Charcoal-grilled squid stuffed with northern Thai sausage and served with marinated banana blossoms; and smoked sea bass relish layered atop seasonal greens. One Michelin-starred Bangkok restaurant 80/20 impresses with its refined take on Thailand’s folk recipes. The head-turning dishes? They are not in the restaurant’s dining room. Instead, you will find them in the open wildness of Wonderfrui­t, Asia’s largest music festival.

Once synonymous with limp hot dogs, sustenance at festivals has clearly evolved – and it is a welcome change.

Of course, this isn’t the first time fine dining chefs have found success on the unlikely stage of music festivals. Dave Pynt, chef-owner of one Michelin-starred modern Australian barbecue restaurant Burnt Ends, collaborat­ed on a four-hands dinner at

ZoukOut Singapore 2018, and B-EAT by Las Vegas famously wrangled fine dining chefs, including executive chef Christophe De Lellis of Joel Robuchon MGM Grand, at Tomorrowla­nd.

It’s easy to list the reasons why chefs are taking to the platform, despite the less-than-stellar kitchen conditions and having to cater to an overwhelmi­ng number of people. Here, cultures collide, ideas are exchanged and, more evidently, it is a dazzling spotlight.

According to marketing manager Becka Whiteley of UK’s Shambala Festival, following the event’s decision to go meat-free in 2016, “Seventy-five per cent of surveyed attendees reduced their meat and fish intake.” So, we can only imagine what effect Wonderfrui­t, a festival with wellness and sustainabi­lity as its core ethos, will have. Its 2018 edition alone saw an internatio­nal audience of over 17,000.

What ultimately draws people and chefs back appears to be something more fundamenta­l, and what these music festivals have stood for since their inception. Chef-owner of Cloudstree­t Rishi Naleendra, who cooked at Wonderfrui­t 2019, sums its aptly: “It’s a different world. No one judges anyone. You can be yourself, truly.”

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Sustenance at music fests may now mean a Michelinst­arred multi-course affair.
NO MORE HOT DOGS Sustenance at music fests may now mean a Michelinst­arred multi-course affair.

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