Jumaat, 26 Ogos 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Features


‘Soul-searching’ chef Ferran Adria looks to Asia

Posted: 26 Aug 2011 12:12 AM PDT

Adria closed his El Bulli restaurant last month. — file pic

HONG KONG, Aug 26 — Groundbreaking chef Ferran Adria is on a quest to find the soul of Asian cooking, which could perhaps provide key hints for future gastronomic inventions from the man who brought the world culinary foam.

Considered the world's best chef by several critics, Adria and his El Bulli restaurant became synonymous with a transformation of traditional dishes into fun and funky culinary adventures.

But, pleading a need for transformation, he last month shut the restaurant down — at least in its current incarnation. It will re-open in 2014 as the El Bulli Foundation.

"I don't know much about Asia, and Asia could be an archive of ideas," Adria told Reuters in Hong Kong, on the sidelines of a trip promoting Spanish food, after a visit to Beijing and Shanghai.

"The gastronomical culture of China is very, very important. Simply to just get to know all the products that exist in China but not exist in the West would take months."

Roughly 15 trips to Japan have helped him understand the country and its cuisine a little, but this has merely whetted his appetite for learning about the rest of the continent.

"I've looked at the soul of the cooking and the reason of things (in Japan) and then I started looking at cooking techniques. But I haven't got to that point for the rest of Asia yet," he added.

At this stage he said his visit had almost sparked more questions than answers.

"What kinds of Chinese cuisine are there? Does imperial cuisine come from traditional cuisine or not? These are all the things we need to know," he said.

"You cannot get an influence from the cuisine of a country if you don't understand it. And to understand it, you've got to study it."

TAMING THE MONSTER

At the final El Bulli dinner last month Adria said the restaurant had become "a monster" that needed taming and transformation.

Its new incarnation, the El Bulli Foundation, will be a centre for new culinary inventions from the Catalan who gave the world paella made of Kellogg's Rice Krispies and gazpacho popsicles.

Asked about his comment, Adria chuckled but said that success requires transformation, especially once things becomes as complex as the restaurant had. But he is confident the foundation will again stamp his mark on the gastronomic world.

It will be open to the public, although reservations and opening hours will not be those of any usual eatery.

"(It) is to be a think tank where we will share everything that we create and divulge it around the world," he added. "It's going to be a place for reflection."

The sharing could extend to agreements with governments, most likely centring around products such as Iberian ham and olive oil at first, perhaps through exports. But no deals will be sealed until at 2013 at the earliest.

Other initiatives could include exchanges of cooking techniques and ideas, part of the reason behind his current culinary quest — although he dismisses the idea of popular "fusion" cuisine as "a lie" and something that always existed.

"Think for example of Chinese cuisine. What would it be without corn, without tomato, without peppers, without all those ingredients that came from America that weren't there before, or all the elements from the Arab world?" he said.

"That's fusion cooking."

Though Adria acknowledged that much about his future and that of the foundation remains unknown, he added that uncertainty often resulted in new questions that led to fresh ideas and initiatives.

"When somebody doesn't understand things very well, it means you're on the right path in terms of creativity," he said, noting that it had taken time before his culinary ideas caught on.

"When I first started in 1994 creating this new language in cuisine, people did not understand me. And there's still a lot of people who don't understand me," he laughed.

"But it's a good sign that if 20 years later it's still a controversial issue and a controversial subject. It means that it's still worth it, it's still avant garde." — Reuters

Mining, police work make most dangerous jobs in 2010

Posted: 25 Aug 2011 09:50 PM PDT

Participants gather around crosses honouring the workers who died on the Deepwater Horizon oil platform, during a service marking the one-year anniversary of the BP Oil Spill in Grand Isle, Louisiana April 20, 2011. — Reuters pic

WASHINGTON, Aug 26 — Disasters at a coal mine in West Virginia and aboard an oilrig operated by British Petroleum in the Gulf of Mexico again made mining one of the most dangerous American jobs in 2010, the US Bureau of Labour Statistics reported yesterday.

In private mining, fatal work injuries rose 74 per cent to 172 in 2010 from 99 a year earlier, according to the government agency's census of deaths.

Fatality rates for mining rose to 19.9 in 2010 from 12.4 in 2009 per 100,000 full-time equivalent workers.

The Deepwater Horizon oil rig off the Gulf coast, licensed to British Petroleum, exploded and killed 11 workers last April, causing the largest accidental oil spill into an ocean in history.

Also last April, an explosion at the Upper Big Branch coal Mine in West Virginia owned by Massey Energy Co killed 29 miners.

The police profession was not far behind mining as a dangerous occupation, with the number of fatalities increasing by 40 per cent to 134 last year from 96 in 2009.

Of the total police officers who died on the job in 2010, 57 cases involved highway incidents and 48 involved homicides.

A preliminary total of 4,547 fatal work injuries were recorded in the US in 2010, a slight drop from the final count of 4,551 fatalities in 2009, according to BLS.

When the Occupational Safety and Health Act passed in 1970, some 14,000 workers died each year on the job, according to a statement on the report from Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis.

Now an average of 12 workers die on the job every day.

"My constant focus is 'good jobs for everyone,' and safety is an essential part of that equation," Solis said.

As for causes, deaths from fires more than doubled to 109 in 2010 from 53 in 2009, the highest count since 2003.

Transportation accidents decreased slightly but still accounted for almost two of every five fatalities in 2010.

Workplace homicides declined to their lowest total ever recorded by the census, dropping seven per cent in 2010 to 506. That was a decline of more than 50 per cent from the high of 1,080 homicides reported in 1994. But workplace homicides involving women increased by 13 per cent last year. — Reuters

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

0 ulasan:

Catat Ulasan

 

Malaysia Insider Online

Copyright 2010 All Rights Reserved