Fermented plums and wild beach roses.
 

Our Dinner at Noma

Posted January 01, 2016
Share To
 
 

Last night, Lisa and i ate a special New Year's Eve dinner at Noma, reputed to be the 'World's Best Restaurant' for an astonishing four years in a row.

Well, it was.... perhaps the best word is.. unique.

Many years ago, (many, unfortunately), I was in Nagano, Japan. This was even before the winter Olympics were held there, so this was a LONG time ago.

In any event, I was invited to what was called a 'very special meal' at a Buddhist Monestary in the mountains outside Nagano.  There, I was served a multi-course dinner consisting entirely of vegetables.  This was not your typical 'vegetarian' meal. On the contrary, each dish, and there were many, was completely unique - and beautifully presented.

It was more like discovering an entire cuisine that you never knew existed before.  As though you were having Chinese food or Italian food for the very first time in your life.  

This was our experience at Noma last night. 

An entirely new and different cuisine.  14 or 15 courses of food and ways of preparing it that we had simply never tasted or experienced before.  That alone was more than worth the price of admission.

The philosophy behind Noma is that all of the ingredients are localy sourced.  Denmark has its gastronomic limits when it comes to the raw material - pine trees, clams, seaweed, moss - you get the idea. But Chef Rene Rezepi's creativity is astonishing.  Anyone (or almost anyone) can broil a chicken.  But try making roasted kelp ice cream - then try making it taste better than vanilla!  

The courses, and there were many, (although each one is small), ran the spectrum from sea urchin and walnuts to egg yolk, potato and nasturtium to sliced raw squid and kelp.  But to list them does not even begin to explain the incredible complexity with which they are prepared and presented.

One course, call simply Cabbage and Samphire was actually a kind of sandwich of watercress and samphire between two leaves of 'crispy cabbage' - two cabbage leaves that had been baked and prepared in a variety of ways for 26 hours - each.  The taste was, as I said, unlike anything we have ever eaten before.

The photo above, for example, was fermened plum and wild beach roses, but presented as a kind of disc roaring with flavor but the kind of flavors I simply have never had before.

All in all, an absolutely astonishing experience.

I have to, in writing this, thank my good friend Mark Bittman, the food critic for The New York Times, who help us enormously in securing this reservation. Even then, it took nearly a year of back and forth emails.  But believe me, it was worth it.  

Oh, and one more thing.

I lived in Copenhagen for about 6 months in the 1980s when I was working with Jan Stenbeck and we were building TV3, the first commercial TV station in Denmark (and VJ-driven!).

At that time, my taste in food was, well, let us say, a bit less developed. In fact, I ate at the same Chinese restaurant pretty much every day.  Remarkably, last night, in a walk along the Strogt, the walking street, Lisa and I found the restaurant. It is still in business!

Sadly, Noma will not be.  Having achieved the absolute pinnacle of success in the food world, Noma is closing its doors for the last time, one year from today - so get going! 

 


Recent Posts

Character-driven journalism is not new to newspapers, though it once was. It was once called The New Journalism in the 1960s — see Truman Capote or Tom Wolfe. Today it is industry standard. Why not take the Sopranos or Breaking Bad formula and marry it to TV journalism? (How many interviews have you seen in The Sopranos? How many Man on the Street soundbites have you seen in Breaking Bad?)


In a recent study by The Reuters Institute, 40% of Americans no longer watch or read the news at all. They find it too depressing. All doom and gloom.


There is a great deal of concern, well placed, that few people under the age of 30 watch TV news. Viewership of TV news in general has fallen off, so naturally, TV executives across the boards are searching for a solution. How to appeal to a demographic that spends most of their time on social media?


Share Page on: