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Cooking with Liquid Nitrogen – Ferran Adria and Harold McGee

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Complete video at: http://fora.tv/2008/10/10/Ferran_Adria_A_Day_at_elBulli

Chef Ferran Adria, head chef of elBulli, and Harold McGee, author of On Food and Cooking, describe how liquid nitrogen is used in restaurant kitchens to create innovative dishes like alcohol sorbets and frozen pistachio puree truffles.

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No one can get into elBulli, Ferran Adria’s restaurant on the northeast coast of Spain. But plenty of people certainly try: every year, the restaurant receives over two million requests for only 8,000 seats during the six months it is open. For the other six months, Adria, who is proud to be called the “Salvador Dali of the Kitchen,” travels, dreams, and creates at his “food laboratory” in Barcelona, called elBulli Taller, where his team includes a chemist and an industrial designer who also design plates and serving utensils to go with the food.

No wonder, as Corby Kummer wrote in The Atlantic, “making the twisty two-hour drive from Barcelona for a dinner that ends well into the wee hours has become a notch on every foodie’s belt–perhaps the notch, given the international derby to get reservations.”

For mortals who won’t be making the trip soon–or who didn’t hit the lottery last year in the German contemporary-art exhibition Documenta, which flew two people at random per day to el Bulli to experience “the exhibition” that is dinner at elBulli–Adria has given the world A Day at elBulli: An Insight into the Ideas, Methods and Creativity of Ferran Adria.

This is the first book to take a behind-the-scenes look at the restaurant whose sources and methods every ambitious chef wants to know. It shows a full working day from dawn until the last late-night guests leave, using photographs, menus, recipes and diagrams that reveal the restaurant’s preparations, food philosophy, and surroundings. — NYPL

Ferran Adria began his culinary career washing dishes at a French restaurant. In 1984, at the age of 22, Adria joined the kitchen staff of elBulli, a traditional French restaurant. Eighteen months later, he became head chef. He soon began learning techniques from culinary masters and performing culinary experiments based on the use of fresh materials. In line with Adria ‘s experimental philosophy, he closes elBulli for six months every year to travel in search of new inspiration and perfect new recipes. In response to the question–can food be art? Adria has said, “That’s for other people to decide. Cooking is cooking. And if it exists alongside art, that’s wonderful.”

Harold McGee writes about the science of food and cooking. Twenty years after its first publication, the revised On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen was named best food reference of 2004 by the IACP and the James Beard Foundation. In 2005, Bon Appetit named McGee food writer of the year. In 2008, Time Magazine named him to its annual list of the world’s most influential people. McGee has written for many publications, including The World Book Encyclopedia, Nature, Food & Wine, and Fine Cooking and has appeared on public television’s “Diary of a Foodie” and on National Public Radio’s “All Things Considered,” “Fresh Air,” and “Science Friday.” He writes a monthly column, “The Curious Cook,” for The New York Times.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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18 responses to “Cooking with Liquid Nitrogen – Ferran Adria and Harold McGee”

  1. Paulino González González

    Estupendo, manipular nitrógeno liquido sin guantes, son medidas de
    seguridad “tipical spanish”

  2. jimmyshitbags

    i just read about some bloke blowing his hands off messing with this stuff
    trying to copy this.

  3. mccTV

    Ich sehe nur Ebay Werbung…. Was soll das?

  4. BillyEchoes

    this is not food at all….

  5. Joe Marra

    if they weren’t playing thay gay music I’d be able to hear the lady
    translating

  6. Josef Richter

    my only problem is those meals actually look pretty disgusting 🙂

  7. nayee9

    it’s not a song, it’s generic techno.

  8. Josef Richter

    @UKGUYDOWN well, it might be pretty good, I just said it LOOKS pretty
    disgusting 🙂

  9. luisfranciscanora

    momentary contact with liquid nitrogen is actually not dangerous as long as
    your skin is warm enough… and how do you know he’s not wearing goggles?

  10. p3rs0nan0ngrata

    Plane to Barcelona, car journey up mountain. 300 quid for food, plus money
    for drinks (and you will be having a different wine for each of the 30
    courses). Accommodation in Barcelona. Plane home. Bare in mind, that’s all
    just to have a meal. So, you might be able to afford it, but do you have
    enough money to just blow that amount as if you’re grabbing a Subway?

  11. quiktime

    what? you’re a retard. unless you’re talking about conductive gloves. but
    you weren’t. retard.

  12. ducos2008

    it’s good cooking? I don’t think so

  13. Adrián García

    Fantástico video en el que salen las grandes tecnicas de elBulli. Eres un
    genio Ferran, mereces ser lo que eres y mucho mas.

  14. mathiz439

    @luisfranciscanora It has to be hot as hell anyways.

  15. Eliphas Leary

    Ferran Adria is a friggin GENIUS! He’s the Thomas Alva Edison of haute
    cuisine!

  16. Kim Tyrone Agapito

    I want this video on my 1210 phone.

  17. simonhillwrexham

    The stuff this man does with food is amazing, he re-wrote the books on
    physics, gastronomy and how to cook, truly spectacular, however shock value
    is an important weapon in his arsenal. To the people or person who said his
    food is disgusting, you don’t get best chef in the world award or three
    michelin stars by being mediocre or bad, liquid nitrogen is proved to
    create better tasting frozen food because there is a shorter time of
    cooling it to frozen, plus the sorbets are remarkably smooth.

  18. Julio-Cesar Florez Zaplana

    its metal genius.

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