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BERLIN

The Best of Berlin in March

This month Exberliner, Berlin's leading English-language magazine, tells you where to get your fix for quality hot sauces and chocolates.

The Best of Berlin in March
Photo: Exberliner

Hot sauce dealers

In a country where mild food and sensitive palates are endemic, Pfefferhaus has brought some spice to the locals’ eating habits. To the chili community that has been hiding on the internet for years: hide no more. To the expats who miss a bit of piquancy: rejoice! At Pfefferhaus, you’ll find it all: from BBQ and hot sauces to an amazing array of treats (chili-flavoured chocolate, anyone?)to wasabi nuts, chips and even the homegrown but hard-to-find Cola Rebell drink. And the hotsauces are the real deal, specially imported from the U.S. and Central and South America. The current bestseller is the (German-produced) Suicide Sauce’s Honey Garlic Hot Sauce Stinger(€7.90), but real alpha males will definitely want to try the Ass Reaper (€9.50) or Sudden Death(€9.95). If you’re still wary of exposing your palate to such extremes, just repeat owner Felix Eichholtz’s mantra: “It’s fun! It releases endorphins!” His own favourite is a hot sauce from CostaRica: Melinda’s Scotch Bonnet (€5,50). Taste it and weep…

Pfefferhaus | Dircksenstr. Bogen 94, Mitte, S+U-Bhf Alexanderplatz, Mon-Sat 11-20, www.pfefferhaus.de

Chocoland

Ritter Sport – the square chocolate bar made to fit in football fans’ pockets – has come a long way since Clara and Alfred Ritter founded the first factory in Bad Cannstatt, near Stuttgart, in 1912. As if worldwide distribution, 26 regular flavours and even a new organic line weren’t enough, the company is now displaying ambitions of Willie Wonka-esque proportions: Bunte Schokowelt, a colourful,four-storey shop, café and showroom in one, right in the touristy heart of Berlin Mitte. The pillar of giant Ritter Sport bars at the entrance is enough to make anyone’s mouth water – luckily, the consumption begins almost immediately. Just head to the “Schokolateria” cafe or the “Schokolounge” restaurant to satisfy your cravings with chocolate lasagne (€6.90), chocolate mousse cake (€2.50) and a cup of marzipan hot chocolate (or any other Ritter Sport flavour of your choice;€3.40). Kids are shown how to make their own chocolates in special workshops(€8 for a 75min lesson), while the real addicts can binge on Ritter Sport-labelled paraphernalia – from sport bags and t-shirts to office supplies. Top all this off with an educational stroll through the mini-museum,where you’ll be enlightened about chocolate-making and the family business history.Bunte Schokowelt may not be everyone’s cup of heiße Schokolade, but it’s enough to satiate even the fussiest Ritter Sport fan.

Bunte Schokowelt | Französische Str. 24, Mitte, U-Bhf Französische Str., Tel 030 2009 50830, Mon-Thu 10-20, Fri-Sat 10-22, Sun 10-18, www.ritter-sport.de

Puncture chic

In this age of ecological correctness, it’s hard not to slip up somewhere.Travelling by train, not plane, may score you some green points, but ifyou’re a meat-eater, your carbon footprint will be running rings around you.Electronic cars, it’s purported, are an environmentally friendly antidote to gas-guzzlers – bar one inconvenient truth: electricity often comes from burning coal. And trading four wheels for two offers a simple solution to pollution… but what if those wheels end up on the scrap heap?Jaap Wijnants’ Puncture Bags range adds a poetic twist to the concept of re-cycling: he resurrects defunct bicycle inner tubes by refashioning them into everyday objects. From wallets and laptop bags to bike saddles and furniture upholstery, each item bears the subtle hallmarks of its former life: puncture repair plasters, logos and serial numbers make the designs genuinely unique.The tomDK pencil case is particularly eye-catching: its curving lines and accentuated corners tame industrial materials into a precise, rounded form.Puncture Bags is ‘trashion’ as it should be. It’s environmentally awareyet tailored to consumers’ needs: a far cry from the bombastic constellations of bin liners and tin cans that have littered the catwalks since the 1990s. Puncture Bags bridges the difficult gap between elegance, functionality and durability. Jaap’s products appeal to the minimalist in allof us, but are also particular enough tobe distinctive. They’re much too special to ever throw away.

Puncture Bags | www.puncturebags.com Stockists: Schoene Schreibwaren, Niederbarnimstr. 6, Friedrichshain, U-BhfFrankfurter Tor; Not A Wooden Spoon, Oderberger Str. 2, Prenzlauer Berg, U-BhfEberswalderstr.; ETSY, www.etsy.com; DaWanda, www.en.dawanda.com

Superstore forsuper-people

Still missing that perfect pair of rainbow leopard-print Lycra leggings?Superstore will satisfy all your 1980s fashion craves. Tucked away in a backstreet of Mitte’s fashion district, this charming two-level vintage shop is run by a cheerful gang of international friends who share the store with La Kitchn, a space dedicated to cooking courses (in everything from Italian and Korean to “erotic” cuisine) and catering services. Everything here,from the gold-foil-covered walls to the disco ball and pink flamingo lamp,screams out extreme pop from lost decades. With his pink striped sweater,flowery waistcoat and puzzling haircut, which only the truly stylish canpull off, David, the American owner, fits right in. The perfect outfit for your next Berlin night out might combine that sparkly gold blouse, with its American footballer-sized shoulder pads, and a pair of yellow Bruno Magli stilettos; if it’s chilly, add the ‘solar system’ jacket complete with Saturn,Jupiter and spaceships. Accessorize with a pair of Varnets or Ray Ban style shades, gold-chain bracelets, and a spiked belt. But Superstore also displays some more conservative clothing, from preppy Hausfrau suits to pre-Wende East German casual (e.g. lozenge marqueted oversize jumpers on bleached skinnies). Punters should expect to pay between €40 and €50 fora pullover, and about €100 for a coat.

Superstore | Almstadtstr. 43 (via La Kitchn), Mitte, U-Bhf Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz,Mon-Sat 12-20, www.superstoreberlin.com, www.lakitchn.de

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FOOD AND DRINK

Danish chef wants to launch gourmet dining to stratosphere

Danish chef Rasmus Munk wants to take high-end cuisine to the edge of space, with plans to serve up a stratospheric dining experience in 2025, his restaurant said Thursday.

Danish chef wants to launch gourmet dining to stratosphere

“The expedition will take place aboard Space Perspective Spaceship Neptune, the world’s first carbon-neutral spaceship,” Alchemist, the Copenhagen restaurant that has earned Munk two Michelin stars, said in a statement.

“They will dine as they watch the sunrise over the Earth’s curvature” at an altitude of 100,000 feet (30,000 metres) above sea level, it said.

For $495,000 per ticket, six tourists will embark on a six-hour journey in a pressurised space capsule that will rise into the stratosphere in a hydrogen-filled “SpaceBalloon”.

The 32-year-old chef and self-confessed space enthusiast will be joining the trip.

READ ALSO: World-famous Copenhagen restaurant to close after 2024

Munk promises “dishes inspired by the role of space exploration during the last 60 years of human history, and the impact it has had on our society — both scientifically and philosophically”.

His menu will be restricted only by his inability to cook food over an open flame.

Many of the ingredients will be prepared on the ship from which the capsule is launched, according to Alchemist, which is ranked fifth among the world’s restaurants in 2023 according to the World’s Best 50 Restaurants guide.

In recent decades, Denmark has emerged as a gastronomical powerhouse on terra firma, with the Copenhagen restaurants Noma and Geranium both having held the title of the world’s best restaurant.

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