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Ibiza opens exclusive whimsical dining club

Ibiza has a new place to see and be seen, a venue that promises to be the 2015 celebrity hang out of the White Island. And of course it comes with a price tag: €100 just to visit the terrace.

Ibiza opens exclusive whimsical dining club
The men behind former "best restaurant in the world" ElBulli have opened a new venture in Ibiza. Photo: Jamie Reina/AFP

Take top Spanish chefs Ferran and Albert Adria, the founder of circus troupe Cirque du Soleil, Guy Laliberte, and Japan's foremost pop artist Takashi Murakami and mix them all on Spain's Mediterranean party island of Ibiza.

The result is “Heart” — an explosion of taste, colour and sound designed to delight all the senses.

“This is not a restaurant, this is a dream turned into reality,” said Albert Adria, one of the founders of the project which opened on Tuesday and runs until September.

“A dream of many people. We have sound technicians, image technicians, make up artists, wardrobe masters,” he told AFP during a preview party at the luxury hotel in Ibiza where the event is held.

Photo: Jaime Reina/AFP

Around him a group of hooded youths performed urban dance routines as a DJ spun tunes and guests munched on Peruvian, Mexican, Japanese and Thai fusion cuisine surrounded by sculptures and video installations.

“It is a very bold project which combines three things that normally don't mix: cuisine and art with entertainment,” said Laliberte, a former stilt-walker and fire-eater.

“It is totally different from Cirque du Soleil, it is more in the spirit of Ibiza,” added the 55-year-old, whose circus troupe and its whimsical plots have toured all over the world.

The idea for the project was born from Laliberte and the Adria brothers' shared passion for art and cuisine.

Laliberte met the chefs over a decade ago when he ate at their award-winning elBulli restaurant, which closed in 2011, and they started work on “Heart” two years ago.

Murakami, whose sculptures combine Japanese traditional art with a “manga” aesthetic, joined the project later, drawn by Laliberte's creativity.

“I met him a year ago in Tokyo. He had brought one of his big Cirque du Soleil shows and it brought tears to my eyes I cried from the emotion of it all,” he said, while on the stage nearby a painter worked on the body of a scantily-clad model.

'Too big to tour'

Murakami's works mix with those of New York artist Dan Graham and France's Miguel Chevalier, who created two multimedia installations for “Heart”.

One of them, “Fractal Flowers”, is a virtual garden where flowers evolve into new shapes when they die. The installation is run by a computer programme and it uses motion sensors to interact with the public.

“In every age artists appropriate the tools of the era and art in the 21st Century can be done with the tools that we use every day for the Internet,” said Chevalier.

Photo: Jaime Reina/AFP

In a vast terrace decorated like a street market overlooking the luxurious yachts in the port, chefs reinterpreted world street foods with a sophisticated touch including watermelon infused in sangria, parmesan cheese pizza, tacos al pastor and oysters with soy sauce.

Inside the elegant indoor dining room, the offer is even more sophisticated. There, guests can make a gastronomic journey through five worlds – the Iberian, Mexico, Oriental, traditional Japanese and Japanese food with a South American twist known as “nikkei”.

But that comes at a price. Mere access to the terrace will set you back €100 ($110) while to have dinner inside, see the show and party until sunrise starts at €315 per person.

“Heart” will be open for just 77 days this year, said Alberto Adria, coinciding with the high season in Ibiza which draws celebrities from around the world. It is already almost fully booked.

After September there are no plans to set up “Heart” somewhere else. “It is too big to take it on tour, I don't even want to think about it,” said Albert Adria.

Laliberte said the project stems from “a search for emotion, and the pleasure of working with these people and their creativity.”

“Though we also want commercial success,” added the showman, who in April sold a controlling stake in Cirque du Soleil to American and Chinese investors.

By Anna CUENCA

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FOOD AND DRINK

Why do they pour cider like that in Spain’s Asturias?

The green northern region’s drink of choice is cider but it’s the method waiters have of pouring it from a great height that catches the attention of ‘out-ciders’.

Why do they pour cider like that in Spain's Asturias?

They say Asturian blood is 50 percent water and 50 percent cider, and given the 40 million bottles produced every year in the region, it doesn’t seem too hard to believe.

However, it’s the method of serving cider in Asturias which really captures the imagination. 

The bottle will either come attached to a contraption which sucks up the cider and splurts it into a wide but thin-rimmed glass.

Or the waiter will come out every few minutes to grab your bottle and glass, lift the former high up with one arm and the latter down low around waist height before pouring some of the cider into the glass from at an arm’s length. 

There’s even a verb for this action – escanciar – to decant.  

The objective is for the cider to be shaken and aerated so that its natural carbon dioxide ‘awakens’.

When it is poured from above and hits the glass, carbon dioxide bubbles are produced that make the aroma of the cider come alive.

It’s good and normal for there to be splashback when pouring Asturian cider, but the aim is still to get most of it in the glass. (Photo by MIGUEL RIOPA / AFP)

These bubbles go away quickly so once served, the customer should quickly drink the culín (small bottom) up in one swig. 

The action of escanciar imitates how cider would be traditionally served when it went directly from big oak barrels to the glass, as cider has been the drink of choice in Asturians since before Roman times. 

READ ALSO: Why Spaniards’ habit of drinking alcohol every day is surprisingly healthy

This is after all natural cider which doesn’t come with the sugar, additives and pre-carbonated mixes of brands such as Strongbow, Magners or Kopparberg.

“It took me some time to get the hang of pouring cider, I missed the mark a lot, and my arm used to get very tired at first,” a Latin American waitress at a bar in Gijón told The Local Spain. 

Many sidrerías (cider houses) and restaurants have cylindrical tubes on wheels where escanciadores (the waiters in charge of pouring cider) can put the glass in to avoid making a mess on the floor or splashing customers, as there is always some splatter even if they don’t completely miss the mark. 

A waiter pours cider for customers at a cider bar in the northern Spanish city of Oviedo (Photo by RAFA RIVAS / AFP)

The more old-school chigres (cider house in Asturian) prefer to have sawdust all over the floor to absorb the spilt cider.

To pour, tirar (throw) or escanciar (decant) cider like an Asturian, you should tilt the bottle slowly from above and aim for the cider to hit the top part of the inside side of the glass, which has to be held at a 45-degree angle. It’s this that brings out the effervescence out in la sidra natural.  

So when you visit the beautiful region of Asturias and you tuck into their famously ample servings of fabada asturiana (Asturian bean stew) or cachopo (meat, cheese and ham all together in breadcrumbs), washed down with one or two bottles of sidra, now you’ll understand what’s behind this eye-catching tradition.

READ ALSO: Eight fascinating facts about Spain’s Asturias region

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