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A tiny beach restaurant in an isolated South African fishing village was named the best in the world on Monday.
Chef Kobus van der Merwe, who did not begin to cook seriously until he was 30, forages every day for ingredients on the wild Atlantic shore of the Western Cape near his Wolfgat restaurant, where he also makes his own bread and butter.
Chef Kobus van der Merwe receives the award. /VCG Photo
Chef Kobus van der Merwe receives the award. /VCG Photo
The Wolfgat – whose six mostly female staff have no formal training – opened just two years ago in a 130-year-old cottage and cave on the beach at Paternoster.
Its seven-course tasting menu costs the equivalent of 53 euros (60 U.S. dollars), a fraction of what you would pay at a top Paris table.
But its humble setting, and Van der Merwe's belief in sustainable, back-to-basics cooking won over the judges of the inaugural World Restaurant Awards in the French capital.
With dishes such as twice-cooked laver (seaweed), angelfish with bokkom sambal and wild garlic masala, limpets, mussels and sea vegetables harvested within sight of its "stoep" (porch), Wolfgat also won the prize for best "Off-Map Destination."
Chef Kobus van der Merwe. /VCG Photo
Chef Kobus van der Merwe. /VCG Photo
The bearded Van der Merwe – a former journalist – said that apart from the influence of the subtle spices of local Cape Malay cooking, his philosophy was to "interfere as little as possible with the products, and to keep them pure, raw and untreated."
"It's hyper local cuisine but we try to come up with new flavors, like dune celery spice," he said.
Source(s): AFP