Categories: FoodKochiLifestyle

Spice Route Culinary Competition: By a Different Set of Rules

KOCHI:
Judging a cooking competition is demanding in the most standardised of settings. A contest of chefs as unique as that at the Spice Route Culinary Festival required judging parameters just as creative, the competition’s jury said.
“With such a novel festival and a very specific theme, the standard rules had to be tweaked to help create a relatively level playing field for the cuisines of the 15 different countries that took part,” said Chef Vijay Nagpal, who chaired the jury.
In nearly four decades as a chef, Nagpal said he had never overseen such a competition. “It was such harder to judge than standard black box competitions because we were not just choosing between chefs and dishes, we were comparing cultures,” he said.
A neutral set of requirements was needed, accounting for the challenge of blending the spices of Kerala with the diverse cuisines of the participant Spice Route countries. The most stringent rule was that 80 per cent of the ingredients had to be sourced locally.
“What resulted was an interesting mix of the classical and the contemporary,” said Chef Debraj Bhaumik, executive chef at Mahendra Holidays Resorts India Ltd. “Though they had to track back to the Spice Route, the contestants used creative, innovative ways to recreate dishes from their homelands.”
Though marks were awarded for such generic criteria as plating, presentation, taste, texture, hygiene, among others, the standards were not absolute and focused on originality.
“This highlights the difference between domestic cooks and chefs. The former are reason-oriented while the latter are jacks of all cuisines and know what would and would not work,” said Chef Montu Saini, executive chef to the President of India.
“Out of this experimentation comes learning and discovery, which is the them
e for this wonderful festival. The main aim was for diverse cuisines, peoples and cultures to learn about each other from each other,” he added.
“Kerala tourism and UNESCO must be commended for organising such a unique event. One hopes it will be a regular fixture on the tourist calendar,” Chef Bhaumik said.
If the crowds and questions raised during the four-day festival are anything to go by, the benefits to the tourism sector and hospitality industry of follow-up editions are undeniable.

NE Reporter

Recent Posts

IHCL Unveils New Taj Website to Enhance Guest Experience

MUMBAI:Indian Hotels Company (IHCL), India’s largest hospitality company, today announced the unveiling of its new…

3 mins ago

Experion Technologies & Twixor Forge Alliance to Revolutionize CX Automation

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM:Experion is excited to announce its strategic partnership with Twixor, the pioneering Actionable Intelligence Platform…

9 mins ago

UST to Train Over 25,000 Employees in Generative AI Technologies

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM:UST, a leading digital transformation solutions company, has launched a groundbreaking new initiative to train…

13 mins ago

Aster Medcity Introduces Latest Hip Replacement Technology

KOCHI:Aster Medcity introduced the first Direct Anterior approach in Total Hip Replacement (THR) in Kerala,…

21 mins ago

Amrita Hospital Installs Genrobotics’s Movement-augmenting G Gaiter

KOCHI:Industry Minister P. Rajeeve inaugurated the G Gaiter robot at Amrita Hospital in the city…

25 mins ago

Innovative Bed Revolutionizes Care for Bed-Ridden Patients

ALAPPUZHA:Dileep Kumar, a 47-year-old Non Resident Keralite (NRK) residing in Australia, has developed an ingenious…

32 mins ago

This website uses cookies.