Tapas cookbook by El Bulli's Albert Adri - with easy-ish recipes
Albert Adrià is most famous for being one of the two brothers (along with Ferran) behind El Bulli in Spain. The restaurant closed in 2011 but its influence is still felt because it’s where many of the modernist (also called molecular) techniques that are commonplace today, such as spherification, foams and airs, were developed or incorporated into fine dining.
While Ferran is probably the better known of the two – he was the one who was interviewed most frequently – Albert is very well regarded by fellow chefs and restaurateurs for his creativity and skills in the pastry kitchen. He has written two incredibly beautiful dessert books but the recipes are so complicated they are almost entirely useless for most home cooks, and the ones in the El Bulli cookbooks, which the brothers co-wrote, are just as difficult.Tapas – Tickets Cuisine, with recipes from the Adriàs’ Tickets restaurant in Barcelona, is much more accessible.
That’s not to say the dishes won’t take effort. For some recipes, you’ll need a scale that weighs increments of a tenth of a gram; several of them call for difficult-to-find ingredients such as calcium salt, calcium gluconolactate, alginate or specific types of flour or produce; and you’re going to have to find some way of calculating if the olive oil in your pantry has precisely 0.4 per cent acidity.
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