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The Basque Country: the Building of a Culinary Nation (en Fine Dining Lovers)

30/11/2020

In 2007, Eusko Ikaskuntza, a centre for the study of Basque culture, published the result of a census aiming to understand the cultural values that best represented the Basque Country. During 2005 and 2006, researchers asked inhabitants of the autonomous community in northern Spain which characteristics best defined local identity. The language (Euskera), of course, stood out in first place in the responses collected. But what surprised the researchers was the fact that gastronomy was one of the most cited aspects in the 22 discussion groups they organised.

Enlace: Fine Dining Lovers

Rafael Tonon. The study brought scientific evidence to something that is empirically perceived by those visiting the Basque Country - from the taxi driver to the owner of the vegetable stand, from the front desk staff to the barista in the coffee shop at the corner, food is a recurring theme in local conversations. Basques discuss gastronomy like people from other countries discuss football: very passionately. “For us, food is something that defines us,” explains chef Andoni Luis Aduriz, of Mugaritz, the acclaimed restaurant located in the small village of Errenteria.

Perhaps good evidence for this lies in the fact that San Sebastián (a small region with less than 3 million inhabitants) has the highest concentration of Michelin stars in a single city (Michelin’s 2020 guide granted 33 stars in the whole Basque Country). Or maybe it is the fact that it has the same representation in the World's 50 Best Restaurants list as gastro-power France: in the 2019 edition, five of the world's top restaurants were located in the Basque Country, within a radius of 50 kilometres. 

“It is such a strong local appreciation that people in San Sebastián are extremely proud of Arzak [the historical 3-Michelin-star restaurant] without ever having eaten there," says Aduriz. “This is because gastronomy is something we recognise as a heritage, but also as a driving force that helped define what Basque culture is in a global panorama.” 

And it has caught the world’s imagination: 40% of the people who visit the region do so because of its gastronomy; wine-related tourism is the second major motivation, according to official data. 

The Power of Food

Many countries have awakened to the power of gastronomy as an economic engine and magnet for tourists. But, above all, they see it as means to express their cultural values and identity ​​to the world. Over a decade ago, many countries began to treat cuisine like a national sport, relying on robust government investments, international symposiums (to bring international chefs and journalists) and seeking greater global recognition (which was previously the domain of traditional cuisines, such as French and Italian).

“It is something that we also started to appropriate ourselves, taking advantage of this in-depth relationship we developed around food,” Aduriz adds. “This cuisine that made us recognised worldwide is relatively new and has never been so rich and diverse. This food identity that we project to the world was built the day before yesterday.”

Yesterday, in the case of one of the oldest peoples in Europe, means the second half of the 19th century. The Basque Country had its first contact with haute cuisine when the Gipuzkoa region (and San Sebastián, in particular) became a summer resort for the European aristocracy and upper bourgeoisie. “They used to come accompanied by their chefs and private cooks and, in case of eating out, demanded a high level of culinary quality and service,” explains Bittor Oroz, Deputy Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food. 

According to Oroz, the crossing between the devotion to the territory, the diverse variety of produce, and the tradition and quality of local ingredients allowed the explosion of a culinary innovation known as ‘Nueva Cocina Vasca’ (New Basque Cuisine) in the 70s. Trailblazer chefs such as Juan Mari Arzak and Pedro Subijana led this movement to put the Basque Country on the global gastronomy map. 

Since then, local rulers and businessmen have steadily raised the culinary flag higher to attract more attention to this autonomous community, investing in events (such as San Sebastián Gastronomika) and bringing in food leaders (from chefs to media). This became especially important following the actions of Euskadi Ta Askatasuna, the armed leftist Basque nationalist and separatist organisation better known by the acronym ETA, which made headlines all over the world.

In 40 years, the group killed more than 800 people and spread a violent campaign of bombing, assassinations, and kidnappings. Its activities came to an end in 2018, however, when ETA made public a letter stating that it had "completely dissolved all its structures." And with its gastronomy (and, consequently, its identity values) further recognised worldwide, the Basque Country was able once again to gain the world's attention. This time in a very positive way.

Gastronomy Society 

“The adoption of gastronomy as local soft power not only affected our image and our international presence, but also influenced our local pride and appreciation, for our own internal dynamics as a society, which has not ceased to be contoured in our recent history,” Oroz explains. During the Franco dictatorship, Basque cultural expressions, such as its language and celebrations, were prohibited. Inside the home, however, families resisted with their food.

It is proof that Basque cuisine is hardly represented by the fine dining restaurants that most people around the world are aware of. “It permeates our whole society: bars, small family restaurants, gastronomy societies - a constellation of places and moments that have played a fundamental role in the softening of positions and generated the dialogue that marked the egalitarianism of Basque society,” says Oroz. 

The region is home to more than 1,500 txokos, or culinary societies, which have historically served as venues for people to gather for company, conversation and food away from the home. “Food, along with the value of the community, is a pillar of our culture. One cannot be understood without the other,” says chef Josean Alija of Nerua, the acclaimed restaurant at Guggenheim Bilbao

According to him, for Basques, the act of eating does not begin at the table, but much earlier. “It is the process that interests us: choosing what we are going to cook, going to the market to get the ingredients, choosing the product carefully, looking for the best recipe, cooking it, setting the table... and of course, sharing it with the people who are close to us,” he says. 

There are so many factors involved in this act that, in the end, the entire chain acquires a much larger volume. The local food and gastronomy value chain represents almost 11% of GDP and directly employs 96,000 people. “This is a differentiating element of our culture that has attracted a lot of attention outside our borders, and that we have promoted because it is a sign of our identity,” he concludes. 

Culinary Nation

Although food represented an innate cultural value, there was no structured approach to local gastronomy, which encompassed a broader understanding of it. "For us, gastronomy is a natural, organic value, but something was missing that could connect the dots: what is the product, its transformation in the chain, the entire catering sector, tourism, identity, innovation, social projects," says Joxe Mari Aizega, director of the Basque Culinary Center, a professional training and research body that helped to place Basque cuisine on the international stage.

This is something that has changed dramatically in recent years. In 2018, when Bilbao was chosen to host the annual World’s 50 Best Restaurants awards, the organisation board came up with the idea of rebranding the Basque Country as a Culinary Nation for the international audience they would welcome. "A person from the Bizkaia delegation, very close to entrepreneurship, gave me a book that focused on how Israel managed to build a whole environment around innovation and new startups called Startup Nation. That helped define the country's international image, and we thought that Culinary Nation could be something very conducive to defining Basque Country. We decided to adopt it,” Aizega recalls. 

According to Bittor Oroz, the idea of the Culinary Nation worked as a formidable introduction to the wider food industry in the Basque Country. "It is the visible face of the entire agri-food value chain we value so much. It represents the tip of an iceberg made up of our producers, our small companies, restaurants, gastronomy societies, small businesses, and our lifestyle."

Chef Andoni Luis Aduriz agrees that what is happening in the Basque Country is a significant improvement based on gastronomy. "I believe there are more interesting than negative things happening now [during this pandemic], such as in the universe of cider, with txakoli [the local wine]. Today we have much better cheeses than we had years ago, for example.”

For Aduriz, the ripple effect has boosted the entire chain, allowing the whole food industry to rise in the Basque Country. "If you rely on cooks as your spearheads, you can win the battle; but you will only win the war if you have the society as your base," he explains. "Don’t worry only about having restaurants in the 50 Best list, or having restaurants in the Michelin Guide. But worry that your society cares deeply about its food.” This is maybe the only way to build up a culinary nation. 



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