So what's it like eating at Noma?

publication date: Apr 27, 2010
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author/source: Fiona Beckett
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Three years ago when I ate at Noma I predicted Rene Redzepi could achieve "the sort of super-stardom enjoyed by Ferran Adria, Thomas Keller and Heston Blumenthal." Yesterday he overtook all three of them when Noma was proclaimed the World's Best Restaurant in The World's 50 Best Restaurant Awards. Here's my account of what makes this extraordinary restaurant so special. (I'll give you an update when I return there in June!)


It’s not often you come across a restaurant which is so strikingly different and original it takes your breath away. Let alone one that is run by a chef who is just 29. But that’s exactly what happened to me a few days ago.



Noma is not new - it opened in 2003 -but has been gradually creeping up on the radar as not only Denmark’s best restaurant, not only one of Scandinavia's but, at the risk of hyperbole, one of the world’s best. Certainly one of the best I’ve been to.

Its incredibly talented chef René Redzepi has cooked at The French Laundry, El Bulli and Le Jardin des Sens in Montpellier but is one of those rare chefs who doesn’t simply seek to recreate the dishes and techniques he’s learnt back in his own country. His cooking, which like all great chefs, doesn’t rely just on flavour and visual appeal but on temperature and texture is evolving so fast that his food already looks different from the pictures in his newly published cookbook Noma. He’s (mercifully) done foams and moved on.

He pays respect to molecular gastronomy but his food isn’t remotely gimmicky. He eschews expensive international ingredients in favour of the unique and indigenous ingredients, traditions and techniques of his part of the world. Despite his use of unusual and quite challenging ingredients it’s not remotely taxing to eat in his restaurant. It is a meal not a performance. The surroundings overlooking the deep blue water of the Inderhavnen are beautiful, the building clean and spare. As you can tell, I really loved it.


For those who are not lovers of blow-by-blow meal descriptions, I apologise but the food was so extraordinary that this is an experience I would love you to share. Even though the food and wine pairings didn’t always reach the same heights as the food.



An interesting postscript: During our visit we learnt a Time magazine reporter had apparently just spent five days with Redzepi and his suppliers (to his slight bemusement). Food and Wine magazine had also recently visited twice. The coverage could propel Redzepi towards the sort of super-stardom enjoyed by Ferran Adria, Thomas Keller and Heston Blumenthal. Book now while you can still get in . . .

Noma’s website is at www.noma.dk Reservations can be taken on (+45) 3296 3297 or booking@noma.dk


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