This Artist Cookbook Has a Recipe for "Rain After Cloud"
The ache is equal parts contortion and confusion—like exiting a college lecture with the dizzying sensation that your neurons are actively stretching, or viewing an art exhibit that’s just barely outside of your grasp: You have the potential to understand it but you don’t—not fully, not yet.
Olafur Eliasson is a Danish-Icelandic artist best known for his large-scale installations involving the natural elements: In 1998, he colored a Berlin river green; in 2003, he rose a sun inside Turbine Hall at the Tate Modern; in 2008, he created four manmade waterfalls in New York City; in 2014, he recreated a riverbed at the Danish Louisiana Museum of Modern Art. As Gabe Ulla puts it, his works "make you take note of your place in the physical world."
As does cooking. As does eating. Is there a reminder as poignant of our physicality as our place in an ecosystem? Or as hunger? With that in mind, it's not counterintuitive that a world-renowned art studio would put out a cookbook.
Their lunch—which is the source of many of the book's 100+ mostly vegetarian recipes—is the farthest from "sad desk" you can get: It's an hour-long break in which every one of the ninety employees sit around communal tables for, what Alice Waters writes in the foreword, "a simply, nourishing and emphatically delicious family-style meal" with dishes like Sri Lankan Cauliflower Sambal and Pasta e Ceci.
As Eliasson explains, the kitchen is what feeds "this entire interwoven organism" of the studio and "literally supplies the energy that powers [their] daily activities." While other art book-cookbooks—like Questlove's somethingtofoodabout—are focused on individuals, positioning chefs as demigods who fashion masterpieces, here, cooking and eating is, refreshingly, founded in community and environment. For the kitchen's leaders, Asako Iwama and Lauren Maurer, working in the kitchen means having "awareness of being part of a larger whole"—what Eliasson's art philosophy looks like in food form.
in this communal act of cooking and eating together, I hope it is possible to cross some of our physical and imaginary boundaries and produce new conversations that have neither an ostensible target nor purpose, but are just listening.(I don't know about you, but I'm feeling that neuron stretch.)
Just as food is woven into studio life and into the interactions of the people who work there, it's entangled with art and activism; the book itself, as is apparent from the quote from Dockx, is full of essays and poetry, diagrams and sketches, photographs of the studio and of the recipes. There's writing about macrobiotic practices, about preserving seed biodiversity, about microorganisms.
At points in the book, I wanted Eliasson to laugh at himself, just a little—to make the concession that this is not how most of us live and eat: Even in environments where food is the focal point (my very workplace, for one), this vision of food (and of lunchtime) is utopic. Not just on the intellectual level (though, at times, you may have that same desire to roll your eyes as you do when reading a very obscure theoretical interpretation of a very obscure piece of art), but at the nuts and bolts of the cooking, too.
On a hot and dry summer day, with the weather outlook forecasting at least 4 consecutive sunny days, begin the following process in the morning.Come on, Eliasson. You can't be serious here?
But he does not see his art projects—and I assume, he does not see his food philosophy—as wackadoo idealistic; as the Guardian put it, he has a “conviction that, far from being rarefied and utopian, the projects [his studio] turns out are deeply involved with the world in which they’re made."
And for every recipe that does require six months (miso) or a bed of straw (natto) or wood sorrel and rose root (RenĂ© Redzepi's contribution), there's a brilliant description (fry the croquettes till "fox-colored"), a quirky headnote (the original braided bread recipe instructs to “knead the dough until doing so produces a certain belching sound”), or a very good-sounding weeknight meal—many of which are from cookbooks we already love (like The New Moosewood Cookbook and The River Cafe Cook Book Two and The Vegetarian Table: India)—that can be part of our world, too.
I want to make the Tomato Soup with Cumin and Figs, the Lasagna with Eggplant and Chard, the Tuscan Kale Risotto with Mushrooms and Rosemary, the Massaman Curry. Tonight.
So yes, you can buy the book if you are looking for an eclectic mix of (mostly pretty simple and appetizing) recipes. Start with the Baked Eggplant or Brown Rice with Kimchi. Yes, you can skip the chapter on "Microorganisms" and the essay titled "How Does It Feel to Eat Blue?"
But there are lots of recipes like this everywhere (and all over the internet).
The book is of real use to readers who delight in language, art, and philosophy; who will study the poems [like "Untitled (To Miso That Arrived Late)"]; or who dream of moving to Berlin, renting an apartment in Kreuzberg, and joining the Eliasson studio for "Rain After Cloud" (Beets, Kale, and Brown Rice with Crispy Onions), so named for the way the ingredient "pairings are surprisingly intuitive, like a gentle rain that follows a billowing thundercloud."
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