(CNN)
-Just when we were getting used to the idea of restaurants as travel destinations, the
restaurants themselves go
traveling.
First
it was Fat Duck, the Michelin star-studded rural English venue created by
scientific chef Heston Blumenthal that announced it was upping sticks and
heading to Melbourne for six months.
Now,
fresh from scooping top honors at this year's San Pellegrino World's 50 Best
Restaurant Awards, Denmark's Noma is preparing to tantalize the unsuspecting
diners of Tokyo
with its visceral version of fine dining.
Both
restaurants are planning to hit the road in 2015 -- taking their chefs, kitchen
staff and cookery concepts with them.
"I
have planned (the move) for two years," Noma's head chef and co-owner Rene
Redzepi said after his Copenhagen venue was named top of the 2014 World's 50
Best Restaurants this week in London.
So,
come the beginning of 2015, diners already desperate to grab one of Noma's
tables could face further frustration as the whole venue appears set to pack
its famous foraging bags and head east.
'Awestruck' by Japanese food
culture
Despite
the prospect of using ingredients they've never cooked with before, such as
tofu and sudachi, Redzepi says there are other worries on the horizon -- such
as Japanese work permits.
"At
the moment the most difficult thing is to make sure that my three people from
Guatemala, two people from Mexico City and two people from Gambia, who are
dishwashers, will get work visas for three months," said Redzepi.
Announcing
the move on his website a couple of months ago, the 36-year-old chef said his
palate rather than his profit motive were to blame.
"We
really want to go," he said, adding that he was "awestruck by the
richness of Japanese food culture" during a trip to Japan five years ago
hosted by Murata, a chef from Kyoto's Kikunoi restaurant.
Don't
expect a sudden switch to sushi in the Noma kitchen that gave us sea urchin
toast, beef tartar with ants and other modern Nordic specialties.
"I
have a plan with Noma Tokyo," said Redzepi. "I'm not going to turn it
into a Japanese restaurant, but I have a plan. In the next five years, Japan is
very important in my big plan of restaurant Noma."
That
said, the chef has in the past revealed to CNN that, despite his strict
insistence on locally sourced produce, in his home larder lurks miso paste,
sesame seeds and aged seaweed from Japan's Hokkaido Island.
It's
not clear where in Tokyo Noma's pop-up restaurant will not appear, nor is it
clear what will become of the original venue when the current teams are gone.
Redzepi
is keeping everyone waiting another few weeks before dishing up the full
details.
In
the meantime, perhaps he should consider changing the name to Nomad.
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