You can ask any chef in the world about their favourite restaurants on the planet, and most likely, Asador Etxebarri will be in their top five — in many cases, even the top one. The restaurant located in Axpe, a small idyllic village nestled in the mountains of the Basque Country, gained prominence through the work of its creator, the 62-year-old cook Victor Arguinzoniz (Bittor Arginzoniz).
In recent years, Asador Etxebarri has consistently been among the 10 best restaurants in the World’s 50 Best list. At the 2021 awards ceremony in Antwerp, the self-effacing, Arguinzoniz was announced as the winner of the Chef's Choice Award, demonstrating how well-respected he is among the global culinary community (something he achieved without a marketing department or a presence on social media, and almost oblivious to today’s food media circus).
Etxebarri has become a place of pilgrimage, and Arguinzoniz a kind of gastronomic deity. It’s difficult to know which one is most admired in the food world - the restaurant or the chef - because it’s impossible to separate creator and creature: Etxebarri is Arguinzoniz, and vice versa. The chef’s life has been the same almost every day. “Since April 27, 1990,” he recalls, precisely. Early in the morning, he goes to the restaurant to light up the braziers with wood (from holm oak to vine trunks) that he collects mostly in the surroundings of the Atxondo valley, where he has lived his whole life.
Then he starts preparing the starters and organising the mise-en-place. He doesn't return home until late evening — not before he's got the dough ready for the next day's bread. "It's infrequent for me not to see him roaming around by 8 pm," says Mohamed Benabdallah, the restaurant's sommelier and front-of-house manager.