“We are now entering a different cycle. A post-Covid cycle.” This is what René Redzepi told the crowd at The World’s 50 Best Restaurants ceremony, just moments after his Noma restaurant in Copenhagen was voted the best in the world. “We spent the last year and half dreaming of something, we are ready to go build it now.”
It was an unexpected, disruptive message from a restaurant owner who had just topped the famous list for the fifth time across two different locations, and been handed his third Michelin star just weeks earlier.
Throughout his speech and subsequent press conference, Redzepi hinted at pending changes, systematic overhauls within the restaurant, new organisation, new hires and ways of freeing his team to be more creative.
Replying to the fact that one of his team said Noma was the best place to work in the world, the chef categorically disagreed. “We are not the best place to work. She might think that but others don’t. I can only say that every day I go to work wanted to do the best. I have not always been the best, I have had periods in my life where I couldn’t control myself, I had no tools. I would go home everyday and be so upset with myself. For years I would hate myself.
“I felt like I should be this leader for people but I was just such a disappointment. I had gone through all these kitchens around the world where the head chef was screaming and I was like, ‘can’t they see that it’s not working? When I’m going to be a head chef I’m never going to do that,’ then I became a head chef. You realise, shit, this is a completely different thing to be managing and I was very disappointed in myself.”