The shortlist for the first ever Basque Culinary World Prize has been announced with 20 chefs making the final selection.
The prize, launched in February, looks to highlight the work of chefs who have in some way improved society through gastronomy. It’s the first award of its kind and will see the winner receive a €100,000 prize to “devote to a project or institution of their choice.”
Submissions were made by any person working in the food industry and the final shortlist was decide by a Prize Committee headed by the Basque chef Elena Arzak.
The final decision for a winner will be made on July 11 with a prize jury comprising of chefs and food experts - including: Gastón Acurio, Ferran Adrià, Alex Atala, Dan Barber, Heston Blumenthal, Massimo Bottura, Harold McGee, Massimo Montanari, Laura Esquivel and Hilal Elver.
Below you can see a full list of the 20 shortlisted nominations with more details about each one on the Basque Culinary World Prize website.
Alberto Crisci, UK:
Crisci’s charity, ‘The Clink’, has a series of fine dining restaurants inside four British prisons, in which offenders learn to cook and serve, and can gain vocational qualifications to give them real job opportunities when they leave – all with the aim of reducing rates of reoffending.
Alicia Gironella, Mexico:
Gironella is a slow food activist who takes part of projects like Semillatón, to preserve native Mexican corn seeds, preventing local species from become extinct. The seeds are placed in community banks to distribute among farmers in Sierra Tarahumara for cultivation.
Angel León, Spain:
Chef Angel León is renowned for his provocative culinary innovation at his restaurant, Aponiente. Passionate about research, he has been exploring the potential of the oceans as a food source and is documenting valuable knowledge that could preserve exciting new possibilities for future generations.
Ann Cooper, USA:
The Chef Ann Foundation gives schools the tools and resources to move away from serving highly processed foods, to providing fresh, cooked-from-scratch meals. This has the aim of contributing towards the reduction of childhood obesity in the United States.
Carlos Zamora, Spain:
The Spanish chef has built a reputation for responsible and sustainable restaurant and teammanagement, around which he has developed strong networks with organic producers. He also supports social initiatives such as Depersonas – which trains and employs young people with learning disabilities.
Daniel Boulud, France/USA:
French chef Daniel Boulud is the co-director of New York charity, CityMeals on Wheels, which provides healthy meals to elderly people who cannot buy food or cook for themselves. Boulud is also in charge of ‘Chefs Deliver,’ an initiative in which top chefs cook gourmet meals for the elderly homebound.
David Hertz, Brazil:
Driven to join the social gastronomy movement ten years ago, Brazilian chef David Hertz started Gastromotiva to give opportunities to the socially vulnerable of the Favelas of Rio de Janeiro (later Sao Paulo, Bahia and now Ciudad de México), through food and culinary training.
Gabriel Garza, Mexico:
Inspired by working at a local centre for the visually impaired, Garzasinglehandedly set up Destellos de Sabor, a project that teaches the blind to cook for themselves, giving them independence, self esteem, and the potential to find future employment.
Jessamyn Rodriguez, Canada/USA:
Harlem based Canadian, Jessamyn Rodriguez, created a 9-month training programme for low-income, immigrant women to become artisanal bakers with Hot Bread Kitchen. Through an employer-driven workforce development and business incubator, it helps women and men professionalise their skills in the culinary arts in order to be able to earn fair wages and achieve financial independence.
José Andrés, Spain:
Following the devastation of Hurricane Katrina in Haiti, Jose Andres started World Central Kitchen to use the expertise of its chef network to empower locals by providing them with clean cooking stoves and food safety/sanitation training. Additional programs include feeding programs in schools and culinary training for the local hospitality workforce.
Joshna Maharaj, India/Canada:
Canadian chef Joshna Maharaj works with several hospitals and institutions to help them serve better food to patients. In particular, Maharaj rethinks and redesigns all elements of the food chain, from farm to fork, in favour of healthy, fresh, nutritious meals.
Kamilla Seidler, Denmark, and Michelangelo Cestari, Venezuela:
Seidler and Cestari were chosen by Claus Meyer to take his Melting Pot project to Bolivia where they opened the restaurant Gustu, which also functions as a cookery school. Gustu has put a culinary spotlight on a previously overlooked country; as well as serving to train and empower locals through a wider knowledge and consciousness about their ethnic gastronomy.
Leonor Espinosa, Colombia:
Leonor Espinosa is the founder of Funleo, an organisation that aims to preserve the food traditions of Colombia while highlighting sustainable practices and local food production. Its focus is on afro-descendent, indigenous communities, and helping them to develop and market their traditional crops and ingredients.
Manoela (Manu) Buffara, Brazil:
Brazilian chef Manu Buffara is nominated for her work in Ilha Rasa, in Curitiva, where she fights besides some 20 producers to preserve traditional ingredients, farming methods and biodiversity. She also encourages locals to explore the potential of their agriculture.
Margot Janse, Holland/South Africa:
Dutch chef Margot Janse runs Isabelo, an initiative that started with a simple gesture - a nutritious muffin given to 70 school children in Franschhoek, South Africa - which has now become a program that produces 1,300 meals a day for local schools.
Maria Fernanda Di Giacobbe, Venezuela:
Maria has built a whole chain of education, entrepreneurship and economic development around Venezuelan cacao. With Kakao and Cacao de Origen, she supports local producers with the resources they need to improve their product. She also helps women to get the necessary training and tools to become chocolate entrepreneurs themselves.
Massimiliano Alajmo, Italy:
Italian chef Massimiliano Alajmo created Il Gusto per la Ricerca to fund research into children’s neoplastic diseases. A recent digital initiative – Tavoli Trasparenti – sees 300 top restaurants backing the cause – with the price of the meal being donated when diners book online.
Nani Moré, Spain:
Nani Moré is the founder of the Asociación de Comedores Ecológicos (the Ecologic Canteen Association),in Catalonia. She directs documentaries and shorts campaigning for better food for children, and has been working with several institutions to prove that fresh, nutritious food can be made at low cost, ensuring that children get the good food they need.
Rodolfo Guzman, Chile:
Rodolfo Guzman, who exemplifies culinary innovation, is passionate about discovering native ingredients from all over Chile, from which he has created hundreds of new dishes and flavours at his research center, Conectaz, in Boragó. The center employs a multidisciplinary team who also look at the ingredients with a view to future food security and sustainability.
Teresa Corçao, Brazil:
Teresa Corçao is the founder of the Instituto Maniva, created to nurture organic family farming and better nutrition in society as a whole. Maniva’s Ecochefs network was set up in 2009 to promote ethical cuisine as well as to encourage communication right across the food chain, from producers to consumers.