Member of The Guild of Food Writers
Member of The Guild of Food Writers

Meet chef Quique Dacosta at the world’s first changing restaurant in Dubai

Chef Quique Dacosta - Palazzo Versace Dubai - Dubai restaurants

Chef Quique Dacosta at Palazzo Versace Dubai

Chef Quique Dacosta’s avant-garde restaurant in the village of Denia, in the south-east of Spain boasts three Michelin stars and sits at number 39 on the World’s 50 Best restaurant list. He also owns one Michelin star El Poblet, and a couple of other restaurants in Valencia. Born in 1972 in the south-west of Spain, Quique started cooking in restaurant kitchens at the age of 14. Three years later in 1989 he moved to Le Poblet, and within a decade he had worked his way to head chef and owner renaming the restaurant Quique Dacosta. He is completely self-taught, yet holds an Honorary Doctorate in Fine Arts bestowed for his contribution to culinary artistry. He is now in Dubai with his team helming a three-month pop-up at Palazzo Versace’s Enigma restaurant which will change its chef four times a year – a ground-breaking concept that is not just a first for Dubai, but the world.

Quique’s interactive dining experience, just open, unearths an ‘untold story’ themed ‘vanguard’ and surprisingly, given high team and produce import costs is only slightly pricier than dining at his restaurant in Denia (AED738 for a tasting menu in Denia, versus AED750 here on weekdays and AED850 on weekends – or even cheaper with an AED650 early bird price if booked by tomorrow). The humble, calm and collected chef reveals more in our interview here, including his wish for his own restaurant in Dubai. At the same time, we also chat to the brains behind the concept, French-Spaniard Patrick Robineau, Palazzo Versace’s hotel manager, to probe on who the next chef might be, and how the restaurant will achieve consistency.

With Quique Dacosta, and his restaurant manager-cum-Spanish interpreter Didier:

  • Can you explain your Vanguard concept, and what diners can expect over the next three months? From the dictionary definition Vanguard is a person or a group of people who are a little bit in advance of others, and in our case, cooking.
  • So will you take guests into the future with the dining experience? The future is the next second. The menu is something that has never been experienced before; something very new. The magic will pop up every night with the combination of service and food, but with the help of the diner. The magic and the soul of the experience will be different every night; for us as well.
  • Will you offer a choice of two menus here in Dubai like you have in Denia? Here it’s going to be something that has nothing to do with Denia. We designed the menu to give emotion, to seduce people and to show them something different that they have never seen before. We wanted as well to challenge, using new techniques and new textures that maybe in this part of the world guests are not used to. Things vanish in your mouth and produce will remind you of your childhood, but with a complete twist.
  • Your main restaurant in Denia is closed until next month. So how long are you here for? We have 15 people from our team here for the whole three months, and I am here until the 18th [January] and will then visit regularly.
  • Your cooking style only uses local ingredients from a 75 kilometre radius. Are you importing ingredients for Dubai or are you going to be inspired locally and source ingredients here? It’s going to be a combination of both, because obviously Denia is not Dubai and Dubai is not Denia. We will bring some produce, and we will also use local ingredients to incorporate a vision of both worlds. Depending on the ingredient, where you get it from is not relevant.
  • Surely it is relevant? It’s not relevant in cooking. For example, if I take local tomatoes, cucumbers, some bread and olive oil, I can make a Spanish gazpacho with only local produce.
  • But when ingredients are imported here you often lose flavour? Or not depending what you import. In the 12 hours you are travelling, there are things that don’t even move and you don’t see changes. There are enough options around the world and we have enough recipes and experience to make sure what we serve is going to be high quality. Basically there are three steps in cooking – first use the best produce you can; secondly the manipulation and the technique you are going to give it; and finally what you are going to serve with it. So you want to have everything under control and to make sure you first have the basic produce and then you can elaborate your own cooking.
  • Can you give some examples of local ingredients on the menu? I can tell you that we came only with herbs from Denia; the rest is local.
  • But surely it won’t just be UAE local, you must be importing from elsewhere in the region and the world? Yes.
  • What’s more important to you, to retain the three Michelin stars or to rise up the World’s 50 Best list? The most important thing for me and our restaurants is the three stars.
  • Is that because of Michelin’s prestige and heritage factor or because it drives bookings? When any chef opens a restaurant, he does not think first of the 50 Best; the big goal is the Michelin star for the prestige and history. Bookings is a sum of consequences. Obviously we know that the 50 Best is very important and it drives a lot of bookings if you are at the top of the list. We also won for two consecutive years the ‘best restaurant in Europe’, by Opinionating About Dining. So obviously all these awards are very important. You don’t want to get rid of any. The good thing is we are in all the good lists so that means we are doing a good job. But you cannot be the puppets of the critics or the awards lists. If my restaurant is full and my clients are happy, then so am I.
  • Do you walk in the restaurant every night when you are there and think one of those guests could be a Michelin inspector? Heinz Beck does. I never think about Michelin until someone asks me. We are always thinking of the comfort of the customer and the experience we are going to give. The only thing we want is to offer high quality in the way we think we should do that, and we’ve broken a lot of rules along the way.
  • I hear that your compatriots Mugaritz and El Celler De Can Roca are opening in Abu Dhabi and Dubai respectively. Would you consider opening a restaurant here? I did not know that, but we would consider it as well. I think that anyone who wants to open a fine dining restaurant in Dubai will have to look at Enigma; it will be a good thermometer for local acceptance. From what we see from the bookings, it looks like the restaurant is going to very popular.

With Patrick Robineau:

  • How many people do you have front and back-of-house including Quique’s team? All together it’s about 30 people. Plus we have a production kitchen that supports because a lot of the work with Quique’s food is prep.
  • In my trends round-up, I question whether changing a chef every three months is going to hinder consistency in service and food for both front and back-of-house. Even the world’s best restaurants take time to settle in. How will you ensure that the service team adapts to a new chef from day one? We always send a team to the visiting chef, so we had the team from front and back-of-house go to Denia to work with the chef for at least one week. Before they go, we give them a list of questions and they really embrace the spirit of the visiting chef. They see the service experience; they take notes; they take videos; they record and they engage in conversation. When they come back here, there is a debrief session. Dishes are adjusted. It’s about making sure that it’s well executed consistently. It’s not like you have an a la carte menu with different dishes; in essence the complexity is less and the risks are less with a tasting menu. The most difficult part is to make it different, surprising and engaging. During the evening you will interact with the experience. The team we have recruited has international experience, Michelin stars, and great attitude. They are so passionate. Passion is a number one priority when we recruit people, and I make sure I interview every single person, whether they work in the kitchen or wash the dishes, I want that passion. If you don’t have a spark, you are probably not for us.
  • Do you have plans to use Enigma to invite local chefs to participate and learn from these pop-ups? Yes. We are currently in discussion with one of the upcoming chefs, to actually work with him to position it in such a way that it is an opportunity for people to be educated. Whether it’s in the schools in Dubai, or whether it’s engaging with other chefs. Quique will potentially be judging one of the gastronomy competitions here. There are a lot of things that we want to do with Enigma, but we will make sure we do it progressively instead of being all over the place.
  • Can you reveal who the next chef is and the calendar of chefs? At this stage it has to remain an enigma [he grins], but what I can tell you is that it will be very different from what Quique is doing. We have already committed to the next chef and his food is equally interesting but from a completely different angle. Both him and the third chef visited us a few weeks ago. There will be an eight-day gap between chefs when the restaurant will close.
  • Is the criteria for selection Michelin stars or World’s 50 Best or both? It has to be a combination of both.
  • Will this concept continue year after year or will it evolve into something else? We worked very closely with house of Versace to design an interior to be very neutral. So it’s very much a blank canvas, that we will take one step at a time. But ultimately what we want to do is to take those young upcoming chefs who have great skills, great gastronomy, creative minds and give them a platform. Obviously Dubai is becoming a hub with gastronomy, creativity and innovation. With 2020 around the corner, it’s great timing for us to be doing what we are doing. There are a lot of great restaurants but consistency as you have mentioned is hit or miss with a few exceptions. From a marketing perspective it gives us an opportunity every three months to go back into the market and be the latest restaurant in town.

Let’s see if they can pull it off. As the idiom says, proof is in the pudding. I am heading to Enigma for a media dinner tonight, so more on FooDiva’s social media channels tomorrow. [13th January update – click here for a peek into my experience. And here is Ishita Unblogged’s take on the dinner.]

Who’s dined at Quique Dacosta in Denia? My sister has and rates it far higher than some of the top five in the World’s 50 Best. When I tell Quique just that, he laughs and says “she must have dined with us on a good night.” Humble to the core.

Are you tempted to give Enigma a taste?

A bientôt.

FooDiva. x

  • Posted under
    Al Jaddaf, Chefs, Dubai, Hotels, International, Licensed, Location, Meet Chefs, Pop-up, Restaurants, Spanish

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10 Responses to “Meet chef Quique Dacosta at the world’s first changing restaurant in Dubai”

  1. Marta January 12, 2016 at 3:21 pm

    Hello!!!

    We visited Quique Dacosta 2 summers ago. I will be happy to discuss with you when we see each other 🙂

    Love the idea of changing chefs every 3 months. A similar concept happens in a hotel in Madrid. they bring chefs for a month and change everything, including the decoration and so on!

    • FooDiva January 14, 2016 at 11:14 am

      Yes please fill me in Marta – feel free to share here too, good or bad! Agh the Madrid concept didn’t come up in my search; great to hear 🙂

  2. JayEim January 14, 2016 at 10:23 am

    Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose!

    I started reading on a positive note and then it went downhill.

    A Michelin starred Chef in Dubai……then a 3 month visiting Chef……..followed by he is here until January 18th..!!!!

    Whose cooking for crying out loud?
    There is a basic contradiction here. To get to Michelin level, the Chef need to be present 24/7. Any other formula is cooking by numbers….in which case simply buy an Escoffier book (preferably with pictures). Point a la ligne!

    Local sourced food…..Oh No wait, imported food…….Ahhh only the Errrbs ( grinning 😉 ) are imported from Spain…..(speaking softly) other food ingredients imported from other countries……The *&^*!%* Liberty!

    Finally, someone please tell the hotel guy that Versace and Neutral is an Oxymoron!!

    Majestic prices are for the 3 Rosettes restaurants and not for a faxed copy!

    Now let’s all singalong: Bling……Bling……….Lalala La………..

    • FooDiva January 14, 2016 at 11:25 am

      Hi Jay. His restaurant reopens early next month so I expect he has to return…and to ensure it retains those three stars! As we know the restaurant here is not a Michelin-starred restaurant so there is no obligation to remain here. It’s simply a pop-up with 15 of his team here; that’s not bad going for a three month stint. The ingredient discussion as you can see was quite challenging…perhaps lost in translation. Believe it or not having now dined there, the interior is so un-Versace. To be honest it’s pretty sterile and not very welcoming. They need to up the ante on the wow factor as you enter.

  3. h_rodriguez January 14, 2016 at 12:45 pm

    Just a question as we tend to always try to be the first, largest, taller etc in Dubai. If I am not mistaken this formula has already been implemented in several restaurants like Carousel in London, hotel Urso in Madrid, Le Cercle in Paris (although a private club), Fifty Seven in LA, Intro in Chicago . There was another one in London I visited last year but whose name now escapes me and if my memory serves me well the first time this concept was executed was by the owner of Red Bull with his restaurant Ikarus about 12 years ago and has had the most impressive lineup in its history.

    • FooDiva January 17, 2016 at 11:02 am

      Great to know Hector; thanks for sharing. Are they still running these pop-ups?

  4. Noreen February 3, 2016 at 3:26 pm

    Interesting as per the usual Samantha! I can’t help but ponder how slow it has taken for this type of concept to come here. With the rest of the world is shifting into casual dining & top chefs opening up fast casual concepts, Dubai is diving into its first true molecular gastronomy theater dining experience. Am I being too critical or is it a little outdated? Tasting menus are apparently completely on the outs for 2016. I can’t speak for the Enigma experience as I haven’t personally tried it but according to everything I’ve seen in the reviews it does seem like a positive experience. My question is – anyone who has had an experience/molecular gastro/michelin star driven meal in other cities, would they be struck by this experience? Would this type of experience put Dubai on the map for destination dining? I’m just not so sure if its revolutionary. I believe any progress is good progress in all aspects but just like the food trucks situation in this city, are we behind the times or what?

    • FooDiva February 6, 2016 at 6:10 pm

      You bring up some good points Noreen. The nature of the cuisine and the cooking style is not revolutionary by any means, but a three-month changing pop-up at a fixed restaurant spot is new I believe (for Dubai and the world). Whether Dubai is ready for this kind of concept, I am not sure as I don’t know how well Versace is doing with bookings. Even though we have seen a move towards more casual dining, I haven’t seen any evidence of the disappearance of tasting menus around the world for World’s 50 Best/ Michelin restaurants, but perhaps that’s one to watch. I think this concept is a clever marketing tactic on Versace’s part as it will certainly give them something new to talk about every three months…whether it succeeds or not, time will tell.

      • Noreen February 10, 2016 at 2:49 pm

        very true xx

  5. Raju March 5, 2017 at 5:26 pm

    Tried it when Chef Dacosta’s menu was here (he wasn’t there when I went).
    To get 3 Michelin stars all has to be wonderful. I did not feel it was excellent. I know Enigma is not a Michelin restaurant but I feel it puts the chefs name down.
    A lot of the staff were Enigma staff and there is a difference with high end cuisine when all the staff are a part of the experience. Here the staff were good and polite but did not have deep knowledge of the dishes or experience (though they told me they went for training to Spain).
    I guess this is why Enigmas concept did not succeed and the night I went there were only 4 tables occupied. Price could not be an issue as people in Dubai spend money dining, I just feel people go more fore the outing and fun than the food.
    Came to your web site as I am excited to dine tonight at One and Only with Chef Gaggan.

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