The Economist - UK (2022-02-19)

(Antfer) #1

78 Culture The Economist February 19th 2022


Worldina dish

Closer to the bone


I


t isnearly 30 yearssinceStJohnopened
in  a  former  smokehouse,  just  to  the
north of the City of London. Back then, the
restaurant  felt  daringly  stark:  white­
washed  walls  and  concrete  floors,  drinks
specials  on  chalkboards,  a  high­ceilinged
dining  room  with  white  tablecloths  and
wooden chairs, no music. After the pastel­
coloured  1980s,  it  seemed  to  smack  of  the
mortuary  or  the  operating  theatre.  Today
the decor is reassuringly unaltered.
So is the food. St John’s menu changes
daily, but its style is constant—what Fergus
Henderson, its co­founder, calls “a kind of
British  cooking”.  It  became  famous  in  the
early  noughties,  when  the  late  Anthony
Bourdain,  an  American  chef,  author  and
television  presenter,  rhapsodised  over  its
roast  bone  marrow  salad.  That  is  the  only
dish that almost never leaves the menu, for
good reason: it is a symphony of unctuous­
ness (marrow), brightness (a parsley, caper
and  shallot  salad),  salinity  (a  mound  of
grey sea salt) and crunch (toast), which the
diner composes himself. Marrow and oth­
er  offal  favoured  by  Mr  Henderson  began
appearing on menus of fashionable restau­
rants from Seattle to Melbourne.
The  offal  fad  competed  with  one  for
molecular gastronomy, with its spheres of
olive juice, then gave way to farm­to­table
cooking, which painstakingly detailed the
provenance  of  every  radish  in  a  salad.
Eventually  came  the  narrative­driven
cooking of today, in which each dish has its
culturally  appropriate  origin  story.  The
marrow is still on the menu at St John.
Yet while the offal grabs the headlines,

MrHenderson’skindofBritish cooking ul­
timately rests on bold, unfussy simplicity.
It  is  a  cold­weather  translation  of  Italian
country  cooking,  with  high­quality  meat
and vegetables simply prepared. The menu
is  laconic  (“Snails  and  Oakleaf”),  flavours
strong and balanced, presentation a flour­
ish  above  plain.  Mr  Henderson  now  has
Parkinson’s  disease  and  no  longer  cooks,
but the restaurant hews to his vision.
In a mercurial industry, that is rare. Far
too  many  posh  metropolitan  restaurants
share  a  dreary,  trendy  predictability,  sup­
plying  the  same  gently  upbeat  music,  the
same  mixture  of  vaguely  Italianate  and
East  Asian  dishes,  and  excessively  busy
cocktails with poetic or suggestive names.
There  is  nothing  inherently  wrong  with
that. Everyone wants to succeed, and these
things  sell.  Castigating  restaurateurs  for
offering  them  is  as  silly  as  berating  direc­
tors for making superhero films. But while
predictable  restaurants  and  superhero
movies  can  be  successful,  and  sometimes
even good, they cannot be truly great.
Not every singular vision succeeds, or is
worth  pursuing  in  the  first  place.  Stub­
bornness  and  greatness  are  not  the  same
thing.  But—as  every  would­be  novelist
turned  lawyer  or  sculptor  turned  dentist
knows—such  dreams  are  all  too  easy  to
abandon  out  of  fear  of  failure.And  more
than most businesses, restaurants tend to
fail. To open one that goes against the grain
is a risk. To find that same restaurant little
changed, still packed with dinersand still
delicious  after  more  than  aquarter  of  a
century is a quiet cause for joy. n

In the fickle world of restaurants, sticking to a vision takes guts

Artisanalpottery

Glaze of glory


C


hallenged by afriend  to  replicate  a
piece of shimmering Babylonian earth­
enware, Mary Chase Perry had an idea. The
ceramicist decided to fire her pieces three
times,  adding  a  spray  of  kerosene  for  the
final blast: the oil burst into flames, com­
busting with the metal oxides in the glaze
to create a swirl of metallic colours. In 1903,
the  same  year  Henry  Ford  established  his
motor company in Detroit, Perry co­found­
ed a small pottery studio in the city. By 1909
she had perfected the iridescent glaze and
the  process  of  “fuming”  that  became  the
studio’s trademark.
The  fortunes  of  Pewabic  Pottery—
named  after  an  old  copper  mine  near  her
birthplace—have  since  reflected  those  of
Detroit  itself.  Perry’s  workshop,  which
fashioned  handmade,  delicate  wares,
could  not  have  been  more  different  from
Ford’s  vast  factory  and  its  assembly­line
production.  But  as  Steve  McBride,  Pewab­
ic’s current boss, notes, the midwestern ci­
ty  “has  always  been  a  place  of  parallel
tracks”. The workshop was an integral part
of  America’s  Arts  and  Crafts  movement,  a
backlash  against  mechanisation  that  be­
gan in the late 19th century. Yet those tracks
sometimes  intersected.  Albert  Kahn,  who
designed the earliest Ford factories, deco­
rated the interiors with Pewabic ceramics. 
Ford  helped  to  bring  people,  and
wealth, to the city in the early 20th century.
Architects  designed  stunning  Beaux­Arts
and  Art  Deco  buildings,  including  one  for
the Detroit Institute of Arts that opened in
1927,  and  the  majestic  Guardian  Building
(pictured), built in 1929; both were adorned

D ETROIT
The story of a pottery is intertwined
with the history of its city
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