From Men's Health Magazine: Any seasoned traveler can tell you that the "best" meals on the planet
are the result of an ephemeral confluence of circumstances. A table at
the most expensive restaurant in the world does not guarantee a truly
great meal. That said, if you're planning on dying in the near future
and want to knock off a list of final, glorious dining experiences,
these places would make a very respectable binge. Start with one. Make
a reservation today. Go on an empty stomach. Trust me: This is livin'.
1) St. John (London) If I
had to die with half a bite of anything hanging out of my mouth, it
would probably be the roast bone marrow in Fergus Henderson's
plain-white dining room at St. John. Scooped out and slathered onto a
crust of toasted bread and sprinkled with sea salt, it's simple yet
luxurious. The menu is proudly English, a rebuke to anyone still
laboring under the impression that English food sucks. Famously
pork-centric and focused on traditional offal and game dishes, St. John
is as wonderful for what it does as for what it doesn't do: compromise.
It specializes in good ingredients from "happy" animals that are
treated with love and respect. Henderson has become a reluctant
spiritual leader to a whole generation of chefs--and even the old-guard
guys love to stop by for crispy pig tails, ham in hay, or a properly
roasted bird. This is one of the truly bullshit-free zones on the
culinary landscape.
2) elBulli (Girona, Spain)
It's the hardest reservation in the world. And everything they say is
true: It's an adventure, a challenge, a delicious and always fun acid
trip to the farthest reaches of creativity. Brothers Ferran and Albert
Adrià and their team are the most influential and creative people
working in food--and this surprisingly casual restaurant on a sleepy
cove on Spain's Costa Brava is probably the most important restaurant
of our time. Love it or hate it, if you have the opportunity to wangle
a reservation, do it. It's like seeing Jimi Hendrix's first show.
Forget any preconceptions you might have. Is it good? Yes. More
important--is it fun? Yes. Yes. Yes.
3) The French Laundry (Napa Valley, California)
4 Per Se (New York City)
The best sit-down, multicourse, white-tablecloth meal of my life was at
the French Laundry. And subsequent meals at Per Se, also run by chef
Thomas Keller, were no less wonderful. There's no better way to go than
the full-on tasting menu, a once-in-a-lifetime marriage of the best
ingredients, creative thinking, and high standards, along with the
personal imprint of the most respected chef in the world. How can
Keller be at both restaurants at once? It doesn't matter. Pick one.
Fast for 2 days, stretch your stomach with water the day of, and then
see how they do it at the very top. It's a level of perfection in food
and service that few even try to approach.
5) Sin Huat Eating House (Singapore)
It's grimy looking, the service can be less than warm, the beer is
served in a bottle (often with ice), and the tables sit halfway into
the streets of Geylang, Singapore's red-light district. But the crab
bee hoon--giant Sri Lankan beasts cooked with a spicy mystery sauce and
noodles--is pure messy indulgence. The whelks, steamed spotted cod,
prawns, scallops (in fact, any seafood available that day) are all
worth having. Warning: It looks cheap, but it's not.
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