Eric and I have been visiting our good friend Rachel and her husband, Javier, in Lima, Peru along with the fourth of our quartet, Linda. We began the trip with a jaunt over to Cusco with a visit to Machu Picchu. Since our return to Lima, we’ve lucked into some rather fantastic meals. The apex of our culinary trip so far has been our visit to Central. The evening featured a dégustation menu which, in its simplest form, is a menu put together for tasting. It is sometimes comprised of up to 20 courses where you will be given a selection of fine food to sample.
Our experience was called MATER ELEVATIONS and would take us on an adventure through a variety of ecosystems and biomes of Peru. They describe MATER as an initiative of exploration and discovery, in which a multidisciplinary team travels through our country in search of new products and new stories of people. It is a sample of what makes Peru a diverse country. The promised experience is an exploration of the diverse Peruvian territory: ingredients, colors, stories and scenarios. They would transport us to different elevations and connect us to each environment in a special way.
The menu was roughly broken down in three sections. The first and last sections, 6 and 4 courses, respectively, were single-bite items. These offerings were usually presented on interesting media – from a mossy subterranean scene to a rocky, clay-like mound or smoking coca leaves! The mid-section of 7 courses were individually plated for each of us. This is the menu including a few links to some pretty good Central Instagram and Facebook photos – our shots are not nearly as clear since the Central dining room is lit with spotlights.
MATER ELEVATIONS
1. – 5 M SPIDERS ON A ROCK : Sargassum – Limpet – Crab
2. 230 M VALLEY OF A TREE : Avocado – Panca Chili Pepper – Paico
3. 120 M DIVERSITY OF CORN : Corn – Honey – Tumbo Passion Fruit
4. 860 M HIGH ALTITUDE RAINFOREST : Yacon – Baston – Bark
5. 180 M RIVER SCALES : River Snails – Gamitana – Sangre de Girado
6. 3900 M ANDEAN PLATEAU : Tunta – Annato – Coca
7. – 20 M MARINE SOIL : Clams – Sweet Cucumber – Lime
8. 2875 M EXTREME STEMS : Ocas – Ollucos – Mashwas – Sauco
9. 400 M AMAZONIA COLORS : Doncella – Bahuaja Nut – Pijuayo – Huito
10. 0 M HARVEST AND COLLECTION : Lettuce – Scallops – Granadilla
11. – 10 M CLOSE FISHING : Octopus – Coral – Barquillo
12. 2900 M LAKE FLOOR : Chicken – Moraya – Cushuro
13. 1800 M LOW ANDES MOUNTAINS : Quinoas – Beef – Airampo
14. 650 M AMAZONIAN RAINFOREST : Rose Apple – Pitahava – Lemon Grass – Sweet Pepper
15. 1050 M GREEN HIGHLANDS : Lucuma – Cacao – Chaco Clay
16. 2190 M VALLEY BETWEEN THE ANDES : Tuber – Sanki – Sacha Inchi
17. 200 M SOLAR MUCILAGE : O.I. Water – Theobromas
The 17 course degustation lasted three hours and had us finish 3 bottles of wine, most of a bottle of port and numerous bottles of San Pellegrino. The evening was well paced as each courses was presented with a thorough description. A few courses required table side plating – a puddle of quinoa milk poured into a recess on the plate, broths portioned at the table in aptly simple pottery cups. We shared our perspectives on the menu’s literal and figurative namesakes – imagining a specific part of our Peruvian world and trying to transport ourselves to the specified elevations. We were often surprised by what we sampled and everyone found something they’d never had before.

1. Spiders on a rock

2. Valley of a Tree

3. Diversity of Corn
The High altitude rainforest was a simple yacon slice rolled in annato and charred to give the illusion of a tree slice. River scales accompanied the yacon and was a quinoa triangle topped with thin slices of Amazonian fish and snail outlined with a Sangre de Grado (Dragon’s blood) based sauce. The bread course (Andean Plateau) followed – another trio: sweet potato bread served over a bed of smouldering coca leaves, potato-like mini cakes and cocoa stars.
We then entered into the plated portion of the evening. Marine soil was presented as a delicate twisting of sweet cucumber surrounding a bed of baby clam meat. Extreme stems followed and could have been called the Tuber Feast. Three types of potatoes (did you know Peru has over 3,600 potato varietals?) were prepared and served in imaginative ways reminiscent to sheets of gelatine, paper thin slices or thin wafers.

9. Amazonia colors

10. Harvest and Collection

11. Close fishing

12. Lake Floor

13. Low Andes Mountains
The last two dessert courses were served together. The Valley between the Andes consisted of dark chocolate bark covered with ground nut and plant elements alongside the tuber element – a portion of pasty potato goodness with a jelly layer. The Solar mucilage clincher presented the Theobromas (genus of the cacao tree) element dried and on a mass of frozen cacao.
By all accounts, the evening was an adventure through unique Peruvian landscapes. The variety of ingredients, techniques and presentation methods is inspiring and will further shape me as the voice and spirit behind à la Claude.
What a totally and crazilly (is that a word?) wonderful food adventure!!!! LOOKS AMAZING!!!!
– Verna
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It was out of this world, Verna!
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That is an awesome concept!! And love the pic of you taking a picture of your food!
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It was a magical evening, Sandra!
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Love the photos! the food looks amazing and so glad you had so much fun!
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