Iceland review - 2016, Side 41

Iceland review - 2016, Side 41
ICELAND REVIEW 39 It tastes just like oyster. The larger the leaf, the saltier it is. Go ahead, try it,” chef Gísli Matthías Auðunsson says, handing the photographer and I a couple of leaves of the oyster leaf plant as he forages for seaweed and wild plants along the beach. Gísli is taking us on a tour of his favorite spots to collect seaweed, herbs and other wild plants on Heimaey island, Vestmannaeyjar, his home turf, just south of the Icelandic mainland. He’s right: the leaves taste remarkably like oyster. He uses them and the rest of his harvest at his restaurant Slippurinn (‘The Ship Yard’), down where the old shipyard used to be at the local harbor. Together with chef Fanney Dóra Sigurjónsdóttir, the newest addition to the Slippurinn team, we pick sea truffles and sea purslane (which are pickled or steamed and served with the fish of the day), angelica (the stems are fermented and used in gin and brennivín schnapps, and the seeds are dried and used to cure meat), and sheep sorrel (used to flavor various dishes like the granita dessert). FOCUS ON SUSTAINABILITY Though he now spends most of the year in Reykjavík, Gísli was born on Heimaey (population 4,300). He lived on the island until age six when his parents decided to move to the capital, returning each summer to visit family. Gísli’s parents moved back to Vestmannaeyjar in 2010, and in 2011 the fam- ily started discussing the idea of opening a restaurant. Gísli completed his schooling in hotel and food studies in Iceland in 2011 and went on to open Slippurinn with his family in 2012 in an old industrial building down by the harbor. The machine workshop in the building had closed 30 years earlier. When Gísli and his family started renting the old workshop from a relative, it was being used as storage for fishing boat equipment. There was no electricity and a huge cleanup job lay ahead. But with help from Gísli’s parents and grandfather, the building underwent a major renovation FOOD Opposite page: Gísli Matthías Auðunsson, chef and co-owner of Slippurinn and his sister, manager Indíana Auðunsdóttir. Above: Guillemot eggs in burnt butter with crispy rye bread, grated cured guillemot eggs, lovage and pickled onion.
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Iceland review

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