Culinary specialists reveal the magic hidden away in ice
Updated: 2015-05-23 06:59
By Zhang Xuan / Mike Peters(China Daily)
|
||||||||
Ice artists Winston Hernes (left) and his son, Mark Wilson, adapt their woodcarving abilities to make sculptures from ice as well as fruit and chocolate.[Photo provided To China Daily] |
As high-end restaurants and hotels push to make meals entertaining, ice artists are coming out of the workshop and into the dining room. Zhang Xuan and Mike Peters chat with a father-son duo of Filipino chefs
As hotel chefs and staff prepare for a dinner in China's capital, two men at the entrance are working up a sweat - despite being literally centimeters from a huge block of ice as big as they are.
Their chisels are flying, but the old saying "let the chips fall where they may" does not apply. The gawking onlookers can't see the design lightly sketched on the frozen surface, and they watch as an eagle suddenly emerges from the shapeless form. Winston Hernes and his son, Mark Wilson, have crafted the aquiline logo of Garuda, Indonesia's national airline and the sponsor of a food festival at Beijing's Kempinski Hotel.
"It is so amazing. I have never seen this kind of performance before," says Chen Lina, a dinner guest, who says she was surprised the artists could create such a vivid sculpture within a short time.
The ice artists are now part of the menu for the hotel's recently launched catering service. In addition, they always cut a big piece in "real time" during the hotel's Sunday buffet, at special events like the German hotel's beer festivals and at weddings.
Every week many customers come here especially to enjoy the ambience of making decorative sculptures in real time.
"Apart from their ice sculpture, this father and son themselves are quite a story," Chen says.
Winston and Mark come from the small town of Paete in Laguna province, "the carving capital of the Philippines". It's famous for moving statues of saints, all hand-carved from wood, have been featured on television. Many people in this community have traditionally been woodcarvers, like Winston's father and grandfather.
- Building collapse in Guizhou caused by landslide: govt
- Xi welcomes Japan delegation but warns against historical distortion
- Chinese Vice-Premier stresses flood control
- China to draft more social work standards to improve service
- Hospital fee adjustments won't raise medical bills
- Newspaper tells staff to start own business
- Colombia: A birdwatcher's paradise
- Journey of a migrant girl from village to ad world
- Photographer captures Chinese on the train
- Hou Hsiao-Hsien's The Assassin premieres in Cannes
- Top 10 highest-paid white-collar jobs in China
- The dying craft of balance scales
- Culture Insider: Six things you may not know about Grain Buds
- Premier Li rides on new China-made train in Rio de Janeiro
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Premier Li embarks on Latin America visit |
What do we know about AIIB |
Full coverage of Boao Forum for Asia |
Annual legislative and political advisory sessions |
Spring Festival trends reflect a changing China |
Patent applications lead the world |
Today's Top News
China, Peru agree on feasibility study on transoceanic railway
China manufactures first
car for US market
Wisconsin hopes to make cheeseheads in China
China, Peru to diversify trade focus
Li: 'Great potential' for Sino-Colombian ties
Green-tea flavored coffee: a simile for cultural ties
Beijing responds to surveillance by US plane
Beijing sets out its rights after reports of incursion
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |