The Atacama Desert, as featured in Boragó

How Rodolfo Guzmán tamed and popularised Chile’s wild food

The Boragó chef convinced hostile diners and critics that Chile was home to some of the world's greatest ingredients

Chilean chef, restaurateur and Phaidon author Rodolfo Guzmán never forgot the Summers he spent with his Grandmother an hour's drive from Santiago. There, he explains in his book Boragó, he would drink milk still warm from the cow, mountain water from a rooftop can and gather eggs as the chickens that laid them clucked and scurried around his feet. All of this instilled him in the idea of food as “real and traceable”, local, never to be taken for granted.

 

Quisco parasites, Chile. Photograph by Cristóbal Palma
Quisco parasites, Chile. Photograph by Cristóbal Palma

In 2008, Guzmán opened his restaurant Boragó. He had cut his teeth working as a chef at some of Europe's finest restaurants but rather than import their ingredients, he was determined to create a cuisine made up of local produce, to reconnect Chileans with their own culinary heritage. He could not understand why Santiago's existing restaurants worked with frozen seafood and meat, eschewing indigenous ingredients such as mushrooms, seaweeds, and seaside plants such as halophytes. Young and idealistic, he sought to change all that.

 

Wilted Spring Leaves with Murra Seasoning, Nalca, and Charcoal-Grilled Jibia. Photograph by Cristóbal Palma
Wilted Spring Leaves with Murra Seasoning, Nalca, and Charcoal-Grilled Jibia. Photograph by Cristóbal Palma

Ironically, despite promoting local produce, Guzmán met local resistance - apathy from Santiago's diners, contempt from his country's restaurant critics who regarded Boragó's fare as insulting to their cultivated palates. Only when the international press took notice of Guzmán's fusion of European-inspired flair and Chilean authenticity that Boragó's business began to boom.

 

Rodolfo Guzmán. Picture credit: courtesy Rodolfo Guzmán
Rodolfo Guzmán. Picture credit: courtesy Rodolfo Guzmán

To find out more about the chef who is putting real Chilean food on the plate (and on the map) order a copy of Boragó here.