-
Laos says cannot determine cause of tourist deaths linked to tainted alcohol
-
The challenges facing UK's next PM Andy Burnham
-
Six-try All Blacks see off Ireland at Eden Park fortress
-
Vietnam floods and landslides kill at least 4
-
From Maradona to Messi: Bangladesh's enduring love for Argentina
-
Founding father: statues of Myanmar's Aung San disappear
-
UN to list more sites as 'in danger' from conflict or climate change
-
Infantino's enlarged World Cup gamble pays off with punters
-
Egypt's 'Garbage City' recyclers reap gains from Iran war plastic squeeze
-
No fuel, no patience: Russians endure fuel shortages
-
Spain, Argentina prepare for World Cup final, Trump hails success
-
'Chainsaw massacre': Europe mulls culls for fish-guzzling cormorant
-
Supplies run dry in Venezuelan village on edge of quake zone
-
England carry 'scars' of World Cup exit, says Tuchel
-
Latin America's unlikely football unity: cheering against Argentina
-
Argentina coach Scaloni hails 'legend' Messi before World Cup final
-
Aston Villa sign Swiss World Cup star Manzambi
-
Argentina World Cup success moves me to tears, says goalkeeper Martinez
-
Trump questions England's World Cup tactics
-
Gold IRA Fees Explained: New 2026 Breakdown of Setup, Storage, and Annual Costs
-
Messi to get 'special attention' from Spain, says de la Fuente
-
Spain captain Rodri preparing for 'physical' Argentina battle
-
Italy coach Quesada's ban reduced to one Test
-
Leather jacket worn by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang auctions for nearly $1 mn
-
Sobers 'stood out' among the greats: West Indies legend Holding
-
Leader Herbert, Burns equal record 62 at British Open, DeChambeau docked two shots
-
DeChambeau's British Open charge hit by two-shot penalty
-
Yankees' Judge improving, but not ready for baseball activities
-
Tech share selloff rolls on, oil prices jump on Mideast clashes
-
None shall pass: Spain's defence ready to thwart Messi in World Cup final
-
Messi eyes second World Cup crown at the scene of his lowest ebb
-
China's Kimi K3 rattles US AI industry
-
Herbert hopes British Open 62 woke Australian kids in the night
-
Herbert takes Open lead, equals Burns' round of 62
-
Norris misses winning, resents intrusions in private life
-
'Great innings ends': Cricket mourns West Indies great Sobers
-
Thousands protest sacking of Ukraine defence minister: AFP
-
Fickle winds whip up huge Spanish wildfire
-
Ex-president Sall back in Senegal for talks with successor
-
US links Taco Bell lettuce to diarrhea-causing parasite outbreak
-
Argentina's Colapinto more nervous about World Cup final than F1 race
-
Strong quake hits southern Mexico, tsunami alert lifted
-
British Museum shows Bayeux Tapestry unfurled after 'titanic' efforts
-
Deschamps set for bittersweet ending to France reign as Zidane waits
-
Ferrari fined but Hamilton and Leclerc escape grid penalty
-
German lawmaker faces criticism for US surrogacy to have a child
-
Tackling Messi 'huge challenge' for Spain: Merino
-
Southern Mexico hit by 7.3 quake, triggering tsunami alert
-
What's behind the Argentina World Cup team's can-do attitude?
-
Germany defender Gosens signs with Schalke
Remote repast: Dining at the world's northernmost Michelin restaurant
You can only get there by boat or helicopter, but Michelin-starred chef Poul Andrias Ziska hopes his restaurant in remote Greenland, far above the Arctic Circle, is worth the journey.
The 30-year-old chef relocated his restaurant KOKS from the Faroe Islands in mid-June, leaving behind his relatively accessible address for Ilimanaq, a hamlet of 50 inhabitants hidden behind icebergs on the 69th parallel north.
Housed in a narrow black wooden house, one of the oldest in Greenland, the restaurant can only accommodate about 20 people per service, and experiments with local produce, including whale and seaweed, with fresh produce almost impossible to find in the harsh climate.
"We try to focus on as much Greenlandic products as possible, so everything from Greenland halibut to snow crabs to musk ox to Ptarmigan, different herbs and different berries," the tousled-haired, bearded chef tells AFP.
The young chef previously ran KOKS at home in the remote Faroe Islands, where he won his first star in 2017, his second in 2019, and the title of the world's most isolated Michelin restaurant.
He plans to return there for a permanent installation, but explains he had always wanted to stretch his gastronomical legs in another territory in the far north, like Iceland, Greenland or even Svalbard.
He finally chose Ilimanaq, located an hour's boat trip from Ilulissat, the third-largest town in Greenland and famous for its huge glacier.
- Local products -
"We just found it more suitable, more fun to do something completely different before we move back in our permanent restaurant," he tells AFP from his kitchen, set up in a trailer outside the house with the dining area.
With 20 courses, the extensive tasting menu will delight the taste buds for some 2,100 kroner ($280), excluding wine and drinks.
"The menu is exquisite and sends you to the far north and back," Devid Gualandris, a charmed visitor, tells AFP.
"From the whale bites to the wines, from the freshly caught fish and shellfish to the curated desserts, everything is bursting with flavour."
While whale meat is a staple food in Greenland and Ziska's native Faroe Islands, whaling is banned in most of the world and activists have called for an end to the practice.
An unlikely locale for a gourmet restaurant, Ilimanaq -- Greenlandic for "place of hope" -- is home to a small community living in picturesque wooden houses, next to hiking trails and more fittingly a luxury hotel, making it an ideal stopover for wealthy tourists seeking to explore new frontiers.
For Ziska, the customers in Greenland are different.
"There are a lot of people for which the number one priority is to visit Greenland and then they come to our restaurant," he says.
"In the Faroe Islands we had mainly people interested in coming and eating at our restaurant and then obviously also visiting the Faroe Islands," the chef explains.
In addition to the adventurers who have already been lured by the Arctic landscape, the Greenlandic Tourist Board hopes the restaurant will also help attract gourmet travellers.
"The unique combination of high-level gastronomy, the inherent sustainability of the North Atlantic cuisine and the characteristic nature and resources of the Disko Bay, speaks to all our senses," Visit Greenland's director, Hjortur Smarason, said when announcing the arrival of KOKS.
A long-overlooked destination, Greenland -- an Arctic island territory nine times the size of the UK -- welcomed more than 100,000 tourists in 2019, nearly double its population, before Covid cut the momentum.
Smarason said the presence of KOKS "is exactly what we strive for in our effort to reach a certain distinguished kind of guests".
A.Taylor--AT