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Melina Keays

Indulge in the food of Ancient Greece at a new London dining experience

Food inspired by Ancient Greece at the Mandarin Oriental London

Have you ever wondered what life was really like in Ancient Greece? Perhaps one of the most satisfying routes to gaining insight and connection is through the eternal human ritual of eating and drinking – all the more fascinating with the realisation that over thousands of years, some things are little changed.

Celebrated chef Heston Blumenthal’s long-held interest in historic gastronomy has led him to create some extraordinary dining experiences, where recipes and techniques from the past are reimagined and re-presented with an exciting contemporary perspective.

Dinner by Heston Blumenthal at the Mandarin Oriental Hyde Park, London, is now offering an opportunity to discover the delights that may have been served at an Ancient Greek table. The restaurant has launched a new tasting menu inspired by an exhibition at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, ’Labyrinth: Knossos, Myth & Reality’.

Minoan treasures inspire a flavour of Ancient Greece

(Image credit: Mandarin Oriental)

The ancient Palace of Knossos (constructed from c1700 BCE) is located on the island of Knossos, Crete, and was a centre of the Minoan civilisation (the first advanced civilisation in Europe, its beginnings dating to c3500 BCE). The palace was a complex of hundreds of buildings connected by a labyrinth of corridors and stairs.

Legend has it that a minotaur (half-man, half-bull) lived within the labyrinth, and this myth is the inspiration behind the Ashmolean’s exhibition, which includes more than a hundred objects that have never before left Greece. 

The Knossos labyrinth was excavated over a century ago by archaeologist and (then) director of the Ashmolean, Sir Arthur Evans, who uncovered a rich array of artefacts, elaborate sculptures and frescoes. These treasures provide a unique insight into Minoan culture, including the serving and preparation of food and drink. 

Labyrinth menu at Dinner by Heston Blumenthal

Roman Minotaur sculpture (Image credit: Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Sports, General Directorate of Antiquities and Cultural Heritage, National Archaeological Museum, Athens)

Jonathan Bowring, the head chef of two Michelin-starred Dinner by Heston Blumenthal, and Deiniol Pritchard, creative director of The Fat Duck Group, have collaborated with experts from the museum to conjure up an immersive reinterpretation of classical Greek cuisine.

There are no actual recipes in existence, so the team gathered clues from the ingredients represented in frescoes and carvings, and from cooking vessels unearthed during the excavation. For instance, one of the exhibition’s highlights is a finely carved marble triton shell that shows the Minoans’ particular interest in sea creatures. The ‘Labyrinth’ menu also features perennial Greek produce such as olives and almonds, and wild herbs known to have been foraged in Crete in ancient times.

Olive oil ‘perfume' cake (Image credit: Mandarin Oriental)

Pritchard comments, ‘So much of what we do is to create out-of-the-ordinary dishes that have taken inspiration from the past, and this collaborative approach with the museum allowed us to work with ingredients and techniques to produce our modern interpretation of Minoan cuisine.’

Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, ’Labyrinth: Knossos, Myth and Reality’ exhibition view  (Image credit: Ashmolean Museum in Oxford)

Dishes include venison tartare with green olive and celery; and octopus, whelk and cockles served with saffron, radish and seaweed. Olive oil ‘perfume’ with fig, pear and goats’ milk is offered as a delicious dessert assembled from classical Greek components.

The Labyrinth menu lists each dish alongside the artefact that influenced its creation. Short rib of beef with wild garlic and smoked fennel makes its appearance with a c1500 BCE bull’s-head rhyton (a type of drinking container, typically in the form of an animal's head), and a replica of this magnificent vessel has been made for use at the table, adding dramatic authenticity to the presentation of the food.

Venison tartare (Image credit: Mandarin Oriental Hyde Park)

Professor Amy Bogaard, head of the School of Archaeology at the University of Oxford, comments: ‘An exciting and innovative aspect of the Knossos exhibition is that it tells an “earthy” story of food alongside the incredible art and mythology, and Deiniol and his team have portrayed this so well.’ 

The Labyrinth menu is available at Dinner by Heston Blumenthal at the Mandarin Oriental Hyde Park, London, in March and April 2023.

‘Labyrinth: Knossos, Myth & Reality’ is at Ashmolean museum, Oxford, until 30 July 2023

dinnerbyheston.com,mandarinoriental.com,ashmolean.org

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