BP Travel Award 2005
Traditionally the exclusive domain of men, the Basque gastronomic societies called txokos originated in 1870 in San Sebastián. They vary in size between fifteen and a hundred members. Groups of these men join together in the kitchen to spend the evening cooking Basque food, talking, drinking and eating - the word txoko means a corner or comfy space. Txokos function as both a practical and a social institution where everyone shares the costs involved, but they equally act as a means for the next generation of men to learn and preserve the long and much lauded tradition of Basque cooking.
I wanted to use the Travel Award to document members from a single txoko and examine how cuisine, politics, identity and tradition intermingle and are developed within such an institution. At a time when, for Basques more than most, the cultural is political, they are anxious to preserve their cuisine along with their language (Euskera is thought by some to be the oldest language in Europe) and their sports, such as pelota.
I did not and do not intend this project as an anthropological study, but rather as an opportunity to exchange and learn from, as well as question, perceived cultural identities - my own as much as those of the txoko members. If I was to learn about Basque food and paint Basque cooks then, in exchange, I would cook for them and introduce them to examples of British food. This of course led to a whole new set of dilemmas and questions: what is authentic British cooking? Does it even exist?
While researching and planning my project I contacted the London Basque Society and over time got to know Kiko Moraiz. Born in San Sebastián, Kiko was invited to join a txoko as a young man but refused because he saw the men-only, members-only policy as both sexist and elitist. When he moved to London over a decade ago he missed the food and set about learning recipes. He now cooks a full four-course Basque meal once a month for fellow Basques there.
I travelled to Bilbao in October 2005 and, by chance, my trip coincided with the year of Basque gastronomy and British food fortnight. I contacted Juan Zabalar, the president of Txoko Mallona, a 40-member txoko in the centre of the old town. This society was set up in the 1940s and is believed to be the second oldest in Viscaya. Over the next month I spent many nights a week meeting, interviewing, eating with and cooking for its members as well as collecting source material for paintings.
Many of the men I met at the txoko and have subsequently painted grew up together under the Franco regime, when Euskera was banned and food was scarce. They are a friendly and generous group of men, many in their sixties, who after around thirty years of cooking in the txoko had become masterful cooks: delicate hake throats in a light batter, monkfish in a rich squid-ink sauce so thick and black it looked like tar, beef steaks served with piquillo pepper and garlic, squid with potatoes. In return I cooked a pork pie and piccalilli to feed twenty, green asparagus with butter (tinned white is more highly prized in the Basque country), chicken curry and roast beef with Yorkshire pudding. But the dish that got them most excited was a simple steamed lemon and orange sponge pudding with custard. It was strange to see such a familiar dish changed through someone else's perspective into something exotic.
I would ask the members for details about specific recipes and what they thought authenticity and traditional Basque food was. Why it was important to them? I also asked them about change in the txoko - would it ever allow women members? Would they always cook just Basque food? How might the next generation approach these traditions? Unintentionally, perhaps, Juan put it best when describing the dilemma of whether to add tomatoes to the tuna, red pepper and potato stew called marmitako: 'Traditionally, no, never, but I do and many people do now. You don't notice it with your eyes but you will in your mouth. Just one, maybe two, chopped up very small, it will improve it. We have an expression here, "what the eyes don't see the heart doesn't feel".'
Portraits from Txoko Mallona
Oil on canvas
various dimensions
2006