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Friday, March 26, 2010

I can't believe it IS butter: Top chef creates intricate works of art with golden spread

By Daily Mail Reporter

From http://www.dailymail.co.uk

We all know too much butter is bad for your health, but who would have thought of using it instead to create these magnificent sculptures.

One of the world's fanciest chefs Vipula Athukorale has designed a Rolls-Royce car, a scene from Pinocchio and detail from the Pied Piper story.

The level of detail in his work is so fine that he cannot even breathe on the butter before cutting figures.

They might look like they're about to melt, but Mr Athukorale said the secret was using the right type of golden spread. He opts for pastry margarine, rather than butter, which tends to melt at much higher temperatures.

Vipula Athukorale with his Rolls-Royce sculpted from butter

Spread of brilliance: Vipula Athukorale with his Rolls-Royce sculpted from butter

Mr Athukorale, 46, picked up two gold medals and a silver at the international Salon Culinaire Awards in London last week.

The judges were amazed by the level of detail and Mr Athukorale's patience.

'The sculptures take a very long time,' said the father of one from Leicester.

'The Rolls-Royce took nearly 90 hours, but the inside and the underside are all detailed.

'If you breathe, it moves your hand,' he said. 'You can't do that. So I lean in, take a deep breath, hold it, do what I need to do and then lean back and breathe out.'

A scene from the Pied Piper is reinvented. Mr Athukorale uses  pastry margarine instead of butter because it doesn't melt so easily

Creamy goodness: A scene from the Pied Piper is reinvented. Mr Athukorale uses pastry margarine instead of butter because it doesn't melt so easily

Mr Athukorale also has to break regularly from his work and wash his hands in ice cold water.

'Otherwise, if my fingers are too hot, it's not good for the sculpture,' he said.

Once finished, the sculptures can stand on display for years. 'I did a Viking ship when I was in Bahrain, and that is still on display in the hotel lobby. It has been there for years.

'They don't melt. I do the sculptures in pastry margarine, not butter. It's a bit harder. You need to keep them covered sometimes, to protect them from dust, but they are OK.'

The chef holds his breath as he sculpts the intricate details of a  scene from Pinocchio, which won a gold medal at the Salon Culinaire  Awards

Steady: The chef holds his breath as he sculpts the intricate details of a scene from Pinocchio, which won a gold medal at the Salon Culinaire Awards

Mr Athukorale, who was born in Sri Lanka, has worked in top-class hotels in Greece, Iraq, Cyprus, Bahrain and England.

'When I was small, I was very good at drawing. Then someone gave me some clay and I started sculpting,' he said.

'I started doing polystyrene sculptures - that's my favourite - and then moved on to butter and food.'

He was made redundant late last year. Today, he finds himself in the curious position of being one of the best fine detail chefs in the world - but with no job.

'I am beginning to think that what I do is no longer needed,' Mr Athukorale said.

'Good hotels always used to have a kitchen artist. Now, they don't. I feel like all the things I can do, all the things I feel so proud of, they don't matter any more. It is very sad, but I want to work.'

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