QUIQUE GARCIA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Want to eat at El Celler de Can Roca, named this year's "World's Best Restaurant" by Restaurant Magazine? You'll have to book a table 11 months in advance.
Gisella Deputato/CNN
One of 21 courses served at El Celler de Can Roca during its 2014/2015 dining season, Summer Vegetable Stock is a vegetable emulsion with gelatinous drops of vegetables and a colorful sprinkling of flowers and leaves. The restaurant will offer a new menu when it re-opens its doors on September 14 following its annual summer recess.
Courtesy of El Celler de Can Roca
Veal shin served with perretxiko mushrooms, marrow, tendons, avocado and truffle.
Courtesy of El Celler de Can Roca
The scintillating mackerel with pickles and mullet roe owes its sparkle to the sauce containing liquid silver. It was named Standout Dish by the awards team at World's 50 Best Restaurants.
Gisella Deputato/CNN
El Celler de Can Roca is famed for masterfully combining amazing flavors with playful elements and artistry. Its Orange Colourology dessert features bits of tangerine, egg yolk, passion fruit and carrot encased in a sugar bowl with a hint of violet.
Courtesy of El Celler de Can Roca
This dish is made from fermented corn, toasted corn sable, huitlacoche, fried corn and vanilla. Huitlacoche, also known as corn smut, is a fungus that spoils corn crops but is also regarded as a delicacy.
QUIQUE GARCIA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
El Celler de Can Roca is run by the three impassionate Roca brothers. From left to right: Josep is head sommelier, Joan, the eldest, is executive chef and Jordi is the pastry chef.
QUIQUE GARCIA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Traveling is a huge part of the restaurant's research and development. This year, it closed for five weeks while the brothers -- along with the 40-strong El Celler team -- went on a culinary journey through Argentina, the U.S. and Turkey.
Gisella Deputato/CNN
Suspiro Limeno, made with milk, lime, coriander, milk caramel and pisco.
Courtesy of El Celler de Can Roca
This is the 2014 iteration of the Orange Chromatism dessert. Jordi Roca's sweet creations are almost too beautiful to eat.
Courtesy of El Celler de Can Roca
Chocolate Anarchy is an explosion of different types and textures of cocoa. There are 50 constituent parts.
Courtesy of El Celler de Can Roca
This delicate dish features oyster, anemone sauce, garlic, walnut, seaweed and apple.
JUAN MABROMATA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
"The restaurant goes on tour ... just like a rock band!" says chef Joan Roca, here supervising in Buenos Aires restaurant Terrazas Bistro as part of El Celler de Can Roca's 2015 summer cooking tour.
Courtesy of El Celler de Can Roca
In 1967 the brothers' parents, Josep Roca and Montserrat Fontane, opened Can Roca, a bar-restaurant in Taiala-Germans Sabat, on the outskirts of Girona. A young Joan and Josep are pictured here at the bar.
QUIQUE GARCIA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
El Celler de Can Roca is located in Girona, Spain -- about 116 kilometers northwest of Barcelona. The parents still run Can Roca, the family restaurant on the outskirts of Girona where the brothers grew up.

Story highlights

El Celler de Can Roca won the top spot at 2015's World's 50 Best Restaurants Awards

Those wanting a seat at the Spanish restaurant need to reserve 11 months in advance

CNN  — 

When the first dish on the menu is called “The World,” you know you’re about to bite into something ambitious.

Ambition is something you should expect though when the restaurant – El Celler de Can Roca – is widely acclaimed as the planet’s best.

And how do you put the world on plate?

The answer comes when the waitress opens a black paper lantern to reveal five edible bites – each representing a different country.

There’s pickled vegetables for China; a mini burrito for Mexico; aromatic tastes of almond, rose, honey and saffron for Morocco; a stuffed vine leaf for Turkey.

I’m instructed to start my epicurean odyssey through the restaurant’s 21 courses via South Korea: a tasty and promising morsel of panco fried bread, bacon and kimchi.

With an 11-month-long waiting list, getting a table at this Spanish restaurant is no mean feat.

Thankfully I was able to grab a spot left by a cancellation – the very last day before the restaurant closes for the summer.

Located 116 kilometers northwest of Barcelona in the city of Girona, El Celler snagged the #1 title at this 2015’s “World’s 50 Best Restaurants Awards,” a list compiled by a panel of global industry experts.

It also holds three Michelin stars, earned over the course of 14 years.

Meet the Roca brothers

The restaurant is run by the three impassionate Roca brothers.

Joan, the eldest, is the executive chef, Josep is the head sommelier and Jordi is the pastry chef.

El Celler’s growth, slow and steady, spans nearly 30 years.

Joan says what they do now is simply a reflection of what they did in the past – only now they’re better equipped.

“We have a new restaurant, a new kitchen, but in the end we always pursue this idea of seducing our guests with one simple message: food is the language we use to tell stories,” he says.

“Here we tell a story that starts with a journey around the world, from South Korea through the Mediterranean, and that travels back in time… to our childhood here in Girona.”

The Roca brothers -- Jordi, Joan and Josep -- celebrate their 2015 "World's Best Restaurant" win.

The Roca brothers spent their childhood in Can Roca, a restaurant still run by their parents on the outskirts of the city.

“My mom is 74 years old, my dad is 81 and they continue on working with passion, which is fantastic,” says Joan.

“I believe chefs have to be in the restaurant, because guests come to our home.”

Quite literally.

Joan and his family live just above El Celler.

Familiar tastes in unfamiliar forms

Meeting the Roca brothers is part of the El Celler dining experience.

During my visit, a smiling Josep wanders around the room, greeting and welcoming guests.

Drawing their inspiration from traditional Catalan cuisine, they reinvent it in a modern and (in the words of Joan) “avant-garde” way.

There’s an element of fun and theater in every dish, along with sophistication in the design.

“Green Olive’s Icecream” is an unexpected treat – olives, hanging from a bonsai olive tree, are served not as desserts, but as precursors to the main dishes.

A pop up scene with cardboard cutouts of the brothers as children appears on the plate alongside miniature tapas.

Playfulness aside, the menu also showcases the best seasonal ingredients, so there are several fish courses.

The “Elderflower Infusion” contains cherries and smoked eel, not usually to my taste but I clean the plate.

My favorite dish, the “Summer Vegetable Stock,” is a delicate vegetable emulsion with gelatinous drops of vegetables and a colorful sprinkling of flowers and leaves.

Three excellent meat dishes follow and then, just when I think I can’t possibly eat any more, it’s time for desserts.

Jordi Roca’s creations are so beautiful they’re almost too pretty to eat.

The “Suspiro Limeno,” inspired by a Peruvian classic, is extremely refreshing. “Chocolate Anarchy” includes the dark substance in many different textures.

But my favorite is “Orange Colourology” – orange (of course) elements encased in a sugar bowl with a hint of violet: evoking my grandmother’s favorite perfume.

I mention this to Joan Roca, who nods and smiles knowingly.

“The restaurant goes on tour…just like a rock band!”

The Roca brothers call themselves gastronomic travelers.

“Our cuisine is local, but our inspiration is global,” says Joan.

“There are dishes that are inspired by other cultures but it’s important that the ingredients are seasonal and local.

“We learned about fermenting vegetables in Korea and we are using local black garlic that is fermented using that same technique.”

Traveling is a huge part of their research and development. This year, the restaurant closed for five weeks while the brothers – along with the 40-strong El Celler team – went on a culinary journey through Argentina, the U.S. and Turkey.

Through a series of pop-up events, the brothers created a special and exclusive menu for each destination, inspired by the local culture and cuisine.

This formula was first tested last year, when the team traveled through the U.S., Peru, Colombia and Mexico.

“For a few years now we have been asked to open El Celler de Can Roca in Paris, Las Vegas, Shanghai… and we always say ‘no”,’ says Joan.

“We can’t replicate this restaurant if we can’t be in the kitchen. By taking the entire team to different cities, we feel confident our guests are getting the best experience: wherever the team is, that’s where you’ll find El Celler de Can Roca.

“The restaurant goes on tour… just like a rock band!”

Dream dining guest? “The boss”

After its 2015 summer recess, Celler de Can Roca re-opens its doors on September 14.

The brothers aim to produce a menu that reflects the regions they’ve been exploring.

“The idea is to adapt to these cultures: it’s a way to learn, it’s a way to look for inspiration, start from scratch with the produce and culture from a new place,” Joan says.

Having cooked for international celebrities, sports stars and Spanish royals, is there anyone else Joan would love to see sitting in their restaurant?

“Bruce Springsteen,” he says.” I’d love to cook for Bruce Springsteen.”

And with that, it’s time for the chef to return to his kitchen, leaving me just enough time for one last question: what does their mom think about the brothers’ “World’s Best Restaurant” title?

“She thinks that they are all crazy! The best restaurant in the world, in my view, is hers.”

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