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Chef who fled communist country opens world's first Michelin-starred Cuban restaurant
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Chef and owner Osmel Gonzalez shares how Emelina in West Palm Beach, Florida, became the first Cuban restaurant in the world to receive a Michelin star and what the achievement means for the cuisine's future.
A chef who left communist Cuba behind is making culinary history in South Florida.
Just four months after opening its doors in West Palm Beach, Emelina recently became the first Cuban restaurant in the world to receive a Michelin star โ a distinction many chefs spend decades pursuing.
For chef and co-owner Osmel Gonzalez, the recognition is about more than fine dining. It's an opportunity to showcase what Cuban cuisine can become when creativity is no longer limited by scarcity.
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Gonzalez, 36, told Fox News Digital he was "happy and excited" to receive a Michelin star.
Named after Gonzalez's grandmother, Emelina offers a modern take on traditional Cuban flavors while honoring the culture's roots.ย
Osmel Gonzalez, shown above in foreground, is chef and co-owner of Emelina restaurant in West Palm Beach, Florida. "We really love our traditions and our classic food," he said.ย (Peter Burke/Fox News Digital)
"Most of the ingredients are sourced from South Florida to tell a unique story," the Michelin Guide description said. "Poached local oysters with yucca foam and mushroom powder show refinement, while cherry tomatoes with Cuban oregano chimichurri and macadamia milk foam showcase how simple ingredients can shine."
Gonzalez said the restaurant isn't trying to replace classic Cuban dishes โ it's trying to build upon them.
"We're not trying to reinvent Cuban food," he said. "We really love our traditions and our classic food. ... We're just here to kind of dream a little and take that Cuban food that we love into this journey of creativity."
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That vision is deeply personal. Gonzalez spent the first 22 years of his life in Cuba and said decades of communist rule have stifled the country's culinary development.
"Surviving is surviving," he said. "When you're surviving, you cannot be creative."
He said Cuban chefs on the island have spent generations focused on obtaining food rather than being innovative with it.
Key West Pink Shrimp, served with caimito, preserved turnip and a coconut-curry broth, is among the unconventional dishes served at Emelina. (Peter Burke/Fox News Digital)
"What's been holding [Cuban cuisine] from evolving is just the revolution that happened in Cuba," he said.ย
"For 67 years, people have just been struggling to get food."
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At Emelina, Gonzalez is doing something he said would have been impossible growing up in Cuba.ย
The restaurant features beef prominently on its menu, a deliberate choice because many Cubans had little access to it.
"Beef was never part of our menu in regular life," Gonzalez said. "Here we chose to present it in a way that we think we could have it in Cuba."
Gonzalez said he was "happy and excited" that Emelina became the first Cuban restaurant to receive a Michelin star. (Peter Burke/Fox News Digital)
The restaurant's atmosphere is also designed to evoke memories of a Cuba that many exiles remember from before the revolution.ย
Gonzalez describes his grandmother as representing "that beautiful Cuban woman" from a different era and said he hopes guests feel transported when they walk through the doors.
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As West Palm Beach's dining scene continues to grow, Gonzalez believes Emelina's success is only the beginning.
He hopes guests feel transported when they walk through the doors.
"I think in five years from now there's going to be a lot more chefs like us that are going to move into the area and contribute," he said.
For Gonzalez, earning the Michelin star is a milestone.ย
Gonzalez tries to bring nostalgia and creativity to Emelina with its unique menu. Above, he's shown inspecting a dish before the restaurant opens for dinner. (Peter Burke/Fox News Digital)
Keeping it, he said, will be the real challenge.
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"Every chef's dream is to have a Michelin star," he said.ย
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"But keeping this star is what's the really hard work."
Peter Burke is a lifestyle editor with Fox News Digital. He covers various lifestyle topics, with an emphasis on food and drink.
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