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Paltrow & pals hit the road in Spain
Daniel Woolls
MADRID, Spain—Gwyneth Paltrow, acclaimed chef Mario Batali and New York
Times food columnist Mark Bittman are embarking on a road trip that
boasts slick cars, hearty food and a candid camera monitoring the flashy
travellers.
Paltrow, the duo of American food gurus and Spanish actress Claudia
Bassols announced their journey, which will be captured in a 13-part TV
series, “Spain ... on the road again.”
The series, which is designed to give viewers a closer look at Spain’s
cuisine, wine, culture and nightlife, will air on PBS next fall.
Organizers are negotiating with broadcasters in Spain and Latin America.
They four celebs were to set off Wednesday and spend much of the next
four months cruising around in a fleet of Mercedes, oblivious to what
award-winning producer and fellow adventurer Charles Pinsky has in mind
for their itinerary, and sampling the best fare in a country that
usually ranks as the world’s second most powerful tourist magnet, after
France.
In the cars at least, tiny cameras will monitor how they react to the
Spanish countryside whizzing by them. Other camera shoots await them
elsewhere at eateries, shops and museums.
“It is going to be a road trip as if anybody else was taking a road
trip, although we’ve planned things out. We’ve got some special things
that maybe other tourists might not get a chance to do, as well,” Pinsky
told a press conference Tuesday in Madrid.
“I don’t know what we are going to do, but it is going to be fun,”
Paltrow added in very good Spanish, a language the 35-year-old actress
learned as a student while living with a Spanish family in the central
Castille region.
Paltrow, a longtime vegetarian, said she likes rice dishes and seafood
and will get by on these in a country that is big on meat.
As far as cuisine in general is concerned, the journey is about roots
rather than three-star glitz. “Tradition is more important than
novelty,” Batali said.
“The most fun is to go and have someone serve something to you that is
cooked the same way their grandmother, their great-grandmother, did it,”
said Bittman. “That’s what I love”. |