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  • In the countryside, there's no culture for fine dining.

  • People eat because they need to feed themselves.

  • So realizing fine dining

  • in a place that doesn't have this tradition is really very difficult.

  • The challenge was big.

  • That was not a touristic area, there were no restaurants around.

  • If you're motivated enough

  • and for us, the motivation was a struggle to survive,

  • then one day you may reach a goal

  • and the goal is being good enough that people are willing to travel to you

  • and hopefully you make them happy.

  • Ana Roš took over Hiša Franko with her husband Valter

  • after the two fell in love and inherited the house from Valter's parents.

  • Today it's a food destination

  • with a waiting list of up to six months

  • and dishes that people travel thousands of miles to try.

  • Hiša Franko in all its history, even before we took over the house,

  • has been a kind of a center of local life somehow.

  • People have been getting married here, they were celebrating births.

  • Today they are not celebrating marriages

  • but people still come because they bring in ingredients

  • which get into transformation through our hands.

  • It means that we are ambassadors of our land.

  • But, at the same time, for people who travel to us,

  • we can show not only our culture and history

  • but also the future.

  • We actually change the social aspect of the area.

  • Young people see the success of Hiša Franko as an example that

  • you can live, survive and be successful in such a remote valley.

  • When I was a child there were a few moments in my life

  • that became a kind of my DNA.

  • We had a little red boat, named after my sister,

  • and we would be going up on the open sea.

  • My mother was picking a lot of oysters.

  • She would be throwing them on the boat and then my father was opening them

  • and me and my sister like eating them

  • just like that, without lemon, without adding anything.

  • I think it influences a lot the way I cook.

  • Because I always go somehow back to those flavors.

  • A lot of dishes were born from mistakes.

  • Being self-taught gives you a different point of view on the material.

  • Our way of seeing the food, our way of seeing the service,

  • our way of seeing the restaurant

  • is different.

  • I'm happy I never did culinary schools,

  • because it gave me a possibility to establish a kitchen

  • that has a completely different perspective from a lot of other chefs.

  • There is a lot of intelligent chefs around the world who think

  • in a similar way that we think.

  • But I'm not inspired by anyone else.

  • I need to survive here.

  • This means listen to the nature, respect the nature,

  • and work on a small level.

  • Take from the nature only what you need,

  • and use it only in a season when it grows.

  • Please go with plums.

  • We follow it very strictly, we still have a lot to learn

  • but I believe that this philosophy

  • can be the future.

  • There is so much around us that people don't use and understand.

  • And I believe that in Hiša Franko, we are opening these new doors.

  • Slowly, step by step,

  • every year something new,

  • every year something more original.

  • And this requires from us really a lot of work.

  • I really believe that a good chef, a great chef,

  • a chef dreamer

  • is a chef who believes that he has a lot of things

  • that he can still do, to improve things

  • and to make things better.

In the countryside, there's no culture for fine dining.

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