Guest chef at Ikarus: Álvaro Salazar

A culinary journey from Andalusia to Mallorca
© Helge Kirchberger Photography
© Helge Kirchberger Photography
Alexandra Gorsche © Conny Leitgeb Photography
7. December 2025 | 
Alexandra Gorsche
7. December 2025
|
Alexandra Gorsche

When Mediterranean lightness meets Andalusian temperament, the result is a menu that is more than just an arrangement of courses: it becomes a narrative about origins, freedom, and the longing for new perspectives. In December 2025, two-star chef Álvaro Salazar from VORO in Mallorca will take over as guest chef of the month at Restaurant Ikarus – and take Salzburg on a sensory journey between Andalusia and the Balearic Islands.

A guest chef who makes curiosity his guiding principle

There are chefs who cook magnificently. And there are chefs who open doors: to memories, landscapes, desires. Álvaro Salazar belongs to the latter group. Born in Linares, Andalusia, shaped by the light and warmth of Jaén, he carries culinary DNA that combines both the temperament of the south and the serenity of the Mediterranean. His curiosity has accompanied him since his early days in his aunt Luisa's kitchen—and today it is the driving force behind a philosophy that has long enjoyed cult status at VORO in Mallorca.

With two Michelin stars and two Repsol suns, the restaurant is one of the most influential fine dining establishments in the Balearic Islands. The name “VORO,” derived from the Latin vorare (“to devour”), says it all: Salazar cooks for people “who are hungry for new ideas, new flavors, and new perspectives on the Mediterranean.”

From Jaén to Canyamel – a biography of curiosity, consistency, and balance

Salazar's path took him beyond renowned establishments such as Tragabuches, Echaurren, and La Seda and out into the world: to Paris, Kuwait, and finally back to Spain, where he earned his first Michelin star at Argos (Port de Pollença) just one year after it opened. With VORO at the Cap Vermell Grand Hotel, he later created a stage for his very own signature style: Mediterranean, profound, with an unmistakable Andalusian soul.

His menus – VORO (17 courses) and DeVORO (22 courses) – unfold like stories in three acts: dawn, zenith, dusk. For Salazar, the sea is his most important ally. The decision to drastically reduce the amount of meat is not a trend statement, but an expression of a conviction: creativity comes from focus, not abundance.

Regional products, small fishermen, garden herbs, home-baked sourdough bread, forgotten varieties, underrated sea plants – Salazar uses them with respect, precision, and a curiosity that goes far beyond the obvious.

Hangar-7: When culinary world tours come to an end

Since its opening, the Ikarus restaurant has been a global culinary laboratory, a place for curiosity and the highest standards. Under the patronage of Eckart Witzigmann and the direction of Executive Chef Martin Klein, the guest chef concept brings a new international signature to Salzburg every month. For the team, each month means an intensive immersion in a completely new culinary world – including techniques, products, aesthetics, and philosophies. For guests, it means: get in, sit back, and fasten your taste buds.

Andalusia meets the Balearic Islands – Salazar's menu at Ikarus

Salazar brings his spirit of discovery to Salzburg. His menu is an Andalusian interpretation of the Mediterranean – a culinary mosaic of saltiness, warmth, memories, and clear, reduced flavors.

Some highlights:

  • Otoro – seaweed meringue – anise emulsion
  • Blue crab – spirulina – nori – trout caviar
  • Mallorcan red shrimp – cuttlefish – vongole – salicornia – Palo Cortado vinaigrette
  • Ravioli with Iberian pork, shrimp, and white Alba truffle
  • Dombes duck “royal” with parsnip and carrot
  • Torrija with brown butter, vanilla, galangal, and meringue

The menu tells a story – about the sea, light, memories, and the courage to rethink familiar products. It crosses boundaries, but always remains clearly rooted in Salazar's origins.

Culinary signals: Why Salazar's signature style points to the future

  1. The shift to “sea-driven fine dining”
    Salazar exemplifies a generation that consciously uses less meat—not out of renunciation, but out of a desire for quality and identity.
  2. Regional producers in a premium context
    VORO shows how small producers, local fishermen, and biodiverse gardens can reshape fine dining.
  3. Culinary identity 2.0
    Andalusian and Mallorcan techniques are not fused here, they are interpreted. This is relevant for chefs who want to integrate their own origins more strongly into their menus.

Conclusion: A journey between two worlds – and a menu full of future

In December 2025, Álvaro Salazar will bring a menu to Salzburg that not only works with Mediterranean products, but also with their emotions.

It is a journey from Andalusia to Mallorca, condensed onto plates, techniques, and memories. At the Ikarus restaurant in Hangar-7, this signature style meets a team that has been bringing the world's best cuisines to Salzburg for two decades – and repeatedly demonstrating how culinary world travel and precision craftsmanship can intertwine. A menu for people who are hungry: for ideas, for depth, for SEA.

A la table, s'il vous plaît! A la table, s'il vous plaît! A la table, s'il vous plaît! A la table, s'il vous plaît!
Copyright for the featured images used:
© Helge Kirchberger Photography

Book tip: Lasagna, Moussaka, and Co. – Happiness in Layers

Ilse Fischer's “Lasagna, Moussaka, and Co.” is a culinary journey through Europe in casserole form

Casseroles are underestimated. They are often considered cozy, filling, a little old-fashioned—but they are actually culinary narrative forms. This is exactly where Ilse Fischer comes in. Lasagne, Moussaka und Co.: Das Glück in Schichten (Lasagna, Moussaka and Co.: Happiness in Layers) is not just another “lasagna book,” but a collection of cultural identities, layered in dough, vegetables, sauces, and memories.

What sets this book apart from classic recipe collections is its focus on the principle of layering. Fischer shows that whether it’s Italian vincigrassi, Greek pastitsio, Alsatian baeckeoffe, or Savoyard tartiflette, ingredients are layered, interwoven, and combined in the oven to create something greater than the sum of its parts throughout Europe. It’s about more than technique. It’s about origin, climate, availability, and food culture.

INFO:
Lasagne, Moussaka and Co. – Happiness in Layers
Author: Ilse Fischer
Illustrations: Gudy Steinmill-Hommel
Publisher: Christian Verlag GmbH
Publication date: November 2025
Length: 256 pages
Binding: Hardcover
Language: German
ISBN: 978-3-9895101-6-6

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How Salon Paradise at The Hoxton is reinventing the night—and why Vienna's most exciting cultural space is emerging beneath it.

Vienna has many bars. But only a few places that truly create their own world. Salon Paradise is exactly that: not a nightclub, but a state of mind. A dimly lit basement bar where conversations become deeper, drinks taste clearer, and music doesn’t accompany, but leads. After the summer break, Vienna’s most iconic underground bar returns to The Hoxton, Vienna on November 22—with a new tempo, a new sound, and a sharpened attitude. The rebellious soul remains, but it now beats with greater focus.

quick & dirty
Alvaro Salazar © Helge Kirchberger Photography
Guest chef at Ikarus: Álvaro Salazar

When Mediterranean lightness meets Andalusian temperament, the result is a menu that is more than just an arrangement of courses: it becomes a narrative about origins, freedom, and the longing for new perspectives. In December 2025, two-star chef Álvaro Salazar from VORO in Mallorca will take over as guest chef of the month at Restaurant Ikarus – and take Salzburg on a sensory journey between Andalusia and the Balearic Islands.