There are culinary victories that feel expected — polished, elegant, predictable — and then there are the ones that feel like Poseidon and all nine Muses got together, clapped their hands, and said “Yes, him, the Cretan one, send him to Spain,” which is precisely how Ioannis Liapakis walked into the University of Barcelona, performed culinary witchcraft on a recipe his ancestors probably cooked during the Ottoman Empire, and then calmly took home the European Young Chef Award while Europe stood there blinking like it had just been defeated by the world’s most charismatic earthquake.
Ioannis Liapakis’ culinary story does not begin with a career choice; it begins in the most intimate corner of a Cretan home, at an age when most children are learning to hold a crayon while he was already holding a wooden spoon, cooking beside his mother and grandmother in a kitchen where tradition was not something taught but absorbed, a quiet inheritance passed from hand to hand before he was even old enough to understand its weight. By fourteen, he had already stepped into a local restaurant, discovering that the intensity and rhythm of a real kitchen matched the cadence of his own instincts, and in 2011, he was named the Youngest Chef of Greece, a recognition that simply put a title on
The competition, held on November 25 and 26 at the Escola Universitària d’Hoteleria i Turisme de Sant Pol de Mar, gathered finalists from across Europe — Slovenia, Coimbra, Sicily, Catalonia, Gozo, Central Dalmatia, Banat — all carrying the pride of their regions, their traditional dishes, their hard-won techniques, and their dreams of impressing the jury, but the moment Ioannis arrived with his reinterpretation of erevinthos, which is essentially rice and chickpeas until a Cretan decides it deserves a PhD, it became clear that this was not going to be a gentle, polite competition; this was going to be a culinary landslide.
And at 23 years old, when most chefs are still learning not to burn onions, Ioannis presented Erevinthos — a dish so deeply rooted in Mediterranean soul that the jury practically bowed. He took a recipe that families have cooked for centuries — sometimes joyfully, sometimes desperately, sometimes because that was simply all they had — and he rebuilt it using modern fermentation techniques, precision like a scientist, and ingredients that read like a love letter to Greek geography: rice from Hálastra, chickpeas from Lasithi, bonito smoked with the kind of seriousness fishermen reserve for funeral rites, and sea lettuce plucked from the Aegean, which is essentially Poseidon’s personal garden.
There was no gimmickry. There were no fireworks. There was just flavor — unapologetic, elemental flavor — the kind that arrives without ornament and sits heavily on the soul because it carries meaning.
He could have stopped there, but it is Ioannis, so, of course, he added references to 20th-century Greek history, cave-aged cheeses, and preparations that whisper stories of famine, resilience, survival, and the eternal Cretan refusal to surrender, even when all they have is legumes and volcanic determination.
Meanwhile, the podium filled beautifully behind him: Pija Frešer from Slovenia took second place with a glowing reinterpretation of Pohorje stew, a dish so warm and authentic the jury nearly adopted her, and Joan Taltavull from Menorca took third with Arròs de la Terra, resurrecting xeixa wheat like a culinary archaeologist who refuses to let a grain die quietly.
Every chef reimagined a traditional plate using local products, which makes this competition feel like a Mediterranean Avengers assembly — each region arriving with heritage on one hand and innovation on the other — but somewhere between Catalonia and Lasithi, Ioannis tapped into that sweet spot where history and technique fuse into something unrepeatable.
Because this is what he does: he turns the past into a compass, not a cage; he treats tradition as a living, breathing organism; he listens to the land the way other chefs listen to timers; and when he says things like “tradition is not a boundary, it’s a foundation,” he does not mean it poetically — he means it structurally, because his cooking stands on that foundation like a lighthouse, sending signals across the sea.
And honestly, watching a 23-year-old Cretan chef beat Europe in Barcelona with rice, chickpeas, sea greens, fermentation, and grandmother-blessed energy feels like the universe is working exactly as it should.
All pictures via Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WorldRegionofGastronomy