When they were just eight years old, Spanish twins Sergio and Javier Torres set a goal: they wanted to become chefs who were among the top in their field. To achieve this, they strategically split up to get training in different esteemed kitchens around the world, published books on cooking and presented a popular TV show. The plan worked.

Over four decades after they surprised their family by saying they wanted to be chefs, Sergio and Javier's Barcelona restaurant, Cocina Hermanos Torres, was awarded a third Michelin star last month. "We developed a plan, that I think is a perfect plan," a smiling Javier, 51, said at the restaurant, one of only 13 in Spain and Portugal with the top three-star ranking from the prestigious French guide.

"When we started to go out of Barcelona, we thought that Sergio would take one path, I would take another, and we would never coincide until we were ready," he added. The journey took the twins-who grew up in a working-class Barcelona neighborhood - to different elite restaurants in Spain, Switzerland and France.

Spanish twin chefs, Javier (right) and Sergio (third left) Torres prepare some meals in the kitchen of their restaurant 'Cocina Hermanos Torres' after receiving the distinction of three-stars from the Michelin guide, in Barcelona.

Before moving to Paris where he worked with top French chef Alain Ducasse, Sergio spent two years at the award-winning Le Jardin des Sens in Montpellier which is also run by twins-Jacques and Laurent Pourcel. "We were separated but every month we met up in a restaurant, ate well, we spent the little money we had and developed the next steps of our strategy," said Sergio as he sat beside his brother.

Grandmother influence

Each brother specialized in different areas-one learned to cook meat and vegetables, the other fish and bread, he added. Both siblings credit their grandmother for their passion for cooking. She was part of a wave of people who moved from the southern region of Andalusia to the more industrialized Catalonia in the northeast in search of a better life following Spain's devastating 1936-39 civil war.

"Our grandmother looked after us, and since she was in the kitchen all day we literally grew up in a kitchen," said Sergio. After earning two Michelin stars with their previous project "Dos Cielos" and becoming familiar faces thanks to their participation in a cooking show, they decided to open Cocina Hermanos Torres in 2018. The twins visited some 200 possible locations before settling on an industrial building near Barcelona's iconic Camp Nou football stadium.

A meal getting prepared by the Spanish twin chefs, Javier and Sergio Torres in the kitchen of their restaurant 'Cocina Hermanos Torres'.
A meal getting prepared by the Spanish twin chefs, Javier and Sergio Torres in the kitchen of their restaurant 'Cocina Hermanos Torres'.
Spanish chef, Javier Torres tastes a meal in the kitchen of his restaurant 'Cocina Hermanos Torres'.
Spanish chef, Javier Torres tastes a meal in the kitchen of his restaurant 'Cocina Hermanos Torres'.
Spanish twin chefs, Javier (right) and Sergio (left) Torres prepare some meals in the kitchen of their restaurant 'Cocina Hermanos Torres'.
Spanish twin chefs, Javier (right) and Sergio (left) Torres prepare some meals in the kitchen of their restaurant 'Cocina Hermanos Torres'.

They invested nearly three million euros to convert it into the restaurant, which seats a maximum of 50 people at tables with no wall separating them from the three workstations where staff prepare meals. "We wanted to reflect what we experienced in our childhood, which was a kitchen and a table, and everyone around the table," said Javier.

'Difficult road'

The tasting menu costs 255 euros ($265), with another 160 euros if it is paired with wine, a stiff price in a country where the monthly minimum wage is around 1,000 euros. Praised for its creative and playful cuisine, among the dishes served is cured squid with poultry broth and an onion soup with Parmesan cheese and truffles. "You will experience flavors that you have never experienced before, because you will discover a cuisine where you will like what you don't like," said Sergio.

On a recent visit at noon, 50 staff members-many of them young-are busy at work finalizing details before customers arrive. "It seems like today a chef is like a 'super star'. It's a very difficult road, very difficult, with long hours and it's very hard to make it, it takes tremendous perseverance," said Sergio. "You have to risk it, go for broke, give it your all because if you don't, you are not living," he added with a smile.  - AFP