TARGET 110622

El Diablo Restaurant
Cooking Food on a Volcano

Ultimate Grill

The name of the restaurant is El Diablo, or the devil, which kind of fits, considering what takes place here. Feast your eyes on this ultimate barbecue experience complete with panoramic and dramatic views. Enjoyed against the volcanic backdrop of Lanzarote’s Timanfaya National Park in the Canary Islands, the food served at El Diablo is cooked on a massive cast iron grill built over a large volcanic vent.

The Restaurant

Designed by the local architect Cesar Manrique and built in the 1970s, the meat, poultry and fish are grilled using the volcano’s geothermal heat. El Diablo’s manager, Julio Padron, told ABC News that the heat emanates from the volcano ”24 hours a day, 365 days a year, reaching between 450 to 500 degrees Celsius.” That is why volcanologists call it a geothermal anomaly, because of the unusual temperatures on the surface that come from underground.

The installation

The restaurant consulted scientists and volcanologists to check the food and the way it is being grilled, and they gave it the thumbs up, deeming it safe, saying there were ”no dangers associated with this technique of cooking at all,” Padron said.

Blowing Steam

Thankfully, the volcano does not spew lava because it’s dormant. But the bursts of heat or hot vapor are enough to cook delectable dishes that have many tourists flocking to the restaurant in droves. Open from midday until 3:30 p.m., the restaurant is ”fully booked every day,”

Just Cook'in

The area is famous for its Martian-like landscape. The ”Montañas del Fuego”, or "Mountains of Fire", were created in the early 18th century when more than 100 volcanoes sprung up on the island. Because the rainfall is low there is hardly any erosion, so most of the landscape looks the way it did in 1824, the date of the last volcanic eruption.

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A Restaurant Built on a Volcano Uses it For Cooking



Many thanks to Ray McClure for providing this target.