Leaving more than two million palates disappointed and knowing that they will never get to eat there, El Bulli, the best restaurant in the world, has closed its doors.
A select 45 extra-special guests savoured the last ever servings of raspberry hare risotto and frozen parmesan air with muesli.
The diners - friends, family and some of the best-known chefs from around the globe - were treated to a 50-course meal, a champagne party, and a swim in the Costa Brava bay just metres away from the three Michelin-starred Spanish eatery.
Ferran Adria, the "godfather" of molecular gastronomy, shocked the culinary world when he announced last year that he was to close his beachside restaurant, acclaimed as the best in the world five times and boasting Catherine Zeta-Jones, Gordon Ramsay and American writer Jay McInerney among its fans.
Adria and his 70 chefs have come up with more than 1200 dishes over the past 24 years and delighted customers with experimental cuisine, ranging from "tobacco-flavoured foam" to "reconstituted olives". The restaurant will be transformed into a "gastronomic think-tank" by 2014 which will focus on stretching the boundaries of food.