Scheduled Maintenance – March 15, 2026

The ESP website will be unavailable on Sunday, March 15, 2026, due to system upgrades. This includes access to X-ZONE and purchases.

All active timed-access products that overlap this date will automatically receive a 3-day extension (excluding the 2-hour  X-ZONE subscription)

Scheduled Maintenance – March 15, 2026

The ESP website will be unavailable on Sunday, March 15, 2026, due to system upgrades. This includes access to X-ZONE and purchases.

All active timed-access products that overlap this date will automatically receive a 3-day extension (excluding the 2-hour  X-ZONE subscription)

Menu Liquide (360p 2026)

The most advanced version of a "Liquid Menu" today isn't just a list of drinks—it’s a . This feature focuses on three core pillars:

In modern gastronomy (seen in restaurants like The Alchemist or Disfrutar), the "Liquid Menu" is no longer an accessory; it is a parallel story. It uses the liquid medium to deliver flavors that are impossible in solid food, such as "ethereal" foams or "suspended" oils that change flavor as they reach body temperature. MENU LIQUIDE

: A high-level liquid menu provides a non-alcoholic "mirror" for every alcoholic pairing. This uses techniques like lacto-fermentation, cold-press extraction, and Schisandra berry infusions to replicate the mouthfeel (tannins, acidity, body) of wine without the ethanol. Why this is "Deep" The most advanced version of a "Liquid Menu"

: Rather than just matching "red wine with steak," the menu uses molecular analysis to pair the aromatic compounds of the drink with the food. For example, a cocktail might use a hydrosol (distilled plant water) that shares the same chemical terpene as a specific herb in the dish. : A high-level liquid menu provides a non-alcoholic

: The menu is engineered as a biological journey. It starts with high-acid, low-alcohol aperitifs to stimulate salivary glands, moves to complex structural liquids (fermented juices, barrel-aged spirits) during the main course, and ends with "viscous" digestifs that coat the palate to signal satiety.