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(CNN)Pop-ups have taken the culinary world by storm in recent years, allowing chefs of repute to bring their unique experience and talent to shine in someone else's kitchen.
Here are 10 tasty ways to take your palate on the road and join them.
1. Malcolm Lee at Asia Society's Garden Court Cafe, New York
Chef Malcolm Lee normally plies his trade at Singapore's Candlenut, a stylish conversion of a heritage building and home to the world's only Michelin-starred Peranakan restaurant.
Peranakan cuisine and culture -- from the descendants of (mainly) Chinese immigrants to the Malay Archipelago -- is being celebrated at The Asia Society in New York from March 7 to June 4.
Diners can expect dishes including "YeYe" coconut chicken curry with kaffir lime leaf, octopus with a pineapple achar pickle or creamy coconut panna cotta with pandan jelly.
2. Iberostar Chefs on Tour, Mexico, Dominican Republic, Jamaica and Cuba
Top global chefs including Emma Bengtsson from Aquavit in New York and Suzette Gresham from Acquarello in San Francisco are heading to warmer climes, notably Mexico, for a series of pop-up dinners with the Iberostar group of hotels.
The nine chefs involved boast no fewer than 14 Michelin stars across a variety of cuisines between them, meaning lucky diners in Iberostar properties get to sample some of their most renowned signature dishes.
As an example of what can be expected, the young Danish chef Ronny Emborg, who normally wows diners at Atera in New York, is serving beautifully plated razor clam and beets with horseradish or beef with broccoli, wasabi and smoked bone marrow sauce.
3. "Four hands dinners" at Nerua Guggenheim Bilbao, Spain
To mark the 20th anniversary of the Guggenheim Museum in the Basque city of Bilbao, four of the world's most celebrated international chefs are joining forces for a series of "four hands'"dinners.
That means that each chef -- Bruno Oteiza (Biko), Joan Roca (El Celler de Can Roca), Mauro Colagreco (Mirazur) and Virgilio Martinez (Central) -- works in tandem with Josean Alija, the chef of the Michelin-starred Nerua restaurant in the Guggenheim.
The ongoing series, which kicked off in February and closes in September, promises serious 12-course gourmet experiences along with conferences about gastronomic culture featuring the culinary masters as part of the Toparte program within the Guggenheim auditorium.
4. Test Kitchen, Hong Kong
Hong Kong's already vibrant dining scene gets regular boosts in the form of pop-up dinners held at Test Kitchen, a cool space in the city's burgeoning Sai Ying Pun district.
Cooking for three or four nights each, global chefs of serious repute show their skills, influences, techniques and flavors while learning about the city's produce and traditions.
That could mean Gal Ben-Moshe from Berlin's Glass restaurant, Iceland's Victoria Eliasdttir or the San Pellegrino young global chef of the year for 2016, Ireland's Mark Moriarty, overseeing the action at the pass.
5. "Archipelago Amigos" at Ubud Food Festival, Bali
"Archipelago Amigos" brings together three of South East Asia's most renowned chefs as Chele Gonzalez from Manila's Gallery Vask joins Ray Adriansyah and Eelke Plasmeijer from Restaurant Locavore in Bali.
Spanish chef Gonzalez regularly hosts pop-ups himself through Cross Cultures dinners in Manila, but he'll be heading to the Indonesian island as part of the Ubud Food Festival on May 14.
The joint degustation menu from the three chefs celebrates the locavore movement and the produce of the two island nations, both of which are seeing their global culinary status rising.
6. The "Sparkling 10" Chef Series, Altira, Macau
"Sparkling 10" brings together heavyweight global culinary talent including Gaetan Evrard from L'Evidence in France, Norbert Niederkofler from Italy's Restaurant St Hubertus, Kirika Oi from Manila's NOBU and Ryan Clift from Singapore's Tippling Club to mark the 10th anniversary of Altira Macau.
The pop-up dining series, which runs throughout May, covers a world of cuisines from Japanese-Peruvian to classic Cantonese, modern European to perfectly-plated classic French fine dining.
Available at both lunch and dinner for four or five-day residencies, the guest chefs are accompanied by some of the world's most renowned mixologists to ensure that the quality of drinks match the plates.
7. New York's Root & Bone at Wyndham Grand, Puerto Rico
Jeff McInnis and Janine Booth, the creative culinary forces behind New York's Root & Bone, recently took their elevated Southern American favorites to the Wyndham Grand Rio Mar Beach Resort, Puerto Rico.
"Drunken deviled eggs" and "momma's biscuit with chicken jus" were all on the menu, along with Puerto Rican-inspired numbers such as a mango queso blanco.
Booth was born in Australia while McInnis is from Florida and both are alumni of "Top Chef" and James Beard Award finalists.
8. Epicurean Exploration aboard Windstar
Talking of James Beard, chef Hugh Acheson, a winner of multiple honors from the 'Oscars of the food world', will be cooking for guests aboard a unique food cruise from Dublin to Lisbon.
The 10-night trip takes in Irish oyster farms, the Cognac regions and the chance to sample port in Porto. The 106 suite Windstar Legend can even navigate the Garonne River to take guests to visit the vineyards of France's renowned Mdoc region, before dinner in a chateau.
Chef, author and restaurateur Acheson is preparing signature dishes daily and hosting cooking demonstrations, while oenophiles get in on the action with tastings hosted by sommelier Steven Grubbs.
The James Beard Foundation Epicurean Explorations of France, Spain and Portugal sets sail on August 15, 2017.
9. Collaboration dining at Amber, Hong Kong
At Hong Kong's Landmark Mandarin Oriental, two Michelin-starred Culinary Director Richard Ekkebus is a regular host to some of the world's most exciting and renowned chefs in a series of 'four hands dinners'.
That has meant names like Spain's legendary Ferran Adri and the Korean-American three-starred chef Corey Lee, but the next iteration looks south to Australia and the chef-patron of Brae restaurant, Dan Hunter.
Hunter is cooking in Hong Kong for the first time in June, taking diners on a gastronomic journey of his "clean, green, delicious, concise" cuisine. His restaurant outside Melbourne sits in 30 acres of organic gardens and orchards, but there will be no shortage of sustainable produce in his menu in the Asian city.
10. Tali Wiru, Uluru, Australia
Tali Wiru means "beautiful dune'"in the local Pitjantjatjara language at Australia's iconic Uluru. An open-air pop-up "restaurant" promises a unique menu featuring ancient local flavors and produce, served on the dunes overlooking the rock.
After sunset Champagne and canapes, a four-course dinner comes with premium Australian wines before a local storyteller shares tales of local indigenous culture around a campfire under the Southern Desert sky.
The extraordinary bounty of local ingredients results in dishes such as Smoked Kangaroo and Kutjera Crostini or Textures of Chocolate with Davidson Plum, Lemon Myrtle and Quandong.
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