Oman Daily Observer

‘Chef of the century’, Joel Robuchon, dies at 73

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PARIS: Chef Joel Robuchon, who at one point had earned more than 30 Michelin stars across nearly two dozen restaurant­s on three continents, died on Monday at his home in Geneva aged 73, his staff said.

Named the “chef of the century” by the Gault et Millau cooking guide in 1990, Robuchon was regarded as a perfection­ist, toiling to make even ordinary seeming dishes — such as mashed potatoes — the very best they could be.

He came into his own in the 1980s and early 1990s, when gourmet food went global.

He steadily expanded his fame, branching out from being one of Paris’s most recognised three-star chefs to become a worldwide phenomenon.

In France, Robuchon is regarded as a chef who ushered in an era of authentici­ty after the restraint of nouvelle cuisine.

“The older I get, the more I realise the truth is: the simpler the food, the more exceptiona­l it can be,” he told Business Insider in an interview in 2014.

“I never try to marry more than three flavours in one dish. I like walking into a kitchen and knowing that the dishes are identifiab­le and the ingredient­s within them easy to detect.”

Born in Poitiers, western France, in 1945, Robuchon rose quickly through apprentice­ships, learning techniques from around the country, before taking over as head chef of what was then the Hotel Concorde La Fayette in Paris at the age of 29.

Some areas in Central and Northern California could see temperatur­es reach 110 degrees Fahrenheit (43 degrees Celsius) and winds of 24 km per hour, with higher gusts that could fan the flames and spread embers

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