Business World

‘Chef of the century’ Joel Robuchon, 73

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PARIS — The multi-starred French chef Joel Robuchon, who died on Monday aged 73, will be honored with a public ceremony next week near his hometown in central France, a spokeswoma­n for his family told AFP on Tuesday.

Accolades have poured in for Robuchon, a classicall­y trained perfection­ist whose revolution­ary idea of stripping fine dining of its more elaborate trappings became a template for up-andcoming chefs around the world.

At one point he held a record 32 Michelin stars at the same time for his galaxy of Atelier (“workshop”) restaurant­s, with people lining up for seats at establishm­ents from Las Vegas to Tokyo.

While his funeral will be private, the public will be able to pay their respects at a ceremony in the Vienne region, where he was born in the city of Poitiers in 1945.

“His wife, his children Eric and Sophie, his grandchild­ren, along with the rest of his family ask that their privacy be respected,” the statement said.

Robuchon, who was hailed as one of four “chefs of the century” by the Gault & Millau industry bible in 1990, founded a string of restaurant­s that revolution­ised fine dining across three continents, at one point ratcheting up a record 32 Michelin stars.

He still had 24 stars at the time of his death, with foodies lining up from Tokyo to Paris and Macau for seats in his L’Atelier restaurant­s, where they can watch chefs in action, perched on high stools at a U-shaped bar.

“His name and his style embodied French cuisine around the world, symbolisin­g an art of living and the insistence on work well done, and expressing the richness of our traditions,” President Emmanuel Macron said in a statement.

“Joel Robuchon has put his mark on French cuisine, by always taking his own course and his mix of freedom and rigour,” fellow globe-trotting chef Alain Ducasse told AFP.

Robuchon died of pancreatic cancer in Geneva, where he was planning to open a restaurant, his friend, food critic Gilles Pudlowski confirmed to AFP.

Macron lauded his role in the emergence of nouvelle cuisine, which did away with heavy sauces in favor of ultrafresh vegetables and intricatel­y crafted dishes.

Tributes poured in from other top chefs, already mourning the death earlier this year of French culinary “pope” Paul Bocuse,

and more recently globe-trotting American celebrity chef and author Anthony Bourdain.

British chef Gordon Ramsay, who trained under Robuchon, tweeted that he “kept all of us on our toes! Even when we were sleeping!

“Merci Chef, God bless, you’ll be missed,” he wrote.

Gault & Millau’s director Come de Cherisey eulogised Robuchon, whose food empire employed 1,200 people, as “a great business leader.”

“He was among the first, just after Paul Bocuse, who was able to have an internatio­nal footprint,” he said.

THE PERFECT MASH

Born in 1945 in the central city of Poitiers to a bricklayer father and stay-at-home mother, Robuchon’s first vocation was the priesthood.

But while cooking alongside nuns for other seminarian­s he discovered a passion for food and at 15 entered the restaurant trade.

A perfection­ist from the start, he quickly earned a name for himself and by the age of 30 was running a 90-strong kitchen at the Concorde Lafayette hotel in Paris.

His signature creations included truffle tart, cauliflowe­r cream with caviar and langoustin­e ravioli — but he also elevated the humble potato, with his smooth, buttery mash earning rave reviews.

He was among the first top chefs to work closely with big food companies, starting as an adviser to the French group Fleury Michon in 1987.

His picture soon began gracing a line of signature ready-to-eat dishes, while giving tips on “Eating Better,” the Fleury-Michon slogan.

But by the age of 51 he had worked himself to the bone. Declaring he did not want to die of the stress of turning out flawless fare day after day, the father of two announced his retirement in 1996. “I will watch my children and my grandchild­ren grow up, I will love my wife, my friends, and the good things in life,” he told Le Figaro.

But he soon became a fixture on French television, hosting a series of popular cooking shows that aimed to demystify haute cuisine for the masses.

The most popular was Bon Appetit Bien Sur, a daily 20-minute program which ran from 2000 to 2009 and often included appearance­s by other top chefs.

His campaign to encourage better everyday eating also included writing nearly 20 books, including Cooking Through the Seasons and one dedicated to potatoes. By 2003 he was back in the kitchen with the Atelier concept, which he debuted in Paris and Tokyo and later took to London, Las Vegas and New York, among other cities. “Times have changed, consumers are looking for cuisine that is less sophistica­ted, a place with ambiance where you eat well,” he said.

 ?? AFP ?? FRENCH CHEF Joel Robuchon attends Vegas Uncork’d by Bon Appetit’s Grand Tasting event at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada on May 9, 2014. One of the most famous French chefs, Joel Robuchon, who had the most Michelin stars in the world, died on Aug. 6 at the age of 73, the according to spokesman for the French government.
AFP FRENCH CHEF Joel Robuchon attends Vegas Uncork’d by Bon Appetit’s Grand Tasting event at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada on May 9, 2014. One of the most famous French chefs, Joel Robuchon, who had the most Michelin stars in the world, died on Aug. 6 at the age of 73, the according to spokesman for the French government.

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