Upscale Living Magazine

Louis XV Monte Carlo

Chef Alain Ducasse Restaurant

- | WRITTEN BY KEVIN PILLEY. PHOTOS COURTESY OF LOUIS XV

They were talking yachts when I arrived. A man at the next door table looked at me over his glasses as if he instinctiv­ely knew that my only private means of water transport was a lilo.

The women beside him shot me the same sneer of withering contempt as if she suspected that the “Vaucluse” asparagus and crushed black truffles would be wasted on me and the turbot and caramalize­d endives would go over my head.

The Felix Hippolite Lucas ceiling fresco bore down on me. The tapestried walls pressed in. Haughty courtesans looked down from their gilded “fin de siecle” portrait frame , branding me a philistine in “”l’art de table” , a child of Col.Saunders rather than Careme or Escoffier.

“Je propose une flute de Billecart Salmon champagne rose followed by un Clos SaintJosep­h avec votre coquillage­s et peut-etre un Chateau de Beaucastel Vielle Vigne Chateauneu­f-du-Pape , “said the sommelier, leaving me with the wine list. My throat went dry. My heart lurched. My Adam’s apple did a bunjee jump. I noticed that one bottle of “Chateau Petrus” 1945 would cost me about hundred times my VISA limit.

It is a once-in-a-lifetime experience to eat in an Alain Ducasse restaurant. Someone once described him as “The Muhammad Ali of cooking”. I was in his Louis XV restaurant in Monte Carlo. It was my first time in a “temple of taste” and “shrine to savoir-faire”.

In the old days , with its lavish splendour and staff in nankeen breeches and gaiters , Monte Carlo’s “Hotel de Paris” was a magnet for the haute monde. It became a place of uninhibite­d self-indulgence ; a byword for the high life. The rich and famous all went there. A Russian grand duke once smashed sixty magnums of Champagne against a marble pillar just for a toast. Fourteen hundred bottles of fine wines were consumed every day in its heyday.

The one kilometre long cellars of the grand nineteenth century palace hotel now hold 250000 cellars or “cave”. It is considered one of Europe’s finest and most valuable collection of wines. Upstairs, the restaurant offers a choice of sixteen different mineral waters as well as fifteen different coffees , sixteen different teas and fifteen types of cigar.

Ducasse has helped establish the luxurious and super-trendy Mediterran­ean resort into one of the great gastronomi­c destinatio­ns of the world. A local helicopter firm even offers a gourmet taxi service up to the auberges and excellent restaurant­s in the neighbouri­ng French department of “Alpes-Maritimes”. Monaco’s masterchef­s have become celebritie­s and as famous as former residents and visitors like King Farouk , the Prince of Nepal and Charles Wells , the man who broke the bank at Monte Carlo.

Although it is only the size of London’s Hyde Park , Monaco has the highest density of Michelin-starred restaurant­s than anywhere. The famous ultra-chic principali­ty on the French Riviera , eleven miles from Nice ,has

been connected with the name of “Michelin” for many years.

Prompted by the waiter , I had a “ragout” of cod and Perugina sausage thickened by the swimming bladder of a Norwegian stockfish. Then Pyrennean suckling lamb. I got through three napkins just drooling at the desserts trolley.

Over one lunch for two heady hours , surrounded by the opulent chic and conspicuou­s choc of one of the world’s greatest restaurant­s , I fulfilled my jetset fantasy and sampled the ultimate of sensual delights.

I wanted to say “Bravo” but it sounded corny. I wanted to praise the Nicoise peas and make discerning comments about the “Xeres” vinegar but I didn’t know where to start. The waiter said it all for me when he came to our table.

“Culinary art is the search for the absolute. Here we set an impeccable ideal. Our kitchen renders very good what is already very beautiful.”

He smiled letting me digest his words. “Perhaps next time I may recommend the strained Muscat pumpkin soup , followed by our veloute of Breton lobster with chestnuts and maybe bass filet with sautéed cuttlefish and anchovy fritters. It is exquisite.” He kissed his fingers.

The couple on the table beside me were still wearing their ”pearls-beforeswin­e” expression­s.

He was puffing away at an unfeasibly large , long cigar. She was swilling an ancient Cognac.

As I passed them on the way out , I wanted to say , “The Chateau Yquem is so hit or miss here. Such a shame there was no eel on today either. But Alain told me that the fishermen in the Straits of Messina are on strike. Of course , it would never have happened in King Farouk’s day.”

In my mind I also heard my fingers clicking towards the waiter and the voice of experience­d epicure and globe-trotting gourmand saying , “

Put a case of Petrus in the back of the Lamberghin­i , garcon. And book me the same table for the same time tomorrow , will you ? Ringo will be coming. Miss Bassey too. I don’t know about Herr Becker. ”

In my mind’s eye , I saw the man’s eyes popping and his nostrils flaring as he choked on his outsized “Cohiba”.

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 ??  ?? Loup, betteraves, agrumes
Loup, betteraves, agrumes
 ??  ?? Amuse bouche at Alain ducasse
Amuse bouche at Alain ducasse

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