Evening Standard

I have no more dreams of Michelin stars now

In January, Michel Roux Jr closed the legendary Le Gavroche forever. He tells Josh Barrie the real reason he shut the family business, and reveals what’s next

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IN a vast private dining room at the heart of The Langham hotel, Michel Roux Jr is rememberin­g his first brush with royalty. It would have been the early Sixties. “I’m told I once escaped from the kitchen and crawled down the corridor,” Roux says. “The Queen mum came back to the kitchen with a baby in her arms and said to dad, ‘I think this one might be yours...’”

Roux is recounting, fondly, his childhood in rural Kent, which has informed his upcoming new opening, Chez Roux at The Langham, his first since Le Gavroche closed early this year. He grew up on the Fairlawne estate near Tonbridge, a country pile dating back to 1630, where Roux’s father, the late, great Albert, was private chef to the aristocrat­ic Cazalet family from 1959 until 1967. It had a touch of Downton Abbey — “it was a bit like that sometimes”, Roux confirms — but it was a happy childhood in which he was afforded licence to roam. He and Albert would go ferreting, foraging and catch crayfish in the crystallin­e rivers.

“It was just what we did,” says Roux, 63. “Foraging was totally normal for us. Dad had ferrets to catch rabbits. That was common, but when it came to all the gorgeous snails, the locals looked at us and probably thought, ‘who are these foreigners?’” When he wasn’t with his parents, Roux remembers being in the care of Mrs Bradbrook, wife of the head butler, and Etty, the headmistre­ss of the local primary school. Both formidable cooks, they imparted upon Roux a love of traditiona­l English fare, most notably classic puddings. Though Roux has long been known for haute French cuisine, his early years were as much about steamed dumplings and sponge cakes with custard as souffle suissesse and poached langoustin­es. “I quite like Bird’s,” Roux says, happily, “but don’t tell anyone that.”

In fact, leaving it all hurt. In 1967, Albert left Kent and moved his family to London to open Le Gavroche with his brother Michel. Roux’s countrysid­e life came to a close and the freneticis­m of a London kitchen took hold. It was all inspiratio­n, even if sometimes it was more difficult to take. Roux went from seeing his father every day to fleeting moments in the kitchen. “If I were to lie down on a couch and be analysed that would have been a turning point. I rebelled a bit and I wasn’t the perfect pupil at school,” he says.

“Mum would take me to see dad and my uncle in Le Gavroche. Back then, the kitchen was in the basement, and I remember the smells, the heat. Descending the stairs was like walking into a fire pit, getting hotter and hotter and noisier and noisier. And they would be down there working furiously. There was movement everywhere. But they would pause to give me some madeleines and macaroons, and I would put them in my pocket.” These memories, then, have helped sculpt what Chez Roux will be: a restaurant of “back to basics” cooking with British tradition at its heart and technical but indelicate French flair throughout.

On the menu? Grilled lobster swimming in garlic butter, a Roux favourite; Welsh rarebit made with Montgomery cheddar and Dijon mustard; and a dish called Lamb Chops Reform, an 1830s recipe created by chef Alexis Soyer, a gloriously liberal Frenchman who shook up Victorian London with his progressiv­e ways. Elsewhere, lamb chops are herb-crusted and rich under a tarragon and chilli-imbued espagnole (brown sauce made with vegetables, stock, and tomatoes), a recipe first served at the Reform club in St James’s.

And it might be something of an

At my new restaurant it’s about simple dishes — definitely no tweezers, no micro herbs or flowers

adage: British ingredient­s cooked with French technique? “I’m French and British,” Roux says of his cooking and culture. “Here it’s about simple dishes. Not messed around with. Definitely no tweezers, no micro herbs or flowers.” But it would be irrational to believe Chez Roux will not have something of Le Gavroche about it. One of the world’s most famous restaurant­s, a two, once three Michelin-starred gastronomi­c powerhouse and a landmark now consigned to the history books, was for decades Roux’s life — he says he “spent more time there than at home”.

Three months since the closure, is Roux able to detach himself from it? Drawing a breath and swallowing, Roux says it was right to call time on Le Gavroche. Better to close than sell, he explains — which his dad would never have approved of. “I had lots of ridiculous offers to buy the name, the business,” he says. “But it would have been like selling my right arm. I know the old man would not have been happy. It doesn’t matter how much money they throw at you.

“It meant — it means — so much to my life. And it means so much to so many people. I spent 35 years of my life there. It would have been tragic, I think, to have sold it and witnessed it being rolled out or run differentl­y.” And, he adds, though the closure shook customers the world over, he and his dad had been talking about it for years. “Dad

I had ridiculous offers to buy Le Gavroche — sometimes it doesn’t matter how much money is thrown at you

would have been behind it, 100 per cent,” Roux says. “And I know that because we talked about it; we had these conversati­ons. He was very frank about passing it on. None of us are immortal. We always talked about what’s next. We planned for it.”

For now, a once busy dining room sits dormant, its possession­s and stock sold off in an auction that raised more than £2 million. The building’s owner, Marriott hotels, might use it as a breakfast room, but there are others in the market.

With Le Gavroche gone, then, is Chez Roux his swansong? Is it a chance to step out from under the famous name?

“I don’t think I have anything to prove,” says Roux. “I have no dreams of Michelin stars now.” He adds that it won’t be him at the stove these days, either. “I’ll be here a lot, it’s my name, and I’ll go through menus with the chefs. But people I trust will be cooking day to day.”

Roux, once forever in kitchens, says he has more time now than before, even if it occasional­ly sits uneasily. “There are pinch-me moments when I’m sitting on the sofa, watching Match of the Day, thinking, ‘what the hell am I doing?’” he says. Exploring his childhood, for better or worse? He nods. “It is mixed emotions, tinged with sadness, but lots of happiness.”

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 ?? ?? French fancy: Michel Roux at The Langham, main. From top, with his father Albert at Le Gavroche in 1994 and as a boy with a toy kitchen set
French fancy: Michel Roux at The Langham, main. From top, with his father Albert at Le Gavroche in 1994 and as a boy with a toy kitchen set

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