Pioneering chef Alain Senderens dies at age 77
June 27, 2017 by Darcie
French chef Alain
Senderens, who helped create nouvelle cuisine, has died at age 77. In the 1960s and 1970s,
Senderens, along with a coterie of French chefs including Paul
Bocuse and Michel Guerard, pioneered a lighter, sleeker style
of cooking that moved away from sauce-heavy traditional French
cuisine.
Senderens helmed two different three-Michelin-star restaurants (L’Archestrate and Lucas Carton) for 28 years combined. In 2005, he shocked the culinary world by renouncing those hard-earned stars in a reboot of the latter restaurant, which he renamed after himself, in favor of what he deemed as a more affordable, less formal way to dine.
The chef loved to push against the culinary establishment, introducing novel combinations such as lobster and vanilla, and by proclaiming that white wine should be served with cheese. Senderens also mentored many chefs, including Alain Passard of Restaurant Arpege, one of the world’s top 50 restaurants.
Categories
- All Posts (7397)
- Antipasto (2369)
- Author Articles (260)
- Book News (959)
- Cookbook Giveaways (1009)
- Cookbook Lovers (272)
- Cooking Tips (133)
- Culinary News (308)
- Food Biz People (577)
- Food Online (831)
- Holidays & Celebrations (293)
- New Cookbooks (165)
- Recipes (1548)
- Shelf Life With Susie (231)
- What's New on EYB (142)
Archives
Latest Comments
- anya_sf on Avoid these mistakes when buying produce
- MollyB on Why the refrigerator is bad for bread
- London_Mummy on Avoid these mistakes when buying produce
- FuzzyChef on Avoid these mistakes when buying produce
- FromScratch on Tomato growing tips from an expert
- Duncanarmour on Gloagburn: Recipes from a Scottish Farm – Giveaway
- janecooksamiracle on Why the refrigerator is bad for bread
- KatieK1 on Why the refrigerator is bad for bread
- bc2rlh2023 on Chesnok by Polina Chesnakova – Cookbook Giveaway
- FJT on Bringing back flavorful food