From “Burgundy Stars” To “The Perfectionist!” Two Riveting Books About The Downside Of Haute Cuisine And The Death Of A Chef…

The Magic Of Food!

When you see an incredibly inventive dish, created by a world renowned Chef, it makes your mouth water. Like these dishes from the first American female Chef to be awarded three Michelin Stars:

More about the food artistry of Chef Dominique Crenn in a moment, but first, a look at what it takes to create food as art, and the pressure for these Chefs to turn out incredible food day after day after day…

For some Chefs, the pressure to get Michelin Stars, the industry’s most widely acknowledged achievement, is more than they can handle.

In fairness, the Michelin Guide is just a guide – their original goal was to offer reviews that would help travelers find a good place to eat – and while it is revered around the world, the pressure to score those “Michelin Stars” has a downside as well…

Meet Chef Bernard Loiseau…

I have read two books about Chef Loiseau, and they tell the complete story of what it takes to achieve coveted “three Michelin Star” success, and the pressure to remain on top.

I first got to know Chef Loiseau thanks to a terrific book about his quest for three Michelin Stars:

“Burgundy Stars” by William Echikson 

I bought the book “Burgundy Stars” in 1995, excited to read how a Chef turned his restaurant into a 3-star Michelin destination. It is a terrific account of his passion for food, his creativity and drive, and how he achieved his dream.

Here is how Amazon describes “Burgundy Stars”: 

“What does it mean to receive a three-star restaurant rating in the Michelin Guide? To Bernard Loiseau, chef-owner of La Cote d’Or in Saulieu, France, it means everything. His bid for the third star is the story behind veteran journalist Echikson’s 12-month account of this famed Burgundy restaurant.”

The book is a fascinating, behind-the-scenes look at how Chef Loiseau created a food empire based on receiving those 3 Michelin Stars, serving some of the best food in the world. The book ends as the Chef is celebrating his triumph…if only the story ended there…

A Chef’s Shocking Death…

Then, in 2003 was this tragic story: 

“One of France’s most celebrated chefs has apparently committed suicide after his flagship restaurant was downgraded in a top restaurant guide. Bernard Loiseau was found dead at his country home, a hunting rifle by his side. His death came a week after the renowned GaultMillau restaurant guide cut its rating for his Cote d’Or restaurant in Burgundy.”

GaultMillau is another revered food guide, and apparently their demotion of Chef Loiseau’s food was more than he could take. As Acclaimed Chef Paul Bocuse said at the time:

“I think GaultMillau killed him. When you are leader of the pack and all of a sudden they cut you down, it’s hard to understand, it hit him hard,” Bocuse said. 

But there would be more to this story.

Out of this tragedy came another terrific book – one that focused on the intense pressure Chefs are under, especially in France, to achieve three-star status – at all costs.

The Perfectionist: Life and Death in Haute Cuisine by Rudolph Chelminski – 2006.

This followup book picks up Chef Loiseau’s story after his 3-star success. The Author looked at the pressure Chef Loiseau was under, and his fear that he was going to lose one of his Michelin Stars.

As one news report stated:

“Bernard Loiseau was one of only twenty-five French chefs to hold Europe’s highest culinary award, three stars in the Michelin Red Guide, and only the second chef to be personally awarded the Legion of Honor by a head of state. Despite such triumphs, he shocked the culinary world by taking his own life in February 2003. The GaultMillau guidebook had recently dropped its ratings of Loiseau’s restaurant, and rumors swirled that he was on the verge of losing a Michelin star (a prediction that proved to be inaccurate).”

And there is the mystery: was Chef Loiseau in danger of losing his 3-star status? Was that what led him to take his own life?

Journalist Rudolph Chelminski, who befriended Loiseau three decades ago and followed his rise to the pinnacle of French restaurateurs, tells the story of a daydreaming teenager who worked his way up from complete obscurity to owning three famous restaurants in Paris and rebuilding La Côte d’Or, transforming a century-old inn and restaurant that had lost all of its Michelin stars into a luxurious destination restaurant and hotel. He started a line of culinary products with his name on them, appeared regularly on television and in the press, and had a beautiful, intelligent wife and three young children he adored—Bernard Loiseau seemed to have it all.

This book digs deep into the life of a Chef that is not only acclaimed, but also filled with competition, culture wars, and impossibly high standards. 

“The Perfectionist” vividly depicts a man whose energy and enthusiasm won the hearts of staff and clientele, while self-doubt and cut-throat critics took their toll.

This is a terrific book, sad but necessary to finish the story that “Burgundy Stars” only began to tell.

The Michelin Controversy Continues!

The story gets even more mysterious. As posted on the “Eater” website at the time the story broke:

“Ten years after the suicide of renowned chef Bernard Loiseau, speculation has ramped up in the French media that the Michelin Guide may have covered up its role in the affair. Though the guide has long denied allegations that it was threatening to pull one of Loiseau’s three Michelin stars, this week French newspaper L’Express published some previously unseen documents that suggest a Michelin official did indeed meet with the chef to discuss his concerns about the “lack of soul” at Le Relais Bernard Loiseau.

bernard-loiseau

The story went on to report:

L’Express obtained a note purportedly written by Derek Brown, then the British head of the red guide, describing a meeting with Loiseau not long before his death. Brown notes that it was Loiseau’s first visit in three years and that they “talked a lot about his [Loiseau’s] philosophy.” Then Brown writes, “I talked of our concerns, irregularity, lack of soul, of character recent in his cuisine and the letters that are very mixed in terms of quality. Visibly ‘shocked,’ he took me seriously. We’ll see.”

Bernard Loiseau's Widow speaks

L’Express also published a note that Loiseau’s wife, Dominique Loiseau, apparently wrote to Brown thanking him for the meeting and explaining that the chef had been closely reviewing the menu with his staff ever since. She writes, “We have well understood your warning and from now on everything is being done in the kitchen to turn things around as quickly as possible.” But just three months later, Loiseau shot himself in the head.

At the time, Michelin denied the rumors that it had threatened Loiseau, and still denies it today. Brown told L’Express in an interview at the time: 

“We never had any deep problem with Bernard Loiseau, just some details like the temperature of a soup.” 

Well, the real story may never be known, but it’s a tragic end to an incredible culinary career, and it just helps showcase the pressure that Chefs find themselves under.

So while it’s great fun to eat at a Michelin-starred restaurant, the pressure to maintain a “three Michelin star” standard is brutal on a Chef…

I showed you some of the dishes at Atelier Crenn in San Francisco, the creation of acclaimed Chef Dominique Crenn:

We are at her restaurant right as she was being awarded 3 Michelin Stars, the first female Chef in US history to receive them…her food was incredible, and you can see our entire meal by clicking on our story here:

Some bristle at the need for the media to create “Celebrity Chefs”, as they just want to focus on the food. But we’ve had celebrities in the kitchen for a long long time…

This terrific book tells the story of the world’s FIRST Celebrity ChefL Antonin Careme! Click here to see more about the man who cooked for Napoleon!

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Categories: Bite Eat Swallow, Bite! Eat! Repeat!, Books / Media, Chef memoirs, Cookbooks, Eat This!, Fine Dining, Food, Food Pictures, Food Writing, World's Wildest Food

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3 replies

  1. I only ate in Michelin-starred London restaurant once, and luckily was not paying the bill. (Company function) We had soem very expensive, unusually tasty food, in VERY small portions. 🙂
    (The restaurant closed in the 1990s, I believe)
    Best wishes, Pete.

  2. I remember reading about his death, and never knew the story behind it. this would be a great documentary. very sad

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