Pierre Koffmann

Pierre Koffman
Born (1948-08-21) 21 August 1948
Tarbes, France
Website Koffmann's at The Berkeley

Culinary career

Cooking style French cuisine

Pierre Koffmann (born 21 August 1948) is a French-born professional chef who has worked mainly in the United Kingdom. He was one of a handful of chefs in the United Kingdom to have been awarded the coveted three Michelin stars at his restaurant La Tante Claire in London. He is currently the head chef of Koffmann's at The Berkeley hotel in Knightsbridge, London.

Early life

Koffmann was born in Tarbes, France on 21 August 1948. His father worked as a mechanic for Citroën. It was with his maternal grandparents, Camille and Marcel, in Saint-Puy that he learnt how to cook when he visited with them during school holidays. Koffmann reminisced about this period in his 1990 book Memories of Gascony, and discussed in an interview with The Guardian in 2010, "The produce was mostly from the farm. Steak was rare; we ate a lot of poultry. My grandmother did own a cooker, but most of her work was done over an open fire."[1] In 1963 he left school and applied for a variety of jobs, but ultimately decided to attend cookery school for the next three years.

Career

Koffmann first worked as a chef in Strasbourg and Toulon,[2] before moving in 1970 to the United Kingdom to work with Michel and Albert Roux at Le Gavroche. He originally only wanted to move to the UK so that he could see England play France in Rugby at Twickenham Stadium.[1] He moved to the Roux brothers' Waterside Inn in Bray, Berkshire in 1972, being made the first head chef of the new restaurant, where he met his future wife Annie who was the restaurant's manager.[1]

He opened his first restaurant, La Tante Claire in 1977 in Royal Hospital Road, Chelsea.[2] Six years after it opened, the restaurant gained its third Michelin star.[2] La Tante Claire moved to The Berkeley hotel in Knightsbridge, London in 1998,[2] with the former site being sold to become the flagship restaurant of Gordon Ramsay.[3] During his time at La Tante Claire, Koffmann worked with several eminent chefs, including Gordon Ramsay, Marco Pierre White, Marcus Wareing and Tom Kitchin.[1][3] He did not get on with Wareing, who made his feelings felt about Koffmann in Simon Wright's book Tough Cookies, saying of Koffmann, "Three-star kitchen! This guy didn't tell you anything. He didn't tell you what the lunch menu was, he didn't tell you where to get anything… You didn't know if you were coming or going… I could not click with the man.",[3] although more recently Wareing speaks better of Koffmann, saying "Koffmann is a complete thoroughbred. He ran the kitchen from the stove."[3] The signature dish of the restaurant was pig’s trotter with chicken mousseline, sweetbreads and morels.[2] Celebrity chef Marco Pierre White has called this "favourite dish of all time".[4]

Following the death of his wife Annie, he closed La Tante Claire in 2003. The space became the flagship restaurant of Marcus Wareing.[3] After taking a break from restaurants, he was briefly head chef at the Bleeding Heart pub in Clerkenwell.[1] In 2009, he opened a pop-up restaurant at Selfridges in London for ten days as part of the London food festival. Koffmann decided to serve classic dishes from La Tante Claire instead of new dishes as he originally planned - "[...] that's not what people want. They want the pig's trotter, the foie gras, the pistachio soufflé. But maybe I do a new dish each day, as a special."[3] The ten days turned into two months.[1] Koffmann described the first month as "a kind of hell", but got used to the hours again during the second month, and began to ponder about opening a new restaurant; "I started to think about a new restaurant. I thought: why not? I still enjoy it. When you are a chef, your place is in the kitchen.".[1]

Koffmann's at The Berkeley hotel opened on 30 June 2010, at the former site of Gordon Ramsay's Boxwood Cafe; it is Koffmann's first full restaurant venture since the closure of La Tante Claire in 2003 at the same hotel.[1] He admits that he is no longer chasing Michelin stars, and will instead cook the Gascon style food he remembers from his childhood.[1]

References

External links

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