About Nouvelle Cuisine
Marie Antoine Careme |
(
French: “new cuisine”) eclectic style in international cuisine,
originating in France during the 1960s and ’70s, that stressed
freshness, lightness, and clarity of flavour and inspired new movements
in world cuisine. In reaction to some of the richer and
more-calorie-laden extravagances of classic French grande cuisine,
nouvelle cuisine sought to emphasize the natural flavours, textures, and
colours of foodstuffs. Citing the unhealthiness of a diet heavy in
fats, sugars, refined starches, and salt, it minimized the use of those
ingredients. Nouvelle cuisine was also influenced by the Japanese style
of food presentation.
Auguste Escoffier |
Origins and Tenets
In
the early 21st century, it was difficult to appreciate just how rigid
the grande cuisine system of French chefs Marie-Antoine Carême and
Auguste Escoffier had become by the mid-20th century. It was a highly
regimented repertoire. Chefs could, and did, invent new dishes, but
there was much reverence for the past and its rules for and techniques
of food preparation. Indeed, the veneration of the past was so strong
that younger chefs began to feel that their creativity was constrained.
Paul Bocuse |
By
the 1960s a few young French chefs had started to take issue with the
system. Many of them had trained with Fernand Point, a brilliant chef
whose career began in the age of Escoffier but then took a different
turn. Point developed his own experimental cuisine, anticipating the
changes that his protégés would perfect. Ultimately, his role as a
mentor for the next generation of chefs was more important than his own
direct contributions.
Michel Guerard |
Point’s
former students began to experiment and abandon tradition, creating
lighter menus, introducing lower-fat sauces and vegetable purees,
borrowing ingredients from non-French cuisines, and plating dishes in
the kitchen instead of at the table. Although those changes were
controversial, by 1972 the innovationshad been christened nouvelle
cuisine.
Louis Outhier |
Early
influential figures in the nouvelle movement included Paul Bocuse,
Michel Guérard, and the food critics Henri Gault and Christian Millau of
Le Nouveau Guide. Gault and Millau, with their friend André Gayot, had
founded the publication in 1969 to protest the Michelin guide, which
they criticized as “a stubborn bastion of conservatism” that ignored
“the new generation of French chefs who had guts.” The inaugural issue
of Le Nouveau Guide featured a cover story on Bocuse, Guérard, Louis
Outhier, Alain Senderens, and 44 other chefs under the headline
“Michelin: Don’t Forget These 48 Stars!” Senderens, in fact, would
famously “give back” the stars that Michelin had awarded his famed
restaurant, Lucas Carton (now named Senderens), proclaiming, “I want to
simplify my cooking, allow myself more liberty and reduce the average
check.”
Alain Sanderens |
In
1973 Gault published “The Ten Commandments of Nouvelle Cuisine,” giving
the movement a set of precepts that helped nouvelle cuisine reach a
wider audience. The 10 commandments were:
1. Thou shalt not overcook.
2. Thou shalt use fresh, quality products.
3. Thou shalt lighten thy menu.
4. Thou shalt not be systematically modernist.
5. Thou shalt nevertheless seek out what the new techniques can bring you.
6. Thou shalt avoid pickles, cured game meats, fermented foods, etc.
7. Thou shalt eliminate rich sauces.
8. Thou shalt not ignore dietetics.
9. Thou shalt not doctor up thy presentations.
10. Thou shalt be inventive.
Critics
Many
of the chefs championed by Gault and Millau quickly garnered respect
and Michelin stars, but the new style drew fire from established French
food critics, particularly La Reynière (also known as Robert Courtine),
the prominent critic at the well-respected Paris daily newspaper Le
Monde. Nouvelle cuisine was seen as a threat to French tradition and was
often attacked on nationalist grounds. Senderens said that in 1978,
when he introduced soy sauce into his cooking after a trip to China, “a
food critic ripped me to shreds.” In 1979 sociologist Claude Fischler
wrote an article for Le Monde titled “The Socrates of the Nouvelle
Cuisine,” in which he subtly mocked the movement’s emphasis on letting
ingredients express their true flavours:
“The
artist in this field is no longer characterized by his overpowering
authority, but rather by the opinionated modesty of an exponent of the
maieutic art: In place of the cook as mercenary of the kitchen stove, we
now have the Socratic cook, midwife at the birth of culinary truth.”
In
the United States one of nouvelle cuisine’s chief critics was celebrity
chef Julia Child, author of the best-selling Mastering the Art of
French Cooking (1961) . Child saw the new movement as an affront to the
logic and grandeur of French haute cuisine. She particularly disliked
the nouvelle cuisine penchant for serving barely cooked meat and
vegetables, which she believed did not properly develop the “essential
taste” of the ingredients. She also accused Gault and Millau of “pushing
the Nouvelle cuisine relentlessly” to the point of “browbeating”
restaurants that did not embrace a nouvelle cuisine ethos.
Other
American gastronomes shared Child’s wariness of the new movement. As
renowned San Francisco cooking teacher Jack Lirio quipped to Newsweek in
1975, “Without butter, cream, and foie gras, what’s left of French
cooking?”
Impact
Despite
such criticism, the nouvelle movement took hold of the culinary
landscape in France and spurred new trends in world cuisine. The extent
of nouvelle cuisine’s impact is evident in a longitudinal study that
followed roughly 600 elite French chefs (those with one or more Michelin
stars) from 1970 through 1997. Northwestern University sociologist
Hayagreeva Rao and his colleagues analyzed each chef’s top three
signature dishes and found that, in 1970, 36 percent of the chefs had
just one nouvelle-cuisine signature dish and 48 percent had none. By
1997 only 6 percent had none, and 70 percent were predominantly nouvelle
cuisine (with two or more signature dishes in the nouvelle style). The
study, published in 2003, concluded that nouvelle cuisine was a true
social movement, not a mere culinary trend.
Nouvelle
cuisine was clearly a successful revolution; it succeeded so well that
by the early 21st century French cuisine was largely seen through its
lens. High-end chefs made great dishes born in the prenouvelle years,
but usually that work was a self-conscious throwback to an earlier age.
Many long-cherished aspects of Escoffier’s grande cuisine, such as
sauces made with meat extracts and thickened with flour-based roux, were
discarded outright.
The
nouvelle movement also fundamentally changed restaurants. Escoffier had
championed service à la Francaise, in which empty plates were set
before each diner and waiters served and carved food at the table.
Nouvelle cuisine featured plated dishes, assembled in the kitchen by
chefs. The waiter simply set the prepared plate in front of the diner.
Yet
in another sense, nouvelle cuisine was a rather limited revolution,
because it was all about techniques and ingredients. The famous 10
principles of nouvelle cuisine championed by Gault and Millau all had to
do with rather technical aspects of cooking—important to chefs and food
critics who had been steeped in the traditions of la grande
cuisine—that seemed quite ordinary in the 21st century. High-end food
was, ultimately, still high-end food, just with a slightly different set
of techniques.
Outside
France, nouvelle cuisine had an enormous impact in some places and
barely any in others, depending on the country and its local gastronomic
culture. In the United States, nouvelle cuisine was deeply influential,
helping to inspire “New American” cuisine. American chefs borrowed
techniques from nouvelle cuisine, but more important than any single
technique or principle was the idea of revolution itself. American chefs
had not been steeped in la grande cuisine, so instead they rebelled
against mass-produced uninspired food. Those chefs, including the likes
of Alice Waters and Charlie Trotter, created a distinctive New American
cuisine based on regional ingredients and food traditions but with a
clear nod to nouvelle techniques.
The
same effect occurred in the United Kingdom, where a generation of “New
British” chefs emerged, adamant that British food was not synonymous
with bad food. Chefs such as Nico Ladenis, Marco Pierre White, Gordon
Ramsay, and Fergus Henderson took principles of nouvelle cuisine and
applied them in their own characteristic ways. With the help of a number
of French expatriates—such as Albert and Michel Roux, Raymond Blanc,
and Pierre Koffmann—those chefs took French nouvelle cuisine directly to
British diners. As in the United States, that helped lead a movement
toward higher-quality food and dining.
In
Spain, the effect of nouvelle cuisine was much more limited. It was
clearly an inspiration for Spanish Basque chef Juan Mari Arzak, who
created his own distinctive style that would later inspire other Spanish
chefs. But throughout the 1960s and ’70s, Spanish food was largely
unaffected by the developments in France.
Italy
had even less of a reaction to the nouvelle revolution. In part, that
was so because Italian cuisine had always been highly regional and did
not have centralized standards. There was no set of oppressive grande
cuisine rules to rebel against.
Legacy : New International Fusion Cuisines
Over
time, successive generations of nouvelle chefs carried forward the
torch of culinary innovation, but in an evolutionary rather than
revolutionary fashion. In part, that is because nouvelle cuisine carved
out some notion of independence for the chef. Whereas Escoffier (and
Carême before him) had explicitly sought to establish rules and
conventions, nouvelle cuisine gave more leeway to the individual chef,
so over time there were fewer strictures to rebel against. For example,
Joël Robuchon, named “chef of the century” by Gault and Millau in 1989,
was known for relentless perfectionism. His cuisine was nouvelle in the
sense that it followed the 10 commandments, but at the same time it was
clearly his own. Much the same could be said of Frédy Girardet, a
self-taught Swiss master chef who was often listed as the best chef in
the world. He too was clearly staying inside the boundaries of nouvelle
cuisine but developing a unique repertoire.
What
started as nouvelle cuisine has become one branch of what is called
“New International” cuisine. Around the world, one can find national
cuisines that were clearly inspired by the nouvelle movement, borrowing
both cooking techniques and the general attitude of rebellion. That
trend includes various innovative approaches to Asian cooking, or
so-called fusion cuisine, which melds Asian spices and techniques within
a Western nouvelle-inspired backdrop.
New
and exotic ingredients have thereby found their way onto menus. Wagyu
(well-massaged) beef and fish such as hamachi and toro (tuna belly) have
always been found in Japanese restaurants, but in the 21st century they
also can be found on the menu at a New International restaurant nearly
anywhere in the world. Similarly, ostensibly Japanese restaurants now
incorporate their own take on foie gras, jalapeño peppers, and other
completely non-Japanese ingredients—yet another sign of the lingering
influence of the nouvelle revolution.
History of French Cuisine
Reference :
https://www.britannica.com/topic/nouvelle-cuisine
Komentar
Posting Komentar