France’s chef of the year is Jean Sulpice, says Gault & Millau

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Tue, 07 Nov 2017 - 03:41 GMT

BY

Tue, 07 Nov 2017 - 03:41 GMT

French chef Jean Sulpice poses in front of his restaurant ‘L'Auberge du Pere Bise’ in Talloires in the French Alps. Sulpice was named chef of the year in the 2018 Gault Millau Guide - AFP

French chef Jean Sulpice poses in front of his restaurant ‘L'Auberge du Pere Bise’ in Talloires in the French Alps. Sulpice was named chef of the year in the 2018 Gault Millau Guide - AFP

The 39-year-old owner of a storied lakeside inn in the French Alps was crowned France’s chef of the year by the Gault & Millau gastronomic guide yesterday.

Jean Sulpice won the coveted award a year after taking over L’Auberge du Père Bise, a century-old hotel on the shores of Lake Annecy which has played host to the likes of Winston Churchill, Charlie Chaplin and Richard Nixon.

Gault & Millau’s owner Côme de Chérisey praised Sulpice for his lightning rise through the rarefied world of French cuisine.

“He is working his way up a high mountain pass,” he said.

On his website, Sulpice describes his food as being “filled with the riches of the mountains” where he grew up.

His menu gives pride of place to regional products, such as venison, brown trout and Beaufort cheese.

Sulpice ran a two-star Michelin restaurant in Val Thorens ski resort – Europe’s highest – before snapping up the property on Lake Annecy, 100 kilometres to the north, in 2016.

After a facelift costing several million euros, the stately Auberge reopened to the public in May.

Among the other winners of Gault & Millau’s 2018 awards were 32-year-old Cédric Grolet of the five-star Le Meurice hotel in Paris, named the country’s top pastry chef.

Born in the Loire region to a truck driver father and hairdresser mother, Grolet has gained a huge following on Instagram for his colourful, fruity creations.

Gault & Millau publishes an annual guide of 3,800 eateries across France, over two-thirds of which offer dishes costing under 30 euros (HK$270).

It is less well-known than the Michelin guide, whose stars are seen as a sort of culinary holy grail.

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