Antoine Carme

Marie Antoine (Antonin) Carme (June 8, 1784January 12, 1833), was a French chef and author. He was the principal originator of the simplified but refined style of cooking known as haute cuisine, the high art of French cooking. Known as "chef of kings and king of chefs," he is often thought of as the first celebrity chef.

Influence

In his first significant position, Carme worked as the chef de cuisine to the French diplomat and gourmet the duc de Talleyrand-Prigord. More than simply an employer or sponsor, Talleyrand actively collaborated with Carme to produce a new refined style of eating, using fresh herbs and vegetables and simplified sauces with fewer ingredients. Talleyrand's table became famous during the negotiations that followed the fall of Napolon, at the Congress of Vienna. When the Congress dispersed, both the map of Europe and the culinary tastes of its upper classes were thoroughly revised. Carme's impact on culinary matters ranged from trivial to theoretical. He is credited with creating the standard chef's hat, the toque; he designed new sauces and dishes, and invented tools to create them; he published a classification all all sauces into groups, based on four mother sauces. He has been called "the Newton of haute cuisine". Carme wrote several encyclopedic works on cookery, above all L'Art de la Cuisine Franaise (5 vols, 183334), which included, aside from hundreds of recipes, plans for menus and opulent table settings, a history of French cookery, and instructions for organizing kitchens.

Biography

Carme's life is the amazing story of a rise from a life of abject poverty with no social connections to employment in several of the grandest courts and dining rooms in Europe. Abandoned in Paris by destitute parents in 1792 at the height of chaos of the French Revolution, he worked as a kitchen boy at a cheap Parisian chophouse in exchange for room and board. In 1798, he was formally apprenticed to Sylvain Bailly, a famous ptissier with a shop near the Palais-Royal. Bailly recognized his talent and ambition. Carme gained fame in Paris by his pices montes, elaborate constructions used as centerpieces, which Bailly displayed in the ptisserie window. He made these confections, which were sometimes several feet high, entirely out of foodstuffs such as sugar, marzipan, and pastry. He modelled them on temples, pyramids, and ancient ruins, taking ideas from architectural history books that he studied at the nearby Bibliotque Nationale.1 He did freelance work creating centerpieces principally for Talleyrand, but also other members of Parisian high society, including Napoleon. While working on his confections at many private kitchens, he quickly extended his culinary skills to main courses. Napoleon was famously indifferent to food, but he understood the importance of social relations in the world of diplomacy. In 1804, he gave money to Tallyrand to purchase Chteau Valenay, a large estate outside of Paris. The chteau was intended to act as a kind of diplomatic gathering place. When Tallyrand moved there, he took Carme with him. Carme was set a test by Talleyrand: to create a whole years worth of menus, without repetition, and using only seasonal produce. Carme passed the test and completed his training in Talleyrand's kitchens. After the fall of Napolon, Carme went to London for a time and served as chef de cuisine to the Prince Regent, later George IV. Returning to the continent he served Czar Alexander I in St. Petersburg, before returning to Paris, where he was chef to James Mayer Rothschild He died in Paris at the age of 48, and is remembered as the "Chef of kings and the King of chefs." He is interred in the Cimetire de Montmartre in Montmartre. See also: Haute cuisine, Auguste Escoffier

Major works

External reference

Notes

  1. Kelly, Chapter 2.
Carme, Antoine Carme, Antoine Carme, Antoine Carme, Antoine

 

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