Memoirs of Alexis Soyer
With Unpublished Receipts and Odds and Ends of Gastronomy
Alexis Soyer author F Volant editor J R Warren editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:22nd Aug '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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An 1859 anecdotal biography, including recipes, of Alexis Soyer (1810–58), arguably the greatest chef of the nineteenth century.
Alexis Soyer (1810–58) was perhaps the first celebrity chef. A flamboyant, larger-than-life figure, he nonetheless took his profession very seriously. This is an anecdotal and admiring 1859 biography by his secretaries, François Volant and James Warren. It includes some of Soyer's recipes and other writings on food.Perhaps the first celebrity chef, Alexis Soyer (1810–58) was a flamboyant, larger-than-life character who nonetheless took his profession very seriously. As the chef of the Reform Club, he modernised its kitchens, installing refrigerators and gas cookers. In 1851, during the Great Exhibition, he prepared spectacular (but financially ruinous) culinary extravaganzas at his restaurant, the Gastronomic Symposium of All Nations. In stark contrast, he organised soup kitchens during the Great Famine in Ireland and volunteered his services in the Crimea in 1855 to improve military catering. He was also a prolific inventor of kitchen gadgets, notably promoting the Magic Stove, used for cooking food at the table. Several of his highly popular cookery books have been reissued in this series. Following his death, his secretaries François Volant and James Warren published this anecdotal and admiring biography in 1859, together with recipes and other cookery writings.
ISBN: 9781108063319
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 18mm
Weight: 410g
324 pages