Michelin-Star Love Stories

by Natasha Wolff | April 11, 2016 9:50 am

If you’re wining and dining that special someone, do it like a Michelin-starred chef. Below, nine hopelessly romantic culinary masters dish on how they found love at first bite. Yes, edible flowers are sometimes involved. Either way, you’ll want to take notes. 

Massimo Bottura (and wife Lara Gilmore)
Chef and owner of Osteria Francescana[1]
Modena, Italy

Massimo Bottura: The meal I made that won over my spouse was a velvety artichoke soup. She remembers this soup very well.

Lara Gilmore: We met in 1993 while working at Cafe di Nonna in Soho, when Michelin stars were a distant dream…

MB: She had mentioned that she loved artichokes. She told me that her mother steamed them and served them with mayonnaise, à la Julia Child. I wanted to make her an Italian take on artichokes with a touch of Modena.

LG: He crushed the leaves and creamed the hearts to make an intense artichoke puree served with a touch of extra old balsamic vinegar. Unforgettable. I still remember it. The spiny artichoke had become soft, enveloping and welcoming. He never made it again.

MB: She has asked me to re-make it but I never have. I know that if I made it again it will never be as special as the first time. The first impression you make only once.

LG: It was love in the form of a creamy soup. Years later, on my 40th birthday, Massimo prepared another soup to commemorate the first.

Massimo: This time it was a minimalist version of Escargots Bourguignonne in a white monochrome. The inspiration for the soup was a walk we had taken the weekend before along the Apennines after a heavy snow. The sun shone bright and the snow was melting before our eyes. As we walked the earth, the small plants and creatures below seemed to come to life.

This soup was a reconstruction of the “earth” in 15 layers of ingredients, one on top of the other. Above them sat the snails in parsley and butter with a garlic foam, white as snow, covering the whole bowl. I thought about all our years together and the secrets we shared like the snow-covered earth. I wanted to recreate metaphorical layers of flavor and mark the passing of time. When she ate the soup she said, “It’s like falling in love for the second time.”

Michel Richard
Chef and owner of Villard Michel Richard[2]
New York

“How I won my wife over: It was with Cristal!  When we first started dating (she was a beautiful girl who worked in my pastry shop), I took her to a wine shop that was having a champagne[3] tasting. It was the first time she had champagne, and she fell in love with it. Being the creative guy that I am, I thought, This is a perfect opportunity for her to fall in love with moi aussi.” 

Josiah Citrin
Chef and Owner of Melisse [4]
Los Angeles

“I met my wife Diane in the early ’90s while we were both working in the kitchen at Patina. Diane was on the pastry line while I was on the savory. After late nights at the restaurant, I would whip up a simple chicken soup for Diane that I knew she loved. I would dice up fresh vegetables to add to the broth and serve it with fresh cilantro and avocado. The dish was easy to make on the fly, fresh and comforting.”

Karen Hatfield
Chef and owner of Hatfield’s[5] and The Sycamore Kitchen[6]
Los Angeles

“Back in early 1998, Quinn and I had been together for a couple of months and he had me over to his Hollywood apartment and cooked me a roast chicken and artichoke gratin. This meal is still one of our most memorable meals to date. Not only was it super delicious, but we got a visit from the downstairs neighbor midway though the evening. Apparently Quinn had put some of the artichoke leaves down the garbage disposal and it had backed up into his unit. Whoops!”

 

NEXT: A college-size fridge and a Crock-Pot[7]

Saul Bolton
Chef and owner of Saul at the Brooklyn Museum[8]
Brooklyn

From Bolton’s wife, Lisa Bolton: “We cooked a three-course Christmas dinner together when we first moved to New York City. We were living in the studio of two fresco artists (lots of dust), the bathroom was in the kitchen, and there was a college-size refrigerator and two burners and a Crock-Pot. Somehow we made a beautiful butternut squash soup, pureed potatoes, a guinea hen and chocolate mousse. Saul always made a really great chocolate mousse.

Or there was the Valentine’s Day[9] dinner he prepared when we lived in Boston. It was a five-course tasting menu. My father showed up out of the blue and joined us!  A little uncomfortable at first, but since my dad lived in Maine, it was not like we could turn him away.  Saul readjusted. The meal began with oysters, then beet salad (because that was my favorite), some sort of fish, then meat and a sabayon with berries for dessert.” 

Graham Elliot
Owner of Graham Elliot Bistro[10] and Primary Food & Drink[11]
Chicago

“It was a chilled Spring Pea Soup, lavender creme fraiche, pink peppercorns and edible flowers. The dish hits on all the senses: visually stunning, aromatic and tastes like springtime, which signals our budding love.” 

Anthony Martin
Executive chef of Tru[12]
Chicago

“When my wife Elaina and I first met, we were both working at Joel Robuchon in Las Vegas. I made her a pasta dish of hand-rolled trofie pasta (a specific short, round, twisted length of dough) that I finished with a super simple sauce of 36-month-old parmesan and white truffles. Since she owns her own boutique catering company and I am the chef of Tru, we have very complicated schedules and often only get to spend time together on Sundays, so food plays a huge role in our time together. Sunday mornings often involve champagne at home and then brunch out with friends.” 

Andrew Zimmerman
Chef of Sepia[13]
Chicago

“The first time I cooked for Lindsey, it was a couple days after we met and she came into the restaurant I was working at, which was not very big and had an open kitchen with just me and the chef.  She was still a vegetarian, so I made her a roasted mushroom risotto with shaved black truffles…not a bad first move.” 

Ben Pollinger
Executive chef of Oceana[14]
New York

“Back when my wife and I first started dating, we had a weekly lunch date where I would cook for her at my place. One of her favorite dishes was my pasta primavera. I would make fresh fettuccine and a nice light vegetable medley with some white wine, olive oil and a little cheese—but no butter or cream. The best part of the dish was the white mushrooms—I would carve the tops into little hearts. She loved it.”

Endnotes:
  1. Osteria Francescana: http://www.osteriafrancescana.it/
  2. Villard Michel Richard: http://www.villardmichelrichard.com/%20
  3. champagne: http://dujour.com/article/champagne-tasting-storing-pairing-tips
  4. Melisse : http://melisse.com/%20
  5. Hatfield’s: http://hatfieldsrestaurant.com/
  6. The Sycamore Kitchen: http://thesycamorekitchen.com/%20
  7. NEXT: A college-size fridge and a Crock-Pot: http://dujour.com/lifestyle/food-love-stories-from-michelin-star-chefs/2/
  8. Saul at the Brooklyn Museum: http://www.saulrestaurant.com/
  9. Valentine’s Day: http://dujour.com/gallery/valentines-day-gift-guide-for-new-couples
  10. Graham Elliot Bistro: http://www.gebistro.com/
  11. Primary Food & Drink: http://primaryrestaurant.com/
  12. Tru: http://www.trurestaurant.com/
  13. Sepia: http://www.sepiachicago.com/
  14. Oceana: http://www.oceanarestaurant.com/

Source URL: https://dujour.com/life/food-love-stories-from-michelin-star-chefs/