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The First Celebrity Chef – Guest Blog!

– By Jeff Koch

The Start.

Over 150 years ago, the man called the “first celebrity chef” got his start in his native France. Born in 1810, Alexis Soyer had star power, looks, and a gift for storytelling and self-promotion. But more importantly, he was a master of the culinary arts and an inventor whose innovations improved cooking methods and lives.

He began his training at age 11 in Paris. In 1830 he began cooking in the Foreign Office just before the Second Revolution. One evening, a mob broke in, killing a number of workers.  Soyer began singing La Marseillaise, and was spared and carried from the kitchen by the mob, but his association with the old order made it difficult for him to remain in Paris. So in 1831 he left for the England where French chefs were in demand.

Big Changes. 

After cooking in various English country homes, including those of the Dukes of Cambridge and Sutherland and the Marquis of Waterford, Soyer landed in London. In 1837 he became the master chef at London’s Reform Club. There he designed a new kitchen with innovations such as the first use of gas and variable temperature ovens. Soyer created numerous new dishes in a style that made him the top chef in London. He is also credited with creating the first fish and chips. The club still serves Soyer’s recipe for Lamb Cutlets Reform.

Soyer had a deep interest in helping the poor and designed portable soup kitchens which did great service in the Irish potato famine. His soup kitchen in Ham Yard, Haymarket one Christmas fed 22,000 people. He also produced some of the first cookbooks for the poor and middle class, as well as The Pantropheon, a history of cooking going back to the Greeks and Romans. His thoughts on healthy, nutritious food were in line with much of ours today – fresh vegetables and fish, in contrast with the typical English diet in the Victorian age.

After leaving the Reform Club in 1850, he helped the British Navy overcome problems with canned meat by changing portions, methods, and ingredients. In 1853 during the Crimean War, the English Army was ill-prepared to supply its army and to treat the sick and wounded. Accounts of the terrible conditions and of Florence Nightingale’s heroic service reached Soyer in London, and he offered to reform the cooking practices of the army and its hospitals to improve the health and morale of the army. Read More The First Celebrity Chef – Guest Blog!

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Virginia Postrel’s 7 Most Glamorous Women in History

I Prefer Blondes

For my entire life, I’ve always been attracted to strong women (preferably blonde). Okay, now my secret is out. So as not to get into trouble, it’s the stories of strong blonde women that I’m attracted to. For some reason I turned to Virginia Postrel’s article in USA Today (August 8, 2014) entitled, History’s 7 Most Glamorous Women. What caught my eye was the woman she named number one: Marie Curie.

Marie Curie, an influential woman
Marie Curie (circa 1898). Photo (photographer unknown). Wikimedia Commons.

The Strong Ones 

I’m very familiar with the story of Marie Curie (#1). She was responsible for the discovery of radiation (she coined the term radioactivity) and x-rays. Madame Curie shared the 1903 Nobel Prize in physics with her husband and she won outright the 1911 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. She died in Paris (1934), likely of radiation poisoning from the x-rays she performed during World War I. Madame Curie is the only woman buried in the Pantheon based on the merits of her own achievements. Based on the pictures I’ve seen of Madame Curie, I would not put her in the bucket called “glamorous.” By the time I got through the remaining 6 names, I figured out that by “glamorous,” what Ms. Postrel really meant is “strong.” While I wouldn’t necessarily disagree with Ms. Postrel’s identifying these individuals as strong women, I would perhaps come up with some other women to put in their place or at the very least, to join them on the list. I guess it could be a toss up between Joan Crawford (#7) and Bette Davis. Or how about Barbara Stanwyck and Mary Pickford? Clearly, this is the entertainment category. Read More Virginia Postrel’s 7 Most Glamorous Women in History