
M. Escoffier was suggested as a subject by Anita-Clare Field.
Georges Auguste Escoffier,
Was born in the village Villeneuve-Loubet,
And could simply take your breath away,
With a Melba toast or a grand soufflé.
At 13, he was apprenticed at his uncle’s cafe,
In Nice, it was called Le Restaurant Francais,
Six years later he decided to move away,
To Paris to see if he could make his career pay.
At the start of the Franco-Prussian war,
He joined the army, a job really hardcore,
But in the summers he found what he was looking for,
To meet wealthy men who came from the top drawer.
In Lucerne it was he met Cesar Ritz,
And then D’Oyly Carte,so bit by bit,
Everything suddenly seemed to fit,
He’d take London by storm, be a palpable hit.
These 3 men then added Louis Echinard,
A maître ‘ d and didn’t find it hard,
To persuade the royal, the rich and avant garde,
And talented chefs into their backyard.
So Escoffier set out to fulfil ‘Oyly Carte’s ploy,
To run the kitchens at the Savoy,
Only the best of the best would he employ,
Much to the rich guests and diners satisfaction and joy.
Escoffier left the Savoy in 1898,
And Ritz left the hotel too, on that date,
It seems wines worth £3400 had got mislaid,
Was it a scam that the two men made?
Despite this, his reputation didn’t fall to bits,
He continued to work at the Savoy, the Carlton, the Ritz,
His signature dishes were palpable hits,
A gourmet of glamour, of colour, of glitz.
He ran the Carlton kitchens through World War I,
In which he lost his younger son,
At 88, in 1935, his life was done,
A chef who was truly second to none.
Thanks for sharing. This is a fun poem!
Thank you Kirsten! I have had to take it down from 30th comment chain because I am in the UK and need it to go into 31st October comment chain!
Very delightfully done. Thanks for sharing!!
You are welcome – I am glad you liked it!
This is such a good poem~ telling the story of a great chef. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you – glad you enjoyed it!
An interesting man and life and well told Caro!
A very interesting man!
Those were the days when hotels actually had restaurants worth visiting!
Some still do!!
Fabulous poem as always! 🙂
Thank you Sophie!
What a fabulous way to share the life and times of one of the world’s renowned chefs!
Thank you!
I would love, love, love to have been able to dine in any of those restaurants in those days. Food is my weakness, eating it that is, not making it. Do you think they stole the wine? I don’t think the Savoy did or they wouldn’t have let him keep cooking there. On the other hand were there ever any more thefts? If not, then I assume someone else was the culprit and that is why he wasn’t fired. I know, too many mysteries on TV and books. Thanks for this cool poem.
It IS a matter of conjecture, nevertheless he was a brilliant chef…
Me too – the eating in the restaurants. I think he almost certainly did steal the wine but his fame was so great he was above the law…
I wonder if his recipes have stood the test of time – are they still around today? Wonderful poem – interesting about the “mislaid” wine!
Oh yes, his recipes have. There are numerous dishes that he created still around today….
The true Master Chef, you do him honor. An yes to Suerae Stein, his recipes have stood the test of time and we do study such people when we are learning our craft.
Yes, William, a master chef indeed!
WOW!! My brother-in-law gave me his book one year as a birthday gift. It’s a treasure!! Fabulous tribute to him!!
Thank you, Carol. And what a wonderful brother in law!
Another triumph of history through poetry.
Thanks Alana!
A great chef. Food remains important in my home country…
Food remains important in this house too! Xx
This is am amazing poem. I love the detail! I have a cookbook entitled Escoffier.
Lucky you!