Poularde à la Godard, color plate from Livre de cuisinePastries based on Gouffé's recepies
Jules Gouffé (Paris 1807 – Neuilly-sur-Seine 1877) was a renowned French chef and pâtissier. He was nicknamed Template:Fr:l'apôtre de la cuisine décorative (Decorative cooking's apostle).[1]
He had a deep impact on the evolution of French gastronomy by gathering an immense knowledge that he wrote down in his Le Livre de Cuisine and his Le Livre de Pâtisserie. Revered by great names such as Pierre Hermé, Bernard Loiseau[2] and molecular gastronomy searchers,[3] his legacy is still vibrant among cooks of today.
Biography
His learning began under his father's supervision who owned a pâtisserie (pastry shop) on Neuve Saint-Merri street, Paris. Gouffé became Antonin Carême's pupil at the age of 16, with whom he would remain for seven years. A story tells that Carême, who was passing by, stopped to admire the pièces montées that were on display, congratulating the proprietor and offering to take his son under his protection.
In 1840 he opened a shop rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré which would soon gain fame. He sold the shop in 1855 and then became inactive.[4]
Le Livre de Cuisine : comprenant la cuisine de ménage et la grande cuisine avec 25 planches imprimées en chromolithographie et 161 gravures sur bois dessinées d'après nature par E. Ronjat, Paris, Librairie Hachette (1867) Read on line Template:Fr
(The Royal Cookery Book)
Le Livre de Pâtisserie : Ouvrage contenant 10 planches chromolithographiques et 137 gravures sur bois d'après les peintures à l'huile et les dessins de E. Ronjat, Paris, Librairie Hachette (1873) Read on line Template:Fr
(The Royal Book of Pastry and Confectionery)
Recettes pour préparer et conserver les Viandes et les Poissons salés et fumés, les terrines, les galantines, les légumes, les fruits, les confitures, les liqueurs de famille, les sirops, les petits fours, etc., Paris, Librairie Hachette (1869) (Le Livre des conserves)
(The Book of Preserves)
Le Livre de Soupes et des Potages contenant plus de 400 recettes de potages français et étrangers (1872) (Le Livre de soupes et des potages)
^Compte rendu du Séminaire N° 36 de Gastronomie moléculaire, 15 avril 2004 [1], Hervé This, Les omelettes sont-elles “sèches” quand elles sont trop battues ?, décembre 2006, [2], etc.
^Henriette Parienté, Geneviève de Ternant, « La fabuleuse histoire de la cuisine française », Editions O.D.I.L., 1981