Philippe Conticini

Philippe Conticini is a French chef and pastry chef born August 16, 1963 in Choisy-le-Roi, Val-de-Marne.

Distinguished for both his sweet and savoury efforts, he is considered by his peers [1] and by the media as one of the figureheads of contemporary French and International gastronomy.

Having worked in France, in the United States and in Japan, he conceived four innovations which transformed the international world of cookery. He notably invented in [2] the verrines, which display in a vertical and transparent container dishes traditionally served horizontally in plates, in 1994.

After receiving several awards and working in Michelin-starred restaurants (La Table d'Anvers, Petrossian...), he is the confounder and head pastry chef of the Pâtisserie des Rêves, a patisserie with outlets in France, Japan and the UK. He is especially concerned with the transmission of emotions through his culinary works and the popularization of such a work on taste.[3]

Very active in the media, he intervened in 2012 in the show fr:Le Meilleur pâtissier on French TV Channel M6.

Biography

Youth and apprenticeship

Born August 16, 1963 in Choisy-le-Roi, Philippe Conticini literally spends his childhood in his parents’ kitchens at the Restaurant du Rocher in Vitry (Val-de-Marne), then at the Michelin-starred Restaurant du Parc in Villemomble (Seine-Saint-Denis). His apprenticeship starts in 1980 at Alain Dutournier’s double Michelin starred Trou Gascon, just before taking on pastry-making at Maxim’s Roissy outlet.

After getting his CAP (French equivalent of a British NVQ in pastry, frozen dessert-making and chocolate-making he starts his career in 1983 as a pastry assistant at Jacques Chibois’ double Michelin-starred Gray d’Albion, which he leaves for Peltier in 1985.

Rise

In May 1986, he opens the restaurant La Table d’Anvers (one Michelin star), rated 17/20 on the Gault Millau guide), a restaurant he co-owns and where he is head pastry chef until 1998. During that time, he changes the pastry codes by incorporating techniques originally used only in savoury cooking (reduction of sauces, minute cooking, deglazing, seasoning... …).

Elected pastry chef of the year by the Gault Millau magazine in 1991, he distinguishes himself in 1994 by inventing verrine desserts, which according to his own description allows him to control the sensations diners feel, and transmit his own understanding of taste to others.[4][5]

His growing notoriety leads him to intervene as a cooking consultant for several companies in the woof industry (Materne in 1995, Senoble from 2001 to 2005, Ferrero in 2005, Nestlé in 2006), and in several medias and shows so as to popularize “contemporary” pastry. He therefore organizes in 1996 the « Des arômes et des hommes » (international day of contemporary pastry), cofounds the “Art et Dessert” association (popularization of contemporary pastry) and starts a two-year collaboration with Thuriès Gastronomie Magazine, where he keeps a monthly column. He is twice named President of the jury of the French Dessert making championships twice, in 1997 and 1998.

International recognition

A collaboration started in 1999 with the House of Petrossian, in Paris and New York, as a cooking consultant allows him to gain recognition outside his native France. He becomes head pastry chef at Petrossian in Paris, and the restaurant is rated 17/20 by Gault Millau two years later. In 2000 he creates a café-boutique concept for the 7th Avenue outlet of Petrossian noted by the “Dining Out” section of The New-York Times, and the newspaper invites him to contribute eight successive columns.

He starts working again with the Peltier pâtisseries, in Paris and starting from 2002 in Tokyo. In January 2003, he coaches the French team to win the title of world pastry champion in Lyon.

He then focuses on personal projects such as the launch of his high-end catering company, Exception Gourmande (until 2008), then in 2009 of the Pâtisserie des Rêves par Philippe Conticini, with an first Parisian outlet rue du Bac, a second one rue de Longchamp in 2010, and finally two Japanese outlets opening in Kyoto and Osaka, Japan, in 2012.

He is named president of the national final of the amateur macaroon competition, and of the 40th edition of the French dessert championship.

Innovations introduced by Philippe Conticini

- Verrines (1994) : he transforms the world of gastronomy and pastry [6] by being the first to serve dishes and desserts “vertically” in glasses rather than horizontally in plates (traditional serving).

- Gourmet cooking with mass consumption products (2004) : willing to prove that gastronomy is not reserved to an elite, he’s among the first chefs to work with mass consumption food products. As soon as 1994, at La Table d'Anvers, he starts using Coca-cola, in the jelly of his Cocajou dessert.[7] In Tentations en 2004, he publishes a recipte using Nutella. Ferrero contacts him soon after and he publishes Sensations Nutella the following year, a book of recipes using the chocolate spread. He goes on by publishing Concentré de délices (Concentrate of delights), a book of recipes using everyday food products. The book’s cover purposely imitates Andy Warhol’s Campbell's Soup Cans II artwork ; in 2007, he also publishes Le Thon c'est bon (Tuna is good), a book of recipes using canned tuna as the main ingredient.

- Reinvented classics (2009) : he is among the firsts to reinvent classic French pastries, adapting them to today’s taste (less sugar, lighter, more intense taste) "Just like Ferran Adrià did it with traditional paella, he managed to revisit the great classics of our pastries entirely, bringing the infinite lightness, softness, and simplicity of his own." writes Joël Robuchon, in his preface of Sensations, Philippe Boé, Philippe Conticini, La Martinière, 2009, notably through his tarte Tatin, his Paris-Brest or his Saint-Honoré.

- The choux bar (2010) : he introduces the concept of choux-bun bar”. The à la minute assembly on the spot allow a structure of textures (between the cream and the puff pastry) and tastes (between the cracker, the main cream and the insert) capable of retrieving all the taste characteristics of the product far away from the kitchen where it is prepared. Since then, choux-buns have enjoyed a growing success and are about to become the next leading pastry after macaroons and cupcakes.[8]

Awards

Media

Concurrently to his activities as a chef, Philippe Conticini has been eager to pass on his experience of taste. Besides his articles in the specialized press he participated in the editing of a number of books, and to the conception of several TV shows, such as Jeux de Goûts on Cuisine TV starting from 2006; he also intervened in the Le Meilleur pâtissier, the TV show broadcast by M6.

Bibliography

Articles

- Thuriès Gastronomie Magazine : publishes a monthly column called Tanganyika form 1996 to 1998

- New-York Times : publishes 8 weekly columns in 2001

- Zeste : publishes a 5-page column in each issue starting from September 2012.

Television

From 2006 onwards, he has been designing and hosting “Jeux de Goûts”, a TV show produced and broadcast by TV channels Odyssée and Cuisine TV.[11]

This programme is about explaining how he is capable of finding the rights seasoning using cheap and easy to find ingredients, therefore enabling the inexperienced cook to conceive a quality seasoning by working on taste.

He also intervenes in the show Le Meilleur pâtissier on M6.

External links

Notes and references

  1. “One of the forerunners in pastry. Philippe Conticini has been, together with Pierre Hermé the instigator of the renewal of our profession” (…)Philippe has a awesome palate, certainly one of the best trained in our profession". Christophe Michalak, head pastry chef of the Plaza Athénée on his blog passions gourmandes,
  2. 'Pastry Chef Philippe Conticini was the first to propose a verrine dessert ". Le Grand Larousse Gastronomique, 7th edition, Editions Larousse, octobre 2012, (ISBN 978-2-0358-8459-6) p.887.
  3. "This work on taste is my search for the Grail. I chose pastry-making as a means of expression, as I could have chosen writing" in Le Nouvel Art Culinaire Français, Editions Flammarion, 2012. (ISBN 978-2-0812-7251-4) p.469.
  4. "Thanks to the multilayered structure, because one had to thrust his spoon down to the bottom and take everything back up, I found myself all of a sudden in a position where I totally controlled what I put in the mouth of my clients",in Le Nouvel Observateur, http://obsession.nouvelobs.com/portraits/20120831.OBS0892/philippe-conticini-rencontre-avec-un-survivant.html.
  5. « Utlimately, Mr. Conticini may find that his innovations not only affect the world of baking, but that of cooking, too. » In There's a New Flavor in Town, and it's... Salt, New York Times, Dining Out, 30 août 2000.
  6. “Far from the artifices of the times and the lazy ways of reproducing, everywhere, the same traditional pastries, Philippe was the first to understand the difference between in-shop pastries and restaurant pastries, by playing on the textures and creating desserts which did not exist before. By renovating the profession, Philippe brought the benefit of all his imagination and sensitiveness to pastry-making, which immediately became lighter, full of new savours” writes Joël Robuchon in the Preface of Sensations, Philippe Boé, Philippe Conticini, La Martinière, 2009
  7. "Best of Philippe Conticini", Paris, Editions Alain Ducasse, 2012 (ISBN 978-2-8412-3442-4), p.18.
  8. Le Chou à la crème, nouvelle star, by Marie-Odile Briet, www.lexpress.fr, 26/05/2010
  9. Video introducing the jury made by the association relais et desserts
  10. http://www.prix-litteraires.net
  11. Introduction of Philippe Conticini’s show on the channel’s website