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Title: Grand Livre de Cuisine, Alain Ducasse
Description: Grand Livre de Cuisine, Alain Ducasse. Versión Tapa Blanda. Adquiere este libro aquÃ! solo en Cocineros.info LibrerÃa Gastronómica.

Title: Le nouveau Jules Verne (Tour Eiffel, Paris)
Description: été confiée au groupe Alain Ducasse, entame une seconde vie avec un nouveau décor signé Patrick Jouin. Interview du designer complice d'Alain ...

Title: Consommé of Chicken Profiterole of Foie Gras and Truffle by Masterchef Alain Llorca
Description: Recipes by Chef Alain Llorca, Masterchef performed at the Masterclass on the occasion of the 07 World Gourmet Summit. About Chef Alain Llorca ...
Title: Grand Livre de Cuisine, Alain Ducasse Méditerranée
Description: Grand Livre de Cuisine, Alain Ducasse Méditerranée. Adquiere este libro aquÃ! solo en Cocineros.info LibrerÃa Gastronómica.

Title: Grand Livre de Cuisine, Alain Ducasse Méditerranée
Description: Grand Livre de Cuisine, Alain Ducasse Méditerranée. Adquiere este libro aquÃ! solo en Cocineros.info LibrerÃa Gastronómica. www.cocineros.info
Title: Alain Ducasse, Tradition & Evolution
Description: Alain Ducasse, Tradition & Evolution. Adquiere este libro ya solo aquà en Cocineros.info LibrerÃa Gastronómica.
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Times Online - Found 3 hours ago ... prices are per person, for one week, B&B, including flights from London Gourmet Provence: Alain Ducasse, the Michelin-starred chef, oversees... |
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New York Times - Found 8 hours ago He fits in perfectly. Mr. Mason has worked under superstar chefs like Alain Ducasse, Jean-Louis Palladin and Paul Liebrandt. |
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Talking makeup: daily cosmetics and makeup blog. - Found Nov. 17, 2009 ... last thing you have energy for is making your hair look glamorous enough for a romantic dinner at Alain Ducasse . A visit to the newly opened... |
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New York Magazine - Found Oct. 31, 2009 Adour Alain Ducasse (Menu) 212-710-2277 Two for eight? Yes Anthos (Menu) 212-582-6900 Two for eight? |
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New York Magazine - Found Oct. 9, 2009 Alain Ducasse oversaw his chefs at a Beard House dinner: ?Interestingly, he was most vocal about fresh black pepper: He wanted lots of it on... |
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Las Vegas Weekly - Found Sep. 3, 2009 Bay By Don Chareunsy, Vegas DeLuxe editor OK, so it wasnâ??t so much a double date with Alain Ducasse and Rick Moonen, two respected star... |
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Time - Found Aug. 20, 2009 ... prepared yet surprisingly uncomplicated dish that features on the haute cuisine course at celebrity chef Alain Ducasse's new l'Ecole de... |
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Telegraph - Found Aug. 20, 2009 So when Alain Ducasse announced that he had a view, indeed, even a course, involving leftovers on the menu at his new cookery school in Paris... |
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Telegraph - Found Aug. 19, 2009 Recipe from chef Alain Ducasse's new cookery school in Paris. |
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Alain Ducasse
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This biographical article needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately, especially if potentially libelous or harmful. (August 2008) (Find sources: Alain Ducasse – news, books, scholar) |
| Born | 13 September 1956 Castel-Sarrazin, France |
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Previous restaurant(s)
Essex House, New York City
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| Official Website | |
Alain Ducasse (b. 13 September 1956 on a farm in Castel-Sarrazin in southwestern France) is a Monégasque chef. He formerly held French nationality. He operates an eponymous restaurant at the Plaza Athénée in Paris. Until the closure of his New York restaurant at the Essex House hotel, he held three stars (the top ranking) in the Michelin Guide. In January 2007 he took the position as chef of the Jules Verne Restaurant located in the Eiffel Tower in Paris.12
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In 1972, when he was sixteen, Ducasse began an apprenticeship at the Pavillon Landais restaurant in Soustons and at the Bordeaux hotel school. After this apprenticeship, he began work at Michel Guérard’s restaurant in Eugénie-les-Bains while also working for Gaston Lenôtre during the summer months. In 1977, Ducasse started working as an assistant at Moulin de Mougins under legendary chef Roger Vergé, creator of Cuisine du Soleil, and learned the Provençal cooking methods for which he was later known.
Ducasse's first position as chef came in 1980 when he took over the kitchens at L’amandier in Eugène Mougin. One year later, he assumed the position of head chef at La Terrasse in the Hôtel Juana in Juan-les-Pins. In 1984, he was awarded two stars in the Michelin Red Guide. In that same year, Ducasse was the only survivor of a Learjet crash that nearly took his life.
Recently he obtained citizenship from Monaco.3
In 1987, Ducasse was offered the Chef position at the Hôtel de Paris in Monte Carlo, with management including the hotel's Le Louis XV. After assuring himself that the Hotel's other restaurant operations were operating well, Ducasse gave up management of all but the Le Louis XV restaurant.
In 1988, Ducasse expanded beyond the restaurant industry and opened La Bastide de Moustiers, a twelve-bedroom country inn in Provence and he began attaining financial interests in other Provence hotels. On 12 August 1996, the Alain Ducasse restaurant opened in Le Parc – Sofitel Demeure Hôtels in the XVIe arrondissement (16th district) of Paris, France. The Red Guide awarded the restaurant three stars just eight months after opening.
Ducasse came to the United States and in June 2000 opened the Alain Ducasse restaurant in New York City's Essex House hotel at 160 Central Park South, receiving the Red Guide's three stars in December 2001. That restaurant closed in 2007. In early 2008, Ducasse opened Adour, at the St. Regis Hotel on 16th and K street in Washington, DC, and has also opened a more casual Bistro Benoit New York, at 60 West 55th Street.4
Ducasse became the first chef to own restaurants carrying three Michelin Stars in three cities. The New York restaurant was dropped from the 2007 Michelin Guide because the restaurant was scheduled to close. Ducasse has become known through his writing and influences.
The Alain Ducasse Group of restaurants, inns, cooking schools, cookbooks, and consulting activities had revenues of $15.9 million in 2002 and employs approximately 1400 people (in 2006).5 Since that time, Ducasse has been expanding his reach. Alain Ducasse has also opened a cooking school for the general public in Paris and another for chefs (ADF), which also works for the European Space Agency to develop astronaut meals to be taken into space.6 Ducasse has also authored numerous books, with the most famous being Alain Ducasse Culinary Encyclopedia.
In 2005, Ducasse opened his first Asian restaurant in Tokyo, Japan. Other Ducasse restaurants include:
Alain Ducasse opened in 2004 a restaurant in a resort near Biarritz, in the French Basque Country. However, after several bombing attacks by Irrintzi, an armed Basque nationalist organization of, which accused him of being a speculator and of "folklorice" the Basque Country, Ducasse decided to leave the Basque Country7.