Secrets of the Best Chefs

(Kiana) #1

Michel Richard


Chef-owner, Citronelle and Central
Washington, D.C.


Chef Michel Richard has an eggshell on his nose.
He’s just shown me his contraption for cutting the top off of an
egg—a weird metal skullcap with a lever that you snap—and now
that the egg’s been hollowed out, he’s turned it into a clown nose.
“My kids love this,” he says, laughing.
A clown, though, he is not. Richard is one of our nation’s
greatest chefs; as the proprietor and owner of both Citronelle and
Central in Washington, D.C., Richard has cooked for presidents (a
fact that he shrugs off, casually) and some of the greatest names in
the history of gastronomy, including the founder of nouvelle
cuisine, Paul Bocuse.
You’d think a chef of his stature would be an egotistical
monstrosity, but Richard is the absolute opposite: he is humble
and kind, and he exudes such a natural warmth that anyone who
comes near him is instantly charmed.
I’m here because Richard’s warmth and whimsy aren’t just
character traits, they’re an integral part of his cooking. His
playfulness and joie de vivre are evident in such dishes as “fake
scrambled eggs,” in which he cooks a scallop mousse in a bain-
marie and serves it in that cut-open eggshell, or potato risotto, a
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