Misplaced Pages

Roland Passot: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 22:55, 8 October 2012 editClueBot NG (talk | contribs)Bots, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers6,438,437 editsm Reverting possible vandalism by 24.5.19.3 to version by Asalrifai. False positive? Report it. Thanks, ClueBot NG. (1259103) (Bot)← Previous edit Revision as of 18:26, 28 October 2013 edit undoCydebot (talk | contribs)6,812,251 editsm Robot - Moving category Chefs of San Francisco, California to Category:American chefs per CFD at Misplaced Pages:Categories for discussion/Log/2013 August 5.Next edit →
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 61: Line 61:
] ]
] ]
] ]
] ]
] ]

Revision as of 18:26, 28 October 2013

Roland Passot
Passot at a staff appreciation dinner
BornVillefranche-sur-Saône, France
Culinary career
Cooking styleFrench
Rating(s)
Current restaurant(s)
  • La Folie, Left Bank
Award(s) won

French-born chef Roland Passot, owner of the La Folie and the more casual, Left Bank Brasseries, was named one of "the eight wonders of Bay Area dining" by San Francisco Chronicle lead critic Michael Bauer.

Early life and career

Passot was born in 1955 in Villefranche-sur-Saône, in France's Rhône-Alpes. He is a classically trained French chef, having attended cooking school in Lyon while beginning as an assistant, at age fourteen, in the city's Léon de Lyon restaurant under Chef Paul Lacombe, and then Pierre Orsi Restaurant. After Passot rose to the rank of assistant sous-chef at Léon de Lyon, Jean Banchet (who Passot considers his most important influence) recruited him in 1979 to work at Le Francais in Wheeling, Illinois (near Chicago, Illinois | Chicago), then sent him in 1981 to open the French Room at the Adolphus Hotel in Dallas, Texas (He was fired from the French Room after getting into a shouting match with its maitre d'). In between, he opened Le Castel in San Francisco.

Restaurants

Passot opened La Folie on Polk Street in 1988, with his wife Jamie and brother Georges. A small brasserie in the Polk Gulch section of the Russian Hill neighborhood of San Francisco, it opened at a cost of $45,000 with no outside investors. His wife conceived the name, which means "craziness" or "folly" in French, referring to the difficulty of opening a new establishment in San Francisco's competitive restaurant scene. Still a family business, his brother serves as sommelier, and his wife as General Manager.

Instantly successful, La Folie steadily gained in reputation and refinement until by 2000 it was one of only several restaurants in the San Francisco Bay Area, California, to earn a "four star" review from the San Francisco Chronicle, from the city's most recognized food critic. It still had that distinction as of 2008. Avoiding "fusion" influences, the establishment is a conventional contemporary French restaurant, with classic French use of stocks and sauces but lighter than traditional French and with attention to local ingredients.

Despite the restaurant's renown it was not significantly profitable due to small size, low number of "turns", and high ingredient and operation cost (with 24 employees for 60-70 seats, and 21⁄2 to 3 hour reservation slots at an average "tab" of $75 per guest, it grossed only $1.7 million in 1998). In 1994, with partner Ed Levine, a Stanford Business School graduate who had been CFO of the Il Fornaio chain, Passot opened the much larger (220 seat) Left Bank restaurant in Larkspur, California, as a more casual alternative to La Folie. The second Left Bank opened in Menlo Park, California in 1998, and then San Jose in 2003. Left Banks are warm, vibrant brasseries offering quality French inspired cuisine. The restaurants serve a style of home-style cooking Passot calls "Cuisine Grand-mere". In 2009 the Left Bank restaurant group opened LB Steak, a modern American Steakhouse, in San Jose's premier Santana Row. LB Steak is a casually elegant American Steakhouse reflecting the distinctive charm of Santana Row's surroundings and neighbors. Featuring USDA Prime Beef, they are known for a diverse selection of 10 prime steaks and Sunday night Prime Rib dinners.

Influence and awards

In style, Passot favors contemporary French cuisine, avoiding fusion, molecular gastronomy, and new devices or techniques such as sous vide. Passot has a reputation for hiring and mentoring young academy-trained chefs. A number of successful restaurant chefs credit Passot as a mentor, or as inspiration, including Richard Reddington, the Michelin starred Chef of REDD in Yountville, CA. Jeffrey Russell, Executive Chef at The Grand America Hotel in Salt Lake City, Trey Foshee of George’s at the Cove in La Jolla, California, and Michael Kramer, formerly of McCrady’s Restaurant in Charleston, South Carolina and (as of 2008) of Voice Restaurant in Houston, Texas

In 1991 Passot was inducted into the Maitres Cuisiniers de France. His restaurant won the Zagat Survey awards for "Best Food" and "Best Nouvelle French restaurant" in 1998, and "Best French restaurant" in San Francisco, in 2002. He also earned a James Beard Award as "best rising star chef" of 1980, and other "best" designations and awards from USA Today, Food & Wine Magazine, Gourmet magazine, Gault Millau, and SF Weekly. In 2001 the French Government awarded him the "Chevalier dans l’Ordre du Mèrite Agricole".

A local caviar producer, Tsar Nicoulai, has named a product after him.

Personal life

Passot met his wife, Jamie, when she was working at the Four Seasons Resort in Irving, Texas. Known for being gregarious and social, Passot is a frequent participant in cooking shows and demonstrations, charity events, and television appearances. After gaining weight from the stress of managing his restaurants, he lost 60 pounds by eliminating alcohol, sugar, and starches from his diet.

References

  1. "42 North America Lodgings and Restaurants Achieve the Coveted 2001 Mobil Travel Guide Five-Star Rating". ExxonMobil Travel Publications. 2001.
  2. ^ Michael Bauer (2008-08-06). "The eight wonders of Bay Area dining". San Francisco Chronicle.
  3. ^ "In the Spotlight: Roland Passot, La Folie". Challenge Dairy.
  4. ^ "Chef Roland Passot". Food and Beverage World. Spring, 2002. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. ^ Susan Dyer Reynolds. "Roland Passot:Pots, Peppers and a Passion for Fashion". The Food Paper.
  6. ^ "Infuse your meal with tea". ABC 7 News. 2008-04-08.
  7. ^ Sophie Brickman (September 19, 2010). "Huge contrast between Coi, La Folie kitchens". San Francisco Chronicle.
  8. Julie Ratner (1995-03-29). "Haute cuisine for a higher cause". Palo Alto Online.
  9. ^ Alan Liddle (1998-05-18). "La Folie". Nation's Restaurant News.
  10. ^ Michael Bauer (2000-11-26). "The Creme De la Creme:Four-star restaurants in the Bay Area are more casual but still first-rate". San Francisco Chronicle.
  11. ^ Alan Liddle (1994-04-25). "Passot, Levine join forces to open Left Bank venture". Nation's Restaurant News.
  12. ^ Laura Reiley (1998-09-04). "Restaurant Review: rant in Menlo Park". Palo Alto Online.
  13. ^ "Roland Passot Chef Profile". Cooks Eat Share.
  14. "Utah's Great Chef Migration". Visit Salt Lake. 2007-01-06.
  15. "In the Spotlight: Trey Foshee, Executive Chef/Partner at George's at the Cove, La Jolla, California". Challenge Dairy.
  16. "Houston's Hotel ICON Debut's VOICE Restaurant". Hotel Interactive. 2008-03-04.
  17. "Roland Passot". Maitres Cuisiniers de France.
  18. Melissa Feldman (2007-11-04). "Now Flavoring:Roe v. Wasabi". New York times.
  19. Kim Severson (2002-01-02). "Balancing act:Chefs and restaurateurs share secrets for battling the bulge". San Francisco Chronicle.

External links

Template:Persondata

Categories: