{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/67cb0e5722c74795c356299d/69df729559baa7e2288cb121?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Part 1 - Raymond Blanc - From Getting Brutally Exiled From France To Winning 2 Michelin Stars At Le Manoir aux Quat’Saisons","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/67cb0e5722c74795c356299d/1776245854116-99ee9609-42df-42d9-897a-a872a471280a.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>Few chefs in the world can match the Michelin legacy of Raymond Blanc. With over 40 years of continuous Michelin-starred excellence at Le Manoir aux Quat’Saisons, he stands among the most consistent and influential figures in global gastronomy. Yet, as he reveals in this episode, he never chased stars—only excellence. The stars, he insists, were always a by-product. From the electric moment he was told mid-service that he’d earned his second star, to his conscious decision to walk away from a Michelin star at his first brasserie concept because it didn’t align with his vision, Blanc’s relationship with the guide is anything but conventional.</p><p>Behind those accolades lies a story that is equal parts grit, instinct and extraordinary luck. Blanc takes us back to his early life in France—hunting, foraging and selling wild ingredients as a teenager before stumbling into his first transformative restaurant experience. From there, his path is anything but linear: training as a nurse, talking his way into a restaurant job by boldly claiming he’d become the best chef in the world, and starting at the very bottom as a cleaner. He recounts learning wine from leftover glasses, studying cookery books obsessively at night, and enduring the brutal realities of old-school kitchens—including the moment a chef smashed a pan into his face, ultimately pushing him to leave France and start over in England.</p><p>What follows is a series of almost unbelievable turning points. Arriving in Britain to what he describes as a “frightening” food scene, Blanc quickly found himself cooking after a disastrous kitchen vacancy—despite never formally training as a chef. He shares vivid, often hilarious stories: witnessing chefs mixing trifle with their bare hands, opening his first Oxford restaurant in the economic chaos of the late 70s, scrubbing tar from the walls and discovering rats in the fridge, then somehow winning a Michelin star within two years. From there came the leap to Le Manoir aux Quat’Saisons—funded largely on reputation and belief—followed by the pressure, failures and triumphs that built it into one of the most revered restaurants in the world.</p><p>Now stepping back after decades at the top, Blanc reflects with honesty and warmth on legacy, leadership and letting go. He discusses choosing his successor, the philosophy behind training dozens of future Michelin-starred chefs, and his determination to reshape kitchen culture into something kinder, more supportive and more human. Along the way, he shares the wild story of how a near-disastrous TV deal led to the creation of the London Cocktail Club, his deliberate reinvention of casual dining with Brasserie Blanc, and why hospitality, at its core, is about giving people the best moment of their lives. This is a portrait of a chef who didn’t just earn stars—he redefined what they mean.</p>","author_name":"Go To Podcast Company "}