Centuries of gastronomy have seen food evolve with the arrival of new innovations, trends and techniques. The Renaissance for example witnessed a veritable culinary revolution, with Europe seeing an influx of new foods from the New World. The exotic charm of a tomato or green bean may raise a smile now, yet clearly demonstrates how cooking constantly adapts to its time and embraces the new to reinvent and meet social change. Fast forward to the 1970s for a flashback to the resolutely subversive chefs championing ‘nouvelle cuisine’.
While culinary Meccas such as Bocuse or Troisgros may seem traditional today, their bold style back in the day caused quite a stir, in their efforts to stand apart from the rich, orthodox style of culinary icon Auguste Escoffier established in the 19th century, and the only one of its kind to qualify for the elevated culinary title of grande cuisine. Nouvelle Cuisine’s determined focus on simplicity, and its steadfast resolve to break free from the shackles of systematised cooking, demonstrates that gastronomy can and must leave its principles in its wake and move with the times.