Chef Alain
Ducasse´s restaurant, in the Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo, is the only with three
Michelin stars in the Principality of Monaco.
"To
offer the best products, in the best place and at the best moment". That
is the philosophy of the restaurant Le Louis XV, located in the Hôtel de ParisMonte-Carlo in Monaco and run by Chef Alain Ducasse, one of the biggest names
in French gastronomy.
When the
restaurant opened in May 1987, a young Ducasse made a promise to Prince
Rainier: in less than four years he would earn for Monaco three Michelin stars,
the highest distinction in the culinary world. And in 1990, this recognition
came to the man who describes himself as a "sentinel of taste" and
who investigates, season after season, new techniques, products, and flavors.
"I'm a
happy cook," says Ducasse. "My inspiration comes from a combination
of flavors from southwestern France, where I grew up, and the Mediterranean,
that seduced me at an early age, but the cook in me still has a great deal of
curiosity. My roots drive me, but they do not hold me down."
With 28
restaurants worldwide, Ducasse has devoted his knowledge of the region to Le
Louis XV, located in the center of luxury and glamour of the French Riviera,
close to Switzerland and Italy.
However, Monaco is more than that, it is at once a seafaring country and a land of excellent farmers and mushroom pickers, commodities that are at the heart of the restaurant´s seasonal dishes, since the menu takes into account the daily market offerings.
However, Monaco is more than that, it is at once a seafaring country and a land of excellent farmers and mushroom pickers, commodities that are at the heart of the restaurant´s seasonal dishes, since the menu takes into account the daily market offerings.
Some of its
specialties are the Pan-Bagnat, made from a traditional olive oil focaccia; the
pigeon breast or the baby lamb from the south of the Alps; the mullets from
Monaco´s bay, and the star dessert: the crunchy praline. Its sauces and
dressings often include hazelnuts from Piedmont, Liguria sweet olives and
citrus from Menton, the small French town on the border with Italy.
With its
legendary decor, which emulates the Palace of Versailles, Le Louis XV has a
very special area called l'Aquarium, a small dining room for four guests, where
glass walls allow the diners to observe the daily creative process of the
Ducasse team: 25 chefs and apprentices led by chef Dominique Lory, who heads
the kitchen after working four years with the master at the Plaza Athénée in
Paris.
Free of
artifice or unnecessary eccentricity, many are the sensations experienced at
this restaurant, also famous for its wine cellar of more than 350,000 carefully
selected bottles. "The volume of the cellar is based on quality, not
quantity," says Noël Bajor, the restaurant's sommelier. "It is an
exciting treasure hunt that guides us through the different wine regions from
all over the world."
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