Michel Roux (1) (1941–2020)
Author of Sauces: Sweet and Savoury: Classic and New
For other authors named Michel Roux, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Michel Roux is a celebrated chef at the top of his profession. For 30 years he has been "chef-patron" of the Waterside Inn, in Bray near London, renowned for the high quality of its classic French cooking and a prized Michelin three-starred restaurant since 1985. Roux is regarded as one of the show more finest chefs in Europe and holds countless culinary honors. Roux has appeared in two television series and written several books with his brother Albert in addition to two books as sole author show less
Image credit: Phil Guest, March 23, 2008
Works by Michel Roux
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Roux, Michel André
- Birthdate
- 1941-04-19
- Date of death
- 2020-03-12
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- chef
- Organizations
- Le Gavroche
- Awards and honors
- Order of the British Empire (Officer|2002)
- Relationships
- Roux, Albert (brother)
Roux, Michel, Jr. (nephew)
Roux, Alain (son) - Cause of death
- idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
- Nationality
- France
- Birthplace
- Charolles, France
- Places of residence
- England, UK
Paris, France
Crans-Montana, Switzerland - Place of death
- Bray-on-Thames, Berkshire, England, UK
Members
Reviews
Michel Roux is, without question, one of the world's best, most accomplished, pastry chefs. He presents "Desserts" as a "fresh look" at the subject with "updated great classics and mouthwatering contemporary recipes, inspired by his travels and designed to suit today's fresher, lighter palate." This is an accurate description of the contents, which span the gamut of desserts (fruit, cremes, souffles, puddings, crepes, ice creams, meringues, pastries, cakes, and chocolates). The recipes have show more numerous beautiful photographs, including photos illustrating techniques. I have not yet tried the recipes but look forward to doing so. Many look perfect for Spring. Note that in 1997 Roux published another cookbook of the same name, Desserts.
I do think that Amazon's description of this book is inaccurate. It states: "For more complicated techniques, helpful step-by-step photos ensure that even inexperienced home cooks and bakers achieve delicious results." Although a few techniques are illustrated, this cookbook is, by no means, suitable for home cooks and certainly not inexperienced cooks. Michel Roux is no Julia Child.
The recipes assume familiarity with professional techniques. Although volume measurements are given, e.g., cups and tablespoons, metric weights are included and produce far more accurate results. The use of "a scant cup" implies, to me, that Roux never intended the chef/cook to measure rather than weigh ingredients.
Further, recipes use professional ingredients, such as leaf gelatin, seldom used by the home baker, and Roux does not provide suppliers or sources. Note: the Internet is a good resource for buying these uncommon ingredients. A few ingredients, such as clotted cream, probably require substitution by even the professional chef, but the recipes provide no suggestions or advice. As for candied mimosa balls used to decorate the mini croquembouche, I could find only 1 source on the Internet. They are made in Toulouse, France, and sell for $11.00 a quarter ounce!
Big technical problems: the binding and printing. A quality cookbook should not fall apart after a few uses. The publisher has a serious problem with the binding. Also, text should not be written on photos as on page 163. It is illegible.
Overall, if one has the skills and experience to deal with Roux's recipes, I do think that this book presents a delicious array of desserts to please most palates. show less
I do think that Amazon's description of this book is inaccurate. It states: "For more complicated techniques, helpful step-by-step photos ensure that even inexperienced home cooks and bakers achieve delicious results." Although a few techniques are illustrated, this cookbook is, by no means, suitable for home cooks and certainly not inexperienced cooks. Michel Roux is no Julia Child.
The recipes assume familiarity with professional techniques. Although volume measurements are given, e.g., cups and tablespoons, metric weights are included and produce far more accurate results. The use of "a scant cup" implies, to me, that Roux never intended the chef/cook to measure rather than weigh ingredients.
Further, recipes use professional ingredients, such as leaf gelatin, seldom used by the home baker, and Roux does not provide suppliers or sources. Note: the Internet is a good resource for buying these uncommon ingredients. A few ingredients, such as clotted cream, probably require substitution by even the professional chef, but the recipes provide no suggestions or advice. As for candied mimosa balls used to decorate the mini croquembouche, I could find only 1 source on the Internet. They are made in Toulouse, France, and sell for $11.00 a quarter ounce!
Big technical problems: the binding and printing. A quality cookbook should not fall apart after a few uses. The publisher has a serious problem with the binding. Also, text should not be written on photos as on page 163. It is illegible.
Overall, if one has the skills and experience to deal with Roux's recipes, I do think that this book presents a delicious array of desserts to please most palates. show less
This cookbook presents some fairly interesting recipes using cheese. My one quibble is that it seems written for an audience with pretty good access to French cheeses, which at least in much of the US is not the case. It would have been nice if the recipes had done more to explain why the suggested cheeses are being called for and what (more readily accessible) cheeses could be substituted. The cookbook does some of that, but not enough. Still an unusually good cheese-oriented cookbook.
Eggs by Michel Roux
An egg-lovers dream. It's like egg porn. Beautiful photography, typography, design, and of course amazing recipes. It's so clean and uncluttered, it's refreshing just to flip through it. Not an overwhelming 1000 egg recipes, just the best of the best. I want to eat the book.
The Roux Brothers on Patisserie: Recipes and Ideas for Pastries and Desserts from the Master Chefs of the Celebrated Waterside Inn and Le Gavroche Restaurants by Albert Roux
The book itself has very old-fashioned (1970s) looks for a book that is published almost 20 years later, but the recipes are classics and in this case that's all that matters.
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 32
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 1,366
- Popularity
- #18,820
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 9
- ISBNs
- 147
- Languages
- 11















