, founder of the Bocuse d'Or Based on an event first arranged in 1983, when the
Salon des Métiers de Bouche (Culinary Sector Exhibition and Trade Fair, later renamed ''Salon international de la restauration de l'hôtellerie et de l'alimentation'', SIRHA) took place in Lyon as "an exhibition organised by professionals for professionals". Paul Bocuse, appointed Honorary President of the exhibition, conceived the idea of a culinary competition to take place during the exhibition, with preparation of all dishes taking place live in front of an audience. Several gastronomy contests were already in existence, however none of them presented a "live performance" and consequently one could not actually see the work performed in the kitchens of the chefs' restaurants. The initial Bocuse d'Or took place in January 1987. The SIRHA, having grown to become one of the biggest and most sophisticated food and culinary arts fairs in the world, also arranges other contests of culinary skill, including the
Coupe du Monde de la Pâtisserie (World Pastry Cup) and in recent years
Mondial du Pain (World of Bread Contest). The audience atmosphere of the Bocuse d'Or evolved in 1997 when the support for the Mexican candidate included a
mariachi band, foghorns, cowbells, cheering and yelling from the stands, marking the beginning of a tradition of noisy spectator presence. At first, the reigning champion nation was not permitted to participate in the following contest, but that rule was removed after the 1999 event when France was competing and did not win gold for the first time.
Léa Linster of
Luxembourg became the first woman to win in 1989, and
Rasmus Kofoed of Denmark became the first multiple medalist with bronze and silver in 2005 and 2007, and the eventual gold medal in 2011. Prior to finishing in second place in 2015 and winning the competition in 2017, the U.S. team had not placed higher than sixth as in 2003 and 2009, while the highest ranking of a North American chef was the fourth-place result of Canadian Robert Sulatycky in 1999. The 2007 Bocuse d'Or was featured in the documentary film,
El Pollo, el Pez, y el Cangrejo Real. The U.S. won second place in 2015 when Philip Tessier and Skylar Stover made history by becoming both the first Americans to mount the podium as well as the first non-European team to win silver. Coached by
Gavin Kaysen,
Thomas Keller, Jerome Bocuse and
Daniel Boulud, this was an extraordinary milestone for a country that had competed every year since the competitions inception in 1987. In 2017 the U.S. won the competition, finishing ahead of
Norway in second place and
Iceland in third. The team's head chef was Mathew Peters and his
commis, or helper, was Harrison Turone. Both had previously worked at Keller's
New York City restaurant
Per Se.
Semi-finals After its 20th anniversary, the format was expanded, with the first Bocuse d'Or Asia contest taking place in May 2008 in
Shanghai and Bocuse d'Or Europe in July 2008 in
Stavanger. The inaugural winners were
Yasuji Sasaki from Japan and
Geir Skeie of Norway, respectively. Skeie went on to win the 2009 world final. Paul Bocuse stated, "I hope [the U.S. team] will win because we'd really like this competition to cross the Atlantic". The Bocuse d'Or USA 2010 took place at the earlier February 2010 date arranged at
The Culinary Institute of America in
Hyde Park, New York. The winner was
James Kent who represented Team USA in Lyon in 2011, eventually placing tenth. The Bocuse d'Or Asia 2010 was again arranged in Shanghai in March 2010, won by the Malaysian all-women team of See Lay Na. The Bocuse d'Or Europe 2010 arranged in
Geneva in June 2010 was won by Danish previous Bocuse d'Or bronze and silver medalist
Rasmus Kofoed, who went on to win the 2011 world final. while the Bocuse d'Or Europe was arranged in
Brussels in late March 2012 with the gold medal won by Norwegian chef
Ørjan Johannessen. The Bocuse d'Or Asia taking place in June 2012, again in Shanghai, was won by Yew Eng Tong representing Singapore.
Criticism For the 2005 Bocuse d'Or, the Spanish delegation had chosen an innovative presentation inspired by
Salvador Dalí motifs; for the fish course a serving vessel in the shape of a one-meter-high crystal egg, as a part of an ambitious campaign at the cost of near
€1 million to achieve a good result in the competition. However, the Spanish candidate finished in the next to last place (a cited reason was that the warm dish produced such
condensation to the inside of the egg that the judges were nearly unable to see the presentation), producing heated reactions from the Spanish delegation who called the jury old-fashioned and outdated, Controversy arose during the 2007 Bocuse d'Or, as allegations of cheating were raised against the winning chef
Fabrice Desvignes, due to the late delivery of two metal containers leading to claims that these contained prepared precooked ingredients. A contest director responded that the containers were delivered to Desvignes two minutes before he started work because snow delayed their overnight arrival, and these contained
silverware and
foie gras, not prohibited by the rules. The controversy led to amendments to the rules for future Bocuse d'Or contests, with the addition of a Kitchen Supervising Committee to control the candidate products and equipment. ==Competition==