Roux's older brother
Albert had already become a patissier (
pastry chef), and Roux followed him into this field at the age of fourteen. He became an apprentice to
Camille Loyal in
Belleville, working seventy-hour weeks. Roux's tasks at the
pâtisserie included making up to sixty
galettes des rois over the course of three days for
Epiphany. Albert found Roux further employment as his apprenticeship ended. As Albert was working at the British Embassy in Paris as a
sous chef, Roux joined him there as the pastry chef for the Embassy. He moved on from there to become a chef in
Philippe de Rothschild's service, while Albert moved to England to work there. Roux nearly decided to give up cooking to become an
opera singer, but instead followed Albert to London, despite not being able to speak English. He would later recall that people thought he was mad for travelling there as he considered the state of English cooking at the time to be horrific. In 1972 the brothers opened a second restaurant, the
Waterside Inn, in
Bray, Berkshire, In 1974, when
Michelin stars were first awarded in the UK, Le Gavroche and the Waterside Inn both won a star, and when a number of restaurants won two Michelin stars for the first time in 1977, both Roux restaurants were among them. Le Gavroche moved to a new location in
Mayfair in 1982, and in the same year became the first restaurant in the UK to be awarded three Michelin stars. The same rating for the Waterside Inn followed in 1985, but Le Gavroche went back down to two stars in 1993 and did not regain the three star level before it closed in 2024. In 2010, the Waterside Inn became the first restaurant outside France to have held three Michelin stars for a period of 25 years. The
Roux Brothers Scholarship was founded by Albert and Michel in 1984. It is an annual competition to select a single chef to send out as an apprentice. In 1986 the brothers split their restaurant business between them, following a disagreement over the direction that their joint business should take; Albert took Le Gavroche, while Michel took the Waterside Inn. In July 2008, Roux announced that he would move permanently to
Crans-Montana, Switzerland, citing concerns about the state of public safety in Britain. He also owned a vineyard and house on the
Cote d'Azur in France. Since 2014, Roux worked with British baking company, Bakedin, as a consultant reviewing and approving all recipes.
Television and radio work Roux spoke out against entertainment-type cooking shows such as the 1990s cooking gameshow ''
Can't Cook, Won't Cook'', saying that "The way these people handle food is a crime. They don't even know the basics. Little attention is paid to detail. Instead, they are intent on having a giggle and a joke. They can do this without involving food." The Roux brothers had a
BBC television show,
At Home with the Roux Brothers, in the early eighties. Together with his brother Albert, Roux appeared on
BBC Radio 4's
Desert Island Discs on 26 October 1986. The
Good Food channel aired a five-part series entitled
The Roux Legacy in January 2012, which featured both brothers, along with their sons Michel Jr. and Alain. Roux had also appeared as a guest judge on
MasterChef: The Professionals, alongside his nephew Michel Jr, and on
Saturday Kitchen alongside his son Alain.
Legacy and awards Roux and his brother have been called the "godfathers of modern restaurant cuisine in the UK" by
hospitality industry magazine
Caterer and Hotelkeeper, while
The Observer Food Monthly described him as "perhaps the finest pastry chef this country has ever had" when he was awarded their Lifetime Achievement Award in 2011. Roux had previously won the Lifetime Achievement award from
Tatler magazine in 2008. In a poll of UK chefs carried out by
Caterer and Hotelkeeper magazine in 2003, the Roux brothers were voted the most influential chefs in the country, and in 2004 Michel Roux was voted the
AA Chef's Chef. Roux was awarded the
Meilleur Ouvrier de France en Pâtisserie in 1976. He was a member of several
orders in France. In 1987, he was inducted into the
National Order of Merit as a Chevalier (knight), and into the
Mérite agricole as an officer. In 1990 he was made a Chevalier in the
Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, and in 2004 the
Legion of Honour followed. Outside France he was made an honorary
Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 2002, and was made an
honorary Doctor of Culinary Arts by the
University of Rhode Island in the same year. ==Personal life==