Troisgros (in French pronounced as /tʁwaɡʁo/) is a French restaurant and hotel with a primary location in Ouches (Loire, France) and additional affiliated restaurants in Roanne and Iguerande, in France.
It started in 1930 as a restaurant located in Roanne, held by Jean-Baptiste Troisgros and his wife Marie, then by their sons Jean and Pierre under the name of in 1957, and finally by their grandson Michel, owner of the current restaurant in Ouches. It has been awarded three Michelin stars since 1968.
The hotel (five stars) has been a member of Relais & Châteaux since 1966.
Jean-Baptiste Troisgros (1898–1974) and his wife Marie Badaut (1900–1968), lemonade makers of Burgundian origin, ran the in Chalon-sur-Saône in Burgundy. They had three children: Jean (born 2 December 1926 in Chalon-sur-Saône), Pierre (born 3 September 1928 in Chalon-sur-Saône) and Madeleine (born 17 June 1935 in Roanne). In 1930, the Troisgros family settled in Roanne, on the borders of Burgundy, the Rhône Valley and Auvergne, on National Highway #7 (Route nationale 7), then a major highway. They bought the located in front of the train station.
The couple were entirely self-taught, and their restaurant offered a regional, bourgeois and friendly atmosphere. Marie Troisgros was in the kitchen while Jean-Baptiste took care of the room and cellar. Their cuisine was simple, "sincere and true", and hiding the flavor and quality of products with sauces or concealing them under bulky decorations was out of the question. The great wines of Burgundy, dear to Jean-Baptiste, were honored.
Quickly gaining notoriety, they renamed their business and restaurant in 1935.
Their two sons, Jean and Pierre, were brought up in the almost sacred eulogies of the great French cuisine. At 15, both entered the kitchen almost "as one enters religion". Jean was trained in Paris, Pierre at the in Étretat in Normandy; he also worked in Saint-Jean-de-Luz in the Basque Country. In 1948, Pierre Troisgros did his military service with the 62nd African Artillery Regiment in Tunis.
After receiving their professional certification (CAP [{{Lang|fr|Certificat d'aptitude professionnelle}}]), the brothers worked together at the, a prestigious restaurant of the place de la Madeleine in the 8th arrondissement of Paris with the great chef Gaston Richard. They formed a lasting friendship there with fellow chef Paul Bocuse.
All three then teamed up in the prestigious restaurant La Pyramide in Vienne near Lyon, among the great chefs, Fernand Point, the boss with a strong personality, and Paul Mercier. Pierre and Jean had a short stay at Maxim's for the former and the Hôtel de Crillon for the latter, before returning to Roanne; their father, Jean-Baptiste, wanted his two sons to help him and eventually replace him.
In 1957, the became, with Pierre working as chef, Jean as master saucier and their father Jean-Baptiste as butler and sommelier with his knack for human contact. At the end of service, he brought his sons to the room and introduced them to customers. This was the beginning of an ascent to the heights of international gastronomy.
The Michelin Guide awarded them a first star in 1955, a second in 1965 and a much sought-after and very prestigious third star in 1968; 18/20 at the Gault Millau and four stars at the . In 1965, Jean Troisgros obtained the title of Meilleur Ouvrier de France (kitchen category). In 1966, Pierre Troisgros served as chef for five months at the Maxim's restaurant in Tokyo, Japan.
In 1968, Christian Millau was on the cover of his magazine stating: "I discovered the best restaurant in the world".
In 1970, the restaurant expanded with the purchase of a neighboring building. In 1976, they built a large kitchen.
In the 1980s, in collaboration with the department store in Japan, Pierre created a brand and product line named after his family: Troisgros, initially available in five store locations.
On 9 August 1983 in Vittel (Vosges), Jean Troisgros died suddenly of a heart attack on a tennis court.[1] On 29 October 1987, the Roanne train station plaza was renamed in his name (inaugurated by François Mitterrand, former French president). In its center stood a work by sculptor Arman dating from 1992:, which represented a stack of forks. Pierre was now left alone to manage the family business with Olympe, his wife, and asked Michel and Marie-Pierre to return from the United States to support them for a few months.
Jean Troisgros was married and father of two children. His son Georges was notably a cook at the restaurants Lutèce and in New York City.[2]
Pierre Troisgros (died on 23 September 2020 in Le Coteau, near Roanne, at the age of 92) and his spouse Olympe Forté (1928–2008), of Italian origin, met in Paris had three children: Claude (born 1956), Michel (born 1958) and Anne-Marie (born 1964).
Claude runs the gourmet restaurant in Rio de Janeiro and three bistros, including one in Miami Beach, Florida. He is the father of two children, including his son Thomas Troisgros, who has taken over.
Anne-Marie (former student of the École hôtelière de Lausanne), with her husband Yves Gravelier, was the owner of in Bordeaux from 1993 to 2014.
Michel, born 2 April 1958 in Roanne, is the son of Pierre and Olympe Troisgros, and he studied in the Grenoble between 1973 and 1976, where he met Marie-Pierre, his future wife. They left to travel around the world in order to learn the craft in big houses like Alain Chapel in Mionnay, Frédy Girardet in Crissier, Taillevent in Paris, Michel Guérard in Eugénie-les-Bains and New York City, Comme chez Soi in Brussels, Chez Panisse in Berkeley and The Connaught (hotel) in London.
Marie-Pierre Lambert, born 6 April 1957 in Sainte-Colombe (Rhône), also studied in the from 1973 to 1976. During her world tour, she worked in various countries, notably in Germany in the Black Forest, at the Hilton Hotel in Brussels, at The Connaught in London, at the Lapérouse restaurant in Paris, at Petrossian in New York City, at Michel Guérard in Eugénie-les-Bains and at the François family in Switzerland. Michel and Marie-Pierre married in 1983. Together Marie-Pierre and Michel have three children, Marion (born 1983), César (born 1986) and Léo (born 1993).
César Troisgros, born 5 November 1986 in Roanne, is the eldest son of Michel and Marie-Pierre. He trained at the Institut Paul Bocuse in Écully from 2004 to 2007 before continuing his culinary apprenticeship in major houses such as Michel Rostang in Paris, the Roca brothers in Girona, Spain, Thomas Keller in California in the Napa Valley and a few months with his uncle Claude Troisgros in Rio de Janeiro. In 2011, he decided to go to work in Japan, but the Fukushima disaster made him postpone his departure. He remained in Roanne to work alongside his father and became involved in family projects, notably in the move to Ouches. Concerned about ecology and biodiversity, the young man cited among his sources of influence the documentary film Tomorrow and the peasant-philosopher Pierre Rabhi. In 2017, he joined in the preservation of a bean variety, the Auvergne bean.
Léo Troisgros, born 26 February 1993 in Roanne, studied at the Institut Paul Bocuse between 2012 and 2015. To complete his training, he joined major companies such as Guy Savoy in Paris, Benoît Violier in Crissier, by Alexandre Gauthier in La Madelaine-sous-Montreuil and the Hotel Adlon in Berlin. In 2017, he joined the cooking team for the opening of the new establishment in Ouches, before joining, where Lisa Roche, his companion, is head of the ranks. In January 2018, he left with his partner for a year in Japan. On 18 June 2020, Léo and Lisa took over the direction of .
After Jean died, Michel and Marie-Pierre teamed up with his parents. The father-son tandem lasted 13 years, until 1996. Embellishments were realized during this period, and in particular the realization of a suspended garden and new rooms. Upon the retirement of Pierre and Olympe, Michel and Marie-Pierre began a collaboration with the architect Christian Liaigre. They reviewed together comfort and elegance from A to Z. In the kitchen, Michel introduced new dishes and dared to free himself from the restaurant's past. Emblematic dishes that had become too systematic, such as the salmon escalope with sorrel, were removed from the menu. Creative and seasonal dishes took over. Michel's cuisine, inspired by maternal Italy and also by Japan, was becoming more and more inspired by cuisines from his travels. Acidity was also at the heart of his work. The narrowness of the premises, the impossibility of feeding a future project for their sons César and Léo, both cooks, led Marie-Pierre and Michel to leave the place of the train station of Roanne on 1 January 2017. The new establishment,, opened on 18 February in the quiet of an estate located in Ouches, eight kilometers west of Roanne.
In 1995, Michel and Marie-Pierre opened a café-restaurant-grocery opposite the train station in Roanne. The memory of the Italian salmon inspired them in the design of this simple and elegant place where precise, home-style cooking (tart with onion and dry ceps, flat omelette and blown with the fourme) is served along with memories of voyages (fish and chips, Indian sauce or sea bream ceviche). It also sold high-quality products such as the judion, an enormous white bean found in tapas bars in Seville and an ingredient of choice for artichoke livers.
In 2015, celebrated its 20th anniversary.
In 2001, Michel Troisgros opened the Koumir (meaning 'diva') restaurant in Moscow, in a 19th-century mansion, between Pushkin Square and Red Square. This presence in Russia lasted three years. Faced with the difficulty in obtaining quality ingredients, Michel did not renew his contract.
In 2004, Michel Troisgros opened the table at the in the 8th arrondissement of Paris. A year later, he was awarded a star by the Michelin Guide. In 2014, the change of ownership put an end to ten years of collaboration.
In September 2006, Michel Troisgros opened the restaurant in the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Tokyo. The address quickly became a good reputation and obtained two stars in the Michelin Guide in 2008. The cuisine offered is close to the spirit of Roanne, but Michel leaves his chefs the freedom to create new dishes, which are initiated from local and seasonal products. This leads to French cuisine with a slight oriental accent. The restaurant closed in 2019.
In June 2008, Marie-Pierre and Michel opened a new establishment,, a few kilometers from Roanne, at Iguerande in the Saône-et-Loire of the Brionnais region. The rural and warm decor offered two lodgings for four people and three houses (cadoles) on stilts with balconies on the countryside. The project required almost 2.8 million euros of investment. The design and architecture were owed to the experience of and was a first step towards the countryside.
On 18 February 2017, the new Troisgros establishment opened. At the foot of the, a large neighboring house with a large farm, woods, meadows, orchard and pond. In the center stands the glass restaurant. It is huddled under a hundred-year-old oak tree and blends into the surrounding nature. It was called . On the farm were the reception areas, the cellars and the kitchen. The large house had 15 rooms as guest rooms. The Troisgros family is assisted by key people such as chief Benjamin Chmura, directors Patrice Laurent, Carole Quint and Jean-Philippe Tacail.