Paul Bocuse, one of the greatest French chefs of all time, died on Saturday aged 91 after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease.
Dubbed the “pope” of French cuisine, Bocuse helped shake up the food world in the 1970s with the Nouvelle Cuisine revolution and create the idea of the celebrity chef.
French President Emmanuel Macron led tributes, calling him a “mythic figure who transformed French cuisine. Chefs are crying in their kitchens across France”.
“He was one of the greatest figures of French gastronomy, the General Charles de Gaulle of cuisine,” said French food critic Francois Simon, comparing him to France’s wartime saviour and dominant post-war leader.
“He brought prestige to the job of a cook,” said Alain Ducasse, who like Bocuse has three Michelin stars, in a statement to AFP.
“The beacon of world gastronomy is no more.”