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Breaking the Rules (and a Few Eggs) --- At Frankfurt-Area
Restaurant, Chef Hessler Earns Star Status With Natural Talent,
Creativity (Copyright (c) 2003, Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)
Maintal, Germany -- THE WHITE TIPS of Doris-Katharina Hessler's
French manicure bob up and down as she fingers a pile of stark green seaweed,
soon to be mixed with lettuce and sherry dressing and served alongside octopus
carpaccio at Restaurant Hessler here, 20 kilometers east of Frankfurt.
Such
unusual combinations help set apart Ms. Hessler, a one-star Michelin chef since
1981. In a country where heavy cream-based sauces and a paucity of spices long
typified the cuisine, Ms. Hessler was mixing Indian, Arab and Italian flavors
with French and German food long before fusion became all the rage.
Three
principles guided her to her star, and have helped her keep it since: Always be
good at what you do; find your own style and stick to it; and, finally, break a
few rules along the way.
She
broke a big rule simply by jumping in to help when the restaurant she and her
husband had opened in their former discotheque needed a new chef. Overnight,
she went from self-taught cook to professional.
German
society places high value on apprenticeships and most people who become chefs
go through rigorous training. The 54-years-old Ms. Hessler, who says she has
never taken a cooking class, catapulted to the top with her natural talent and
creative recipes. She is now one of five female (and 184 male) chefs in Germany
to have at least one Michelin star. Ever since she received it, Ms. Hessler has
been writing cookbooks, appearing on television and giving cooking classes.
Her
restaurant, which also goes by the name Kathi's Bistro, serves lunch and dinner
Wednesdays through Sundays to as many as 40 people in a prewar villa. Her
husband, Ludwig, also self-taught, serves as sommelier. Fixed-price menus range
from 29.50 euros for a three-course lunch to 73.50 euros for the menu de
degustation, or tasting menu. This isn't a place with a long waiting list;
calling on a recent Monday secured a table for two on that Saturday night.
Ms.
Hessler declines to discuss the restaurant's finances, other than to say it is
profitable.
The
eclectic cook's monthly menu changes with the seasons and serves as the stage
for Hessler-style experiments such as a mille-feuille using kohlrabi, also
known as cabbage turnip, with small lobsters and green asparagus. Or how about
pigeon breast and guinea fowl in a pastry shell atop lentils with balsamic
sauce?
Rarely
does something go wrong, and Ms. Hessler insists she can't recall a single
experiment that flopped. Restaurant critic Michael Allmaier sent his green
asparagus back to the kitchen, complaining that it was too salty and
overcooked. Nonetheless, his review, which appeared in a Frankfurt paper last
year, gave the restaurants good marks overall. The German online version of the
GaultMillau food bible positively drooled, describing her style as one that
"dances expressively on the tongue." It awarded her 17 of 20 points and ranked
her restaurant among the top 20 in the state of Hesse.
Ms.
Hessler has never moved away from her hometown of Maintal, population 38,000,
and her adult life here has been suspended between stardom and community
endeavors. Numerous German camera teams have traipsed through the riverside
town to portray Kathi's Bistro and its chef as a role model for aspiring female
chefs. Ms. Hessler has lost count of the number of times she has been on
television talking about a woman's rise to the top of a male-dominated career,
although she has never had to answer to a man or navigate her way through male
territory. "I could never work as someone else's cook," she says.
Ms.
Hessler tries to pass along her excitement in her regular cooking classes.
All-day weekend classes are booked three months in advance, and weekday classes
are regularly available.
On a
recent Thursday afternoon, Peter and Martina Vikanis, amateur foodies from
northwestern Germany, got their lesson, a gift from friends. The couple,
wearing souvenir aprons that read, "Cooking with Doris-Katharina Hessler,"
observed mussels being loosened from their shells, salmon being filleted and
soy-sauce marinades being mixed. The lack of hands-on cooking disappointed Mr.
Vikanis, but he was nonetheless inspired to cook Hessler-style stuffed lamb and
tuna balls at home -- to the approval of his dinner guests.
The
lesson was interrupted as Friedrich Beilstein, Maintal's retired confectioner,
stopped to gossip about doings on the nearby golf course as he delivered three
portions of poppy-seed "pudding" that looked like minimuffins, baked in a water
bath.
Ms.
Hessler does create her own desserts, but she admits that had she ever taken a
praline-making class, she would have flunked the part on getting the chocolate
to shine. Sauces, not chocolate sheens, are her strength, she says.
A few
minutes later, another neighbor calls to request that a 13-year-old girl be
placed in Kathi's kitchen on Girls Day in May.
Rolling
her eyes with a satisfied smile, she says, "My goodness, Girls Day? Was es
alles gibt. Everything under the sun."
For
assistance, access Factiva's Membership Circle.
wsje000020030508dz5800011 By Rhea Wessel Special to The Wall
Street Journal 885 Words 08 May 2003 The Wall Street Journal Europe
A8 English
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