SAN FRANCISCO – When a world-renowned French chef offers to share his bottle of pinot noir at noon on a Monday, the answer is yes — especially when the partner in wine is charming raconteur Jacques Pépin.
Late last month, Pépin was in San Francisco shooting one of his last shows, "Jacques Pépin: Heart and Soul," at KQED for his final season on public television. Just weeks from turning 79, he has no intention of retiring, but it's time to bring the show to a close. After a month away from home filming, he misses his wife of 49 years, Gloria, his Connecticut garden and two dogs.
Throughout his career, Pépin has been a peripatetic champion of cooks at all levels, a master chef with a knack for nurturing a novice. In years past, he's visited the Twin Cities, and still remembers classes he taught at Cooks of Crocus Hill in St. Paul and Kitchen Window in Uptown.
A devoted mushroom hunter, his biggest morel bounty took place on a foraging trip in Minnesota. His favorite butter? Land O'Lakes unsalted.
Before the recent show, Pépin walked out to shake hands with a dozen adoring audience members, who included food and beverage distributors, magazine editors, a restaurant chef and a few fans with connections.
Stepping back to the front of the cameras, Pépin swatted away black smoke as he opened the oven to a burned pan of fougasse (a savory flatbread), today's lesson. He shrugged it off. "The first casualty of the day," he said, as assistants darted to the backstage kitchen for a replacement pan of bread.
For this episode, he's preparing "fast" fougasse from pre-made pizza dough and salmon rillettes as an appetizer. "That's good," he said, taking his first bite. "I need a glass of wine with that." Chenin blanc was poured.
This Frenchman's culinary education began essentially at birth in 1935 in Bourg-en-Bresse in eastern France, near Lyon, where his parents, Jeannette and Jean-Victor owned a restaurant. Eventually, he trained at the Plaza Athénée in Paris and cooked for three French heads of state, including Charles de Gaulle, before moving to the United States in 1959.