Daniel Boulud on Food, Family and France

The famous French chef on a life built around food.

ByABC News
November 25, 2008, 11:18 AM

Nov. 25, 2008— -- It's fitting that world-famous chef Daniel Boulud grew up in Lyon, a French city its inhabitants call the capital of gastronomy.

"I was meant to be a chef in Lyon. It was something quite special," Boulud said. "Quite unique, actually. Amazing concentration of great chefs, amazing concentration of ingredients, the four seasons, certainly, the north with Burgundy, the south with Rhone. ... It was really encased into a very geographic center for gastronomy, I would say."

CLICK HERE for Boulud's recipes.

One of Boulud's most memorable experiences as a child was not in Lyon but on a trip to San Malo, a little port town in the Brittany region of France, where he first tasted a wide variety of seafood: huge crabs, lobster and shrimp.

"I think maybe I was 8 years old. ... Of course, I had wonderful memories of food before, but that one was like something striked me because all those flavors were not so familiar to me. I'd never had lobster at home. Oysters, we had that, but fancy seafood never! And so to have that for the first time, I think that was quite spectacular."

Another spectacular experience? The smooth, mellow flavor of an avocado. He was 14 when he first tried one, the same age at which he decided to be a chef.

"I'd never saw an avocado because we never had that at home. It was not something that was available. We couldn't grow it, so we didn't eat it. It's kind of thing at the farm: If you can't grow it, don't eat it. So the avocado, when I went to work at this fancy restaurant in Lyon at 14, for the first time I tasted an avocado and that was also … and since then I don't know, I love avocado. There's few things I love dearly and avocado is one of these."

It's been more than 25 years since Boulud, 53, arrived in New York where he settled on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.

"If Lyon was the epicenter of gastronomy, this is the epicenter of wealth in America, so in a way, it was a good neighborhood for me," Boulud said. "It has been good to cook in this neighborhood and the neighborhood has been good to me as well."