A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject.(December 2012) |
William Curley | |
---|---|
Born | William Curley 29 October 1971 Methil, Fife, Scotland |
Occupation(s) | Patissier, chocolatier |
Website | williamcurley |
William Curley (born 29 October 1971) is a Scottish patissier and chocolatier. [1] Curley is the owner of the London chocolate company William Curley Ltd., and has won the Academy of Chocolate's 'Britain's Best Chocolatier' Award four times. [2] In 2012 William became a member of the prestigious pastry association Relais Desserts. [3]
William Curley, the son of a dock-worker, was born and raised in Methil, a small town in Fife. [1] He began his career on the advice of Moysie, with an apprenticeship at Gleneagles Hotel, before moving on to train at numerous Michelin-starred establishments. He has worked amongst many chefs and patissiers in the business, including: Pierre Koffmann at La Tante Claire, Raymond Blanc at Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons, Marco Pierre White at The Restaurant Hyde Park Hotel (now the Mandarin Oriental Hyde Park, London, [4] Marc Meneau at L'Esperance in Burgundy and Pierre Romeyer at Maison Du Bouche, just outside Brussels. [1] At the age of 27, William then moved to The Savoy[ [5] ] to become Head Chef Patissier, where he led a team of 21 pastry chefs under Anton Edelman. [6]
William has won a variety of awards including the 'William Heptinstall Award', [7] 'The Craft Guild Pastry Chef of the Year' award, [8] 'Caterer and Hotelkeeper's Acorn Award,’ and 'British Dessert of the Year.'
William won Gold at numerous international culinary competitions and events in Chicago, Luxembourg and Basel, and at the Culinary Olympics in Germany in 2004. [9]
William has also been named four times winner of the 'Best British Chocolatier' award by the Academy of Chocolate. [10] [11] [12]
William Curley opened his first shop in Richmond Upon Thames just off the green in 2004, serving a range of chocolates and patisseries. Following the success of Richmond, a second boutique was opened in November 2009 in Orange Square, Belgravia, London. Boasting the same fine selection of chocolates and patisseries as well as home-made ice cream and a brunch menu, William's Belgravia boutique introduced London's first "dessert bars" where customers can sit at the bar and sample a tasting menu of desserts created in front of them by one of William's chefs. [13] Curley's Belgravia dessert bar featured creations such as Mille-feuille au chocolate - layers of hazelnut dacquoise and chocolate cremeaux with an orange sauce, and muscavado ice-cream and then Rhubarbe sable – layers of shortbread sandwiched with rhubarb parfait and topped with berry sorbet, and rhubarb poached in ginger syrup. [14] Both shops closed in early 2016 following a split between the two co-directors. [15]
In the summer of 2011, William Curley opened a chocolate concession at the luxury department store Harrods. His chocolates are available to buy in the Chocolates and Confectionery Room on the ground floor of the store. [16] To celebrate Chocolate Week in October 2010, William held an Afternoon Tea at Claridges Hotel in Mayfair, London, which featured some of William's signature creations including his Venezuelan Cadeaux and Sea Salt Caramel Tart. [17]
William then began a regular Afternoon Tea set with the Halkin Hotel in November 2011 [18] and launched his limited-run Jubilee Afternoon Tea [19] in the Halkin Hotel in June 2012, featuring an Apricot and Ginger Macaron Crown. In the summer of 2012, William collaborated with the V&A Victoria and Albert Museum in London to celebrate their Ballgowns British Glamour exhibition. [20] William selected four gowns and created 4 patisseries, available as part of Harrods' 'Best of British' Afternoon Tea range in their Tea Room during the Jubilee.
William and his chefs provide chocolate masterclasses and workshops, where participants learn the basics of chocolate making. William also holds demonstrations and classes at Divertimenti Cookery School. [21] The William Curley team was also the first ever to hold chocolate making classes at Harrods in May 2012, [22] encouraging participants to get hands-on working with chocolate, in the Harrods Gourmet Cook Shop.
To commemorate the Queen's Diamond Jubilee in May/June 2012, William and his team created a chocolate crown displayed in the window of the luxury department store, Harrods. [23] [24]
In March 2012 William was invited to participate in Faberge's charity event The Big Egg Hunt [25] to raise money for Action for Children and Elephant Family. William and his team created a giant chocolate egg measuring 1.5 metres. This egg was featured in the window of Fortnum & Mason during the hunt and on 20 March 2012 fetched £7,000 at a charity auction making it the most expensive edible chocolate Easter Egg ever sold at auction. [26]
William regularly takes part in events and charity dinners and also appeared in the television series, Raymond Blanc's Kitchen Secrets, [27] in early 2010.
A croquembouche or croque-en-bouche is a French dessert consisting of choux pastry puffs piled into a cone and bound with threads of caramel. In Italy and France, it is often served at weddings, baptisms and First Communions.
Claridge's is a 5-star hotel at the corner of Brook Street and Davies Street in Mayfair, London. Claridge's Hotel is owned and managed by Maybourne Hotel Group.
The kitchen brigade is a system of hierarchy found in restaurants and hotels employing extensive staff, commonly referred to as "kitchen staff" in English-speaking countries.
Pierre Hermé is a French pastry chef and chocolatier. He began his career at the age of 14 as an apprentice to Gaston Lenôtre. Called "the Picasso of Pastry" by Vogue, Hermé was awarded the title of World's Best Pastry Chef in 2016 by The World's 50 Best Restaurants. He was also ranked the fourth most influential French person in the world by Vanity Fair. In 1998, Hermé created his own brand with Charles Znaty. He has written or co-written over 40 books.
Paul Andrew Young is an English chocolatier, pâtissier and television personality.
Éric Lanlard is a French pâtissier and celebrity chef. He was previously a chef for the French Navy, but moved to the UK in 1989 to work with Albert and Michel Roux. He left their company in 1995 to set up his first business, Laboratoire 2000, which was replaced by his shop Cake Boy in 2005. He had previously appeared on British television in guest spots on a number of channels before Channel 4 gave him his own television series, Glamour Puds and Baking Mad with Eric Lanlard.
Jacques Torres is a French pastry chef and chocolatier based in New York. Torres is a member of the International Culinary Center community as Dean of Pastry Arts, as well as holding pastry demonstrations. He appears on the show Nailed It!.
Jacques Génin is a French chef, cookery book writer, and well-known chocolate and caramel maker in Paris.
Pétrus is a restaurant in London, which serves modern French cuisine. It is located in Kinnerton Street, Belgravia and is part of Gordon Ramsay restaurants owned by celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay's Gordon Ramsay Restaurants Ltd. It has held one Michelin star since 2011, and 3 AA Rosettes.
Angela Hartnett at The Connaught, also known as MENU, was a restaurant owned by Gordon Ramsay Holdings and run by chef Angela Hartnett. It was located within The Connaught in Mayfair, London. The restaurant was opened following Ramsay's successful opening of Gordon Ramsay at Claridge's, within the Claridge's hotel, which is owned by the same equity group. Ramsay had originally been asked to move Restaurant Gordon Ramsay into the space, but suggested that Hartnett should run a new operation there instead. The restaurant was awarded a Michelin star in the 2004 guide and held it until it closed in 2007.
Sadaharu Aoki is a Japanese chef patissier at the pâtisserie Sadaharu Aoki in Paris, France. He is known for using traditional Japanese ingredients and flavors in French-style pastries. His style is defined as a combination of minimalistic aesthetics with rigorous French techniques. He is also known as a food consultant for Yumeiro Pâtissière manga, as claimed by the series author Natsumi Matsumoto.
Christophe Michalak is a French Master Pâtissier, author and television presenter.
Bake Off: The Professionals is a British television baking competition featuring teams of professional pastry chefs pitted against one another over two challenges. The series is a spin-off from The Great British Bake Off, and was originally titled Bake Off: Crème de la Crème on the BBC. Its first episode was screened on BBC Two on 29 March 2016. The third series screened on Channel 4 and was renamed Bake Off: The Professionals to join The Great British Bake Off after the BBC failed to renew the series.
Le Meilleur Pâtissier is a French culinary reality show broadcast on M6 since 2012 and in Belgium on RTL-TVI1.
Pierre Marcolini is a Belgian chocolatier born in Charleroi, Belgium, in 1964.
Kirsten Tibballs is an Australian pastry chef and chocolatier. Tibballs has represented Australia at world championships and as a judge for global competitions. In 2002 Tibballs founded Savour Chocolate and Patisserie School in Brunswick, Melbourne. Tibballs is the author of three cookbooks, a regular contributor to pastry publications and has featured on several television shows including MasterChef Australia. As one of the most followed female pastry chefs on Instagram, Tibballs is regularly referred to as the ‘Queen of Chocolate’ due to her contribution to the chocolate industry.
The Asian Pastry Cup (APC) is an international pastry competition taking place every two years in Singapore. It is the official selective platform for the Asian teams who will go and compete at the World Pastry Cup in Lyon, France.
Amaury Guichon is a French-Swiss pastry chef and chocolatier. He is known for his pastry designs and chocolate sculptures.
Cherish Finden is a Singaporean-born pastry chef. Born in Singapore, she trained to become a pastry chef and after moving to the United Kingdom, has worked as an executive chef at various hotels and restaurants and has won a plethora of awards for her work. Since 2016, she has served as a judge on Bake Off: The Professionals.
Philip Khoury is an Australian pastry chef who specialises in plant-based desserts. Since 2018, he has been the Head Pastry Chef at Harrods in London. His debut book A New Way to Bake (2023) won a Fortnum & Mason Food & Drink Award, among other accolades.