Nouvelle
Cuisine
The 1970's brought
a great deal of upheaval and new ideas to the forefront, and the world
of cuisine was no exception. In June of 1975, the British magazine
Harpers & Queen coined a term to refer to a new type of food
that was sweeping the world: Nouvelle Cuisine.
What
is nouvelle cuisine?
It is, in a word,
the marriage of health-conscious California to traditional France.
Consider it an updated version of French cuisine- flavourful food with
a light-handed, healthy approach. It's difficult to define nouvelle
cuisine in more specific terms because of its huge impact on the way
food in general is prepared today.
Nouvelle cuisine
opened doors to a new generation of restaurant-goers who loved rich
tastes and fresh combinations, but didn't want their bodies to pay for
it later. With this new lighter menu came a new
style of cooking as well.
Chefs in nouvelle
cuisine restaurants used shorter cooking times and fresher ingredients,
cutting down on the multiple steps that got in the way of the natural
flavours of the food. In a world that was waking up to faster-moving
times and stricter diets, this new cuisine caught on with incredible
speed.
Like any other
trend, nouvelle cuisine was often widely misunderstood and
misrepresented. Depending on what regional restaurant you visited, you
might have been subjected to a low-calorie meal with tiny portions and
been told it was nouvelle cuisine. Many chefs and consumers alike did
not grasp the concept that lighter did not necessarily mean less.
One of the main
goals of nouvelle cuisine was to excite more than just the sense of
taste. A skilled nouvelle chef would be able to produce a meal that was
artistically arranged on the plate and contained a wonderful mix of
smells, textures, and flavours.
Oils and fresh
spices were used extensively to bring out the natural flavour of the
fresh vegetables and pastas in these meals. The way we cook at home
today owes a great deal to nouvelle cuisine. Olive oil, vinaigrette,
and fresh herbs are common today in many American kitchens, mainly due
to the influence of the nouvelle cuisine movement.
Restaurants, too,
have taken their cue: before the appearance of nouvelle cuisine,
portions were heavier and larger, and consumers went to restaurants
expecting to come out full, but not necessarily sated.
Nowadays fine
restaurants base their expertise on combining flavours, not smothering
them; and on their presenting food that satisfies, not simply fills, an
empty stomach. There is still a debate on whether nouvelle cuisine has
disappeared from the radar.
It has certainly
influenced other
fields of cooking, but nobody is
sure if it can be considered a movement of its own in the current
times. Then again, a trend that catches on so quickly is almost always
destined to develop in other ways and spread to other things, losing
its identity as a separate entity along the way.