What is L'Académie?

L’Académie Brillat-Savarin was established to honor one of the world’s first gastronomes. Born in France, Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin was an attorney, an author and a foremost authority in the seventeenth century on “the physiology of taste”, which was, not surprisingly, the title of his most well known book. Our acknowledgement of this gastronomic historian began in 1999 with the reincarnation of L’Académie de Brillat-Savarin.

The focus of this Chaîne sub-society continues its evolution as the stellar honor society for outstanding students in culinary arts and hospitality management programs in the Unites States. Many young students have no familiarity with the Chaîne des Rôtisseurs. Ask any one of them about Brillat-Savarin and you will find that they all are cognizant of his impact in the culinary world. The Brillat Savarin program recognizes the students who will become our future professionals and hopefully our Chaîne members. Young Professional inductees of Brillat-Savarin receive a stipend of $250 and a medal designated for this honor. The 2004-05 year expanded the program to 39 additional qualified schools. Brillat-Savarin inducted 41 Young Professionals – commanding 203 awards since inception.

During the June 2000 Grand Chapître, 100 members deemed Fondateurs committed $1,000 each to the Chaîne Foundation in startup funds for Brillat-Savarin. To date, the Brillat-Savarin membership is 583. The National Council approved an additional level of Pilier with contributions of $1,000 to Brillat-Savarin. These funds are designated by the Foundation for Brillat-Savarin.

The programs of L’Académie offer opportunities for Brillat–Savarin members to experience regional cuisine, culture, art and music. The relationships we form with chefs, proprietors and sommeliers who work with us during regional adventures reinforce the Chaîne goodwill through Brillat-Savarin. A 2001 inaugural event in Lafayette kicked off the reward to Brillat members followed by excursions to South Beach, Charlotte, Santa Fe, New Orleans, Bermuda, Key West and Québec, Canada. Adventures planned for 2006 include Vail and San Juan, Puerto Rico. Future events will offer a return to Santa Fe, an Oregon journey and a return visit to the rejuvenated New Orleans.

 

The Académie also awards a Médaille de Mérite to active professionals in the culinary and hotel industries who have rendered outstanding service to the Chaîne des Rôtisseurs, education, or to gastronomy in general. Three types of honorary titles are offered: Fondateur, to a maximum of 100 Chaîne members who make a $1000 donation to provide start-up funds for the student awards program (such memberships are now fully subscribed); Académicien, to outstanding educators in the culinary and hotel fields and active professionals who have been deeply involved in supporting education; and Conseiller, to the person in each school who is responsible for the Brillat-Savarin program.

Click on image 
to view list of Fondateurs 

 

 

L'Académie is now offering general membership to all Chaîne members in good standing. Various activities are being planned, with regional cuisine the focus of two trips for Brillat-Savarin members in 2002-3. At $35 a year (plus $60 for induction), you can't beat it! The best part is that you get one more medal to wear on your Chaîne ribbon.

Please contact your local Bailliage (Chapter) or the National Administrative Office:

Confrérie de la Chaîne des Rôtisseurs
National Administrative Office
Chaîne House at Fairleigh Dickinson University
285 Madison Avenue
Madison, New Jersey 07940-1099

Telephone: (973) 360-9200
Fax: (973) 360-9330

Application Forms (password protected)

History of L'Académie

In France, l'Académie came into being in 1955, the two-hundredth anniversary of the birth of the world-renowned author of The Physiology of Taste (Meditations of Transcendental Gastronomy). The first meeting of l'Académie was held in the Great Amphitheater of the Sorbonne University in Paris. Jean Valby, who had founded the Chaîne des Rôtisseurs just five years earlier, organized it. The purpose of the new organization was to uphold and popularize regional cuisines, encourage gastronomic literature, and support young culinarians through contests and awards. The French Chaîne publication Bonne Table et Tourisme carried articles on such subjects as cassoulet and bouillabaisse, describing their origins and local variations.

In the United States, l'Académie did not become active until many years later. Since 1995, the Chaîne des Rôtisseurs Foundation has been providing scholarships for culinary and hotel management students. The schools themselves suggested that there was a need for awards recognizing outstanding student accomplishment without reference to financial need. 

L'Académie de Gastronomie Brillat-Savarin des Etats-Unis was born in1999. Its purpose went beyond simply upholding and popularizing regional cuisines. L'Académie was a natural extension of our commitment to education. The first Brillat-Savarin Medal of Excellence was presented to Maire O'Keefe at the Culinary Institute of America during the graduation ceremony in August, 1999.

Who was Brillat-Savarin?

Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin was among the first to write seriously about eating and the art of the table. In recognition of his accomplishments, a cheese, an omelet, a salmon dish, a garnish, and a consommé all bear his name. 

The discovery of a new dish does more for human happiness than the discovery of a new star. 
Brillat-Savarin

Brillat-Savarin was born in 1755 in Belley in the region of Bresse, an area rich with food and wine. From an early age, the young Anthelme loved to visit the kitchen to sniff the odors coming from the stoves. He learned to play the violin. He studied law and was elected first magistrate, then mayor, of his town. During the Terror that followed the French Revolution, he was forced to flee the country, eventually making his way to New York. 


I was in the drawing room, enjoying my dinner," said Brillat-Savarin, beginning an anecdote. "What!" interrupted his friend. "Eating dinner in a drawing room?" "I must beg you to observe, monsieur," explained the great gastronome, "that I did not say I was eating my dinner, but enjoying it. I had dined an hour before. 
Brillat-Savarin


To support himself he gave French lessons and played violin in the John Street Theater orchestra. One biographer reports that to flee a plague of yellow fever he left for Connecticut, walking most of the way and visiting Yale and Harvard. (He was more respected for his knowledge of gastronomy than geography, as his forty-five mile walk from Manhattan to New Haven took him 340 miles out of the way to Cambridge.) He later stopped for some time at a farm, which he described as
a rustic and generous Eden. He then spent three months in Boston before moving on to Philadelphia. While there, he accompanied a friend to a meeting with Thomas Jefferson, at which he asked Jefferson how to prepare a wild turkey. 

Let the progress of the meal be slow, for dinner is the last business of the day; and let the guests conduct themselves like travelers due to reach their destination together.  
Brillat-Savarin 

Finally receiving permission to return to France, he sailed from Philadelphia in June of 1796. There he was appointed to various posts, eventually becoming a judge on the Supreme Court of Appeal. The rest of his life was spent peacefully, entertaining his friends lavishly and, in return, being invited to the best tables in Paris. Over the years he worked on his gastronomic memoirs, filling many pages with recipes, anecdotes, and observations on life. 

Tell me what you eat and I will tell you what you are.   Brillat-Savarin


Inaugural Brillat-Savarin trip to Lafayette, Louisiana, in 2001.
 

L’Académie Brillat-Savarin was established to honor one of the world’s first gastronomes. Born in France, Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin was an attorney, an author and a foremost authority in the seventeenth century on “the physiology of taste”, which was, not surprisingly, the title of his most well known book. Our acknowledgement of this gastronomic historian began in 1999 with the reincarnation of L’Académie de Brillat-Savarin.

The focus of this Chaîne sub-society continues its evolution as the stellar honor society for outstanding students in culinary arts and hospitality management programs in the Unites States. Many young students have no familiarity with the Chaîne des Rôtisseurs. Ask any one of them about Brillat-Savarin and you will find that they all are cognizant of his impact in the culinary world. The Brillat Savarin program recognizes the students who will become our future professionals and hopefully our Chaîne members. Young Professional inductees of Brillat-Savarin receive a stipend of $250 and a medal designated for this honor. The 2004-05 year expanded the program to 39 additional qualified schools. Brillat-Savarin inducted 41 Young Professionals – commanding 203 awards since inception.

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