Best Artisan of France. Not only was Bocuse a man of many talents, he was a man of charity and good heart. In 1949 he held a wine auction at the medieval charity hospital. At the Bistro 110 benefits he raised more than $3,000. He has also helped raise money for a Chicago hunger program for kids, helped with the March of Dimes and Project Openhand and, after all his charity work in 1944, he then enlisted in the first French Division at WWII where he was shot and treated in an American hospital.
In 1982, Bocuse opened up a restaurant in the Epcot Center, a part of Disneyworld, with Gaston Leotre and Roger Verge. His son Jerome now manages the Chefs de France restaurant inside the French pavilion at Walt Disney World’s Epcot. After the very long list of his achievements, merely scratching the surface of Bocuse’s success, it is also important to talk about his excellent culinary talent. Bocuse’s main restaurant is the luxury three Michelin starred l͛Auberge du Pont de Collonges, near Lyon.
The Bocuse franchise consists of over a dozen spin-off restaurants, scores of cookbooks, an international cooking competition, Bocuse d’Or. Paul Bocuse was also honoured with an award named after him, Bocuse d’Or, one of the most prestigious awards for chefs in the world and is sometimes seen as the unofficial world championships for chefs. The Culinary Institute of America honoured Bocuse in their Leadership Awards Gala on 30 March 2011.
Paul has his own institute, Paul Bocuse Worldwide Alliance, where the institute brings together 12 universities in South Africa, United States, Peru, Canada, Japan, Guatemala, Taiwan, Greece, Singapore, China, Finland, Colombia and Ecuador. Each university selects the best students to follow a four-month intensive training at the Institute Paul Bocuse in subjects such as French Regional Cuisine, the arts de la table, wine selection, cheeses, French cooking terminology and pastry techniques.
He sadly leaves behind his two children, daughter Francoise, his son Jerome, and his partner Patricia Zizza. Chef Paul Bocuse, one of the prominent chefs associated with nouvelle cuisine, is not just a French cuisine magician, he was also a keen business man, an innovator and the Meilleur Ouvrier de France.