Gerard Chouet is the head pastry chef at Andrew Fairlie at Gleneagles. Born and raised in France, Gerard has nonetheless spent much of his career working in the UK including stints at Raymond Blanc’s Le Manoir aux Quat’ Saisons and Hotel Tresanton in Cornwall.
He has been the pastry chef at Andrew Fairlie for seven years and describes it as the best atmosphere he has ever worked in.
The Staff Canteen caught up with Gerard to find out
what life is like for a French pastry chef in rural Scotland.
When did you first decide to become a pastry chef?
I grew up in Burgundy in France and my mum was a great cook. We used to have lots of family parties with all the neighbours and I used to help out in the kitchen. From a young age I saw how much people got excited over desserts so I started to make some very simple things like marmalade using fruit from the garden. We also had a yoghurt machine and I remember making yoghurt at home at the age of about ten. At the age of 19 I left school to do a professional apprenticeship in a pastry shop.
What were your reasons for coming to the UK?
My first experience at Le Manoir was very positive. The mentality was very different than in France where you had a lot of people screaming and shouting; I didn’t find that at all at Le Manoir and I wanted to recreate that experience so I came back to the UK and worked in Cornwall.
Then, when I came to Scotland, I had been working for some time in France and northern Spain so my plan was to stay for one year, mostly to stop me forgetting the language but I ended up staying for nine because of Andrew Fairlie!
What is it about Andrew Fairlie that has kept you there?
We’re not a huge team at Andrew Fairlie; we’re just nine chefs in the kitchen so we know each other very well; we help each other when we’re in the s*** and when there’s something wrong we try to find a solution together rather than fighting or screaming at each other. Andrew’s a nice guy who looks after us and has looked after me very well. There’s also very good communication between the kitchen and front of house so in service nobody’s screaming or calling each other bad names, so when you come to work you’re in a good mood.
How has your role developed since you started at Andrew Fairlie?
Since I started the business has really increased in volume and the team has increased from five chefs to nine. The quality and the attention to detail has increased as well over the whole kitchen, not just in pastry. In terms of pastry, when I first came here there were a couple of things we were buying in but I said, “I can make that myself and I can make it better,” so that became my goal and now everything is homemade from start to finish. We buy the flour and the eggs from outside but that’s it, everything else is made in the kitchen – the chocolate, the bread, everything.
Have you developed as a pastry chef yourself?
I think I have improved as a pastry chef in all aspects since I’ve been here: my personality,
the way I work, the way I think - they have all evolved. Technically I have learned a lot as well. At Andrew Fairlie we can go once a year