Click yourself onto the Google homepage today and you will see the jolly face of Eugénie Brazier cooking up a storm.

Today would have been the celebrated French chefs 123rd birthday.

Brazier, known as “La Mère Brazier” or the Brazier Mother, was the first French chef to be awarded three stars by the Michelin Guide.

Todays Google Doodle deceits her in the kitchen, with the steam from her cooking cleverly forming the words Google.

Eugénie Brazier Google Doodle TWITTER / GOOGLE

EUGÉNIE BRAZIER: She was the first French chef to receive three Michelin stars

“Eight years after moving to Lyon, Eugénie Brazier opened La Mère Brazier which quickly developed a reputation as an elegant culinary destination for politicians and celebrities”

Google Doodle

Why is Google celebrating the French chef?

Eugénie Brazier was a massively influential French chef, who is even more astonishing when you consider the fact she came from humble beginnings.

Brazier was born on June 12, 1895 on a far near Lyon, France.

She grew up knowing poverty and hard work, but she also considered her upbringing idyllic.

Despite being mostly uneducated, she later described she was “ready for anything that might challenge me”.

Eugénie Brazier Google Doodle GOOGLE

EUGENIE BRAZIER: Google Doodle is celebrating the French chef

She didnt have an easy life, with her mother dying when she was 10 years old, having a child out of wedlock at 19, and living through two world wars.

After her mother died she moved to a farmstead where she learned how to cook in the Bresse regional style.

Brazier gained a reputation for her skills at La Brassiere du Dragon in Lyon when she was 20, after learning the trade through some apprenticeships.

She would later publish the highly influential cookbook Brazier: The Mother of Modern French Cooking.

In the book she described how she went to work as a nanny in Lyon during World War I for the Millet family, who owned a bakery.

The best Google Doodles

We celebrate the best of Google's graphic art works. Google celebrates John Harrison's 325th birthday. He invented the marine chronometer, a long-sought-after device for solving the problem of calculating longitude while at sea Google Google celebrates John Harrison's 325th birthday. He invented the marine chronometer, a long-sought-after device for solving the problem of calculating longitude while at sea

She eventually took over preparing the meals, because she loved “working the stove”.

However, Brazier needed more money to support her son Gaston, leading her to work at La Mère Fillioux, a “high-class establishment”.

Eventually, on June 12, 1895 she opened her first restaurant in Lyon at the age of 26.

Brazier became renowned for her simple, elegant food.

She would later write that cooking is “not complicated, you have to be well organised, to remember things, and to have a bit of taste.”

Her exceptional cooking at La Mere Brazier attracted celebs like Marlene Dietrich and Charles de Gaulle.

One of her most famous dishes included “beautiful dawn lobster” and “poultry in half mourning”.

Google explained: "Eight years after moving to Lyon, Eugénie Brazier opened La Mère Brazier which quickly developed a reputation as an elegant culinary destination for politicians and celebrities.

"La Mère Brazier expanded many times to accommodate the massive increase in customers."

Brazier eventually developed a Lyonnaise cuisine into a natural phenomenon, which her student Paul Bocuse later turned into a worldwide success.

In 1933 the critically acclaimed restaurant received a three-star Michelin rating.

Eugénie Brazier TWITTER

EUGENIE BRAZIER: She became known as the Mother of Modern French Cooking

Despite not ever wanting to be a “celebrity chef”, La Mere Brazier became the restaurant of choice for the French elite.

She later opened a second restaurant, Le Col de la Luère in the Alpine foothills, which also achieved three michelin stars.

Her record of six michelin stars was unmatched by any chef until 1998.

Brazier spent decades on her cookbook, and it was finally her family that completed it.

The French version, Les secrets de la Mère Brazier was published in 2009, while the English version, La Mere Brazier: The Mother of Modern French Cooking, was published in 2014.

Brazier sadly passed away on March 2, 1977, at the age of 81.

Related articles

[contf] [contfnew]

daily star

[contfnewc] [contfnewc]