or search restaurant name


Advanced Restaurant Search
Browse Location

Chefs
Restaurants
Food
Wine
Bars
The Arts
Travel
Name Title

The Closure of Paul Bocuse in Melbourne

Update: Paul Bocuse Melbourne closed on the 29/11/1997

For more information on Paul Bocuse and trends in Fine Dining, look here

Melbourne has been the most far flung culinary outpost of Paul Bocuse's great gastronomic empire.

And the emperor himself is visiting to officiate at the final celebrations for the Bocuse restaurant next week. This visit has been planned for some time. What wasn't planned was chef Philippe Mouchel 's announcement that he was leaving the kitchens of Bocuse at the end of the month and, on Sunday, the press release that the Paul Bocuse restaurant would be closed before the end of the year.

And what is still not planned is when exactly the restaurant will close. It seems bizarre that the release should have been issued whilst this is still unresolved. It came from Daimaru Australia Managing Director, Brian Beirne, as he was leaving for a week's holiday. Neither he nor Philippe Mouchel could be contacted yesterday.

However, Duncan Steele, Divisional Merchandising Manager - Food & Restaurants for Daimaru, expressed reasonable confidence that Paul Bocuse would be trading until Christmas. He says that bookings are still being taken but the decision depends on whether they believe that the restaurant will be able to maintain standards (after Mouchel goes) throughout December.

Mr Steele did explain that Daimaru had the option to ask Bocuse to provide them with another French chef but they have decided not to continue with a format which has not really been working.

Revenue has not been what we budgeted for over the last 2-3 years and, with Philippe Mouchel going, it gave us a chance to review our position.

Philippe himself decided to review his own position with the announcement in October that he was leaving to start his own bistro in the city. When I spoke to him in June, it was clear that he was tired of the battle. The constant search for good staff, the declining interest in classic French cuisine and the inroads made into remaining trade by the opening of the Casino.

He also blamed the media, the media decides what people should eat, now I think it's more going to the casual food, maybe, what they call Australian food.

Supporters of Phillipe's fine classical food, and there are a legion of them in the industry, say it was not the style of the food but the position of the restaurant. People don't like going to a shopping centre to dine. It's a tribute to Philippe and to the standards he has maintained that the restaurant has survived for six years.

So where does this leave Melbourne?

For many years at Two Faces Hermann Schneider led the fine dining field in Melbourne and throughout Australia. He says unequivocably that it was the wrong venue. Had Philippe been in a better environment, he could have survived.

It seems that Melbourne can't really support even a handful of restaurants of that style anymore. It's a different expectancy now from people in dining.Hermann believes that it's becoming impossible to maintain professionalism, to run a proper staff. Personally I can't see privately owned restaurants being able to maintain the level of staff required for fine dining. Only the major hotels and a concern such as Daimaru can support brigades with any real depth.

It's not just in the kitchen but in the front of house that so many resources and so much attention is needed. There simply comes a point where the passion to excel and to keep pushing yourself and the staff beyond normal physical limits without any potential of increased financial reward no longer seems worthwhile. It never makes commercial sense but you continue to do it, until one day it dawns - that's enough! Sadly, for Melbourne that day has dawned for a number of us who started some twenty years ago, Mietta's closed at the end of 1995 and Stephanie Alexander said last year she wants to sell Stephanie's. Two Faces left Melbourne some years earlier as did Fanny's.

So what we have left are places with fewer staff, simpler food and different standards. Situations and service are more relaxed and hold lesser importance. However we do have some of the chefs who worked in those once grand establishments still cooking very well, albeit in different sorts of places. Mietta's last chef Donovan Cooke is going great guns at est est est. But Donovan and his co-chef and wife, Philippa Sibley Cooke, are doing it through total commitment and limited staff. Only their youth and passion can get the results from the small and inexperienced kitchen staff they have. Greg Malouf worked at Mietta's and is now doing wonderfully complicated Lebanese style food at O'Connells Hotel. Neither of these places bear any similarity to Mietta's, nor should they, but their chefs maintain a dedication to food and their customers are reaping the benefits. They are not being served in the same style, the rooms may be noisier, prices relatively less.

Though it may suit the times and fashion, once the "grand establishments" are gone, can the old standards ever return? Where can the staff be trained to do so?


Mietta O'Donnell
Published in the Herald Sun Food & Drink Section on the 28/10/1997
©Mietta's 1997




Or perhaps ...

Adelaide Eating
Adelaide is a city which takes its food very seriously The Central Market is busy and well used by the city\'s gourmets. People enjoy cooking and eating well at home, a fact which drives the restaurateurs to distraction. It certainly keeps prices down.

African
At C.E.R.E.S. children (and others) can visit the animal farm, feed the chooks and guinea fowl, learn to make mud bricks and learn the art of bartering in the African Village.

Around the MCG
Tonight, pre Grand Final, is a traditional get together with old friends, mostly, but not exclusively, male, gathering in Melbourne from all over.

Art Office Eating
Eating and drinking well enriches most artistic activity. Nourishment of the body is one important reason but it\'s also the nourishment of the soul and the spirit which is provided by good drinking and eating spaces.

Asian Food Festival
Melbourne\'s Asian Food Festival: it\'s really a year round festival of Asian food available in Melbourne. We have such a wealth of good Asian eating places that you could eat nothing else and do very well, thank you.

baby-chino
Searching Melbourne for the perfect baby-chino. This, for the uninitiated, is well frothed milk served with a marshmallow - it is the only thing which allows adults to converse in the presence of small children.

Bastille Day
Even in Melbourne Bastille Day stirs the French community. This piece looks at the events organised by French restaurants for the big day

Beating the Blues
Places where you can hear blues music. Description of the blues train and Queenscliff music festival.

Bocuse closure Melbourne
Paul Bocuse\'s 1997 visit to Melbourne with coincided with the closing of Paul Bocuse Melbourne

Breakfast
Breakfast, breakfast and breakfast - this piece looks at the wealth of opportunities to eat early, or not so early, in Melbourne

Breakfasts
Probably the real test is what we eat at breakfast. Not so much at home, where opening packets or popping toasters may be the rule.

Brisbane
A series of travel pieces both within Australia and overseas. This is a look at the restaurant scene in Brisbane which finds some good restaurants in the north

Cairns, Culinary Crossroads
The culinary road from Melbourne to Cairns is a long one. But there we were, Tiberio Donnini and I, both former Melbourne restaurateurs, sitting under the north Queensland sun on the pier at Cairns.

Christmas Lunch
How to find and choose a place for Christmas Lunch without braking the bank. We\'ve hunted out some good places offering lunch from $18-$80.

Christmas parties 1998
The preparation of Christmas parties for clients, staff and relatives, has seen businesses and families, who all want to host the perfect party, gripped by a paralysing panic.

City Cafes
For some Melburnians coffee is an essential start to the day. Without the right espresso hit, the system doesn\'t start.

Collins Street Festival
The Melbourne Festival

Cross Culture on Smith
Two young women have recently opened cross cultural cafes which are distinctly different and are each really interesting venues. Co-incidentally, both are on Smith Street and both are related to Japanese cuisine.

Darwin
A look at Darwin, its many markets and their food stalls, the restaurants and interviews with the suppliers of top quality ingredients

Dining in Dandy
Hannah Abiseganaden finds a major outbreak of Indian culture in Dandenong, with restaurants and sweet shops proliferating

Dining Your Valentine
Rose growers have been nursing their crops for the past month to get a bumper harvest ready just in time; candles have been ordered, extra staff booked in restaurants; musicians preparing \'romantic\' medleys; chefs designing dishes \'for two\'.

Eating around the MCG and Yarra Bank
On an ideal day, there\'ll be a cracker footy game scheduled at the \'G, followed up by a must-see show at the Tennis Centre. The MCG environs, East Melbourne, Jolimont, Richmond the Fitzroy Gardens and Yarra Park are an elegant delight at any time.

Eating by Design
Design is an important part of any eating and drinking space. No more so than in Melbourne, surely the most design and dining conscious city in Australia.

Eating in Footscray
In central Footscray there are around fifty-five cafes. Thirty of these are Vietnamese or Vietnamese-Chinese. That\'s a lot of Vietnamese cafes in one place. But they don\'t all serve pho and spring rolls.

Eating Japanese in Melbourne
Caris McDonald gives essential information on eating at Japanese restaurants in Melbourne

Eating Solo
Roger Fry discusses the trials and tribulations of dining alone in restaurants and offers some sage advice to the diner and the establishment

Eyton Arts
Eyton on Yarra, the veneyard, is now turning towards the arts in their purpose built amphitheatre

Fine Dining 1998
Melbourne\'s fine eating scene has re-invented itself and is a fiercely energetic and competitive scene today

Florentino
For more than 70 years the Florentino has been a famous name in Melbourne\'s food and wine industry. Now the Grossi family have taken over the business and have put their name up front.

Food Families
There is something very special about family run businesses. You just know that there\'s more care and concern behind the scenes. And there\'s usually at least two generations of experience to back that up.

Food Wine Writers' Festival
A series of travel pieces both within Australia and overseas. This is a look at the food scene in Adelaide with a detour to the vineyards of McLarenvale.

Forecasts
This year is not starting slowly as the excitement generated in the countdown for the year 2000 will get things moving from slow to fast boil and our culinary champions will be even more determined to keep their lead.

Ghosts
Memories are tricky things, they can enrich the experience of being in a place or they can just make people nostalgic for times long past.

Introduction restaurant stories
Index of articles relating to restaurants by Mietta O\'Donnell for the Melbourne Herald Sun

Kosher and almost
A listing of Melbourne\'s Kosher and almost Kosher restaurants and take-aways researched by David Langsam in 1999.

Laurent Little Collins
An interview with Laurent Boillon about his latest venture, a pastry shop and cafe in an old bank on the corner of Little Collins Street and the Causeway.

Leonie Palmer
A series of travel pieces both within Australia and overseas. This is a look at the food scene in Noosa, north of Brisbane, through the eyes of Leonie Palmer.

Luxe
When is a restaurant not a restaurant? When it\'s Luxe. A new eating and drinking space defies definition - fine food, coffee a bar and bustle - not at all what you\'d expect from the quality of the food.

Melbourne eating
Eating and Drinking in Melbourne is not just about great food. It\'s about going out to be with people, about choosing a place which suits where you want to be, your own style and where you feel comfortable.

Melbourne meet eat
Melbourne as the meeting point of many food cultures.

My Yarraville
John Pasquarelli moved to Yarraville before the trend and is bemused by the influx of smart inner suburban cafes and their latte drinking inhabitants

Newman Family
An interview with the Newman. the parents Tikki and John are veterans of theatre restaurants. They have been followed into the business by their children.

Park Hyatt
Radiating out from the park.

Paul Wilson 1998
The new Georges - three smart food outlets with an attached department store. An interview with the executive chef, Paul Wilson (ex-Quagalino\'s in London)

Prince of Wales
A look at the Prince of Wales Hotel and The Stokehouse Restaurant in St Kilda. These two enterprises of the Van Haandel family set the pace for style and quality in Melbourne

Restaurants 1998
Food & Drink is here to stay. Melburnians just love to go out eating and drinking so as more bars, cafes and restaurants keep on opening the need for good advice grows.

Retro and Friends
An interview with Steve Richardson of Retro in Brunswick Street.

Sydney Dining Melbourne Style
Sydney Dining Melbourne Style

Sydney Summer 98
A look at the restaurant scene in Sydney in early January 1998, in which we investigate MG Garage, the Banc, Belmondo and others. Fnally we strike bread at Phillip Searle\'s Infinity Sour Dough Bakery

Tassie in Winter
A voyage through Tasmania in June with details of restaurants, accommodation and interviews with suppliers of top quality ingredients

Toasted
How to make the perfect toasted ham, cheese and tomato sandwich and more importantly find a cafe which understands and practises the art.

Under Ten Dollars
Eating in Melbourne for less than $10 a head. Detailed are a range of cafes where you can eat well for less than $10

Victorian Eating
Eating out in country Victoria. Travelling round Victoria it\'s not just the scenery that changes. There\'s good places in every region and some exceptional quality and value. The ten not to be missed are listed below.

ViS
Viz a new restaurant in Swanston Street next door to the Lounge and under the same ownership.

Wayne Finschi Designer
The story of a man who has designed more than 40 restaurants and cafes in Australia, mostly in Melbourne.

Winter Breakfasts
A warming look at eating early as the days grow shorter - great breakfasts around Melbourne

Yarraville
Yarraville is Melbourne\'s newest trendy hot-spot and as gentrification continues apace cafes continue to open amongst the pubs - reminders of a working class past


-->