Marthe Distel

Marthe Distel was a French journalist.

Career

Marthe Distel started the culinary magazine La Cuisinière Cordon Bleu. To prompt readership, Distel offered subscribers cooking lessons with professional chefs. The first class was held in January 1895 in the kitchens of the Palais Royal. The classes led to the development of a more formal school, now known as Le Cordon Bleu.[1]

Heritage

On her death in the 1930s, Distel left the school to an orphanage, which struggled to manage it.[2] The school closed during World War II, and was later bought by another French woman, Élisabeth Brassart.

Marthe Distel and Henri-Paul Pellaprat with their students in front of the L'école du Cordon Bleu in 1896

The magazine ceased publication in the 1960s, but the school has evolved from its single location in Paris to more than 27 schools in 17 countries.[3]

gollark: Yes. Yes it is.
gollark: Anarchoprimitivism: for when you want to die of preventable diseases after living a life where you had to hunter-gather all day with no modern conveniences!
gollark: Oh, anarchoprimitivists.
gollark: Anarcho-anarchism?
gollark: Anarchism is like communism in that it sort of sounds good if you don't look too hard, but it is impractical and bad.

References

  1. Le Cordon Bleu - A brief History correlates to accounts offered in Le Cordon Bleu books
  2. Page 138, The Sharper Your Knife, the Less You Cry by Kathleen Flinn
  3. Le Cordon Bleu FAQ
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