Famous Pastry Chef Cédric Grolet Has “Nightmares About Nobody Showing Up” At S’pore Shop
Celebrity pastry chef Cédric Grolet really likes you tiao and kopi. 8days.sg recently scored an exclusive interview with the affable 38-year-old at Como Orchard – a luxe new hotel and retail complex that will house Cédric’s first-ever outlet in Asia, slated to open early September. He was in Singapore for pre-publicity duties ahead of his shop’s opening. Surprisingly, the World’s Best Pastry Chef (as crowned by World’s 50 Best Restaurant awards in 2018) was genuinely charmed by our humble breakfast takeaway.
As we present the dough fritters and kopi, which cost less than $5, to the brilliant mind behind the world-famous mini cakes resembling real fruits costing 18 euros (around S$26) a pop at his eponymous boutiques in Paris, his face lights up instantly.
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“We watched the video where you dipped your croissant in cappuccino at your cafe and wanted you to try our local version,” we explain nervously. “This is nice,” came his enthusiastic response via a translator. “This is the first time a journalist has brought me food and drinks.” Whew.
What would Cédric buy if he had to queue at Cédric Grolet Singapore?
8days.sg asks Cédric what he’d get if he had to queue for his own pastries at the Singapore outpost. “What time am I queuing?” he replies, clearly amused but treating our outrageous question with more seriousness than we deserve. Whenever the wait would be the longest, we say. “Ah, then it’s the morning. Morning has the longest queues,” he muses, referring to his Paris patisseries.
“I’ll take a cappuccino and a pain suisse (the name refers to a Swiss brioche bun),” he says finally. “I always have one [at my shops]. The pain suisse is not like my other creations. I’ve modified it while respecting the true nature of the pastry. Originally, the pastry was made with brioche. To give it a twist, we’re using a different type of dough and we make it with chocolate chips and creme patissiere (a rich, creamy custard).”
The dramatic, irregular shape of the tropical fruit posed a unique challenge for Cédric and his team. “It’s not regular, so we can’t use a mould and we have to do everything manually to make it look natural,” he explains. “The fruit is also quite neutral as it doesn’t have [strong, distinct flavours], so it was one of the more challenging creations [we’ve made so far].” What made him pick the tricky ingredient? He sums it up simply: “Because nobody has done it before. I want to create something unique and unprecedented.”
Another Singapore-only item is a mooncake-inspired creation, which Cédric considers to be a quintessential Asian confection. While the details of this pastry are under wraps for now, it’s clear that Cédric has done his research – the stylish Frenchman proudly flaunts his bright yellow bunny print pants (a nod to the Mid-Autumn Festival’s Jade Rabbit) during our photoshoot.
Celeb cameos in videos, including actress Zoe Saldaña
To make his content harder to replicate, Cédric recently started featuring celebrities in his videos – including Avatar star Zoe Saldaña, who learned to bake fruit tarts with the pastry chef at his Le Meurice shop in Paris. More celebrity collaborations are in the pipeline, including footballers and Formula 1 drivers, with Lewis Hamilton at the top of his wishlist.
Don’t expect any Singaporean personalities to turn up on his feed anytime soon, though. For his Singapore debut, the pastry chef plans to focus on “showing what we can do first”, referring to his impressive repertoire of confections.
