HERMÉ, Pierre
The Architecture of Taste
On November 27, 2012, world-renowned pastry chef Pierre Hermé arrived at Harvard University from Paris. He brought five chefs, two assistants, 600 sheets of gelatin, 150 eggs, 68 pounds of caster sugar, 40 pounds of unsalted butter, 32 pounds of cream, 25 pounds of milk chocolate couverture, 11 pounds of grated wasabi, and the alchemic techniques to transform these ingredients into an elaborate “lecture de pâtisserie.” Together with Savinien Caracostea and Sanford Kwinter, he methodically deconstructed four conceptual desserts for 400 spectator-diners. The Architecture of Taste recaptures this night and the physiological effects of Hermé’s pastry visions. [publisher's note]
This book is part of The Incidents series, based on “uncommon events” at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design from 1936 to tomorrow.
Published by Sternberg Press / Harvard University Graduate School of Design, 2015
Design by Åbäke
Essays