CHS Homepage
About CHS Collections Collections Publications Programs Membership Museum Store
California Historical Society
Current Exhibits
Past Exhibits
Online Exhibits
Future Exhibits

Changing Tastes :: Menus of the Palace Hotel and Chez Panisse
 


 

When Alice Waters and a small band of friends in Berkeley founded a neighborhood bistro called Chez Panisse in 1971, they attempted to create an experience similar to a dinner party at home. This idea alone was a radical departure from contemporary thoughts on fine dining. It was not to be the only one.

Unlike the Palace Hotel's illustrious beginnings, Chez Panisse began in a converted family home on Shattuck Avenue in Berkeley near the University of California campus. The restaurant turned the traditional principles of fine dining upside down. Instead of showcasing the wizardry of the chefs, the kitchen focused on ingredients, seasonal, local, and naturally raised – cooked only to reveal their essence. While both Chez Panisse and the Palace Hotel share a common origin in the grand cuisine of France, Waters and her friends found inspiration in the rustic, regional styles of cooking of the countryside. This commitment to simplified fine cuisine reveals a more casual and relaxed attitude towards fine dining. The emphasis on the simplicity of both the food and the dining experience have come to define not only contemporary California dining and cooking, but have greatly influenced the whole movement of American gastronomy.

The menus at Chez Panisse illustrate an ambitious exploration and experimentation in not only the food and its preparation, but the manner in which it is described. The celebration of fresh, vibrant ingredients carries over into the menus. Many are glorious works of art, designed and illustrated by professional artists, printers and calligraphers, visually vibrant and often witty. By acknowledging the particular varieties of food on the menu and the farm that produced it, the people who grow the food are celebrated as much as the chefs who prepare it.

 
© 2002 California Historical Society. All rights reserved