IN THE FIRST OF A NEW SERIES DELVING INTO WHAT WATCHIN DUSTRY LEADERS DO DURING THEIR TIME OFF, STANISLAS RAMBAUD, MANAGING DIRECTOR OF IWC SOUTHEAST ASIA, TELLS US WHY HAPPINESS IS A FULL KITCHEN AND RECIPES FROM HIS CHILDHOOD.
TEXT CHARMIAN LEONG PHOTOGRAPHY FRENCHESCAR LIM ART DIRECTION DENISE REI LOW SHOT ON LOCATION ARC LINEA
For this food and watch lover, emotions run deep in both gastronomy and watchmaking.
I’ve been immersed in the world of French cuisine and fi ne dining since I was a child. I watched my father and grandmother cooking on weekends and I always wanted to help. When we travelled around France, my father would plan a route according to Michelinstar restaurants we hadn’t yet visited, and I would collect all the restaurant menus because I was fascinated by what those chefs could do. Now I cook almost daily.
I usually cook simple, French bistro-style dishes like grilled meat with potato gratin, roast chicken with lemon sauce, or homemade pasta – many of them based on my grandmother’s recipes. But I love cooking with truffles. Whenever I go back to France for Christmas, I buy a kilogram of fresh truffles to bring to Singapore. My wife and I have a tradition of having at least one truffle dish for dinner each month, and we’ve used it with scrambled eggs, souffle, pasta, red meat and foie gras. My friends also love my flourless chocolate cake – it’s very heavy and full of butter.
I recommend Nouri. The chef (Ivan Brehm) is good because he manages to bring together techniques and flavours from all over the world. But my favourite place to eat at is still home. I don’t think I’ve ever ordered takeaway, since coming to Singapore over a year ago.
There was once I left foie gras in the oven then forgot about it, as I was watching a TV show and tired from travelling. It was supposed to be cooked for half an hour but it was in there for two. In the end, it turned into a slab of yellow fat.