Károly Gundel
Károly Gundel | |
---|---|
Born |
Budapest, Austro-Hungarian Empire | 23 September 1883
Died |
28 November 1956 73) Budapest, Hungary | (aged
Occupation | Restaurateur, Culinary works of writers |
Spouse(s) | Margit Blasutigh |
Károly Gundel (Hungarian pronunciation: []; 23 September 1883 – 28 November 1956) was restaurateur and writer of culinary works.
Family
Károly Gundel was born on 23 September in Budapest, the son of János Gundel, a restaurateur. His mother was Anna Kommer. Of the 5 children of János Gundel it was Károly who inherited his father’s passion for the catering profession and his gastronomic genius. He married in 1907 with Margit Blasutigh.
His grandchildren were Zoltán Latinovits, István Bujtor and Károly Frenreisz.
Life
After the trade school, he learned the craft in famous restaurants in Switzerland, Germany, England and France from 1900. He was secretary in the Tátralomnic's hotel between 1906 and 1908. In 1908 he became the director. He bought the Wampetich restaurant in 1910. (Later it became the Gundel restaurant). From 1937 Károly Gundel managed the restaurant of the Hotel Gellért as well. Many well-known politicians, artists,and prime exponents of business life were regular guests in his restaurants. His cookbooks were the best and best-known books in Hungarian gastronomy. He wrote in foreign languages, gave cooking demonstrations and exhibitions, and popularized Hungarian cuisine, boosting tourism. He was also one of the leaders of the Hungarian restaurateur, hoteliers and industry. To host, to be a guest, a book by Frigyes Karinthy (Budapest, 1933) was made with his advice.
Gundel restaurant
Károly Gundel's restaurant was the official restaurant of the Hungarian Pavilion in the New York World's Fair in 1939. 'The Gundel Restaurant is a bigger, better publicity from Budapest than a boatload of tourist brochures." (New York Times) In 1949, the Gundel restaurant was nationalized. The Gundel Restaurant is today the most prestigious restaurant in Budapest.
Cuisine
One of Gundel's signature dishes is the Gundel palacsinta, a crepe with a filling made from rum, raisin, walnuts, and lemon zest, served with a chocolate sauce. Gundel also claims to have created Palóc soup, a soup that aimed to be "like goulash . . . yet not goulash," according to the Gundel web site.
The Gay Hussar
Victor Sassie, the founder of The Gay Hussar restaurant (in Soho, London) served his apprenticeship under Gundel. Sassie was sent to Budapest by the British Hotel and Restaurant Association when he was seventeen. On his return to London in 1940, he established first the Budapest restaurant and then The Gay Hussar, which was to become popular with left wing politicians.[1]
References
- ↑ Soho in the Fifties, Daniel Farson.
External links
- Hungarian biographical encyclopedia
- Gundel website (Hungarian)
- Gundel website (English)
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