Pakistani brothers in arms take French cuisine by storm

Sylvestre and Jonathan – not the names they began life with – are succeeding at what the French consider they do best, creating sumptuous dishes

Sylvestre Wahid, chief of hotel-restaurant L'Oustau de Baumanière, on July 29, 2009, in Baux-de-Provence. Set among the villages and vineyards of Provence, where Van Gogh and Cézanne found their inspiration, L'Oustau de Baumanière, with two Michelin stars is famed for its French cuisine. The rooms of this boutique hotel are light and airy blending the hotel's 17th-century origins and handmade furniture with modern-day surround-sound extras.       AFP PHOTO PATRICK VALASSERIS / AFP PHOTO / PATRICK VALASSERIS
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The world of French haute cuisine has been made to sit up and take notice of two gifted sons of a Pakistani father who found  a new life in the West by joining the Foreign Legion.

In a chic Parisian arrondissement and in the heart of Provence, Sylvestre and Jonathan – not the names they began life with – are separately succeeding at what the French generally consider they do best, creating sumptuous dishes for discerning diners.

As boys, the brothers were happy to play cricket in the streets of Kohat, 70 kilometres south of Peshawar.

The tables of exquisite restaurants frequented by figures from film, music, big business and politics could hardly have seemed more distant.

Yet in a fiercely competitive environment, the Wahid brothers are now acclaimed chefs with three Michelin stars between them, a shared appetite for relentless work and limitless ambition. They have also converted their skills into business success.

They served together for several years at the famed French restaurateur Jean-André Charial's magnificent Ousteau de Baumaniere at Les Baux-de-Provence, north of Marseilles. Sylvestre was the chef and quickly acquired two Michelin stars, Jonathan the patisserie chef with a national award under his belt.

When they branched out in different geographical directions, they retained a professional relationship.

Sylvestre, now 42, moved to Paris and succeeded the venerated Jean-François Piege as chef at the four-star Hotel Thoumieux, where he runs two restaurants – one bearing his name – and leads a team of 25-30 staff.

Portrayed in glowing French media accounts as a chef “out of the ordinary”, he is happy in his work but dreams of opening his own restaurant or restaurants in such cities as Abu Dhabi and Dubai, New York and Los Angeles.

And he has already given himself a taste of entrepreneurial commitment by joining his younger brother in buying and developing the Auberge Saint-Remy de Provence.

The day-to-day running of the restaurant and hotel is very much in the hands of Jonathan, 40, and his wife, Fanny Rey, France's only Michelin-starred female chef in 2017 and a past finalist in French television's Top Chef contest. But beyond the ties of a close family, the brothers retain a professional and business relationship.

Both are conscious of operating in a notoriously fickle sector where flair is not enough.

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“The terrorism attacks in Paris affected everyone and it has not been easy,” says Sylvestre, who is “crossing fingers” for a third Michelin star in January. “But if you take proper care of your business, you can make a restaurant succeed provided you never forget the golden rule - work, work, work.”

Jonathan, the father of two children aged 13 and eight, echoes his brother’s words. “In this business, you need to combine passion, endeavour and ambition,” he says. “The guiding principle is work hard, work quickly and work better.

“We have put a huge amount of into preserving the history and identity of our establishment and strive constantly to improve everything we do.”

The Auberge employs 25 people and has 11 rooms although the restaurant accounts for 80 per cent of revenue, with an average of 25 to 30 guests each lunchtime and 40 for dinner.

“Our history and that of the Auberge are above all the story of a couple - Fanny the chef, me the pastry chef - and in her case working enormously to her own culinary signature.

“Fanny and I own the entire property but it is true that being together, and sharing knowledge, with Sylvestre makes us much stronger in terms of evolution.

“He is our financial partner but also gives us his vision of cuisine. Remember he is a great, highly experienced chef whose help we consider precious. Fanny is younger, less experienced. It’s an exchange and a matter of sharing.”

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The brothers’ outstanding progress is all the more astonishing when their origins are fully understood.

It was on little more than a whim, and a fondness for western films and television programmes such as The Great Escape and Robin Hood, that their father left Pakistan to join the Foreign Legion in the south of France.

Six years later in 1984, having established himself in the unit’s catering service, he was allowed to bring his family to join him.

When The National featured the brothers in 2009, their father, by then retired from the Foreign Legion, said everything he did on arriving in Europe was guided by a belief that "when people move to another country, it is for them to adapt, not the other way round".

This view was later mirrored by Mohed Altrad, the illegitimate Syrian-born son of a Bedouin tribal leader who turned a a bankrupt scaffolding business into a French multinational, with 17,000 employees and a turnover of US$2 billion (Dh7.34bn).

Initially encountering racial prejudice on winning a scholarship to study in France as a teenager, he decided that “for me to stay, it was not France that had to change for me, but me for France”.

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For the Wahid family, this meant changing first names to appear more French. The father had already become Henry Wahid and he quickly changed his sons’ names from Shahzad and Jawad.

Like Mr Altrad, the brothers have never forgotten their roots. But it was not until this year that they returned for the first time to Pakistan, invited by the French ambassador there to cook for an official function in Islamabad.

“It was a short trip, just four days, but very moving,” says Jonathan. “We managed to see relatives and also something of the way Pakistan, as a relatively young country, is developing so quickly and successfully.”

In their high-profile careers, both brothers have cooked or baked for such celebrities as the British actor Hugh Grant, the former Beatle Sir Paul McCartney and – before they separated - the Franco/American film couple Vanessa Paradis and Johnny Depp.

In Paris, Sylvestre has prepared dishes for a wide international clientele, including visitors from the UAE.

But for Jonathan, the status of his customers is unimportant. “We have a very wide client base, international but also European and even local,” he says, “and for us it makes no difference whether our customers are known or not. We just want them to be happy.”