Michelin-starred chefs share their favorite easy 30-minute brunch recipes (2024)

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Anneta Konstantinides

2021-06-05T12:01:00Z

Michelin-starred chefs share their favorite easy 30-minute brunch recipes (1)

Liudmyla Chuhunova/Getty Images
  • Insider asked Michelin-starred chefs to share their favorite 30-minute brunch dishes.
  • Recipes include a Persian fritatta and potatoes with scrambled eggs inspired by Switzerland.
  • There's also French toast with peaches and crêpes with mascarpone to satisfy your sweet tooth.

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Give your French toast an even sweeter twist by adding cinnamon and caramelized peaches.

Michelin-starred chefs share their favorite easy 30-minute brunch recipes (2)

Curtis Stone

"I go indulgent and kid-friendly when brunching at home," Curtis Stone, who runs Maude and Gwen in Los Angeles, told Insider. "Everyone loves my French toast!"

To make the caramelized peaches for this dish, you'll need: 4 peaches (each cut into 8 wedges), ½ cup sugar, and 3 tablespoons unsalted butter.

First, combine your sugar with ¼ cup of water in a large sauté pan over medium heat. Stir the mixture until the sugar dissolves and the syrup has come to a simmer.

Allow your syrup to boil over medium-high heat without stirring for about six minutes, until it begins to turn golden brown. Swirl your pan occasionally to make sure the syrup cooks evenly.

Remove the pan from the heat and add your peaches and butter, swirling everything together until the butter melts. Then cook the peaches over medium heat for two minutes, until they're just tender.

To make Stone's French toast for six, you'll need: 6 large eggs, 4 slices of brioche bread (½-inch thick), 1/3 cup crème fraîche, ¼ cup sugar, 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon.

First beat the eggs with a fork in a baking dish to blend. Then place your slices of brioche in the eggs and let them stand for five minutes, turning your slices over once.

Stir your sugar and cinnamon on a large plate and set aside. Then melt your butter in a large griddle pan over medium heat.

Add the brioche slices to the pan and cook them for about two minutes per side, until they're golden brown. Then immediately place your French toast in the cinnamon sugar, coating the slices completely.

Spoon the peaches over your French toast to serve, drizzling the caramel sauce over the peaches and around the bread. Top it all off with a dollop of crème fraîche and serve immediately.

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Craving something savory? Why not try some Korean potato pancakes.

Michelin-starred chefs share their favorite easy 30-minute brunch recipes (3)

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Suyoung Park, the executive chef of Jungsik in Manhattan, told Insider that this is her favorite recipe with potatoes.

"It's so savory and crispy, and it has a similar taste to a hash brown," she added. "It's very easy and simple —that's the way Korean people love it!"

To make Park's potato pancakes at home, you'll need: 2 medium potatoes (peeled, thinly sliced), ½ medium onion (peeled, thinly sliced), 1 green chili (seeded, thinly sliced), and ¼ carrot (thinly sliced).

Begin by julienning your potatoes and soaking them in cold water for at least five minutes. Park said this step is essential for removing the starch from the potatoes. Then dry them with a kitchen towel.

Mix your green chili, onion, and carrot with ½ teaspoon of salt, 2 tablespoons of flour, and 1 tablespoon of the potato starch. Add your potatoes to the mixture.

Place a pan on medium heat and add plenty of cooking oil. Spread your potato slices onto the pan and cook until they're browned, making sure to turn it over and cook the other side as well.

Park recommends serving your Korean potato pancakes with soy pickles or an easy dipping sauce — just mix equal parts soy sauce, vinegar, water, sugar, and chili powder.

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Or get your potato fix by serving them in the rösti style inspired by Switzerland.

Michelin-starred chefs share their favorite easy 30-minute brunch recipes (4)

The Inn at Little Washington

"In Switzerland, rösti means 'crisp and golden,'" Chef Patrick O'Connell, who runs The Inn at Little Washington, explained to Insider. "The word has become synonymous with the country's famous potato cake."

O'Connell, whose three-star restaurant was also recently awarded the Green Michelin Star for sustainability, serves his rösti potatoes with smoked salmon and scrambled eggs.

"The potato cake makes a delicious cushion for ribbons of smoked salmon and lightly scrambled eggs," he said. "This dish is a lighter and more interesting brunch dish than the usual eggs Benedict."

To make O'Connell's rösti potatoes for six, you'll need: 2 large Idaho potatoes, ½ cup clarified butter, 12 eggs, 12 slices smoked salmon, 5 tablespoons crème fraiche, 2 teaspoons capers, 2 teaspoons red onion (finely diced), 2 teaspoons fresh chives (finely chopped), 2 teaspoons fresh dill (chopped).

Begin by peeling the potatoes and steaming them for 15 minutes. Let them cool, then use a box grater to shred the potatoes. Season the shredded potatoes with salt and white pepper and shape them into six cakes.

In a large skillet, heat half of your butter over medium heat. Place three of the cakes into the skillet and cook them for about five to seven minutes per side. Remove and drain them on paper towels. Repeat the step for the remaining cakes.

To make the scrambled eggs, first whisk your eggs together with 3 tablespoons of the crème fraîche, along with salt and pepper, in a stainless-steel bowl. Then place the bowl over a simmering pot of water, stirring and folding the eggs with a rubber spatula until they're very lightly scrambled.

To serve, place one of your rösti potatoes in the center of each plate. Add two slices of salmon on top, as well as a spoonful of scrambled eggs and a small dollop of crème fraîche. Top everything off with your capers, red onion, chives, and dill.

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Kuku sabzi is a Persian frittata packed with herbs and veggies.

Michelin-starred chefs share their favorite easy 30-minute brunch recipes (5)

Chris Morgan

Chris Morgan, who runs Bammy's in Washington, DC, told Insider that he loves making this dish for his wife all the time.

"It's super healthy and not as dense as a frittata," he said. "This is kind of the guilt-free quiche, without the buttery crust."

To make Morgan's version of kuku sabzi, you'll need: 7 eggs, 2 medium yellow onions (peeled, finely chopped), 4 cups spinach (finely chopped), 1 cup fresh parsley (finely chopped), 1 cup fresh cilantro (finely chopped), ½ cup spring onions (finely chopped, white and green parts), 6 cloves garlic (peeled, finely chopped), 1 tablespoon kosher salt, 1 tablespoon rice flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder, ½ teaspoon turmeric powder, and 1 tablespoon advieh (Persian spice mix).

The first step is caramelizing your onions. Heat some olive oil in a wide skillet over medium heat and sauté your onions for 10 to 15 minutes, until they're lightly golden. Remove the onions and allow them to cool.

Then, to make your batter, break your eggs into a large mixing bowl and add the baking powder, advieh, salt, pepper, and turmeric. Beat lightly with a fork. Then add the garlic, spinach, herbs, flour, caramelized onions, and 2 tablespoons of olive oil. Fold in gently using a rubber spatula, and be careful not to overmix.

Paint a rimmed sheet pan with olive oil, then pour in the batter and gently shake the pan to even it out. Bake the kuku for 15 minutes at 400 degrees Fahrenheit.

Once it's ready, remove your kuku sabzi from the oven and place on a cooling rack. Morgan said you can serve it hot or at room temperature, and recommends pairing it with lavash flatbread and labneh cheese.

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Make your crêpes extra special by pairing them with orange and mascarpone.

Michelin-starred chefs share their favorite easy 30-minute brunch recipes (6)

Curtis Stone

This is another one of Stone's favorite 30-minute brunch dishes.

To whip up Stone's crêpes for four, you'll need: 2 large eggs, 1 cup all purpose flour (sifted), 1 ¼ cups whole milk, ½ cup heavy cream, 1 tablespoon unsalted butter, 4 teaspoons sugar, and a pinch of salt.

Start by blending the flour, milk, cream, sugar, eggs, and salt in a blender until they're smooth. Cover the batter and set aside for 30 minutes, which will allow time for your flour to absorb all the liquid.

Then, heat a crêpe pan or an 8-inch nonstick sauté pan over medium-low heat. Dab some butter on a paper towel and wipe the pan with a little butter.

Pour 3 tablespoons of batter into the center of your pan and swirl to thinly coat the bottom. Cook for one-and-a half minutes, or until the edges of the crêpe are light brown. Loosen the edges gently with a silicone spatula and carefully turn your crêpe over. Continue cooking the crêpe for about one minute, until the bottom begins to brown in spots. Transfer to a plate.

Repeat with the remaining batter, wiping the pan with butter as needed. You should be able to make 12 crêpes total.

To make the sauce, you'll need: 2 oranges, 1 cup mascarpone cheese, ½ cup pure maple syrup, 4 tablespoons unsalted butter, and 2 tablespoons Grand Marnier or other orange liqueur.

First, grate the peel from your oranges and set aside. Cut the oranges between the membranes to release the orange segments, setting them aside as well. Then squeeze the orange juice from the membranes into a bowl. You should get ¼ cup of orange juice total.

Heat the maple syrup in a large sauté pan over medium heat until it begins to simmer. Add the orange peel and juice, as well as your butter, and simmer over medium-low heat for five minutes, until the sauce slightly thickens. Add the Grand Mariner and simmer for two more minutes, until the sauce slightly thickens again.

Spread a large spoonful of mascarpone over each crêpe and fold in half, then in half again, forming triangles. Add the orange segments to the hot orange sauce and swirl the pan to gently warm the oranges. Spoon the sauce and oranges over the crêpes and serve immediately.

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Switch out your usual pancakes with some hoecakes instead.

Michelin-starred chefs share their favorite easy 30-minute brunch recipes (7)

Liudmyla Chuhunova/Getty Images

Unlike pancakes, hoecakes —which are popular in the South —are made from cornmeal batter. Soo Ahn, chef of the soon-to-be-open Adalina in Chicago, takes his version up a notch by cooking them in bacon fat.

"I love cooking bacon and hate wasting all that delicious fat, so I use that as the oil on the pan. It gives it that extra salty, smoky flavor through the hoecakes — which are absolutely delicious," Ahn told Insider.

To make Ahn's hoecakes, you'll need: 2 eggs, 1 cup flour, 1 cup cornmeal, ½ cup water, ¾ cup milk, ⅓ cup melted butter, 3 tablespoons of sugar, 2 teaspoons of baking powder, 1 teaspoon of salt, and a pinch of nutmeg.

First, mix your flour, cornmeal, baking powder, sugar, salt, and nutmeg together. In a separate bowl, mix your milk, water, melted butter, and eggs together. Then whisk the liquid mixture into your dry ingredients.

Heat a sauté pan with some bacon fat over medium-high heat. Pour about ¼ cup of the batter in the pan and cook for 45 seconds to one minute on each side to make a hoecake. Repeat for each cake.

"Once it's done, you pour maple syrup over it," Ahn said. "There's salty, smoky, sweet, savory goodness in every bite."

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Ending your brunch with a coffee or tea? Why not enjoy some madeleines with it.

Michelin-starred chefs share their favorite easy 30-minute brunch recipes (8)

Ryan Ratino

Ryan Ratino, the youngest US chef to ever receive two Michelin stars, always serves madeleines on his tasting menus at Bresca in Washington, DC.

To make Ratino's iconic madeleines at home, you'll need: 6 large eggs, 270 grams all-purpose flour, 270 grams melted butter, 225 grams of sugar, 30 grams dark brown sugar, 2 tablespoons honey (combined with the melted butter), 1 ½ teaspoon baking powder, and a vanilla bean pod.

First, in a stand mixer with a whisk attachment, add your eggs, sugar, and dark brown sugar. Whisk them together on high for 10 minutes until they've tripled in volume.

Then, slowly add the flour and baking powder to the mixture in small additions. Make sure to turn the mixer on low-medium speed, mixing thoroughly until all the dry ingredients are incorporated evenly.

Add your melted butter, honey, and scraped vanilla bean (not the whole pod) to the mixture. Mix for one to two minutes on medium speed.

Put your completed batter into pastry bags. Pipe the batter into madeleine baking molds, filling them about two-thirds of the way. Bake your madeleines for three to five minutes at 350 degrees Fahrenheit, until they're golden brown and cooked through.

Toss your madeleines in a small mixing bowl with granulated sugar and enjoy!

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Michelin-starred chefs share their favorite easy 30-minute brunch recipes (2024)

FAQs

Who is the #1 chef in the world? ›

Introducing Joël Robuchon – the chef with the most Michelin stars. He holds the number one spot among the top 10 chefs in the world, which makes him the best chef in the world according to the Michelin star rating.

Who has the most Michelin stars in the world right now? ›

1. Joël Robuchon: 31 Michelin Stars. Many consider the late French chef Joël Robuchon the best chef of the modern age. And with 31 Michelin Stars spread across three continents, it's hard to argue this claim.

Is Bobby Flay a Michelin chef? ›

The Las Vegas Mesa Grill earned Flay his only Michelin Star in 2008, which was taken away in the 2009 edition. Michelin did not publish a 2010 or 2011 Las Vegas edition, so the star could not be re-earned. Bolo Bar & Restaurant closed its doors on December 31, 2007, to make way for a condominium.

Who is the richest celebrity chef? ›

1. Alan Wong. Japanese-born Alan Wong is the richest chef in the world by a country mile. Wong is known as one of the founding leaders of island fusion cuisine (think poke bowls), which has earned him over $1 billion dollars.

Who is the greatest chef to ever live? ›

Consider it a rundown of the world's best chefs, with only the most highly decorated and esteemed professionals to ever grace the restaurant industry.
  • Joël Robuchon: 31 stars.
  • Alain Ducasse: 21 stars.
  • Gordon Ramsay: 16 stars.
  • Pierre Gagnaire: 14 stars.
  • Martin Berasategui – 12 stars.
  • Yannick Alléno: 10 stars.

Why did Gordon Ramsay lose Michelin stars? ›

In October 2013, the Gordon Ramsay at The London restaurant in New York lost its two Michelin stars owing to issues encountered by the Michelin reviewers. The guide's director Michael Ellis stated that he was served "some very erratic meals" and also experienced "issues with consistency."

Who taught Gordon Ramsay? ›

After earning a vocational diploma in hotel management from North Oxon Technical College in 1987, he moved to London and began honing his culinary skills under chef Marco Pierre White at the restaurant Harvey's and under chef Albert Roux at La Gavroche.

Does Wolfgang Puck have any Michelin stars? ›

Puck holds three Michelin stars (two for his restaurant Spago Beverly Hills and one for CUT, which earned its star just one year after opening), so he has first-hand knowledge when it comes to how two and three-starred restaurants differ.

Which US city has the most Michelin stars? ›

Some US cities that have Michelin Star Restaurants include New York City, Chicago, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. New York has the most Michelin Star Restaurants with a total of 73.

Who lost a Michelin star this year? ›

Which restaurants lost a Michelin star? A number of London restaurants were stripped off their Michelin stars, with Barrafina Dean Street in Soho, Leroy in Shoreditch, Hakkasan Hanway Place and Hakkasan Mayfair all losing their one star status. The iconic Le Gavroche, which had two stars, closed last month.

Who has 21 Michelin stars? ›

Alain Ducasse

Is Bobby Flay a billionaire? ›

What is Bobby Flay's net worth in 2024? Bobby Flay's net worth in 2024 is estimated at $60 million. Flay's made his fortune not just through his Food Network stardom, but also through his ownership of restaurants and chains like Amalfi, Mesa Grill, Bar Americain, Bobby's Burgers and Bobby's Burger Palace.

Why did Bobby Flay lose his star? ›

A star that, unfortunately, could only shine for one year, because the Michelin Guide took it back in its 2009 edition. Re-earning the star was not an option for Bobby Fly, as the gastronomic guidebook stopped publishing its Las Vegas edition just after 2009.

Does Jamie Oliver have Michelin stars? ›

And the second name in this European ranking — none other than Jamie Oliver — doesn't hold a single Michelin star, despite being the subject of 4.4 million Google searches last year, compared with 1 million for Alain Ducasse.

Who is the king of all chefs? ›

About Auguste Escoffier

Beginning his career at 13 years of age, Auguste Escoffier was quickly consumed with ambition to become the best and moved steadily upward until he was known as the King of Chefs, Chef of Kings.

Who is very popular chef? ›

Gordon Ramsay

The eternally angry culinary critic Gordon Ramsay is one of the most famous chefs on TV, known for the harsh words he shares with the people on his shows like Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares and Hell's Kitchen.

Who is the best chef in the USA? ›

Table of Contents
  • Julia Child - The Pioneer of Television Cooking.
  • Thomas Keller - The Definition of Fine Dining.
  • Alice Waters - The Mother of Farm-to-Table.
  • James Beard - The Icon of American Cookery.
  • Emeril Lagasse - The Essence of Creole and Cajun Cuisine.
  • Gordon Ramsay - The British Import Who Conquered America.

Is Gordon Ramsay a Michelin star chef? ›

His restaurant group, Gordon Ramsay Restaurants, was founded in 1997 and has been awarded 17 Michelin stars overall and currently holds eight. His signature restaurant, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay in Chelsea, London, has held three Michelin stars since 2001.

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