The Bright Side: French chocolate auction raises more than €100,000 for children with leukaemia
A French chocolate auction – featuring edible sculptures ranging from a rose bouquet to a clock – this week raised more than €100,000 for a charity supporting children hospitalised with leukaemia. The auction house said the event was a world first and brought together 25 of France’s most celebrated pastry chefs.
Chocolate artworks by some of France's most famous pastry chefs sold at auction Monday for more than 100,000 euros in a charity event that had bidders smacking their lips.
The Paris auction, organised by the pastry chef Pierre Hermé, featured such whimsical creations as a chocolate clock, a bouquet of white chocolate roses and a monumental piece made of 495 chocolate eggs – plus one of ritzy Daum crystal.
The event raised €108,100 for a charity that helps children hospitalised with leukaemia, according to auction house Artcurial.
It called the auction the first of its kind worldwide.
"This is truly a first," auctioneer Arnaud Oliveux told AFP.
The auction featured works by 25 celebrated pastry chefs, including Hermé, Patrick Roger, Cyril Lignac, and Nina Metayer.
Many of the chefs paired their creations with one-of-a-kind experiences.
Hermé's chocolate and crystal egg masterpiece, for example, came with a private lesson from the chef on making macarons, while a two-metre (six-foot-seven-inch) sculpture by Roger came with a tasting session with the master "chocolatier".
The auction house did not release the selling price for individual items.
The pieces are all edible, though the chefs created them to be displayed, said Hermé.
"When you set your eyes on them, you don't feel like touching them because they're so visually magnificent," said Oliveux, calling top-level pastry creation "a kind of culinary art".
(FRANCE 24 with AFP)