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Fish dishes prepared by Alexandre Mazzia of three-Michelin-star AM par Alexandre Mazzia will feature in the 2024 Paris Olympics’ food programme, which aims to both nourish athletes and educate them about French cuisine and culture. Photo: AP

Michelin-star food awaits athletes at 2024 Paris Olympics, where top chefs will cook dishes with a ‘very French touch’

  • Baguettes, Brie and croissants with a twist are among the items that will be served at the ‘world’s largest restaurant’ in the Paris 2024 Olympic Village
  • Some of France’s top chefs will cook gourmet dishes in front of athletes to show what ‘French cuisine is about’ as part of the Games’ sustainable food programme

Freshly cooked bread, selected cheeses and vegetables will be among the foods available to athletes and visitors at the 2024 Paris Olympics – as well as gourmet dishes created by leading French chefs.

About 40,000 meals are expected to be served each day during the Games to the more than 15,000 athletes from 200 countries housed at the Olympic Village.

Visitors, too, will be able to enjoy some specially created snacks at the different venues.

French food services company Sodexo Live!, which was selected to oversee the catering at the Olympic Village and 14 venues of the Games, says it has created 500 recipes to be offered at a sit-down restaurant in the Village. With seating for up to 3,500 people, it is said to be the “world’s largest restaurant”.

A bread salad recipe created by leading French chef Stephane Chicheri, which will be served at the Olympic Village in Paris this summer. Photo: AP

“Of course, there will be some classics for athletes, like pasta,” says Nathalie Bellon-Szabo, the global chief executive of Sodexo Live! But the food will have a “very French touch”.

Athletes will also have access to “grab-and-go” food stands, including one dedicated exclusively to French cuisine.

French chef Amandine Chaignot has created a riff on croissants, which will be served at the Games. Photo: AP

French chef Amandine Chaignot, who runs a restaurant and a cafe-bistro in Paris, last week unveiled one of her recipes based on the croissant.

“I wanted the recipe I suggested to be representative of the French terroir, but I wanted athletes to enjoy it at the same time,” she says. “It was quite obvious for me to make a croissant that I could twist.

“So you have a bit of artichoke purée, a poached egg, a bit of truffle and a bit of cheese. It’s both vegetarian and mouthwatering.”

Every day during the Games, which will run from July 26 to August 11, a top chef – including some who have won Michelin stars – will cook in front of the athletes at the Olympic Village.

Chaignot says this is “so they’ll be able to chat and better understand what French cuisine is about – and to understand a bit of our culture as well”.

Chaignot’s twisted croissants with (from left) artichoke purée, a poached egg, truffle, and cheese. Photo: AP

Daily specials will be accompanied by a wide range of salads, pastas, grilled meats and soups. Cheeses will include top quality Camembert, Brie and sheep’s milk-based Ossau-Iraty from southwestern France.

The Olympic Village will also feature a bakery producing fresh baguettes and other breads.

“The idea is to offer athletes the chance to grab a piping hot baguette for breakfast,” says baker Tony Doré, who will be working at the Olympic Village’s main restaurant.

Tony Doré prepares baguettes like those that will be served during the Olympic Games. Photo: AP

Athletes will be able to participate in daily bakery training sessions, and learn to make their own French baguette, Doré says.

In an effort to provide as many options as possible, dishes will be available under four cuisine categories: French, Asian, African and Caribbean, and international food.

Paris 2024 organisers have promised to make the Games more sustainable and eco-friendly – and that includes efforts to reduce the use of plastic. The main restaurant at the village will use only reusable dishes.

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Additionally, organisers say all meals will be based on seasonal products, 80 per cent of which will come from France.

Plant-based food will represent 60 per cent of the offerings for visitors at the venues, including a “vegetarian hot dog”, says Philipp Würz, head of food and beverage for the Paris 2024 Committee.

There is “a huge amount of plant-based recipes that will be available for the general public to try, to experience and, hopefully, they will love it”, Würz says.

One hundred per cent of the food offerings at the urban park at the Place de la Concorde, in central Paris, will be vegetarian – a first in the Games’ history. The park will be the stage for Paris 2024’s most contemporary sporting disciplines: BMX freestyle, 3x3 basketball, skateboarding and breakdancing.
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