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・ Joseph Farey
・ Joseph Fargis
・ Joseph Farington
・ Joseph Farndale
・ Joseph Farquharson
・ Joseph Farrell
・ Joseph Farrell (politician)
・ Joseph Farrell (priest)
・ Joseph Farrow
・ Joseph Farrugia
・ Joseph Farrugia (cyclist)
・ Joseph Fasano
・ Joseph Fassbender
・ Joseph Fauchier
・ Joseph Fauria
Joseph Favre
・ Joseph Fawcett
・ Joseph Fay
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・ Joseph Featherston
・ Joseph Feilden
・ Joseph Fels
・ Joseph Fels Barnes
・ Joseph Felsenstein
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・ Joseph Fenno House
・ Joseph Fenton
・ Joseph Ferdinand
・ Joseph Ferdinand Damberger


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Joseph Favre : ウィキペディア英語版
Joseph Favre

Joseph Favre (; 17 February 1849 – 17 February 1903) was a Swiss chef who was known for his four-volume ''Dictionnaire universel de cuisine pratique''. As a young man he fought with Garibaldi, became an anarchist, and then adopted a more moderate socialism. He founded a magazine for chefs, sponsored cooking competitions, and launched a chefs' trade union. He was one of the great chefs of the period.
==Early years==
Joseph Favre was born on 17 February 1849 in Vex, in the canton of Valais in Switzerland. He was the illegitimate child of Victor Leblanc, a Catholic priest, and Madeleine Quinodox. He was orphaned as a young child and only received primary education. A local lawyer raised him and told him that because of his humble origins he had to choose between becoming a priest or learning a manual trade. When he was aged fourteen he was sent as an apprentice cook to an aristocratic family in Sion, capital of Valais. After his three-year apprenticeship, he moved to Geneva to work in the Hôtel Métropole, and at the same time took science classes at the University of Geneva.
Favre was ambitious to become a master chef. In 1866 he went to Paris to enlarge his experience.
He worked at La Milanese, a famous restaurant on the boulevard des Italiens, and then for the Maison Chevet, a well-known Parisian ''traiteur'' and caterer.
In the summer of 1867 he went to Chevet's Kursaal restaurant in Wiesbaden, reputedly one of the best in Europe. He worked during the next two years at the Taverne Anglaise in Paris, at the Royal Hotel and the Hamburg Restaurant in London, and after returning to Paris at the Hôtel de Bade, the Café de la Paix and then the Café Riche under the direction of Louis Bignon (1816–1906).

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