Christine Ferber (born 11 May 1960[1]) is a French
pastry chef and
chocolatier, who co-owns La Maison Ferber in
Niedermorschwihr,
Alsace region of France. She sells over 200,000 jars of jam a year across the world.
Personal life
Ferber was born in
Colmar, France,[2] a medieval town five miles (8 km) apart from her village
Niedermorschwihr.[3] Her great-grandfather moved to
Alsace from Germany in 1870.[4] Her great-grandfather, grandfather and father all worked as
pastry chefs.[4][5] Her father Maurice opened La Maison Ferber in 1959,[3][6] in a seventeenth century traditional French building called Au relais de Trois Épis (At the
post house of the Three
Ears).[3] Ferber speaks French, Alsatian, German and English.[7] Ferber's mother died in March 2020.[8]
Career
Aged 15, Ferber moved to Brussels in order to complete a three-year apprenticeship as a confectioner and chocolatière.[9] Afterwards she spent a year in Paris to study with the renowned French pastry chef Lucien Peltier.[10] Peltier was considered one of the most creative pastry chefs of his generation in the 1980s, his work inspired by the
nouvelle cuisine was a reference for all professionals.[11]
In 1979, she won the French Cup for patissiers.[12] She moved back to Alsace in 1980,[12] where she started her own workshop.[3] She initially made jams, selling them in her parents' shop[13] despite the resistance of her mother.[3] In 1998, Ferber was voted Patissier of the Year by the
Guide Champérard [
fr].[5][14][15] In 2005, she produced a cookbook Alice's Little Kitchen in Wonderland, in reference to
Lewis Carroll's book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.[15] The images for the book were intended to imitate
Salvador Dalí style paintings.[15] Ferber took joint ownership of La Maison Ferber with her brother Bruno and sister Betty, after the death of their father in 2011.[6][9] In 2015/16, she had a larger workshop and storehouse built.[16] In 2018, the building was awarded the Prix AMO architecture prize in the category "lieu le mieux productif" (most productive place).[17]
Ferber makes over 200 varieties of jam,[5] with traditional, regional, and original varieties. Examples of Ferber's unique flavours include
celery and
pineapple with
rosemary.[12] She also makes pies,
stollens, beraweka, gingerbreads, and
kougelhopfs.[5] Around 35% of her revenue is from jams, and about 35% is from pastries.[12] Ferber is nicknamed the Jam Fairy.[3][6] She is also nicknamed Reine Christine by local Alsatians[5] and honoured as the Queen of Jam around the world.[4][18] Ferber sells 200,000 jars of jam per year,[19] and all over the world, in countries including Spain, Germany, Japan,[13] and Singapore.[20] In Tokyo, her jam jars are sold in
Isetan department stores, and are wrapped in red cloth and with a white bow.[9] Fellow French pastry chef and chocolatier
Pierre Hermé has said that Ferber "sells the best jams in the world",[19] and he sells Ferber's jams in his shop in Paris.[6] Her jam is also bought by chef
Alain Ducasse, the three
Michelin starLa Maison Troisgros restaurant, as well as
Hôtel de Crillon and
Four Seasons Hotel George V, and
The Connaught in London.[21]
Ferber has also taught in France, Italy, Japan and the US. She has taught at the
French Pastry School in
Chicago, US.[22] In 2013, British newspaper the Daily Mirror reported that
Brad Pitt had become obsessed with Ferber's jams, and had flown to Alsace to meet her.[23][24][25] However, Ferber claimed that she had never seen Pitt in her shop.[24] In 2020, Ferber hosted Luxembourgish chef
Léa Linster at La Maison Ferber.[26]
Honours
In January 2018, Ferber was awarded a Chevalier (Knight) of the
Legion of Honour.[27]
Works
Ferber, Christine, Mes aigres-doux : Terrines et pâtés, Payot, 1999.
ISBN2228892408
Ferber, Christine, Ma cuisine des fruits, Marabout, 2003.
ISBN2501039106
Ferber, Christine, Mes Tartes: The Sweet and Savory Tarts of Christine Ferber, Michigan State University Press, 2003.
ISBN0870136887
Ferber, Christine; Model, Philippe; Winkelmann, Bernhard, La petite Cuisine d'Alice au pays des merveilles (Alice's Little Kitchen in Wonderland), Chêne Jeunesse, 2005.
ISBN2842777093
Ferber, Christine, Le Larousse des confitures : gelées, compotes, chutneys avec les conseils techniques et 40 recettes inédites de Christine Ferber, Larousse, Paris 2009.
ISBN978-2-03-584975-5
Ferber, Christine, Leçons de confitures, Chêne, 2009.ISBN2842778006
^Lutaud, Léna (20 September 2013).
"Pour les becs sucrés, le soleil se lève à l'est". Le Figaro (in French). "Dans les années 1980, Christine Ferber et bien d'autres passent chez Lucien Peltier, un pâtissier parisien aujourd'hui décédé" ("In the 1980s, Christine Ferber and many others visited Lucien Peltier, a Parisian pastry chef who is now deceased.")