Shop with a Chef: Alain Rayé, La Régalade

Chef Alain Rayé keeps his recipes in an unassuming notebook. The pages look decades old—and some are: Rayé opened his first restaurant in France in 1975. The book has spent countless evenings next to the award-winning chef and cookbook author; his restaurant, La Régalade (103–2232 Marine Dr., West Vancouver, 604-921-2228; Laregalade.com), has the same time-honoured feel. Rayé uses basic, high-quality ingredients to make traditional fare—with a few mouth-watering twists. One of his departures is his fondness for orange-blossom extract, frequently used in Middle Eastern cuisine. He picks it up at Nancy Bakery (1589 Garden Ave., North Vancouver, 604-987-5544). Crispy baguettes come from Terra Breads (2380 W. Fourth Ave., 604-736-1838; Terrabreads.com). For meats—abundant in French cooking—he shops at Walter’s Exotic Meats (25645 82nd Ave., Langley, 604-910-8460), which stocks free-range chicken, venison, quail, hard-to-find veal liver, and duck. Oyama Sausage Co. (Granville Island Market, 604-327-7407) supplies Toulouse sausage, saucisson, and prosciutto, but not terrine: he makes his own. Rayé uses Gourmet Warehouse (1340 E. Hastings St., 604-253-3022; Gourmetwarehouse.ca) for everything from cinnamon to basil to fleur de sel. From Far-Met (34 W. Seventh Ave., 604-876-2241; Qualifirst.com) he gets escargots and piment d’espelette, a fiery powder that gives any dish major kick. Enough twists: at home, Rayé and his wife, Brigitte, favour a tender roast, with lots of cracked pepper and a sprinkling of salt.

Vancouver Magazine

Vancouver Magazine

The editorial team at Vancouver magazine is obsessed with tracking down great food and good times in our favourite city on earth. Email us pitches at [email protected].