Herman van Ham

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born(1931-04-16)16 April 1931[1]
Nijehaske, The Netherlands
Died2 August 2012(2012-08-02) (aged 81)
Wellerlooi, The Netherlands[2]
OccupationChef
Herman van Ham
Born(1931-04-16)16 April 1931[1]
Nijehaske, The Netherlands
Died2 August 2012(2012-08-02) (aged 81)
Wellerlooi, The Netherlands[2]
OccupationChef
EmployerHostellerie De Hamert
Known forMichelin star
SuccessorBertus Liefting[3]
PartnerRiek Schoester
Children1 son, 3 daughters

Herman van Ham (16 April 1931 2 August 2012) was a Dutch head chef. He worked in the Michelin starred Hostellerie De Hamert, in Wellerlooi, the Netherlands, when it earned his stars in the period 1963-1989.

In 1952, Van Ham started working at De Hamert as an assistant. Soon after that he took over as head chef and stayed till his retirement in 1988.[4]

Herman van Ham specialized in asparagus to such an extent that he had several nicknames related to this. He was named as De Ongekroonde Koning van de Asperge (Eng.:The uncrowned king of Asparagus),[5] Asperge Paus (Eng.:Asparagus Pope)[6] and Mister Asperge (Eng.: Mister Asparagus).[7] One of his famous asparagus dishes was the "Cocktail Prins Alexander", a combination of chicken, asparagus and oranges, created in 1967 in celebration of the birth of Willem-Alexander, Prince of Orange.[8][9]

After his retirement, Van Ham started collecting asparagus dishes. His collection went on display in Keramiekcentrum Tiendschuur Tegelen in 2012 under the name "Het keramische bedje voor de asperge." (Eng.: The ceramic bed for the asparagus.)[10] Earlier, in 2008, his collection was on display in Aspergemuseum De Locht[11]

Herman van Ham died on 2 August 2012, after an illness.[12]

Books

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI