Pierre Hermé has never published his complete flavour pairing methodology in English. The untranslated volumes of his "Infiniment" series (Hermé's annual themed collections, each dedicated to a single ingredient or pairing — volumes on vanilla, chocolate, rose, jasmine, hazelnut, truffle, olive oil — published in French only) contain the only documented account of how he develops new combinations. This entry synthesises what can be extracted from his interviews in French culinary media, his rare English-language statements, and the logic implied by his collections.
Hermé's flavour pairing method is not the molecular gastronomy "flavour compounds" approach (the technique popularised by Heston Blumenthal and the FlavorDB database — pairing ingredients that share volatile aromatic compounds). Hermé's method is older and more intuitive: he identifies what he calls "harmonic resonance" between ingredients — the way certain flavours amplify each other rather than competing or simply coexisting. His categories:
1. Every pairing in Hermé's work has a structural logic — flavour anchor, amplifier, and tension element 2. The "Infiniment" series explores single ingredients at maximum expression before pairing — understanding what vanilla IS at its purest before combining it with anything 3. Hermé tests 50–100 formula variations per new product — the final version is not creative intuition but iterative refinement
French Pastry Deep: Sugar Work, Chocolate, Regional & The Untranslated Knowledge