Georges Perrier


Georges Perrier is a French chef who emigrated in the United States in 1967 and lived in Philadelphia, where he founded and ran Le Bec-Fin and other restaurants, bars and cafés across the country.

Early life

At age 12, Perrier created his first entrée, "Sweetbreads with Mushrooms and Madeira", and after this experience, he decided on his career which he began two years later at age 14. He trained with chefs at various restaurants of France, including Michel Lorrain of Casino de Charbonnières near Lyon, Jacques Picard of L’Oustau de Baumanière in Provence, and Guy Thivard in Vienne, owned by Ferdinand Point.

Le Bec-Fin

Perrier immigrated in the United States of America in November 1967. In 1970, he opened Le Bec-Fin, a French seafood-specialised restaurant. Originally on 1312 Spruce St., it moved to Walnut Street in 1983. Le Bec-Fin was awarded as one of the best restaurant in the United States. After 43 years, the restaurant closed on June 15, 2013.

Brasserie Perrier

Opened in 1997 on Walnut Street, Philadelphia, the Brasserie Perrier was Georges' second restaurant, Brasserie Perrier. A casual brasserie, it closed in 2009 due to a rent increase. It was a casual and contemporary sibling to his haute-cuisine jewel, Le Bec-Fin. Upon closure, it had 120 employees.

Bistro Perrier

Chef Georges Perrier became master-in-residence at The Restaurant School at Walnut Hill College in 2017, and he began his role at "Le Bec-Fin Redux," a one-night-only reprisal of his menu in the restaurant that would later become Bistro Perrier.
Georges Perrier helped guide the careers student chefs at Walnut Hill College. He taught, host special dinners, and led workshops for professional chefs on the WHC campus.

Television & Cinema