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Candy Wallace - Executive Director
Picture of chefcandy
Posted
This is such sad news. Albert Uster was a giant in this industry.
Candy

Remembering Albert Uster

July 29, 2008 - Albert Uster, Executive Chef, Founder and Chairman of
the Board, passes in a plane crash in the Swiss Alps on Friday, July 25,
2008, at age 75.



ALBERT USTER LOSES LIFE IN PLANE CRASH IN THE SWISS ALPS
Executive Chef, Philanthropist and Entrepreneur-Founder of Albert Uster
Imports Dies at 75

GAITHERSBURG, Md., July 29 - Albert Uster, Executive Chef, Founder and
Chairman of the Board of Albert Uster Imports, died in a plane crash in
the Swiss Alps on Friday, July 25, 2008 at age 75. The cause of the
crash is under investigation.

Swiss-born Albert Uster was a professional chef turned savvy businessman
and spent the last fifty years in an industry that he treasured. After
training at some of the finest restaurants in Europe, Uster arrived at
Ellis Island in the United States in 1954, worked in New York and
Houston, served in the U.S. Army in Texas and attended the University of
Houston, majoring in industrial psychology and management. He opened
three hotels for the Hotel Corporation of America in Houston, New
Orleans and Hartford. And, while working as the executive sous-chef
at the Shamrock Hilton in Texas, he opened several more hotels in Kansas
City, Aurora and Atlanta.

It was while working at the Washington Hilton as an Executive Chef that
Mr. Uster formed the Restaurant Corporation of America, partnering with
Harold Giesinger, Guido Gerosa and Sam Schattner. The group built a
30,000 square-foot restaurant at the Watergate Hotel, called The
Watergate Restaurant. To stock the pastry kitchen, Uster returned to
his Swiss roots and began importing quality chocolate and other items
such as fondant and marzipan -- gourmet products he could not find in
the United States.

In 1980, Mr. Uster took his import enterprise out of the Watergate and
named it Albert Uster Imports. He built a warehouse in Gaithersburg,
Md., building the company by forming strategic partnerships with Swiss
manufacturers and importing only the finest ingredients and products.
He introduced to the American palate Swiss couverture, a
professional-grade chocolate prized by gourmet chefs for its glossy
texture. The company eventually expanded into a multimillion-dollar
global enterprise Albert Uster Imports with locations in Kansas City,
San Francisco, Honolulu, Miami and around the world.

In 1998, Uster passed the reins of the company to a new Chief Executive
Officer, Philipp Braun, remaining as chairman of the board and proudly
overseeing the expansion of the company into the frozen food and savory
food businesses. His vision remains strongly embedded within the
company's name and spirit.

Mr. Uster was an avid glider pilot, wine collector and gardener. He was
a philanthropist who created the popular Sweet Charity event to support
The Heart of America Foundation, a charity combining service, learning
and literacy to support the needs of at-risk children. The event
brought together pastry chefs and chefs from the Washington, D.C. Metro
Area's leading hotels and restaurants for a unique event that
emphasized chocolate as a metaphor for the sweetness and potential in
every child.

Mr. Uster is survived by his daughters Jenny Schaepper-Uster, Scarlett
Uster, and Kristen Narlinger-Goldner, his sons Albert D. Uster, Adam
Uster and Erik Goldner, his brothers Hans Peter Uster and Henry Uster,
and his close companion Josephine S. Cooper.

Albert Uster Imports will continue to be led by President and CEO Philipp
Braun and the AUI team.

A funeral will be held in Kuesnacht , Switzerland on August 8, 2008,
followed by a celebration of Albert Uster 's life and accomplishments on
Sunday, August 24 in the Washington , D.C. area. In lieu of flowers
contributions may be made to Heart of America "Sweet Charity", 401 F
Street, NW, Suite 325, Washington, DC, 20001 or Albert Uster Imports,
Inc. 9211 Gaither Road, Gaithersburg, MD, 20877, for assisting students
studying the culinary arts.
 
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Picture of John
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Thank you, Candy-

It is always a big loss to us as chefs when we lose one of our own. Though I was not especially aware of Chef Ulster and his vast accomplishments, How could anyone not be very impressed by his immigration and bountiful contributions to food for over 50 years!

Incredible!

Unfortunately, we often don't learn of people's contibutions and bettering of our society until they are euligized.

I wish his family, friends and colleagues my sympathies during this saddening and difficult time for them.

Thank you Chef Ulster, you shall not be forgotten.
 
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