Astronaut Going to ISS With Michelin-Starred Meals
- Editor OGN Daily
- 6 hours ago
- 2 min read
When you think about the food that astronauts eat in space, lobster, haddock and foie gras probably don't spring to mind - but that's what France's next visitor to the International Space Station will be dining on.

Astronaut Sophie Adenot has teamed up with award-winning French chef Anne-Sophie Pic - who has the most Michelin stars of any female chef in the world (10) - to create a menu of gastronomic delights that will travel with Adenot to the ISS next year. Instead of the usual freeze-dried nutrients that astronauts eat, Adenot, 42, will be choosing from the likes of 'Foie gras cream on toasted brioche' and 'Lobster bisque with crab and caraway'.
There are strict rules for food on the ISS - it must be crumb-free, lightweight and keep for at least 24 months, the ESA says. Therefore, most meals are canned, vacuum packed or freeze-dried, with fresh fruit and vegetables a rare luxury that can only be enjoyed when a spacecraft arrives with new supplies.
But to keep things interesting, boost morale, and help with crew bonding, every tenth or so meal is one prepared especially for each astronaut, with these "bonus meals" often made in partnership with a chef.
Pic says this project is "pushing the boundaries" of gastronomy, as she worked with her team to create special food, while keeping within the technical constraints. "Cooking for space is an exhilarating challenge," she was quoted as saying by the ESA.
In good news for her fellow astronauts on the ISS, Adenot says she will share the haute cuisine with her colleagues on board - it is after all an important moment - French gastronomic culture becoming for the first time... extra-terrestrial.