Zürcher Nachrichten - France's Michelin, the go-to guide on fine dining

EUR -
AED 3.781391
AFN 73.199945
ALL 98.232827
AMD 408.559377
ANG 1.854979
AOA 938.909387
ARS 1067.376691
AUD 1.662384
AWG 1.853111
AZN 1.749115
BAM 1.954464
BBD 2.078479
BDT 125.567059
BGN 1.955609
BHD 0.388108
BIF 3045.017763
BMD 1.029506
BND 1.409236
BOB 7.113136
BRL 6.245296
BSD 1.029496
BTN 88.358579
BWP 14.428274
BYN 3.368796
BYR 20178.317712
BZD 2.067786
CAD 1.482473
CDF 2954.68178
CHF 0.93979
CLF 0.037502
CLP 1034.807706
CNY 7.54855
CNH 7.574328
COP 4455.866714
CRC 520.643975
CUC 1.029506
CUP 27.281909
CVE 110.189116
CZK 25.089784
DJF 182.963954
DKK 7.460732
DOP 63.136826
DZD 139.770913
EGP 52.063458
ERN 15.44259
ETB 129.499646
FJD 2.39901
FKP 0.81535
GBP 0.837106
GEL 2.856852
GGP 0.81535
GHS 15.183617
GIP 0.81535
GMD 73.095168
GNF 8899.870888
GTQ 7.944529
GYD 215.374815
HKD 8.011837
HNL 26.170104
HRK 7.38455
HTG 134.398096
HUF 413.683295
IDR 16675.423528
ILS 3.765171
IMP 0.81535
INR 88.433947
IQD 1348.477887
IRR 43342.202485
ISK 145.088055
JEP 0.81535
JMD 161.419618
JOD 0.730231
JPY 162.811744
KES 133.318789
KGS 89.566795
KHR 4158.196942
KMF 491.58971
KPW 926.554829
KRW 1502.615762
KWD 0.317355
KYD 0.857822
KZT 541.229897
LAK 22441.654003
LBP 92183.56326
LKR 303.31259
LRD 192.500235
LSL 19.433317
LTL 3.039864
LVL 0.622738
LYD 5.08952
MAD 10.363063
MDL 19.178072
MGA 4873.667301
MKD 61.521176
MMK 3343.795348
MNT 3498.261273
MOP 8.250418
MRU 40.908827
MUR 48.150095
MVR 15.864527
MWK 1784.9794
MXN 21.106392
MYR 4.635905
MZN 65.796135
NAD 19.433411
NGN 1593.139605
NIO 37.884094
NOK 11.730387
NPR 141.373326
NZD 1.840046
OMR 0.396325
PAB 1.029396
PEN 3.886043
PGK 4.127158
PHP 60.194166
PKR 287.05061
PLN 4.261437
PYG 8120.447096
QAR 3.752934
RON 4.972587
RSD 117.080602
RUB 105.780715
RWF 1430.735535
SAR 3.864795
SBD 8.681106
SCR 14.69509
SDG 618.732579
SEK 11.485766
SGD 1.408848
SHP 0.81535
SLE 23.472187
SLL 21588.229305
SOS 588.297712
SRD 36.094998
STD 21308.695754
SVC 9.006797
SYP 2586.664975
SZL 19.414724
THB 35.631182
TJS 11.251515
TMT 3.603271
TND 3.302342
TOP 2.411203
TRY 36.364654
TTD 6.988221
TWD 33.862303
TZS 2584.060368
UAH 43.644343
UGX 3807.396435
USD 1.029506
UYU 44.939052
UZS 13320.82629
VES 54.778055
VND 26131.43619
VUV 122.225015
WST 2.844306
XAF 655.515115
XAG 0.034144
XAU 0.000386
XCD 2.782292
XDR 0.792758
XOF 655.50557
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.560907
ZAR 19.508114
ZMK 9266.781498
ZMW 28.591449
ZWL 331.500514
  • RIO

    0.4400

    58.63

    +0.75%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    36.74

    -0.11%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.1

    -0.56%

  • NGG

    -0.6200

    57.98

    -1.07%

  • SCS

    0.1000

    11.3

    +0.88%

  • RBGPF

    -2.6900

    59.31

    -4.54%

  • BCC

    -0.8200

    117.4

    -0.7%

  • RELX

    0.7900

    46.77

    +1.69%

  • BP

    -0.7100

    31.12

    -2.28%

  • VOD

    -0.2000

    8.21

    -2.44%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.4

    -0.26%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.22

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.22

    +0.28%

  • GSK

    -0.3400

    33.75

    -1.01%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    23.63

    -0.97%

  • AZN

    -0.0600

    66.58

    -0.09%

France's Michelin, the go-to guide on fine dining
France's Michelin, the go-to guide on fine dining

France's Michelin, the go-to guide on fine dining

France's prestigious Michelin Guide is among the world's most influential references on gourmet dining, its star ratings highly coveted and sometimes controversial.

Text size:

Ahead of the publication of its 2022 edition on Tuesday, here is some background.

- More than 120 years old -

French tyre manufacturer Michelin brought out a travel guide in 1900, the early days of the automobile, to encourage motorists to take to the road and so boost its business.

The free, red guidebook included maps, instructions on how to change tyres and lists of mechanics and hotels along the route.

The first run of 35,000 copies was such a success that guides for Belgium, Germany, Portugal and Spain followed.

In 2021, in a small revolution, an edition was published for those wanting to discover France by regional train, rather than by car.

- Star rating -

The guide included restaurant listings from 1920, when it started charging for the publication. It began sending out undercover inspectors, and from the early 1930s introduced its famous star ratings.

Michelin says it issues up to three stars based on the quality of the ingredients used; mastery of flavour and cooking techniques; the personality of the chef in his cuisine; value for money; and consistency between visits.

One star indicates "High quality cooking, worth a stop"; two stars is for "Excellent cooking, worth a detour"; and three rates "Exceptional cuisine, worth a special journey".

Of about 20,000 international restaurants listed, only around 130 have attained the highest distinction.

In 2021, the Guide was criticised for keeping its selection in France going, despite the fact that restaurants were closed due to the Covid pandemic. Its competitors had decided to cancel their awards.

- Michelin goes global -

In 2005, the Michelin Guide branched out of Europe with a New York guide, followed in 2007 by editions for San Francisco then Las Vegas and Los Angeles.

It moved to Asia with a Tokyo version in 2008 when 90,000 copies, in English and Japanese, flew off the shelves in 48 hours.

Michelin published its first Shanghai guide in 2016 and today there are versions for several Asian cities, with Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo also covered.

Having long been criticised as biased towards formal dining, the guide in 2016 awarded a star to a Singapore street food outlet known for a braised chicken dish.

A famed Tokyo sushi restaurant, where Barack Obama is said to have enjoyed the best sushi of his life, was meanwhile dropped in 2019 after it stopped accepting reservations from the general public.

- A lot of pressure -

A handful of French restaurateurs have relinquished their Michelin status because of the stress of being judged by its inspectors, including Joel Robuchon (1996), Alain Senderens (2005), Olivier Roellinger (2008) and Sebastien Bras (2017).

The suicide in 2003 of three-star chef Bernard Loiseau was linked, among other reasons, to hints that his restaurant was about to lose its three stars.

Star Swiss chef Benoit Violier took his life in 2016, a day ahead of the release of the Michelin Guide, although his restaurant maintained its three-star rating.

The guide was taken to court for the first time in 2019 when celebrity chef Marc Veyrat sued it for stripping one of his restaurants of a third star and suggesting -- wrongly, he insists -- that he had used cheddar cheese in a souffle.

His lawsuit was rejected.

F.Schneider--NZN