Mouthfuls: Michelin Red Guide Tokyo 2008 - Mouthfuls

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Michelin Red Guide Tokyo 2008 The new Capital?

#1 User is offline   dekay 

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Posted 20 November 2007 - 10:39 PM

Pretty incredible news.
With 8 ***'s, 25 with **, and an astonishing 117 one star restaurants, Tokyo vaults past Paris by a star count of almost double.

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#2 User is offline   Miguel Gierbolini 

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Posted 21 November 2007 - 12:33 AM

Tokyo's population (and I am sure there are several methods and dates of estimation) is 8.5 million habitants
Paris has-------------------------------------------------------------.54 million habs or 540,000 thousand habitants.
Tokyo then has 17 times the population of Paris.
So if Edo has double the Michelin starred restaurants than Paris, then Paris has 8.5 times the Michelin restaurants per habitant that Paris has.
Paris wins.

Congrats to Mr. Porkwah (and Ms. P.) on the birth of their little tyke.
"I mispoke."
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#3 User is offline   Orik 

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Posted 21 November 2007 - 07:58 AM

QUOTE(dekay @ Nov 20 2007, 05:39 PM) View Post
Pretty incredible news.
With 8 ***'s, 25 with **, and an astonishing 117 one star restaurants, Tokyo vaults past Paris by a star count of almost double.


That's perfectly in line with my own experience there. L'Osier, to which they awarded 3 stars, was among the best 3 star restaurants I've eaten in (although under a previous chef) and overall the quality is very high. Imagine what it will be like once the bubble economy is back in full force.
I think that is the danger of keeping a blog: you exaggerate everything
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#4 User is offline   Orik 

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Posted 21 November 2007 - 08:06 AM

But Mr. Sarkozy here is also right that you can expect more restaurants of all levels in a city that's like 20 Manhattans stuck together than in Paris.
I think that is the danger of keeping a blog: you exaggerate everything
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#5 User is offline   Rail Paul 

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Posted 29 November 2007 - 08:26 PM

Wine Spectator has some comments on the Tokyo awards. I bolded a comment which was an issue in the NY ratings.

WS

QUOTE
The new guide was released on Nov. 19. One hundred fifty restaurants and 28 hotels were reviewed, with eight restaurants receiving the prestigious three-star rating, 25 receiving two stars and 117 receiving one star, for a total of 191. The results surprised both critics and local gourmets, who were skeptical about a foreign guide that would critique a very traditional cuisine. About 60 percent of the selected restaurants were Japanese.

What made the guide's release such a surprise, in addition to its perceived partiality toward French restaurants, was that Tokyo's results came just after the release of guides for Los Angeles and Las Vegas. Los Angles earned no three-star ratings and Las Vegas only picked up one. The Tokyo guide, however, awarded at least a single star to all 150 restaurants listed, which is unprecedented in any Michelin guide.

"I didn't expect to receive so many stars," said Joel Robuchon, reached in Paris, who earned stars for all three of his Tokyo restaurants: La Table de Joel Robuchon with one star, L'Atelier de Joel Robuchon with two stars and Joel Robuchon with three stars. "I was also surprised to find restaurants [rated in the guide] that I didn't know. In Tokyo, the quality of gastronomy is at a very high level in all different types of cuisine—not only Japanese, but also Italian, Spanish, French and so on."

Another three-star recipient, Hiroyuki Kanda, of Kanda Restaurant, said that he believes that Tokyo has extremely high culinary standards due to local chefs' diligence, as well as the speed with which fresh ingredients find themselves in front of discerning diners. "For example," Kanda explained, "I can cook together the local crabs chosen in the morning direct from Hokkaido and fresh vegetables picked from Tanba, and prepare them for my customers the same day."

Two-star recipient Takayuki Hishinuma is one of the recommended restaurants in Wine Spectator's "Translating Tokyo" story in the April 30, 2007, issue. Other recommended restaurants from that article that received Michelin stars include Ginza Sushiko, Ohno, Banrekiryukodo and Ryugin.

If nothing else, Michelin's recognition of Tokyo's high culinary standards puts to rest claims of the inspectors' stronger taste for French food. And it certainly helps the restaurants' bottom line. "In all the restaurants the Michelin has given stars, the business is increasing by about 20 to 30 percent," said Robuchon.

"I didn't know much about the Michelin Guide and didn't understand the impact," said Ono Jiro, who received three stars for his 42-year-old sushi restaurant, Sukiyabashi Jiro. "We are operating at over capacity; we are busier than before," he said, adding that the attention has resulted in numerous phone calls from around the world. "We have lots of calls every day, but no one [at the restaurant] speaks English and we are not sure what to say," he said, laughing.





My only complaint was that if they need to charge me $30 because they're robbing the duck to pay the boar they might as well give me a more substantial portion of flour, water, and bits of meat.

Orik, on the pasta price at Hearth in NYC
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#6 User is offline   Orik 

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Posted 29 November 2007 - 09:32 PM

QUOTE
"I didn't know much about the Michelin Guide and didn't understand the impact," said Ono Jiro, who received three stars for his 42-year-old sushi restaurant, Sukiyabashi Jiro. "We are operating at over capacity; we are busier than before," he said, adding that the attention has resulted in numerous phone calls from around the world. "We have lots of calls every day, but no one [at the restaurant] speaks English and we are not sure what to say," he said, laughing.


Maybe Jiro should tell the truth about his restaurant not sitting non-Japanese and only allowing them into their shopping mall branch. dry.gif
I think that is the danger of keeping a blog: you exaggerate everything
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