Tag Archives: Tokyo

Michelin Guide – Still relevant??

18 Nov

 

 

Tokyo has overtaken Paris as the city with the most Michelin three-star restaurants, cementing its status as the “world capital of gastronomy”.

The latest edition of the Michelin guide to the Japanese capital awarded 11 eateries the coveted three stars, against 10 in Paris.

Tokyo also kept its title as the world’s most-decorated city with 261 stars in total — 34 more than last year — awarded to 197 restaurants.
“Tokyo remains by far the world capital of gastronomy and also has the most three-star restaurants,” Michelin guide director Jean-Luc Naret told a news conference.

With 11 three-star, 42 two-star and 144 one-star eateries, Tokyo now boasts triple the number of awards that the French capital has.

Tokyo has become the world culinary capital, ahead of Paris. We give stars where we find them and in Tokyo, the culinary richness is extraordinary,” said Naret.

Tokyo’s status as the world’s largest metropolis was also a factor given that it has four times as many restaurants as Paris, he noted.

But France kept its place as the country with the most Michelin triple-star restaurants — 25, compared with 18 in Japan, including those awarded to eateries in a separate edition for the western Kyoto-Osaka region.

Two-thirds of the 197 restaurants that Michelin selected from the 160,000 eateries in Tokyo serve Japanese cuisine, while the others offer French, Chinese, Italian, Spanish, or fusion food.

The Tokyo edition only includes restaurants that have been awarded stars. In the Michelin guides for other cities, it is common for a restaurant to be listed without being awarded stars.

The first Tokyo guide in 2007 provoked criticism and sarcasm amongJapanese restaurant owners and food critics, who mocked the ability of French inspectors to judge Japanese cuisine.

For the latest edition, the inspectors were all Japanese.

The updated guide, which will go on sale in Japanese and English on November 20 in Japan and in early February in Europe, covers 15 districts of Tokyo.

It also introduces for the first time Japanese-style “izakaya” pubs, “kushiage” and “yakitori” restaurants that feature deep-fried and grilled food, as well as “shojin ryori” — a vegetarian food favoured by Buddhist monks.

Three restaurants offering Japanese cuisine joined the prestigious triple-star club this year — Esaki, Sushi Saito, and Yukimura — while another, Hamadaya, lost one star due to the departure of its chef.

Three French restaurants also kept the full three stars — Joel Robuchon, L’Osier and Quintessence.

Under Michelin’s rules, one star signifies a “very good” cooking quality, two stars mean “excellent” and three stars mean “exceptional”.

Michelin will run 150,000 copies in Japanese and 30,000 in English of the new 2010 edition. The first Tokyo 2008 guide sold about 300,000 copies while the 2009 version sold 180,000.

http://www.luxuo.com/gastronomy/michelin-guide-tokyo-2009.html#more-15267

Japanese Delights…

13 Oct

Aoki

http://www.sadaharuaoki.fr/news/en.html

Delicious!”

When I hear this from people with their mouths full of my pastries and a smile on their face,
I would always say: “Good, but I can do even better!”
This is a motto of my everyday life.

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boutique Port Royal
56 boulevard de Port Royal 75005 Paris

boutique Vaugirard
35 rue de vaugirard 75006 Paris

boutique Marunouchi

3-4-1 Shinkokusai BLD Marunouchi,chiyoda-ku Tokyo

We want to be optimist but reality knocks the door….

7 Oct

Versace to close Japan store and

Louis Vuitton step’s back.

versace1

Touted to top world’s largest luxury goods market within the next five years, China is certainly moving up the luxury scale. But Japan may soon lose its slot in the list of the world’s largest luxury market. It is reported that Gianni Versace will shut down its stores in Japan as there is decline in the demand for luxury goods. And Versace isn’t the first brand to take this step. Last year Louis Vuitton scrapped its plans to open a store in Ginza, Tokyo. A senior economist quoted that Luxury goods makers see less need to sell their products in Tokyo with the increasing importance of Singapore and Hong Kong as financial centers.

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