The Phnom Penh Post

French restaurant tops list, Japan shows strength

- Fiachra Gibbons

A PARIS restaurant run by chef Guy Savoy was named the best in the world on Wednesday – according to the French-based guides aggregator La Liste – but Japanese restaurant­s came out on top overall.

Double Emmy-award-winning US telev ision chef Er ic R iper t ca me joint second for his New York f ish restau ra nt Le Ber na rd i n, sha r i ng t he honou r w it h t he minuscu le Tok yo restaurant Kyo Aji.

Kyo Aji helped ensure that Japan triumphed again in the country rankings, with 116 of the top-rated 1,000 restaurant­s, three more than France, with Chinese chefs coming third.

But restaurant­s in Italy came out best on value for money.

Savoy’s restaurant in la Monnaie, the old French national mint on the Left Bank of the River Seine, is famous for its artichoke soup with black truffle and filo pastry mushroom brioche and “cold steamed” blue lobster.

His 18-course “Innovation­s and Inspiratio­ns” menu costs € 490 ($520) without wine.

It was the top-rated French restaurant last year, coming in fourth place in the La Liste, which was set up as a “more scientific and reliable” rival to the British-based 50 Best Restaurant­s ranking.

Savoy – who trained the volcanic British chef Gordon Ramsay and remains his mentor – controvers­ially did not make the 50 Best this year.

Nor did Kenichiro Nishi of Kyo Aji, who La Liste called “the undisputed master of kaiseki”, the traditiona­l multi-course Japanese dinner.

French-born Ripert, 51, a Buddhist who picked up his Emmys for his PBS show Avec Eric, already holds the maximum three Michelin stars.

La Liste bills itself as a “guide of the guides”, pulling together reviews from almost 400 guide books, newspapers and online sites from TripAdviso­r to the New York Times and the prestigiou­s Michelin rankings.

But tragedy struck the first winner Franco-Swiss chef Benoit Violier, who killed himself a month after winning for the Hotel de Ville at Crissier near Lausanne in Switzerlan­d.

S a v oy, 6 3, a t h r e e -Michel i nsta r red chef, comes f rom humble origins. His father was a municipal gardener in the small town of Bourgoi n-Ja i l leu nea r Lyon i n easter n France where his mother ran a fastfood buvette.

La Liste’s founder Philippe Faure, the head of the French tourist board, has accused the 50 Best of consistent­ly “denigratin­g” French restaurant­s in its listing.

W h i le 50 Best ha s repeated l y denied t he charge, no French restaurant­s have made its top 10 for the last few years.

Faure said his listing was compiled impartiall­y from a rigorous mathematic­al analysis of hundreds of guides and thousands of reviews.

La Liste has now also launched a smartphone applicatio­n in six languages aimed at internatio­nal travellers for its 1,000 top-rated restaurant­s in the world.

 ?? STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AFP ?? French chef Guy Savoy works in the kitchen of his restaurant at the Hotel de la Monnaie in Paris in May 2015.
STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AFP French chef Guy Savoy works in the kitchen of his restaurant at the Hotel de la Monnaie in Paris in May 2015.

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