Windsor Star

NOT EVERYONE IS HAPPY THAT RENOWNED FRENCH CHEF JOËL ROBUCHON HAS TAKEN OVER THE RESTAURANT AT THE MONTREAL CASINO. IT’S NOT THE FOOD — IT’S THE $11M PRICE TAG THAT’S THE PROBLEM.

ARRIVAL OF CELEBRATED CHEF STIRS POT IN MONTREAL

- GRAEME HAMILTON in Montreal National Post ghamilton@postmedia.com Twitter.com/grayhamilt­on

It is not often that the mayor chimes in on the opening of a new restaurant, but as celebrated French chef Joël Robuchon prepared to set up shop at the Montreal casino, Mayor Denis Coderre was moved to comment. The new eatery would cement Montreal’s “role as a culinary and cultural metropolis,” Coderre said last fall.

Popular Quebec singer Gregory Charles drooled over Robuchon’s “spectacula­r” cuisine in the casino’s promotiona­l video for the restaurant, which opened in December.

But not everyone is cheering that Robuchon has chosen the provincial­ly owned casino as the latest site for his growing constellat­ion of restaurant­s. He now operates in 12 cities on three continents.

Quebec Finance Minister Carlos Leitao, accustomed to defending government cutbacks and heavy taxes, last week found himself playing culinary critic in the National Assembly as the provincial lottery corporatio­n’s decision to lure Robuchon came under fire.

“Concluding an agreement with an internatio­nally renowned chef, one of the best in the world, Mr. Speaker, is a very effective way to market the Montreal Casino to attract travellers, whether from Europe or the United States,” Leitao said Thursday.

Some Quebec chefs and the opposition Parti Québécois say the reported $11 million spent to help Robuchon open in Montreal is an inexcusabl­e extravagan­ce and an insult to the province’s own gastronomi­c stars.

André Villeneuve, the PQ critic for agricultur­e, fisheries and food, said that instead of negotiatin­g a deal in secret with Robuchon, the casino should have issued a call for tenders and invited Quebec chefs to submit proposals.

Villeneuve demanded that Leitao apologize to Quebec chefs for suggesting their cooking could not compare with that of Robuchon, who has accumulate­d 28 sought-after Michelin stars at his various restaurant­s.

“Mr. Speaker, you heard as I did, it appears Québécois chefs are not appealing,” Villeneuve said. He later said he was “astonished” to see the government failing to give Quebec chefs their proper due.

“We shine, Mr. Speaker, across the planet in several fields, in particular in gastronomy.”

Leitao did not deny the figure of $11 million put forward by Villeneuve as Loto-Québec’s investment, saying it was spent on renovation­s that will serve any future occupant.

Loto-Québec spokesman Patrice Lavoie said Sunday that the crown corporatio­n would not disclose details of its agreement with Robuchon, but said its investment in the restaurant is less than the $11 million reported. The website Eater Montreal reported in December that L’Atelier Robuchon had spent $40,000 on Limoges Bernardaud china and another $40,000 on Christofle cutlery for the 56-seat restaurant.

Montreal Gazette restaurant reviewer Lesley Chesterman has long been a critic of Loto-Québec’s arrangemen­t with Robuchon.

“By pouring money into the luxury restaurant at the casino, the government is underminin­g our taxpaying restaurate­urs,” she wrote in December. “At a time when our restaurant­s are scrambling to stay alive, why should our heavily taxed chefs have to compete with a foreign brand bankrolled by our government?”

On Thursday, Chesterman slammed Leitao for his comments in the legislatur­e. “Quebec government doesn’t think our chefs can draw in internatio­nal customers,” she wrote on Twitter. “Pathetic. Shameful. P’tit Quebec.”

David McMillan, the chef behind Montreal’s Joe Beef restaurant, joined the chorus of criticism, calling the government’s response pathetic and a scandal. “Resign,” he tweeted at Leitao.

Normand Laprise, chef at Toqué restaurant, also took offence. “Accusing people of being closed when you are yourself,” he wrote to Leitao.

The Finance Minister had suggested the PQ’s opposition to Robuchon’s arrival was smallminde­d. Quebec chefs are free to set their sights beyond the province’s borders, just as Robuchon has done, Leitao said.

“We are open to the global market,” he said. “And in the same way that Quebecers, Montrealer­s, chefs and people in other fields have access and want to work outside (the province), we are also open to those from abroad who come here.”

In reality, Robuchon will seldom be present at the Montreal restaurant. Eric Gonzalez, a chef who has worked at a number of well-regarded Montreal restaurant­s, oversees the kitchen. Lavoie noted that the restaurant staff members are Quebecers.

 ?? JOHN MAHONEY / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? French chef Joël Robuchon, right, with cooks Marc-Olivier Pilon, left, and Olivier Jean, opened his Restaurant Atelier de Joël Robuchon at the Montreal casino in December.
JOHN MAHONEY / POSTMEDIA NEWS French chef Joël Robuchon, right, with cooks Marc-Olivier Pilon, left, and Olivier Jean, opened his Restaurant Atelier de Joël Robuchon at the Montreal casino in December.
 ?? JOHN MAHONEY / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? The millions spent to help Joël Robuchon open in Montreal is an insult to Quebec’s own gastronomi­c stars, according to some critics.
JOHN MAHONEY / POSTMEDIA NEWS The millions spent to help Joël Robuchon open in Montreal is an insult to Quebec’s own gastronomi­c stars, according to some critics.
 ??  ?? French chef Joël Robuchon has been hailed for the spectacula­r cuisine at his 12 sites on three continents. He opened his latest restaurant, at the Montreal casino, with an investment from Loto-Québec.
French chef Joël Robuchon has been hailed for the spectacula­r cuisine at his 12 sites on three continents. He opened his latest restaurant, at the Montreal casino, with an investment from Loto-Québec.

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