A WOMAN’S PLACE
It might be in the kitchen, but that’s not in one of the world’s 50 best restaurants, apparently
The San Pellegrino list of the world’s 50 best restaurants was announced this week. It was, as usual, dominated by multicourse tasting menus, huge price tags, European destinations, and men. Yes, one of the most newsworthy developments of the list is not the name of the chef who has risen to the top like a perfect soufflé — Massimo Bottura — but who was left out. Women. Almost entirely. Five of the 50 top chefs are women.
Atelier Crenn’s chef and owner Dominique Crenn, pictured, was the recipient of the patronising “Best female chef of the year” title in 2016. This is odd, because her restaurant wasn’t ranked in 2016. In 2017 she debuted on the long list at No 83, and this year dropped off the list entirely.
This week Crenn shunned the event at which the list was announced. Instead, the two-Michelin-star chef attended a charity event to raise money for women’s health. The day before the awards she gave an interview to the Washington Post calling the female chef award “stupid” and accusing the World’s 50 Best fraternity of treating women “as if we are a sport”.
The criteria for this offensive award seem nonsensical. Of the eight women who have been awarded it since 2011, none have had their restaurants featured on the list of the top 50. So we can assume that, according to the awards, the best female chef on Earth is still not as good as the 50th-best male chef.
That’s not to say that there are not restaurants on the list in which women hold key positions. The number of female chefs (or co-chefs) on the list increased from last year’s three to five in 2018: Central by Pia León and Virgilio Martínez; Arzak by Elena and Juan Mari Arzak; Hiša Franko by Ana Ros; Cosme by Daniela Soto-Innes and Enrique Olvera; and Nahm by Pim Techamuanvivit.
It’s pretty outrageous that the chefs on the “women only” list haven’t been honoured in the world rankings. Why are we singling out women for praise based on gender alone?
Mark Durden-Smith, one of the presenters at the awards, said: “It’s all about girl power tonight.”
My response is the following: firstly, female chefs are not “girls”, and, secondly, it can hardly be considered a female forward event when only two of the restaurants on the list, Nahm and Hiša Franko, are run without male co-chefs.
As a female chef I ask myself, why are women simultaneously praised for their capacity to do great work while at the same time systematically excluded from the top honours on the serious list?
This award entrenches gender bias while at the same time reiterating its attempt to move beyond it.
Clare Smyth, the 2018 recipient of the world’s best female chef award, said: “For the last 10 years of my career I’ve been asked what it’s like to be a female chef, to which I always reply, ‘I’m not sure what you mean, I’ve never been a male chef’.”
Her restaurant, Core, did not make this year’s world’s best restaurants list.
Best female chef of 2016 Crenn posted a screenshot of the jurors for the San Pellegrino 2018 Young Chef competition that went viral because all 37 jurors were men.
She took to Instagram to call out the company for its lack of fair representation, commenting: “I thought we all got the memo that women are 50% of the population. Oh wait . . . 54%.”
‘IT’S ALL ABOUT GIRL POWER TONIGHT’ SAID THE PRESENTER. FIRSTLY, FEMALE CHEFS ARE NOT ‘GIRLS’