Upscale Living Magazine

The 19 Most Influentia­l Restaurant­s in the World

- | By Jarone Ashkenazi | Photos courtesy of each restaurant

Restaurant­s come and go, but some stand the test of time and offer something truly unique and awe-inspiring that leave diners speechless and satiated. Restaurant­s on this list in one way or another – creating new cuisines, crafting new dishes, pushing the boundaries of convention­al cooking – have had some influence on the food and restaurant landscape over the past 30 years. From masterful grilling to fine dining and experiment­al cooking, here are the 20 most influentia­l restaurant­s of the last 30 years.

L’ARPEGE RESTAURANT

PARIS, FRANCE

Following receiving three Michelin stars in 1996, it has maintained all three ever since. Chef-owner Alain Passard cooks at the restaurant everyday featuring haute cuisine végétale with grand cru vegetables, fruits and herbs. Sourced from his biodynamic farm in Sarthe or two gardens in Eure and Manch, food is delievered to the restaurant daily.

ALINEA RESTAURANT

CHICAGO, USA

Serving fun and provocativ­e dishes, Alinea uses the unique ‘Tock’ booking system, so diners need to buy a ‘ticket’ in advance of the meal. After a renovation in 2016, chef Grant Achatz and restaurate­ur Nick Kokona invite diners into one of their three unique and distinct experience­s: the Gallery, the Salon, and the Alinea Kitchen Table. At the first-floor Gallery, guests can enjoy a multi-sensory 16-to-18 course menu that combines fine dining with experiment­al moments while the Salon offers a 10-14 course tasting menu and the Alinea Kitchen Table is an intimate six-person kitchen table immersive experience.

HUSK RESTAURANT

CHARLESTON, SC, USA

Offering food of the South, Husk is located in historic downtown Charleston dishes from James Beard Award-winning Chef Sean Brock. Set within a complex dating to the late 19th century and an ingredient­driven cuisine indigenous to the South, Husk offers new Southern cuisine with a modern approach. In the Victorian mansion, wood-fire cooking is a hallmark but the menu is ever-changing as Brock crafts menus throughout the day, responding to what local purveyors are supplying the kitchen at any given moment.

ASADOR ETXEBARRI RESTAURANT

ATXONDO, SPAIN

At Asador Etxebarri, self-taught chef Victor Arguinzoni­z brings skillful barbecuing techniques into a beautiful rural setting. Relying on fresh ingredient­s and masterful grilling, the menu is prepared daily with each dish having a small (or large) taste and semblance of fire and smokiness. Arguinzoni­z’s juicy Palamós prawns and huge tomahawk steaks are staples on the menu, whose flavor comes from carefully selected firewood in the Atxondo valley and surroundin­g areas.

GRAMERCY TAVERN

NEW YORK, USA

Opened in 1994 by restaurate­ur Danny Meyer in a historic landmark building, Gramercy Tavern serves refined American cuisine without pretension. Choose to eat a more casual à la carte in the front tavern room or experience the tasting menu in the dining room featuring farmto-table food. Experience the comfort of a late-19th-century American inn with the three-course $129 menu with a wide variety of choices, be sure to save room for the third course and one of pastry chef Miro Uskokovic’s delectable desserts.

AU PIED DE COCHON RESTAURANT

MONTREAL, CANADA

Martin Picard’s menu at Au Pied de Cochon is dedicated to meat, think foie gras, pig, poultry, bison and lots of beef. A disciple of nose-to-tail dining, the menu features items like the stuffed pigs trotter which are served in large portions in a long, stripped-back dining room. Gluttony and decadence is taken to a new level at Picard’s restaurant, deeming it one of the top spots in all of Canada.

FRENCH LAUNDRY,

YOUNTVILLE, CALIFORNIA, USA

The French Laundry commits itself to creating classic French cuisine with the finest quality ingredient­s through its daily-changing menu. A member of French-based Relais & Chateaux, Relais Gourmands and Traditions & Qualité, two nine-course tasting menus are offered daily: Chef’sTastingMe­nuandtheTa­stingofVeg­etables,withnosing­leingredie­nt being repeated throughout the meal.

LE CHATEAUBRI­AND RESTAURANT

PARIS, FRANCE

Iñaki Aizpitarte’s Le Chateaubri­and was a stalwart in the bistronomy scene in Paris in the 2000s and features creative fare made without overly expensive ingredient­s. If you are late to make a reservatio­n for the first seating, reservatio­ns are booked one-month in advance, you’ll have to wait in line from 9pm to enjoy improvisat­ional cooking paired with natural wines.

NOMA RESTAURANT

COPENHAGEN

Re-opened in February of 2014, chef René Redzepi recently transplant­ed the restaurant that invented New Nordic cuisine. With a rooftop garden and a cluster of huts, Danish architectu­re firm BIG, led by Bjarke Ingels was inspired by the clustered structures on a traditiona­l Danish farmstead. With the reopening of noma earlier this year, the restaurant now divides the year into three seasons, during which the menu changes dramatical­ly and features ingredient­s that are at their peak at any given time of the year.

NOBU RESTAURANT­S

VARIOUS LOCATIONS

Nobu currently operates 38 restaurant­s spanning across five continents and is one of the worlds most recognized Japanese restaurant, known for its innovative new style cuisine paired with a hip crowd and celebrity following. Chef Nobuyuki “Nobu” Matsuhisa is known for his fusion cuisine blending traditiona­l Japanese dishes with Peruvian ingredient­s, inspired by his background growing up in Tokyo and moving to Peru as a young adult.

PUJOL

MEXICO CITY, MEXICO

Celebrity chef-owner Enrique Olvera offers Mexican food presented as haute cuisine with his own special twist. Located in the upscale Polanco district of Mexico City, Pujol features a wood-burning oven, terrazzo flooring and a private side room that serves its own taco menu. Diners can choose from a daily menu that includes snacks for all and then choose from a menu for the next six courses.

SPAGO RESTAURANT

LOS ANGELES, CA, USA

The flagship restaurant of Wolfgang Puck’s, Wolfgang Puck Fine Dining Group, Spago continues to set the standard for fine dining in Beverly Hills. The sleek and simple design of the restaurant complement­s the market-driven menu which guests can choose from a seasonal a la carte menu or explore the best of the west with the chefs’ multi-course California Tasting Menu. Spago is the recipient of the AAA Four Diamond Award and received two stars in The Michelin Guide-Los Angeles edition, one of only three restaurant­s in the city to win this coveted distinctio­n.

MICHEL BRAS

LAGUIOLE, FRANCE

Set up by Michel Bras in 1992 on a hillside in Aubrac, near the village of Laguiole, Sebastian, his son, is now the head chef. Known for inventing a dish called the chocolate coolant along with his best-known dish being the gargouillo­u, it has been rated three stars in the Guide Michelin since 1999.

ST JOHN RESTAURANT

LONDON, UK

Opened in 1994, Fergus Henderson began creating inventive dishes following the nose-to-tail dining, where nothing goes to waste. St John’s main dining room is stripped back while the bar is packed nightly with a separate short bar menu. The converted smokehouse in Clerkenwel­l focuses on meaty dishes like the Rabbit Offal while unique dishes like the Pigeon and Courgettes or Poached Rabbit are a plenty on the menu.

EL CELLER DE CAN ROCA

GIRONA, SPAIN

Located in the medieval city of Girona in Catalunya, northern Spain, the Roca family moved the restaurant into an airy space with a large kitchen. Run by three brothers – Joan, chef, Josep, sommelier, Jordi, pâtissier – they take infuse ingredient­s, techniques and inspiratio­ns for their menu from their annual tours around the world. Guests can be invited by Josep into their magical walk-in cellar before enjoying the complex and flavorful chef ’s tasting menu.

OSTERIA FRANCESCAN­A RESTAURANT

MODENA, ITALY

The small discreet restaurant in Modena helmed by Massimo Bottura, combines Italian tradition with modern techniques. Influenced by are and music, the kitchens creations mirror the high-quality contempora­ry artwork in the three dining rooms. Playing with ingredient­s from the surroundin­g regions, courses include the famous Five Ages of Parmigiano Reggiano and the Adriatic Chowder.

STEIRERECK RESTAURANT

VIENNA, AUSTRIA

Under the guidance of chef Heinz Reitbauer, Steirereck has been family owned for generation­s and serves Austria’s rural Styrian region cuisine in a cutting-edge style. Located in Vienna’s Stadtpark in a monolithic glass cube, the super-modern design is bright and features a tasting menu along with the popular lunch Wiener Schnitzel. Equal part theater and precise culinary technique, the freshwater mountain fish, char, takes center stage cooked tableside.

NIHONRYORI RYUGIN RESTAURANT

TOKYO, JAPAN

Recently Moved to the new Hibiya Midtown developmen­t, Nihonryori RyuGin serves contempora­ry kaiseki cuisine under the guidance of chef Seiji Yamamoto. Dragons play a powerful presence in the décor of the dining room and can be seen in its table settings, and derive from the restaurant’s name, Nihonryori means “Japanese cuisine,” while RyuGin is a term used in Zen Buddhism, meaning “dragon’s voice.” Yamamoto brings avant-garde cooking techniques to his cuisine grounded in kaiseki cuisine.

D.O.M. RESTAURANT

SAN PAULO, BRAZIL

Establishe­d in 1999 by former DJ Alex Atala, D.O.M. fuses fine dining with unique ingredient­s from the Amazon basin. D.O.M. stands for Deo Optimo Maximo, which translates as ‘To God, The Good, The Great’, and is a Benedictin­e motto which was often used to indicate places where weary pilgrims could eat and rest. Vibrant food takes center stage with native ingredient­s like the jambú, a herb that creates a tingling sensation on the tongue, and its use of ants in dishes

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