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RESTAURANTS

Paris restaurant ranked ‘best in world’

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

Paris restaurant ranked 'best in world'
Photo: Guy Savoy
Double Emmy-award-winning US television chef Eric Ripert came joint second for his New York fish restaurant Le Bernardin, sharing the honour with the minuscule Tokyo 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.
 
Guy Savoy. Photo: AFP
   
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, whom 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.
 
Tragedy 
 
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.
   
Savoy, 63, a three-Michelin-starred chef, comes from humble origins. His father was a municipal gardener in the small town of Bourgoin-Jailleu near Lyon in eastern France where his mother ran a fast-food “buvette”.
 
A meat dish at Savoy's restaurant. Photo: Guy Savoy   
 
He later trained as a chocolate maker before being taken on as an apprentice by the legendary Troisgros brothers for their restaurant in nearby Roanne.
   
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.
   
While 50 Best has repeatedly denied the 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, plus the 10,000 eateries which its analysis found to be the best value.
 

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FOOD AND DRINK

Cheese in numbers: France’s obsession with fromage

From cheese types to the amount eaten per year, via cheese favourites - here's a look at how France really feels about fromage.

Cheese in numbers: France’s obsession with fromage

March 27th is the Journée nationale du fromage in France – so here are a few facts about the delicious dairy delicacy.

246

Charles de Gaulle famously once asked of governing France: “How can anyone govern a country with 246 varieties of cheese?”.

His numbers were wrong. Producers in France make closer to 1,000 varieties of cheese – and some have estimated that figure could be pushed up as high as 1,600.

8

The number of cheese ‘families’ in France. A good cheeseboard in France is generally considered to consist of at least three ‘families’ – a soft cheese, a hard cheese and either a blue or a goat’s cheese. Remember, too, an odd number of fromages on a platter is better than an even number, according from cheese etiquettists

READ ALSO France Facts: There are eight cheese families in France

2.5

About how long – in years – it would take you to try every cheese made in France, if you tried a new variety every day. Life goals. 

95

The percentage of people in France who say they eat cheese at least once a week, spending seven percent of their weekly food bill on it.

READ ALSO Best Briehaviour: Your guide to French cheese etiquette

40

Two-fifths of French people say they eat cheese every day

57

The amount of cheese produced, in kilogrammes, in France every second, according to this website, which has a counter to show you how fast that really is. It’s estimated that 1.8 million tonnes of cheese are produced in France every year.

27

The French consume, on average, a whopping 27 kilogrammes of cheese per person per year.

READ ALSO Fonduegate: Why customer service is different in France

3

The three most popular cheeses in France, based on sales, are Emmental, Camembert, and Raclette – followed by mozzarella, goat’s cheese, Comté and Coulommiers.

63

Some 63 cheeses have been awarded the Appellation d’Origine Contrôlée status, which means they can only be produced in a certain region.

1

France has – or at least soon will have – one dedicated cheese museum. 

READ ALSO Three things to know about the new Paris cheese museum

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