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FOOD AND DRINK

Michelin Guide returns to celebrate ‘resilient’ French food scene

The Michelin Guide launches its 2022 edition on Tuesday, vowing to celebrate the diversity of French cooking and the industry's resilience after two challenging years caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. 

Michelin Guide returns to celebrate 'resilient' French food scene
This file photo taken on January 21, 2020 shows the 2020's Michelin Red Guide, the oldest European hotels and restaurants reference guide. (Photo by JOEL SAGET / AFP)

Expected each year with apprehension by chefs and gourmets, the famous red book is being unveiled in Cognac in southwest France, the first time in its 122 years the ceremony has taken place outside Paris. 

“The 2022 edition is a very fine vintage which reflects the diversity of cuisines that can be found in France,” the guide’s director Gwendal Poullennec told AFP. 

“But it will also make room for a new generation of chefs who have taken the risk of embarking on this journey in spite of the challenging context,” he said.  

“Despite the crisis, the profession has shown great resilience. It was an opportunity for professionals to reinvent themselves, to go further, and that’s what we want to support.” 

Last year’s ceremony, in the midst of a months-long shutdown caused by the pandemic, was a low-key affair with only one chef — Alexandre Mazzia — promoted to three stars, the highest distinction. 

While Poullennec said the judges’ criteria remained the same, there was an increased focus on more minimalist, sustainably sourced restaurants that have come to dominate the food scene. 

Remaining relevant

Controversies have long swirled around the guidebook and the pressure it places on chefs. 

In 2020, Michelin shocked foodies by downgrading the Auberge du Pont de Collonges — the oldest three-starred restaurant in the world — following the death of legendary chef, Paul Bocuse. 

A year earlier, Marc Veyrat became the first to sue the guidebook, after losing the third star of his Alps restaurant La Maison des Bois just a year after it was awarded. 

He lost the case and said he never again wants to see a Michelin inspector in his restaurants. 

Poullennec said demotions were vital if the guidebook was to “remain relevant to customers.” 

Overall, however, the French food scene is in top form. 

After a long period during which French restaurants were accused of growing stale and lazy, the past 15 years have seen an influx of young chefs more open to global influences and new approaches, said Paris-based food writer Lindsey Tramuta. 

The Michelin Guide has sometimes struggled to keep up, she added. 

“When you have something as structured as Michelin, it is very tricky to incorporate all the things that are happening in the food scene — things that are high-calibre, but maybe aren’t as formal,” she said, adding that female chefs remained poorly represented. 

“But Michelin is still very important for chefs and owners. If it motivates their kitchen staff and team, and brings more diners and curiosity, then it has value.” 

Created in 1900 by tyre manufacturers Andre and Edouard Michelin as a guide for motorists, it now has editions across Europe, Asia, North and South America. 

In March, it announced it was suspending operations in Russia due to the war, just a few months after launching its first guide in Moscow. 

SEE ALSO: Holy cow – French monks with too much cheese seek salvation online

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ENVIRONMENT

Why Bordeaux wine is under threat in France this year

Winemakers in the famous French Bordeaux wine region fear the weather conditions this spring may lead to a disastrous harvest.

Why Bordeaux wine is under threat in France this year

It’s the second year in a row that mildew has threatened Bordeaux vines. Around 90 percent of vineyards were affected by mildew to some extent in 2023, according to the regional chamber of agriculture.

But this year, the fungus has appeared earlier than usual. “If the weather continues, it’s going to be a disaster,” one vineyard owner told regional newspaper Sud Ouest, as mildew threatens crops. “I’ve never seen mildew strike so early.”

In its latest plant bulletin, the Gironde Chamber of Agriculture underlines the “favourable climatic conditions for [mildew] development” and is pessimistic for the coming days, fearing an increase in potential risk.

In the end, the 2023 harvest was reasonable, helped by favourable August weather – though a heatwave towards the end of the month raised concerns over working conditions.

READ MORE: France to revise its Champagne-making area due to climate change

But last year’s outbreak and the weather so far in 2024 has brought the ‘mildew season’ forward in parts of the region. The Grand Libournais and Graves winegrowing areas are particularly affected, according to May’s Bulletin de Santé du Végétal for Nouvelle Aquitaine.

Winegrowers in the Blayais region, meanwhile, have noticed that mildew spread is erratic – but the expected return of rainy conditions in the early part of next week have prompted concerns that the fungus’s spread will only increase.

“There are abandoned plots, neighbours who haven’t pruned their vines or estates that have been unable to carry out an uprooting program because of the incessant rain,” one vineyard owner said.

Official figures suggest that some 2,000 hectares of vines are uncultivated in the Gironde alone. The Fédération Départementale des Syndicats d’Exploitants Agricoles insists that the real figure is much larger – with implications for the health of neighbouring cultivated vines.

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