Bangkok Post

Japanese-born chef wins Michelin’s first ever three-star rating in France

- LUCIEN LIBERT

The French edition of the Michelin Guide, the bible of gastronomy, for the first time in its history awarded the highest rating of three stars to a Japanese-born chef.

The accolade, unveiled at a ceremony in Paris on Monday evening, went to chef Kei Kobayashi who, according to the guide, “is a virtuoso at marrying flavours and always spot on with his conception of the dish”.

Japan has several dozen restaurant­s with Michelin stars, but Kobayashi is the first chef from Japan to be awarded the recognitio­n for a restaurant in France, a country seen by some as the touchstone of fine dining.

Kobayashi was born in Japan’s Nagano province where his father was a chef in a traditiona­l Japanese restaurant.

After being inspired, according to the Michelin guide’s biography of the chef, by watching a documentar­y on French cooking, he moved to France and trained under three-star chefs Gilles Goujon and Alain Ducasse.

He set up his Kei restaurant in the French capital nine years ago, and in the years since accumulate­d first one and then two Michelin stars, before achieving the highest accolade.

“How do you achieve it?” he said after being presented at Monday’s ceremony with a chef’s white tunic with three stars embroidere­d onto the left breast. “You need to progress, you need to reach new levels, that’s what it is. You need to look for great products and so on,” he said. “So you need emotion, you need to share the pleasure with the team.”

The guide said its reviewers were bowled over in particular by one of the dishes Kobayashi serves at his restaurant: a garden of crunchy vegetables, Scottish smoked salmon, a rocket foam and a lemon emulsion.

Kobayashi was one of three first-time recipients of three stars in the French 2020 edition of the guide, while there were 11 new holders of two stars and 49 newly-minted one-star restaurant­s.

The guide, which was first published in 1900, has been seeking to embrace innovative chefs, with a particular emphasis on sustainabl­e cooking.

But that has irked some in the old guard of French cuisine, who accuse the guide of putting novelty before quality.

French celebrity chef Marc Veyrat sued the Michelin Guide after it removed one of his restaurant’s stars, saying the downgrade was unfounded and tipped him into depression. He lost the court case.

 ??  ?? Kei Kobayashi with Gwendal Poullennec, Internatio­nal Director of Michelin Guides.
Kei Kobayashi with Gwendal Poullennec, Internatio­nal Director of Michelin Guides.

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