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Michelin Guide

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Delicious dishes created by top Michelin star restaurants around the world.

The Michelin Guide is a special book about restaurants. It was made by the French tire company Michelin starting in 1900. The guide helps people find the best places to eat around the world.

Really excellent restaurants can earn up to three special awards called Michelin stars. Only a few special restaurants ever receive these awards.

Besides the restaurant guide, Michelin also makes books called the Green Guides. These books share general information about cities, areas, and countries. The Michelin Guide is very important because it shows which restaurants have the best food and preparation. It is a big honor for a chef to have their restaurant chosen.

History

The first Michelin Guide, published in 1900

In 1900, there were not many cars in France. Brothers Édouard and André Michelin, who made car tires, created the Guide Michelin to help drivers. They gave away almost 35,000 copies of the first guide. It had maps, tips for fixing tires, and lists of mechanics, hotels, and gas stations in France.

The guide was made to encourage more driving, which would help sell more tires. Over time, the guide grew to include many countries. During World War I and World War II, the guide was not published. After World War II, people had to pay for the guide, and it began to list restaurants. In 1926, the guide started giving stars to restaurants. At first, only one star was given. Later, restaurants could get up to three stars if they were very special.

The guide has kept growing. It now includes places like New York City and Tokyo, among many others.

Transition to digital publication

The Michelin Guide stopped printing paper copies in 2021. After 121 years, it is now available online through a special app. This change lets more people see the guide for free. As of 2024, only a few popular areas like France, Italy, Japan, and Spain still get printed copies.

Methods and layout

Red Guides list many restaurants. They use symbols to describe them in just two lines. They also add short summaries to help explain the restaurants better.

Stars

See also: List of Michelin 3-star restaurants

Michelin inspectors visit restaurants without telling anyone who they are. They give one, two, or three stars to restaurants that are very good:

  •  : "High-quality cooking, worth a stop"
  •  : "Excellent cooking, worth a detour"
  •  : "Exceptional cuisine, worth a special journey".

One star means the restaurant uses top quality ingredients and makes dishes with distinct flavors. Two stars show the chef's talent in making special dishes. Three stars is the highest award for chefs who make cooking into an art form.

Green stars

Dishes made by Michelin-starred restaurants

In 2020, the Michelin Guide started a sustainability emblem to show excellence in sustainable eating. Restaurants with this green star can explain their vision on the Guide's website. They can still have other awards like Michelin stars or a Bib Gourmand.

Bib Gourmand

Since 1997, the guide has highlighted restaurants that offer "exceptionally good food at moderate prices", called "Bib Gourmand". These restaurants must have meals priced below a certain amount based on local costs.

Selected Restaurants

In 2016, a new symbol called "the Plate" was added to recognize restaurants that "simply serve good food". In 2022, this tier was renamed "Selected Restaurants".

Keys, for hotels

Michelin began awarding "keys" to hotels starting in 2024. The key award is given after anonymous stays by Michelin Guide teams, using five criteria: excellence in design, quality of service, personality, value for the price, and contribution to the neighborhood. The Michelin Guide recommends over 6,000 hotels around the world.

Guides

Countries

This is a list that changes often and may not list everything. You can help by editing the page and adding missing information with references to good sources.

Regions and cities

This is a list that changes often and may not list everything. You can help by editing the page and adding missing information with references to good sources.

Non-restaurant food

In 2014, Michelin added a special list for gastropubs in Ireland. In 2016, the Michelin Guide for Hong Kong and Macau began listing well-known street-food places. That same year, the Singapore guide gave the first Michelin stars to street-food spots, including Hong Kong Soya Sauce Chicken Rice and Noodle and Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle.

Other ratings

All restaurants listed, no matter their star rating, Bib Gourmand, or Plate status, also get a "fork and spoon" rating. This shows how comfortable and nice the restaurant is, from one to five. One fork and spoon means a "comfortable restaurant" and five means a "luxurious restaurant". Red-colored forks and spoons mean the restaurant is also "pleasant".

Restaurants can also get special symbols:

  • Coins show restaurants with menus at a set price or less. In 2010 in France, 2011 in the US and Japan, the highest "coin" prices were €19, $25, and ¥5000.
  • Interesting view or Magnificent view symbols are for restaurants with great views.
  • Grapes, a sake set, or a cocktail glass show restaurants with good choices of wines, sake, or cocktails.
Country/RegionYearThree Stars
Two Stars
One Star
Restaurants
with at least
One Star


Green Star
Bib Gourmand
Selected RestaurantsTotal restaurants recognized
France20253181542654100399—N/a3,000+
Japan2023238244254728492—N/a1,501
Spain20251633242291572137471,251
Italy20251438341393692501,3401,986
United States202514402262804341066
($49)
1,780
Germany2024105028034077199750—N/a
Great Britain and Ireland202610231742071497452451
Nordic countries202461366853637—N/a268
China (mainland)20245181091314183245485
Switzerland202342610813831125
(CHF70)
777
Singapore2024364251281151283
Taiwan202336354411139321
Belgium & Luxembourg202422312815312131—N/a792
Netherlands20232201031251598 (€39)504
Austria202521862823343208
South Korea202419265787177
Thailand20262833435137288468
Slovenia202311798759
Portugal202408313953296167
Brazil202623192434481149
Canada2024023335554186275
Mexico202502212384297157
Hungary202302794775
Turkey2025021517439115171
Croatia20230110113117193
Philippines2025018912574108
Argentina202401677771
Malta20240167052840
Poland202401561165577
Malaysia2024014524577
Estonia20240112362735
Vietnam20250099263109181
Lithuania20240044142634
Qatar2025002242733
Serbia20250022021923
Latvia202600221534
Andorra20240011—N/a—N/a56
CityYearThree stars
Two stars
One star
One star or moreGreen star
Bib Gourmand
Selected RestaurantsTotal restaurants recognized
Abu Dhabi2025004483648
Athens2023011112531
Atlanta202500882113958
Beijing20252427332147101
Belgrade20240000222
Boston2025001161926
Chengdu20240211132069
Chicago202323162147 ($40)400
California20236126987143608
Colorado20230055944
Doha20250022433
Dubai2025231419322119
Florida202401252633 ($50)91149
Guangzhou202403172044105
Hangzhou202300661251
Hong Kong & Macau202491868957790262
Kyoto and Osaka2024827150185117138440
Las Vegas (suspended)2009131317140
Moscow (suspended)2021027915
Nara Prefecture20230420241888
New York City202551552714102 ($49)358
Philadelphia202500331102137
Quebec2025018931776102
São Paulo20262113163365389
Shanghai202429415126148
Texas202400151544116
Toronto20230114152183
Tokyo20241233138183127194504
Vancouver202300991777
Washington, D.C.202313212529 ($40)122

Green Guides

The Michelin Green Guides review and rate places to visit that are not restaurants. There is a guide for all of France, and more detailed guides for ten regions inside France. There are also Green Guides for many countries, regions, and cities outside of France. Many of these guides are available in several languages. They give background information and list points of interest in alphabetical order. Like the restaurant guides, the Green Guides use a three-star system to recommend sites, from "worth a trip" to "worth a detour" and "interesting".

Controversies

Allegations of lax inspection standards and bias

Pascal Rémy, a Michelin inspector from France, wrote a book in 2004 about his job. He said that Michelin did not visit restaurants as often as they claimed and might favour well-known chefs. Michelin denied these claims but did not share exact numbers about their inspectors.

Allegations of prejudice favouring French cuisine

Some critics outside France felt the guide preferred French-style restaurants. For example, when Michelin first gave out stars in New York City, many of the top-rated restaurants had a French style. Some people thought this showed a bias toward formal dining over more relaxed styles.

Allegations of leniency with stars for Japanese cuisine

When Michelin gave out stars in Tokyo and other Japanese cities, some wondered if the ratings were too generous. With many more restaurants in Tokyo than in Paris, some felt the stars might have been given more easily.

Unwanted stars

Some restaurant owners did not want to keep their Michelin stars because they felt it changed how customers acted or made the restaurant too expensive to run. For example, a chef in Spain did not like the dishes that earned his restaurant a star and later stopped offering special menus.

Losing stars

Losing a Michelin star can be very hard for a restaurant, as many depend on the fame it brings.

Mistakes

In 2017, a café in France was accidentally given a star because it had the same name as a different restaurant.

Influence on cuisine and working conditions

Some chefs felt that aiming for Michelin stars pushed restaurants to look and act too much alike. This style of dining can require long hours from staff, and some workers have complained about unfair treatment. However, many chefs still value the chance to earn a Michelin star because it brings more customers and can improve restaurant quality.

Images

The Plate symbol from Michelin, representing a dining or culinary guide.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Michelin Guide, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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