A chef in southern France with three Michelin stars says he wants to be stripped of the distinction because of the “huge pressure” to dish up flawless fare each day.
Sebastien Bras’s Le Suquet restaurant in the village of Laguiole joined the elite club of French three-star restaurants, which currently number 27, in 1999.
On Wednesday the 46-year-old said he wanted to be dropped from next year’s edition of the Michelin Guide to “start a new chapter.”
Photo: AFP
INSPECTED
While winning the coveted distinction had been “a source of a lot of satisfaction,” maintaining its exacting standards had also put him under “huge pressure,” he said.
“You’re inspected two or three times a year, you never know when. Every meal that goes out could be inspected. That means that, every day, one of the 500 meals that leaves the kitchen could be judged,” he added.
“Maybe I will be less famous but I accept that,” he said, adding that he would continue to dazzle diners’ palates “without wondering whether my creations will appeal to Michelin’s inspectors.”
Michelin said it was the first time a French chef had asked to be dropped from its gastronomic bible in this way, without a major change of positioning or business model.
“We note and we respect it,” Claire Dorland Clauzel, a member of the French tire maker’s executive committee, said of his decision.
But she said the request would not lead to Le Suquet’s “automatic” removal from the list, and would have to be given due consideration.
Bras, who took over the business from his father a decade ago, said that like “all chefs” he sometimes found himself thinking of Bernard Loiseau — the Frenchman who committed suicide in 2003, an act widely seen as linked to rumors that he would lose his third Michelin star.
But “I’m not in the frame of mind,” he hastened to add.
STARS NO MORE
Bras is not the first chef to walk away from the ultra-competitive world of Michelin-star cooking. A handful of French restaurateurs have relinquished their prized three-star status.
In 2005, late Paris restaurateur Alain Senderens — one of the pioneers of Nouvelle Cuisine — caused shock by giving back his stars, claiming that diners were turned off by excessive luxury. He later reopened the restaurant under another name, with a simpler menu at a fraction of his old prices.
In 2008, Olivier Roellinger closed his luxury eatery in the Breton fishing village of Cancale, saying he wanted a quieter life.
Asked about the stress endured by star chefs, Dorland Clauzel likened them to top athletes, “Excellence requires discipline and work.”
“We tell our chefs, ‘You’re not working for the Michelin Guide, you’re working for your customers,’” she said.
May 11 to May 17 Traversing the southern slopes of the Yushan Range in 1931, Japanese naturalist Tadao Kano knew he was approaching the last swath of Taiwan still beyond colonial control. The “vast, unknown territory,” protected by the “fierce” Bunun headman Dahu Ali, was “filled with an utterly endless jungle that choked the mountains and valleys,” Kano wrote. He noted how the group had “refused to submit to the measures of our authorities and entrenched themselves deep in these mountains … living a free existence spent chasing deer in the morning and seeking serow in the evening,” even describing them as
As a different column was being written, the big news dropped that Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) caucus whip Fu Kun-chi (傅?萁) announced that negotiations within his caucus, with legislative speaker Han Kuo-yu (韓國瑜) of the KMT, party Chair Cheng Li-wun (鄭麗文), Taichung Mayor Lu Shiow-yen (盧秀燕) and Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) Chair Huang Kuo-chang (黃國昌) had produced a compromise special military budget proposal. On Thursday morning, prior to meeting with Cheng over a lunch of beef noodles, Lu reiterated her support for a budget of NT$800 or NT$900 billion — but refused to comment after the meeting. Right after Fu’s
Yesterday, the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) nominated legislator Puma Shen (沈伯洋) as their Taipei mayoral candidate, the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) put their stamp of approval on Wei Ping-cheng (魏平政) as their candidate for Changhua County commissioner and former legislator Tsai Pi-ru (蔡壁如) of the Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) has begun the process to also run in Changhua, though she has not yet been formally nominated. All three news items are bizarre. The DPP has struggled with settling on a Taipei nominee. The only candidate who declared interest was Enoch Wu (吳怡農), but the party seemed determined to nominate anyone
What government project has expropriated the most land in Taiwan? According to local media reports, it is the Taoyuan Aerotropolis, eating 2,500 hectares of land in its first phase, with more to come. Forty thousand people are expected to be displaced by the project. Naturally that enormous land grab is generating powerful pushback. Last week Chen Chien-ho (陳健和), a local resident of Jhuwei Borough (竹圍) in Taoyuan City’s Dayuan District (大園) filed a petition for constitutional review of the project after losing his case at the Taipei Administrative Court. The Administrative Court found in favor of nine other local landowners, but