Idk about Michelin star restaurants, but from my experience, the best food places I’ve been to have always been slightly dodgy and a bit grimy lol. Some of my favourite food in Japan for example were from a couple random back alley establishments.
Hoppy-pup on
£500 per head… for filthy food made by a recklessly filthy chef.
currydemon on
>“I’m buying sashimi-grade fish from Japan, and they’re questioning, ‘Well, we don’t know the water, so how do we know it’s sashimi grade?’ Well, it is sashimi grade, this stuff’s eaten raw all over the world, and just because our rules don’t fit their rules, they’re questioning it.”
Surely you’d have some sort of documentation to say it’s sashimi grade if there’s a risk of food poisoning.
Presumably he knows what he’s talking about if he’s got a Michelin star but you’d also hope the FSA knew what they were talking about. Somebody needs to update their rules.
>“The people in life that push the hardest and think outside the box and do something different will always have to deal with this kind of stuff.
Who doesn’t love a maverick chef who doesn’t play by the rules?
sivaya_ on
In my experience as an ex-chef, one-star is usually reserved to people who refuse to engage properly with the inspector’s concerns. I’ve previously had to discuss date labels for ferments with an inspector and they have been receptive, helping me to do it in a way that fits with their standards.
WheresWalldough on
Worth bearing in mind that:
* The world’s best restaurant (previously – not any more) – caused the largest restaurant norovirus outbreak in history
> An outbreak of gastroenteritis affected at least 240 persons [at The Fat Duck]. The case-control study demonstrated increased risk of illness in those who ate from a special ‘tasting menu’ and in particular an oyster, passion fruit jelly and lavender dish. Diners were infected with multiple norovirus strains belonging to genogroups I and II, a pattern characteristic of molluscan shellfish-associated outbreaks. The ongoing risk from dining at the restaurant may have been due to persistent contamination of the oyster supply alone or in combination with further spread via infected food handlers or the restaurant environment. Delayed notification of the outbreak to public health authorities may have contributed to outbreak size and duration.
* The restaurant here scored poorly in two areas: cleanliness and management of food safety. He has admitted “inspectors were “not 100% wrong”, adding that an additional hand washing sink had now been installed in the fish preparation area.”
* and “Some of our paperwork wasn’t right, and that’s our fault,” he said.
Ultimately the law is the same for everyone and saying “we’re super-innovative here” and “our ingredients are for rich people, they won’t get sick” just isn’t good enough.
messiah-of-cheese on
Sounds like he’s getting his fish off the back of a lorry tbh.
No_Chemistry53 on
This is the idiot that spoke about spending a lot of money on titanium cups to keep water at the perfect temperature.
All the comments were saying the science doesnt make sense and glass was actually better.
Also looks thick as pig shit
painteroftheword on
Presumably you have to use dead rats to wipe found surfaces to get that kind of rating?
jodrellbank_pants on
There all grifting when I go to eat and I’m looking for steak under a pea I’m not amused.
OpticGd on
The food grading system is very generous. I have a friend who is a chef who won’t eat anywhere with a three or less.
PathOfJan on
Gotta be fucked up in the head to pay £500 for a meal unless you get a blowjob and a hotel room with breakfast and another blowjob during checkout
Prestigious_Lime6099 on
Sounds like the inspector had something up his arse and the guidelines need updating. Know people who’ve worked there and by all accounts he is the very best of the best.
Unique-Contract760 on
Local council idiots who know nothing except what’s written on the clipboard, they’d hardly have 2 Michelin stars if they didn’t know what they were doing.
milesparis on
A comprehensive and integrated system of paperwork is the **best** way to ensure food safety in a professional kitchen. 1 star is wild, the defense that hes innovative and the council don’t like aging is so lame. How many fine dining sushi, Korean, classic French, African restaurants have 1 star? Most serve aged, pickled, preserved and raw foods! Best practice is all that is expected. £500 a head is also crazy. Cant afford some food safety training and a few extra hand wash sinks?
14 commenti
Idk about Michelin star restaurants, but from my experience, the best food places I’ve been to have always been slightly dodgy and a bit grimy lol. Some of my favourite food in Japan for example were from a couple random back alley establishments.
£500 per head… for filthy food made by a recklessly filthy chef.
>“I’m buying sashimi-grade fish from Japan, and they’re questioning, ‘Well, we don’t know the water, so how do we know it’s sashimi grade?’ Well, it is sashimi grade, this stuff’s eaten raw all over the world, and just because our rules don’t fit their rules, they’re questioning it.”
Surely you’d have some sort of documentation to say it’s sashimi grade if there’s a risk of food poisoning.
Presumably he knows what he’s talking about if he’s got a Michelin star but you’d also hope the FSA knew what they were talking about. Somebody needs to update their rules.
>“The people in life that push the hardest and think outside the box and do something different will always have to deal with this kind of stuff.
Who doesn’t love a maverick chef who doesn’t play by the rules?
In my experience as an ex-chef, one-star is usually reserved to people who refuse to engage properly with the inspector’s concerns. I’ve previously had to discuss date labels for ferments with an inspector and they have been receptive, helping me to do it in a way that fits with their standards.
Worth bearing in mind that:
* The world’s best restaurant (previously – not any more) – caused the largest restaurant norovirus outbreak in history
> An outbreak of gastroenteritis affected at least 240 persons [at The Fat Duck]. The case-control study demonstrated increased risk of illness in those who ate from a special ‘tasting menu’ and in particular an oyster, passion fruit jelly and lavender dish. Diners were infected with multiple norovirus strains belonging to genogroups I and II, a pattern characteristic of molluscan shellfish-associated outbreaks. The ongoing risk from dining at the restaurant may have been due to persistent contamination of the oyster supply alone or in combination with further spread via infected food handlers or the restaurant environment. Delayed notification of the outbreak to public health authorities may have contributed to outbreak size and duration.
* The restaurant here scored poorly in two areas: cleanliness and management of food safety. He has admitted “inspectors were “not 100% wrong”, adding that an additional hand washing sink had now been installed in the fish preparation area.”
* and “Some of our paperwork wasn’t right, and that’s our fault,” he said.
Ultimately the law is the same for everyone and saying “we’re super-innovative here” and “our ingredients are for rich people, they won’t get sick” just isn’t good enough.
Sounds like he’s getting his fish off the back of a lorry tbh.
This is the idiot that spoke about spending a lot of money on titanium cups to keep water at the perfect temperature.
All the comments were saying the science doesnt make sense and glass was actually better.
Also looks thick as pig shit
Presumably you have to use dead rats to wipe found surfaces to get that kind of rating?
There all grifting when I go to eat and I’m looking for steak under a pea I’m not amused.
The food grading system is very generous. I have a friend who is a chef who won’t eat anywhere with a three or less.
Gotta be fucked up in the head to pay £500 for a meal unless you get a blowjob and a hotel room with breakfast and another blowjob during checkout
Sounds like the inspector had something up his arse and the guidelines need updating. Know people who’ve worked there and by all accounts he is the very best of the best.
Local council idiots who know nothing except what’s written on the clipboard, they’d hardly have 2 Michelin stars if they didn’t know what they were doing.
A comprehensive and integrated system of paperwork is the **best** way to ensure food safety in a professional kitchen. 1 star is wild, the defense that hes innovative and the council don’t like aging is so lame. How many fine dining sushi, Korean, classic French, African restaurants have 1 star? Most serve aged, pickled, preserved and raw foods! Best practice is all that is expected. £500 a head is also crazy. Cant afford some food safety training and a few extra hand wash sinks?