BSS
  23 Nov 2021, 12:19
Update : 23 Nov 2021, 12:31

New York's French chef Daniel Boulud voted world's best

    NEW YORK, Nov 23, 2021 (BSS/AFP) - French chef Daniel Boulud, who has

been living in New York for almost 40 years, was named best restaurateur in
the world by Les Grandes Tables du Monde on Monday for his flagship
restaurant "Daniel."

   The association of 184 top restaurants worldwide said that the Lyon
native, who moved to New York in 1982, "embodies, for many North Americans,
French gastronomy, or even gastronomy, period."

   Boulud, 66, defines his cuisine as French in its cooking and textures but
with American products and flavors. Besides "Daniel," which has two Michelin
stars, in New York, the chef has other restaurants in the United States,
Canada, Dubai, Singapore and the Bahamas.

   Boulud told AFP after the news broke that this latest in a long list of
honors represented a "professional dedication and really a sign of friendship
and support from colleagues" in an environment widely seen as extremely
competitive and high-pressure.

   Like all New Yorkers, Boulud took a big hit in the Covid-19 pandemic that
killed at least 34,000 people in his adopted city, which bore the brunt of
the first wave of the virus in the United States in early 2020.

   Some of his establishments closed, but "Daniel" kept going, setting up a
terrace of covered shelters on the sidewalk "with heating in the winter and
air conditioning and music in the summer" for die-hard fans.

   Emerging from the pandemic, Boulud thinks New York will remain "one of the
five most attractive cities in the world" and will always enjoy a prominent
place in French gastronomy. The economic and cultural capital of the United
States and a cultural mosaic of 8.5 million inhabitants, New York is home to
183 French restaurateurs, according to the French consulate.

   "In love" with New York and now an American citizen, Boulud still boasts
of being "the most French of all French chefs in the United States" thanks to
a "cuisine which has its French references" but which "never stops
innovating."

   The price of one of his "exceptional" dinners runs to about $300 a head
including wine and service, according to the restaurateur.

   "Customers want to have fun, to splash out on wines, they go out a lot. We
see them with a regularity and a loyalty that reassures us", said Boulud, who
is now looking forward to the return of visitors from Asia and Europe.