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Michelin Guide Tokyo (Michelin Guides) (Paperback)
by Michelin
Category:
Restaurant guide, Food & lodging, Travel guide, Japan |
Market price: ¥ 218.00
MSL price:
¥ 198.00
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Stock:
Pre-order item, lead time 3-7 weeks upon payment [ COD term does not apply to pre-order items ] |
MSL rating:
Good for Gifts
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MSL Pointer Review:
An excellent resource of where to go for great food when you are in Tokyo, from the famous Michelin Travel Publications. |
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Author: Michelin
Publisher: Michelin Travel Publications; 1 edition
Pub. in: January, 2008
ISBN: 2067130692
Pages: 383
Measurements: To be provided
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BA01072
Other information: ISBN-13: 978-2067130692
Language: English
Price inclusive of airshipping freight.
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- Awards & Credential -
The first Asian Michelin guide ever compiled and published and a bestseller on Amazon.com in the category of Travel to Japan. |
- MSL Picks -
TOKYO, Nov. 19, 2007 - The first edition of the MICHELIN guide Tokyo has been released today. For its first venture into Asia, the MICHELIN guide offers a selection of the best hotels and restaurants in the center of Tokyo, a total of 178 establishments, of which 28 are hotels and 150 are restaurants.
Available in English and Japanese versions, the MICHELIN guide Tokyo 2008 has one particularity that sets it apart from other guides in the collection: All the restaurants in the guide have been awarded stars. The initial selection includes 8 restaurants with three stars (***), 25 with two stars (**) and 117 with one star (*). With 191 stars in all, Tokyo has become the world leader in gourmet dining with more "stars" than any other city. And to honor its outstanding cuisine, the unrivaled quality of the products used, the cooking techniques employed, its rich heritage and its culinary traditions, which are passed on from one generation to the next, the selection in the MICHELIN guide Tokyo 2008 is comprised exclusively of "starred" restaurants.
One star (*) means a very good restaurant in its category.
Two stars (**) mean excellent cooking, worth a detour.
Three stars (***) mean exceptional cuisine, worth a special journey.
A restaurant that receives one or more stars is not only one of the best in its country but also one of the best in the world.
In Japan, as in the 21 other countries covered by the MICHELIN guide, a consistent selection is ensured by awarding stars based on the same criteria: product quality, preparation and flavors, the chef''s personality as revealed through his cuisine, value for money, and consistency over time and across the entire menu. The criteria are adapted to each type of cuisine, notably Japanese cooking styles.
In the first edition of the MICHELIN guide Tokyo, the focus is clearly on Japanese cuisine, which is served in more than 60% of the selected restaurants. The major culinary styles are represented, including kaiseki, kappo, fugu, soba kaiseki, sushi, tempura, teppan yaki and unagi. The remaining 40% is comprised of French, Italian, Spanish, Chinese restaurants, etc.
In this first edition of a MICHELIN guide devoted to Asia, each hotel or restaurant is presented on a double-page spread. The left-hand page features pictures of the establishment, its classification and the number of stars received, while the right-hand page provides the reader with a description of the restaurant and its cuisine, a photo of the entrance and an access plan.
Thanks to a rigorous selection process that is applied independently and consistently around the world, the MICHELIN guide has become an international benchmark in gourmet dining. The selection is prepared by anonymous and experienced inspectors, Michelin employees, who pay their hotel and restaurant bills in full. This first selection was made by a team of five Japanese and European inspectors. In a city with some 160,000 restaurants, they pre- selected around 1,500 establishments and, after more than a year and a half of anonymous meals, narrowed down their selection to 150 restaurants.
The first MICHELIN guide was published in France in August 1900. Today, 108 years later, the collection comprises 21 guides covering 22 countries. In addition to 20 countries in Europe (since the addition of the first MICHELIN guide Austria in 2005), the collection also includes North America, which is covered through four guides: New York City (with the third edition released in early October 2007), San Francisco, Bay Area & Wine Country (a second edition released in late October), and Los Angeles and Las Vegas, whose first editions were released just a few days ago.
In Europe, the collection includes 16 guides, the most recent being the English versions of the MICHELIN guide France and the MICHELIN guide Paris, both aimed at the some 70 million people who visit France each year.
Two versions of the MICHELIN guide Tokyo 2008 are available -- a standard edition and a special boxed set that includes the Saga of the MICHELIN guide, a small volume filled with anecdotes relating the history of the guide from its origins in 1900 to the present.
The MICHELIN Guide Tokyo 2008 goes on sale, in France, at the beginning of February at the price of 14,50 euros.
MICHELIN Guide Tokyo 2008: the selection Total number of One star Two stars Three stars restaurants (*) (**) (***) 150 117 25 8 Award Category Type of cuisine of Comfort *** Hamadaya Japanese Joel Robuchon French contemporary Kanda Japanese Koju Japanese L''Osier French Quintessence French contemporary Sukiyabashi Jiro Japanese sushi Sushi Mizutani Japanese sushi ** Aimee Vibert French Cuisine(s) Michel Troisgros French contemporary Daigo Japanese Esaki Japanese Fukudaya Japanese Hishinuma Japanese Ichimonji Japanese Ishikawa Japanese Kikunoi Japanese Kogetsu Japanese L''Atelier de Joel Robuchon French contemporary Le Mange-Tout French contemporary Pierre Gagnaire French contemporary Reikasai Chinese Ristorante Aso Italian contemporary Ryugin Japanese contemporary Sant Pau Spanish contemporary Sawada Japanese sushi Sushi Kanesaka Japanese sushi Taku Japanese sushi Tsukiji Uemura Japanese Tsukiji Yamamoto Japanese fugu Twenty One French Usukifugu Yamadaya Japanese fugu Wako Japanese * Abe Japanese Ajiman Japanese fugu Aragawa Steakhouse Arai Japanese Arbace French Argento Aso Italian contemporary Aroma-Fresca Italian contemporary Asagi Japanese tempura Au Gout du Jour Nouvelle Ere French Banrekiryukodo Japanese Beige French contemporary Benoit French contemporary Chemins French contemporary Chez Inno French Chez Matsuo French Chez Tomo French contemporary Chikuyotei Japanese unagi China Blue Chinese Chugoku Hanten Fureika Chinese Cogito French Coucagno French contemporary Crescent French Cucina Hirata Italian Dons de la Nature Steakhouse Fukamachi Japanese tempura Fukuju Japanese Gastronomie Francaise Tateru Yoshino French contemporary Ginza La Tour French Ginza Sushiko Honten Japanese sushi Hanasanshou Japanese Harutaka Japanese sushi Higuchi Japanese Hinokizaka Japanese Hiramatsu French Hirosaku Japanese Keyakizaka Japanese teppan yaki Kikumi Japanese Komuro Japanese Kondo Japanese tempura Kosetsu Japanese soba kaiseki Kyubey Japanese sushi La Bombance Japanese contemporary La Cave Hiramatsu French L''Alliance French contemporary L''Anneau d''Or French La Primula Italian contemporary La Table de Joel Robuchon French contemporary La Tour d''Argent French La Tourelle French Le Jeu de l''Assiette French contemporary L''Embellir French contemporary Les Creations de Narisawa French contemporary Les Enfants Gates French Le 6eme Sens French contemporary Les Saisons French Maison d''Umemoto Shang-hai Chinese Maison Paul Bocuse French Makimura Japanese Minoichi Japanese Miravile French Momonoki Chinese Monnalisa French Morimoto XEX Japanese teppan yaki Muroi Japanese Mutsukari Japanese contemporary Nadaman New Otani Japanese Nadaman Sazanka So Japanese Nakajima Japanese Narukami French Ogasawara Hakushakutei Spanish contemporary Ohara et Cie French Ohara''s French Ohno Japanese Okina Japanese soba kaiseki Ozaki Japanese Piatto Suzuki Italian Ristorante Hamasaki Italian contemporary Ristorante Honda Italian contemporary Sakuragaoka Japanese Sakuragawa Japanese Sankame Japanese Sasada Japanese Sazanka Japanese teppan yaki Sekihotei Japanese Shigeyoshi Japanese Shin Japanese sushi Shofukuro Japanese Signature French contemporary Sugawara Japanese Sushi Nakamura Japanese sushi Sushi Ohno Japanese sushi Sushi Saito Japanese sushi Sushisho Saito Japanese sushi Suzuki Japanese Tahara Japanese Takeyabu Japanese soba kaiseki Tateru Yoshino French contemporary Tatsumura Japanese The Georgian Club French Tofuya Ukai Japanese Tomura Japanese Toyoda Japanese Uchiyama Japanese Ukai-Tei Japanese teppan yaki Umi Japanese sushi Uotoku Japanese Waketokuyama Japanese Yamane Japanese fugu Yamasaki Japanese Yebisu Japanese teppan yaki Yokota Japanese tempura Yonemura Japanese contemporary Yoneyama Japanese Yotaro Japanese tempura Yukicho Japanese Yukimura Japanese Yuta Japanese sushi
(From www.michelinguide.com)
Target readers:
Written in English, the Guide is intended mainly for business people and tourists travelling to Tokyo and who want to quickly find a good hotel or a good restaurant.
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What distinguishes the Michelin Guide from other restaurant and hotel guides?
Michelin has been in the business of evaluating and recommending restaurants and hotels for over a century. We employ full-time professional inspectors who anonymously visit restaurants and hotels, and evaluate them on a range of criteria. Our evaluation process has been honed over time to identify consistently high-quality establishments to suit a range of budgets and across a range of styles and cuisines.
If our inspectors are impressed by a restaurant or hotel, they visit the establishment again. And again. It is this sort of obsessive research that makes the Michelin Guide such a reliable source of recommendations. No matter what the occasion, we think you'll find that the Michelin Guide will help you make the perfect choice.
The Michelin Guide. How to find perfect.
(From www.michelinguide.com)
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From Publisher
The Michelin Guides offer a selection of the best hotels and restaurants in every price category. These establishments are chosen by a team of full-time inspectors with a professional background in the industry. They cover every corner of the countries, visiting new establishments as well as testing the quality and consistency of the hotels and restaurants already listed in the guide.
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Michelin (MSL quote), France
<2007-11-23 00:00>
The MICHELIN guide is making its entry into Asia with the publication of the first edition of the MICHELIN guide Tokyo, scheduled for release in November 2007. After Europe, where 20 countries are covered, and the United States, the MICHELIN guide is pursuing its international development in Japan. “Japan is a country where fine dining is an integral part of the culture and the art of table setting reflects a way of life that discretely combines refinement and culinary enjoyment,” said Michel Rollier, the Group’s Managing Partner, who made the announcement today in Tokyo. When asked about the choice of Japan and Tokyo, Jean-Luc Naret, Director of the MICHELIN guides, replied: “The MICHELIN guide is pursuing its international development with the launch of the first MICHELIN guide Tokyo a few months from now. Japan - and Tokyo in particular - seemed the natural gateway to this continent, which is so rich in gourmet food and cooking traditions.” Since last summer, European and Japanese Michelin inspectors have been making anonymous visits to restaurants and hotels in Tokyo, evaluating meals and staying overnight in hotels so that they can independently assess the quality and consistency of the services offered. Since the Michelin inspector’s role is to see and experience what awaits the customer, maintaining anonymity is essential if they want to receive the same treatment as any other visitor to the establishment. The MICHELIN guide offers a selection of hotels and restaurants in various comfort and price categories. Comfort is rated by fork-and-spoon symbols for restaurants (from ò to ö) and pavilions for hotels (from j to l). These pictograms assess the establishment’s equipment, service, cleanliness and general upkeep. Stars judge only “what’s in the plate,” meaning the quality of the cooking. Five criteria are taken into account: product quality, preparation and flavors, the “personality” of the chef and the kitchen team, consistency over time and across the entire menu, and value for money. The number of stars that may be awarded ranges from one (m) to three (o). Their meaning is always the same, regardless of the country: -*: “a very good restaurant in its category.” -**: “excellent cooking, worth a detour.” -***: “exceptional cuisine, worth a special journey.”
Decisions to award stars are made collectively. All the inspectors who have evaluated a meal in a given restaurant present and support their opinions, based on their experiences and reports. The MICHELIN guide Tokyo will be available in two languages: Japanese and English. The MICHELIN guide Tokyo will be the 19th guide in the 2008 collection, while Japan becomes the 22nd country covered by the MICHELIN guide. When they invented the first automobile tire in 1895, cofounders André and Edouard Michelin revolutionized the world of transportation and, subsequently, travel. Since introducing this technological invention designed to enhance mobility, Michelin has remained firmly committed to making life easier for travelers by providing them with information that is objective, accurate, clear and easy to understand. The first MICHELIN guide France was published in August 1900. Distributed free of charge (until 1920) and originally intended for chauffeurs, the Guide contained a wealth of practical information, including tips on using and repairing tires, city street maps, and lists of gasoline outlets, hotels and mechanics. For the Michelin brothers, the objective was to speed the development of the automobile, and consequently the tire market. They wanted to promote and improve travel by making it safer and more enjoyable - in other words, by enhancing mobility, which is still today the goal common to all Michelin’s maps, guides, atlases and other publications. The practice of awarding stars to the best restaurants was introduced in 1926 and expanded to include two- and three-star ratings in the early 1930s. Since then, Michelin has become the undisputed benchmark for gourmet dining around the world. Every year, in more than 90 countries around the world, Michelin publishes some 19 million maps, atlases, tourist guides, and restaurant and hotel guides - always with the same focus on quality. (www.michelin.com) |
Isabel Reynolds (Reuters, MSL quote), UK
<2007-11-23 00:00>
Forget Paris, New York and Rome. The real home of gourmet dining is Tokyo, according to the new Michelin restaurant guide unveiled on Monday.
In its first ever Asian edition, the result of more than a year's research by five undercover inspectors, Michelin awarded more stars in Tokyo than in any other city in the world.
Eight restaurants, five serving Japanese cuisine and three French, were given the coveted three-star rating, which Michelin defines as "exceptional cuisine, worth a special journey," and means a massive boost in business and profile for the chef.
The effect could be even greater in food-obsessed Japan, where many people think little of traveling and lining up for hours to eat the latest delicacies.
"We were so surprised by the quality of the cuisine here," Jean-Luc Naret, director of the Michelin guides, told a packed news conference in Tokyo. "Not only Japanese making French cuisine, but Japanese food in all sorts of genres."
He added that a star won in Japan had exactly the same significance as a star in Las Vegas or Paris.
Twenty-five Tokyo eateries got two stars and 117 were given one star, compared for example with Britain, where only three restaurants in the whole country have three stars and 12 have two.
Some critics and chefs had expressed doubts about whether Europeans were capable of appreciating the finer points of Japanese food, even though two members of the five-strong inspection team were Japanese.
The New York edition of the Michelin guide, first published in 2005, was criticized for favoring French restaurants.
"I think the selection proves the opposite," Naret said. Sixty percent of the starred establishments serve Japanese food, with most of the rest French, plus a handful of Chinese and Italian and one Spanish.
INFORMAL STYLE
Others had said the fact that some of Japan's gourmet food is served at counters in out-of-the way basements might be a hard sell to Europeans expecting more luxurious surroundings.
But Michelin says the star ratings are based purely on what inspectors find on their plates.
Chef Hiroyuki Kanda was shown on television in his modest counter-style establishment, Kanda, throwing his arms in the air and shouting "Banzai!" after hearing he had been awarded three stars.
Tokyo's three-star Japanese restaurants are Hamadaya, Kanda, Koju, Sukiyabashi Jiro and Sushi Mizutani. The three-star French restaurants are listed as Joel Robuchon, L'Osier and Quintessence.
Three-star chefs from around the world were set to attend a celebration for their Tokyo colleagues later in the day.
"I hope more and more people will come, like these chefs, and see what is happening in Tokyo. It's really worth the trip," Naret told reporters.
The first Michelin restaurant guide, aimed at chauffeurs in the early days of motoring, was published by the tire company in 1900 and the star rating system was introduced in the 1920s. The organization only took its first steps outside Europe in 2005, with its New York guide.
Michelin remains tight-lipped about which cities will be targeted in future guides - Naret said only that a second Asian city would be announced in a few months.
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