A New York restaurant that banned tipping and where lunch takes more than three hours has been named the best in the world after taking the crown from Italy.
Contemporary New York venue Eleven Madison Park took top spot in the World’s 50 Best Restaurants awards held in Melbourne, Australia – considered the Oscars of the food world.
Run by Swiss-born chef Daniel Humm, the Manhattan institution edged out last year’s winner, Italy’s Osteria Francescana and Spain’s El Celler De Can Roca.
In 2015, it was revealed that diners at Eleven Madison Park, in New York’s Flatiron District, would no longer be expected to leave a tip. Instead menu prices were reportedly raised to include service and as part of moves to close the pay disparity between dining room staff and no-tipped kitchen workers.
Its website says an eleven course menu will soon begin lasting three hours at $295 a guest – not including wine or tax. But it adds: ‘Gratuities are neither expected nor accepted.’
Humm, was praised for his multi-course fine dining menu celebrating New York’s rich history and culinary traditions, said: ‘I don’t know how I feel right now but I’m overjoyed,
‘I’m so proud to be up here. When I first started cooking 25 years ago, I never in my wildest dreams would have thought I’d find myself in this position. It’s an unbelievable time to be a chef,’ he added.
Organisers said Eleven Madison Park, housed in an art deco building and which came third last year, enhanced the dining experience ‘with a sense of fun, blurring the line between the kitchen and the dining room’.
The top 10 was rounded out by restaurants in France, Peru, Thailand, Austria and Spain.
France, Spain and the United States each had six restaurants in the top 50, while eateries from China, Chile, Hong Kong and Singapore also made the grade.
The awards this year were held outside of London or New York for the first time, with Australia fast earning a reputation as a serious food destination and attracting some of the world’s top chefs to open restaurants Down Under.
The move to Melbourne was part of an ongoing strategy to make the event more global, organisers said.
In other awards, Spanish eatery The Disfrutar in Barcelona was picked as the One to Watch while Ana Ros of Hisa Franko in Slovenia was named the world’s best female chef.
Top pastry chef was French-born Dominique Ansel — known as king of the cronuts — and his bakery in New York, while a nod for sustainability went to France’s Septime.
Virgilio Martinez of Central in Lima won the Chefs’ Choice Award, voted for by his peers.
Acclaimed British chef Heston Blumenthal, whose restaurant The Fat Duck is a former winner of the top award, was handed a lifetime achievement gong.
Organisers said it was hard to think of another chef who had more of an impact on the way the world cooks.
‘Such is his influence, even those that haven´t been lucky enough to eat at The Fat Duck in Bray — west of London – will likely have experienced elements of his work second-hand,’ they said of Blumenthal.
‘Many of the world´s greatest restaurants use methods derived from Blumenthal and his development team´s ground-breaking research.’
Blumenthal, who has brought his recipes to millions through TV shows that are broadcast across the world, said he was honoured by the accolade and had no plans to slow down.
‘I consider the past 20 years my apprenticeship,’ he said. ‘I’m only just getting started.’
The awards, run by trade magazine Restaurant, began in 2002 and have become a reference for the world’s foodies, but were hit in 2015 by allegations of cosy deals between eateries and jury members.
The jury is now made up of just over 1,000 ‘independent experts,’ including food writers, chefs, restaurant owners and gourmets.
Members list their choices in order of preference, based on where they have eaten in the past 18 months.
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