Cookie Consent by Free Privacy Policy website Yannick Alleno’s 1947 restaurant in Courchevel awarded three stars in the 2017 MICHELIN guide France
febbraio 09, 2017

Yannick Alleno’s 1947 restaurant in Courchevel awarded three stars in the 2017 MICHELIN guide France

Comunicato Stampa disponibile solo in lingua originale. 

70 new restaurants receive at least one star this year, thereby establishing a new record for the past ten years.

Michelin is pleased to unveil the new selection featured in the 2017 #michelin guide France, which awards one or more stars to 616 restaurants, of which 70 are new.

This year, 1947, the restaurant located in Courchevel’s Cheval Blanc hotel, received three #michelin stars. Its chef, Yannick Alleno, who has already been awarded three stars for the Pavillon Ledoyen in Paris, offers a unique gourmet dining experience in this exceptional establishment. Commenting on the award, Michael Ellis, International Director of the #michelin guides said: “At 1947, chef Yannick Alleno and his team give us a true lesson in fine cooking and a memorable experience that is undoubtedly worth the trip and which will appeal to the palate of the world’s most discerning gourmet diners. What he has accomplished with sauces, which is the result of much research on extraction and fermentation, combined with his perfect handling of techniques and blending of flavours provide us with truly emotional cuisine that showcases the richness of the Savoy Alps,

since the chef uses local products like Arctic char, Crozet square pasta, the féra, a fish that is native to Alpine lakes, and mountain herbs.”

The 2017 selection also includes 12 new two-star restaurants: Le Pressoir d'Argent-Gordon Ramsay and La Grande Maison de Bernard Magrez in Bordeaux, Le Pré-Xavier Beaudiment in Clermont-Ferrand, Le Montgomerie and Le Kintessence in Courchevel, La Maison des Bois-Marc Veyrat in Manigod, La Grenouillère in Madeleine-sur-Montreuil, Kei, La Table de l’Espadon and Le Clarence in Paris, L’Hostellerie de Plaisance in Saint Emilion and, lastly, Le Gindreau in Saint-Medard.

A total of 57 restaurants were awarded their first star in the 2017 edition of the #michelin guide. Spread throughout the country, they are proof of France’s regional vitality and the powerful territorial interconnection of French gourmet cooking today. This is the case, for example, in the North and the Pas-de- Calais where La Liegoise in Wimereux and the Haut Bonheur de la Table in Cassel both receive their first star. It’s also the case in Ardèche with the W in Annonay and in the Landes region with Le Hiltau.

This year, the #michelin guide inspectors have also noted that chefs continue to prefer an uninhibited style of cooking and are attentive to the environmental and economic impact of their efforts. Fully aware of nature’s limits and respectful of what producers can offer them, they are increasingly preparing short menus, such as Pertica in Vendôme, which offers a single menu.

Attentive to keeping prices down as well as to customer expectations, the chefs are aware that quality cooking also means affordable prices, to which they pay special attention. Examples include L’Auberge Tiegezh in Guer, where 25-year-old chef Baptiste Denieul offers a menu for €25, L’Alchémille in Kaysersberg, where chef Jérôme Jaeggle proposes a €24 menu in a former off-track betting facility, and at Le Restaurant H in Paris, where chef Hubert Duchenne offers a menu for €30.

The 2017 #michelin guide France will be available in all sales outlets beginning on 15 February and priced at €24.90. The selection will also be featured – and restaurants can be
booked – on #michelin Restaurants and ViaMichelin web-based and
mobile media.