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The Michelin Guide (''Le Guide Michelin'') is a series of annual Guide Book s published by Michelin for over a dozen countries. The term refers by default to the Michelin '''Red Guide''', the oldest and best-known Europe an hotel and restaurant guide, which awards the '''Michelin stars'''. Michelin also publishes '''Green Guides''' for travel and tourism, as well as several newer publications such as the ''Guide Voyageur Pratique'' (independent travel), ''Guide Gourmand'' (good-value eating-places), ''Guide Escapade'' (quick breaks) and ''Guide Coup de Cœur'' (hotels of character). HISTORY In 1900 , André Michelin published the first edition of a guide to France to help drivers maintain their cars, find decent lodging, and eat well while touring. It included addresses of gasoline distributors, garages, tire stockists, public toilets, etc. The guide was distributed free until 1920. According to a story told by the Michelin brothers, the charge was introduced after a pile of guides was found propping up a workbench in a garage, showing that a free gift would not be taken seriously. In 1926, the guide introduced the star to note good cooking; two and three stars were added in the early 1930s. The cover of the guide was originally blue, but since 1931 has been red. As motoring became more widespread, the star system was developed and guides to other countries introduced. Today a series of twelve guides lists more than 45,000 hotels and restaurants across Europe, and the guide to France has sold 30 million copies since it was introduced. There is now a country-wide Red Guide covering France , Austria , Benelux , Italy , Germany , Spain and Portugal , Switzerland and the UK and Ireland . The one covering France is still by far the most thorough. There is also a Red Guide covering the "Main Cities of Europe". The first guides for cities outside of Europe were published in 2005 for New York City and 2006 for San Francisco . Guides for Tokyo , Los Angeles and Las Vegas will be released in November 2007. RED AND GREEN GUIDES The Michelin Red Guide has historically had many more listings than its rivals, relying on an extensive system of symbols to describe each establishment in as little as two lines. Restaurants rated with a star also listed three specialities. Recently, however, very short summaries (2-3 lines) have been added for many establishments, for example 9,000 in France. These short summaries are written in the language of the country for which it is published, but the symbols are universal. The Red Guide uses anonymous inspections and does not charge for entries, unlike some restaurant and hotel guides which are in effect little more than advertising.1 Michelin claims to revisit establishments on average once every eighteen months in order to keep ratings up to date. There is a Green Guide for each French region and many countries, regions, and cities outside France. Most Green Guides on France are available in several languages. They include background information and an alphabetical section describing points of interest. Like the Red Guide, they use a three-star system for recommending sights: three stars, "worth the trip"; two stars, "worth a detour"; one star, "interesting". MICHELIN STARS AND OTHER RATINGS The guide's Restaurant Rating s using Michelin Stars are probably the most recognized and influential culinary ratings in western Europe. The guide awards one to three stars to a small number of restaurants of outstanding quality. Stars are awarded sparingly; for instance, in the UK and Ireland 2004 guide, out of 5,500 entries, there are 98 with one star ("a very good restaurant in its category"), 11 with two stars ("excellent cooking, worth a detour"), and only 3 with three stars ("exceptional cuisine, worth a special journey"). Michelin stars are taken very seriously in the restaurant business, where the addition or loss of a star can mean a difference in turnover of millions of Euro s. Some three-star restaurants are able to charge hundreds of euros for a meal on the strength of their reputation. Since 1955, the guide has also highlighted restaurants offering "good food at moderate prices", a feature now called "Bib Gourmand". They must have a menu priced at no more than £28 in the case of the UK, or €40 in Ireland. The name comes from Bib (Bibendum), the Michelin Man, Michelin's logo for over a century. The guide also recognizes many restaurants without any stars or Bib Gourmands. These restaurants are usually rated solely on the scale of "forks and knives". The forks and knives rating is given to all restaurants recognized in the guide, and range from one to five. One fork and knife being "Quite comfortable restaurant" and five being "Luxurious restaurant". If the forks and knives are colored red they designate the restaurant to be "pleasant" as well. The forks and knives scale is designated to speak of the overall comfortability and quality of the restaurant, however any listing in the guide requires a relatively high standard of the kitchen as well. Restaurants, independently of their other ratings in the guide, can also receive a number of other symbols next to their listing.
CONTROVERSY The Michelin Guides have been the centre of various controversies. Perhaps none too helpful has been the fact that the inspectors use secret criteria, unknown to even the most experienced chefs. Loiseau affair In February 2003 , Bernard Loiseau , a prominent French chef with a history of Bipolar Disorder , committed Suicide when his widely-admired restaurant ''Côte d'Or'' in Saulieu , Burgundy , was rumoured to be in danger of a downgrade by Michelin from three to two stars. However, most news reports attributed this suicide to a downgrade by the rival Gault Millau guide, the Michelin guide having stated he would not be downgraded. Allegations of lax inspection standards Pascal Rémy, a Michelin inspector, wrote a tell-all book in 2004 , claiming that Michelin had become extremely lax in its standards. He gave evidence that, though the guide claims to visit all 4,000 reviewed restaurants every 18 months in order to keep the guide up to standards, they are actually visited about every 3.5 years, unless a specific complaint had been made.2 Rémy was sacked. He brought a court case for unfair dismissal, which was unsuccessful. Michelin Red Guide: Cooked Story on "Brand Channel" includes discussion of Pascal Rémy case. Retrieved 11 October 2006 Accusations of bias As the Michelin Guide is published by a French company, some US food critics have denounced the rating system as inherently biased toward French cuisine. When the Michelin Guide released the first edition of the New York City guide, many American media sources, including The '' New York Times '', noted the complete omission of any stars for many otherwise highly reviewed restaurants, specifically Danny Meyer 's Union Square Cafe . They also noted that over half of the restaurants that received two or more stars served French Cuisine .3 Differing coverage The extent of the guide's coverage differs greatly between countries. Although criteria may be the same the guide only covers the largest cities and the very best of the restaurants available in some countries. The best covered country is naturally France, and therefore Paris alone has a much greater amount of Michelin-rated restaurants than many other countries altogether has. This has also led to the guide being considered "snobbish" in many countries where only the very best and most expensive star-rated restaurants are listed. FURTHER READING
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