The world's worst kept secret is now officially out: Japanese food is the best in the world. So says the newly released 2012 Michelin Guide, at least. The French authority on the world's best restaurants has endorsed Japan's dining scene like never before. The guide has awarded 29 of the country's restaurants the highest possible rating of three stars - eclipsing France, which now comes second with a mere 25 top-rated dining spots. From cheap conveyor-belt sushi joints to astronomically priced gastro-palaces such as the elite chain Nobu - the one in Atlantis, The Palm in Dubai is the city's most recognised Japanese restaurant - Japanese cuisine's international prestige and popularity no longer take second place to anyone's. In the Emirates alone, Japanese restaurants have been springing up all over the place in the past decade. Every hotel with any pretensions to luxury seems unfinished without a posing spot vending deluxe sushi - it's no surprise to hear that the new Rocco Forte Hotel Abu Dhabi will have just such a space when it opens any day now. Tori No Su, a top-of-the-range Japanese at the Jumeirah at Etihad Towers hotel that opened in Abu Dhabi yesterday, may not yet be ready for customers, but once it opens its doors, it might well become a serious challenger to Dubai's trendy Nobu and Zuma restaurants. Japanese producers have noticed the Middle East's Japanese food boom and have started targeting their products at the region especially. News came this spring that Japanese farmers are now producing a halal version of their most exquisite meat - tender, perfectly marbled wagyu beef. In a world where French food was for long the benchmark by which all culinary good taste was measured, Japanese eclipsing French cuisine is a shocking reversal, not least because the Michelin Guide is one of the great bastions of the French gastronomic tradition. Some commentators' spiteful claims that the guide's findings signal the death of French cuisine may seem premature - France's score is still impressive given that it has half Japan's population - but anyone with a pair of eyes and a working set of tastebuds could tell you that Japanese food has been taking over globally in recent years. But while Michelin's endorsement of Japan could hardly be more enthusiastic, is it possible that its top ranking for 2012 is just a case of the guide (which first covered Japan only two years ago) waking up to a level of quality that has always been out there? The Japanese food writer Kimiko Barber, who will host a Japanese cookery demonstration at the 30th annual Sharjah Book Fair on November 24, insists that Japan's current level of excellence is indeed something new. "When Japan opened up, the country was so hungry for anything western. After the bubble era of the 1980s ended, however, there was a reappraisal among Japanese about what was important, and people started looking around them for inspiration rather than chasing the next expensive international trend. "Part of the effect of this reappraisal was that many excellent authentic Japanese restaurants opened around the country." It's not just a case of excellent local cuisine - many Michelin stars have been awarded to Japanese restaurants selling foreign-inspired food as well. As Barber notes: "There is also excellent non-Japanese food in the country - you can even find things like very high-quality, delicate French patisserie. Very generally speaking, the level of Japanese imitations is often higher than that of Japanese food made in foreign countries. "We do take a lot of care with everything we really like - it's part of the obsessive nature of Japanese culture." While Japanese cuisine has been reaching new heights, France's gastronomic star has been falling slowly but steadily for some years. The original home of haute cuisine was once where the whole world looked for inspiration in matters culinary; now its restaurants aren't even the best in Europe. For the past decade, Spain - and more recently Scandinavia - have been the places to look for real inspiration. The sheer inventiveness of chefs such as El Bulli's Ferran Adria and Noma's René Redzepi make haute cuisine specialists such as France's Alain Ducasse look a little staid and corporate.
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