Mulboyne wrote:Jack, if we take your premise as true, do also you think that a Japanese foodie can't have a full appreciation of French or Italian food? If they can, then at what point do you think it does become possible for a Frenchman to appreciate Japanese food? Or, indeed, a Frenchman to appreciate Italian food?
In any case, Michelin shouldn't be held up as any kind of definitive guide to Tokyo dining because its terms of reference are unlikely to suit everyone. Even those who are guided by it would grow weary of eating in starred restaurants every day. We all value food that wouldn't warrant a Michelin rating whether it be a mother's cooking, a barbecue on the beach or a thermos of soup on a cold night.
I think it's the same for others but with a caveat. If you are rating restaurants in Italy for Italians then its best to have Italian judges. Restaurants in Paris for French people then you need French judges. But like I said before, most western people would be predisposed to different kinds of western food anyway so you don't lose too much by having French or Americans judge Italian food. The same cannot be said of westerners' familiarity with Japanese food.