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The French-born chef’s restaurant, Atelier Crenn, has been praised for its innovative and artistic dishes since it opened in 2011.
Atelier Crenn’s elevation from last year’s two-star status was unanimous among Michelin reviewers for its “consistently top-quality experience,” said Gwendal Poullennec, Michelin Guide’s international director.
???????? #French Chef @dominiquecrenn wins third @MichelinGuideSF Star ⭐️⭐️⭐️, for her modernist #SanFrancisco restaurant @ateliercrenn ! A first for a woman in America ????????! Congratulations ????????, ???? https://t.co/fIwzzCTGmP pic.twitter.com/fVFRd6teir— French consulate in SF (@FranceinSF) December 1, 2018
Crenn’s cuisine, he said, “displays a wonderful balance of grace, artistry, technical ability and taste.”
Crenn, whose small restaurant has only eight tables and offers a tasting menu for $335, is the fifth female chef currently in the world, helming a Michelin three-star establishment.
Other women who achieved this Michelin accolade are Carme Ruscalleda in Spain, Anne-Sophie Pic in France, Nadia Santini in Italy and Clare Smyth in Britain.
Atelier Crenn and Single Thread joined Benu, The French Laundry, Manresa, Quince, The Restaurant at Meadowood and Saison in Michelin’s top rating of San Francisco-area restaurants in its 2019 guide for their “exceptional cuisine, worth a special journey.”
“The talented couple behind this powerhouse project has shown consistent commitment to the highest standards of ingredient quality and exceptionally refined cuisine,” Poullennec said of Single Thread’s chef Kyle Connaughton and his wife and farmer, Katina Connaughton.
Michelin’s latest San Francisco guide will go on sale on Dec. 4.
Dining at #BarCrenn is a transportive experience where every morsel is more luxurious than the last. Congratulations on earning #onemichelinstar for the #michelinguidesf #michelinguide2019. @dominiquecrenn https://t.co/ykiiR8Nd3i— Michelin Guide (@MichelinGuideSF) November 30, 2018
For a second year in a row, San Francisco and its neighboring wine-producing regions of Napa and Sonoma have more three-star restaurants than New York City, which has five.
The Big Apple is still a top-notch global dining destination, according to Poullennec. “New York has a lot of diversity and overall has more star restaurants than San Francisco,” he said.
Michelin awarded stars to 76 New York City restaurants earlier this month, compared with 57 in the Bay Area.
In San Francisco, Coi lost a star and returned to Michelin’s two-star category for establishments with “excellent cuisine, worth a detour.” Other two-star San Francisco-area restaurants in the latest ranking include Acquerello, Baumé, Californios, Commis and Lazy Bear.
Five eateries made one-star debuts, bringing the total of 43 restaurants. Last year, there were 41 in this category that anonymous reviewers or “inspectors” agreed on their “high quality cooking, worth a stop.”
Bar Crenn, a wine bar that serves classic French dishes next door to Atelier Crenn, made the cut as did Birdsong, whose chef Christopher Beidorn worked at Atelier Crenn and Saison.
Madcap, Nico and Protégé each earned one star for the first time.
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