I ate 3,000 meals for my βbest of London restaurantsβ list β and I hope you disagree with it | Jonathan Nunn
From pie-and-mash to the swank of a Michelin star, everyone has their own idea of whatβs βbestβ. Whatβs yours?
Jonathan Nunn is the author of London Feeds Itself
Almost 24 years ago, a small British food magazine called Restaurant assembled an all-star panel β made up of Gordon Ramsay, John Torode, Aldo Zilli and 65 other food guys β to adjudicate on the worldβs most stupid question: what is the best restaurant on the planet? It didnβt matter that no judge had been to all the restaurants on the shortlist, or that two of the judges happened to be Jeremy Clarkson and Roger Moore β what the editors of Restaurant understood is that people love a list, and if you order a group of restaurants from 50-1 and throw a party, people might take it seriously.
βThis could run and run,β the editors wrote in their intro, half hoping. They were right. Within two decades, The Worldβs 50 Best Restaurants had gone from what critic Jay Rayner described as a βterribly successful marketing exerciseβ to an insurgent alternative to the ossified Michelin Guide, solidifying the reputations of El Bulli, the Fat Duck and then Noma as the βworldβs best restaurantβ.
Jonathan Nunn is a food and city writer based in London who co-edits the magazine Vittles. He is the author of London Feeds Itself
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Β© Composite: Getty / Guardian Design

Β© Composite: Getty / Guardian Design

Β© Composite: Getty / Guardian Design