logo
episode-header-image
Feb 2023
28m 46s

What's the big deal about fine dining?

Bbc World Service
About this episode

Noma – considered by some to be the ‘world’s best restaurant’ - has announced it will close in 2024. The news has prompted headlines around the world and a renewed discussion about the culture of fine dining, and whether it is sustainable as a business model.

In this programme, Ruth Alexander asks ‘what’s the big deal about fine dining?’. Is it an industry that exists only for the very wealthy, or do its innovations and trends affect how we all eat?

Ruth is joined by Pete Wells, restaurant critic for The New York Times, who ate at Noma in Copenhagen in 2018. Food historian Dr Rachel Rich at Leeds Beckett University in the UK talks about the history of fine dining, and the celebrity chefs of the 19th century. Chef Sarah Francis knows what it is like to be at the top of your game but want to do something different – in 2018 she and her partner gave back the Michelin star awarded to their restaurant The Checkers in Wales. And BBC World Service listeners and self-confessed ‘foodies’, Casey Griffiths in the UK and Pamela Garelick in Greece, tell Ruth about their best and worst fine dining experiences.

Presented by Ruth Alexander.

Produced by Beatrice Pickup.

Up next
Nov 20
The servers: The highs and lows of waiting on tables
<p>What are the highs and lows of waiting on tables? Ruth Alexander speaks to restaurateurs from London, New York and Mumbai to find out about the inner workings of one of the hardest jobs in the business. </p><p>Ruth hears from French celebrity Maitre D, Fred Siriex, Mumbai base ... Show More
26m 28s
Nov 13
Food by drones?
From pizza delivery to emergency aid, are autonomous aircraft the future? Ruth Alexander looks into whether drones are a feasible alternative to delivery drivers and traditional air drops. We hear how fast food and groceries are being delivered into suburban back gardens in Helsi ... Show More
31m 14s
Nov 6
Turmeric: The golden spice
Turmeric has been revered for thousands of years, not just for its mellow taste but for its golden colour and its supposed health giving properties. Rumella Dasgupta looks at its history, its uses in food and medicine and talks to scientists who have studied the spice. She finds ... Show More
26m 28s
Recommended Episodes
Mar 2023
Should Fine Dining Exist?
<p>The Copenhagen restaurant Noma has consistently topped lists of best restaurants in the world. People fly in from all over the globe to pay $500 per person for the hyperlocal tasting menus dreamed up by chef/owner Rene Redzepi. But a couple months ago, Redzepi announced the re ... Show More
30 m
Apr 2023
Restaurants
Ellen E Jones and Mark Kermode discuss how restaurants are portrayed throughout cinema and the small screen, from Big Night to Ratatouille. Mark is joined by film and TV journalist Roxana Hadadi to discuss an overview of the best depictions of restaurants on the silver screen and ... Show More
42m 44s
Sep 2023
Best Of: Why fine dining isn’t fine
The announcement last winter that the world’s top restaurant, Noma, will close in 2024, has spawned dozens of think pieces asking whether this is the end of fine dining. So this weekend, we went to the FT’s renowned food critic Tim Hayward to learn about the state of the industry ... Show More
25m 4s
Feb 2019
Who are the new generation shaking up the food system?
Who are the new voices pushing for change in the food system? Sheila Dillon hears from Alice Thompson of Social Bite, a charity that distributes over 100,000 hot drinks and meals to Scotland’s most vulnerable people every year from its sandwich shops and every Monday afternoon th ... Show More
28m 45s
Apr 2023
How Food Can Foster Tolerance
<p>Restaurateurs Asma Khan and Judy Joo share how food can bridge cultures and bring people together.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><br><p><strong>Background:</strong></p><br><p>Food may be a universal experience, but the culinary world has a long patriarchal history. Throughout their own tenur ... Show More
21m 47s
Feb 2022
Scotland, a Good Food Nation?
Can Scotland become a nation where people from every walk of life ‘take pride and pleasure in the food they produce, buy, cook, serve, and eat each day’? Sheila Dillon and her Scottish producer Robbie Armstrong assess the country’s health and food system, and find out what opport ... Show More
27m 50s
Jun 2020
Restaurants
In a moment of profound unrest and unprecedented chaos, Americans are wondering what comes next. For citizens and businesses alike, this is a period of questioning, rethinking and rebuilding -- sentiments that have been reflected in many conversations we've had over the last ten ... Show More
37m 15s
Dec 2023
10. Michelin Stars (Replay)
<p>Only the finest restaurants have a chance to bask in their glow. Sometimes, it’s a bit too bright. Zachary Crockett squints at the menu.</p><p> </p><ul><li><strong>SOURCES:</strong><ul><li><a href="https://www.thealineagroup.com/people">Nick Kokonas</a>, founder and co-owner o ... Show More
16m 58s
Oct 2022
928: Katie Dixon Head Chef/Owner Birdhouse Cafe
<p>Chef Katie Dixon is the Head Chef and owner at <a href= "https://birdhousecafe.net/">Birdhouse Cafe</a> in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. When she was a kid, Katie was served "love on a plate" by her grandmother at large family gatherings where food was always the center of the pro ... Show More
1h 38m
Mar 2024
Gail Simmons: Food Writer, Culinary Multi-Hyphenate, and Top Chef Judge
<p>Gail Simmons is the ultimate culinary multi-hyphenate. Though she’s perhaps best known for her 21-season tenure as judge on the competition reality show <em>Top Chef</em>, which debuts its latest season on March 20, she’s also made a lasting impact on so many other areas of fo ... Show More
58m 52s