Western Gastronomy: Commons, Heritages and Markets: Christian Barrère, Laboratory Regards, University of Reims, France
Western Gastronomy: Commons, Heritages and Markets: Christian Barrère, Laboratory Regards, University of Reims, France
Western Gastronomy: Commons, Heritages and Markets: Christian Barrère, Laboratory Regards, University of Reims, France
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Elster shown that the economic theory has to consider emotions: “Emotional experiences are important sources
of human satisfaction, we would expect economists to have thought about them a great deal…Economists, as we
know, have done nothing of the kind… To put it crudely, economists have totally neglected the most important
aspect of their subject matter” (Elster, 1996: 1386).
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how market and no-market processes cohabit or mix into hybrid modes of organisation – none
of which is exactly the cup of tea of standard economic analysis. Gastronomy cannot be
analysed by strict implementation of the standard microeconomic model, which postulates a
purely rational person, related to other individuals by market relations alone. The inputs and
outputs of gastronomy cannot be considered as exclusively economic resources, able to be
owned by individuals through market property rights. Besides markets and private properties,
commons, heritages and hybrid forms of property and use characterise the workings of the
gastronomic field.
A second connection links the role of the past (mainly via its legacy) with that of the
present (mainly via innovation and creativity). Because social norms and routines are
embedded within a historical context (Italian gastronomy being fundamentally different from
American gastronomy), the historical point of view is necessary to understanding the current
problems and evolution of gastronomy, and by including this historic perspective, we step
right away from the formalist approach of mainstream economics. Gastronomy should thus be
studied from the perspective of commons and heritages analysis, because this new framework
allows consideration of social, collective and past dimensions.
In this chapter we restrict ourselves to consideration of the institutional organisation of
western gastronomy from the point of view of economic theory. Gastronomy is only one part
of cuisine and foodways, yet it allows an accurate observation of its working,
We try to understand this hybrid organisation (which includes private property rights,
commons and heritages) and its evolution. We show that market dynamics drive the
development of the leading edge of gastronomy, and that heritages are what frame this
development, co-determining its path. In the recent period, the extension and intensification
of competition has led to hyper-sophistication of cooking and over-investment, undermining
the economic and social sustainability of the leading western model. The issue then becomes
the possibility of reviving western gastronomy by exploring its roots afresh and renewing the
relationship between elitist gastronomy (currently top artistic and scientific gastronomy) and
popular gastronomy - and by opening it up to other heritages.
The next point is dedicated to a consideration of the supremacy of collective
organisation and the role of the past in the foundation of gastronomy. The third point studies
the organisational characteristics of the leading western gastronomic model. In the fourth
section we consider the effects of the development of market relations on its organisation and
evolution, leading up to its present difficulties. The fifth and final section presents concluding
remarks on the limitations of the present leading model of gastronomy, and explores the
possibility of a popular gastronomy based on commons, including heritages.
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because they define the different uses of food (according to social conditions, status, age and
gender) that draw together different situations and different group (or social) positions: food
intended for the Gods cannot be the same as food for the people, food for dominant groups is
not the same as food for ordinary people, food for feasts and religious ceremonies is not the
same as everyday food. Food, culinary and gastronomic systems constitute sets that serve to
organise difference - structured sets.
Nutritional value could, at a stretch, be said to refer only to the individual, but the
same could not be said of food – upon which all of this confers a semiotic dimension that is
fundamentally dependant on social values and norms. People eat in every society, thus
developing cultural use of any potential foodstuff: not every good is good to eat, even if it has
nutritional characteristics, it has to be good to be thought of; plus, cultural norms such as the
distinction between le cru (the raw), le cuit (the cooked) and le pourri (the putrefied) serve to
classify foodstuffs and the different ways they are used (Levi-Strauss, 1964). This semiotic
principle remains determinant. For instance, Fischler (1993) argues that the present distinction
between edible and inedible varies from country to country and from one culinary culture to
another: in 42 cultures dog meat is commonly eaten; in many countries rat meat is much
appreciated; ants are cooked in Colombia, as are bees, wasps and cockroaches in China.
In the western world during the Middle Ages, food was thought of within the
paradigm of the Great Chain of Being. The universe was considered on the basis of a
hierarchical principle from earth to sky, from material to spiritual beings, from sin to
perfection, from the Devil to God. At the top, God, then angels, saints, kings, princes, nobles,
commoners, animals, plants, minerals. The same principle governed the hierarchy of food: at
the bottom, bulbs (garlic or onion) and roots (carrots, beets, or turnips), which were under the
ground; then vegetables whose leaves start from the root (salads, spinach); followed by
vegetables whose leaves start from the stem (peas, cabbage); then foodstuff located in the air
(cereal); then fruit coming from trees (pears have a strong value but strawberries, which are
on the ground, were looked down on); the birds, higher still, and so on. This ‘natural’ order
implied parallels between foods and eaters. Upper beings had to eat upper food while lower
beings ate lower food; for instance, peasants ate leek and onion but never peacock or swan –
while the reverse was true of aristocrats. Note that the present cuisine continues to name
certain foodstuffs ‘noble’ (caviar, lobster, etc.) and certain wines (such as the Bordeaux
Grands Crus Classés) Grands Vins – precisely to distinguish them from standard goods.
Moreover, certain social norms (mainly religious) have influenced the semiotic quality
of goods. Fish had high value because of its connection to Christ (a symbol of the first
Christians was the Greek word ἰχθύς for fish - an acronym of "Jesus Christ, Son of God,
Saviour"); and the same is true of cherries (a symbol of the holy blood) and pomegranates
(each pip a symbol of a drop of Christ’s blood). Apples, however, were bad food because of
their role in Original Sin; and fox was not eaten, while a lot of other animals were (rabbit,
hare, deer, boar, etc.) because the fox was the symbol of the Devil. The semiotic dimension of
food goods took on such importance because people thought God was speaking to them
through these signs based on resemblance and similitude (Foucault, 1966). Religious norms -
for instance the distinction between feast and fast days - are part and parcel of this complex
set of cultural and social meanings.
In the same way, the distinction between luxury and ordinary food, and between
standard and gastronomic cuisine, depends on food goods’ semiotic value. Major changes are
discernible over many years. In the 19th century, the captains of fishing boats on the Gironde
and Adour rivers in south-west France used to give their employees the catch of wild
sturgeon, as non-noble, unsaleable fish; employees would eat the fish, but only after feeding
the eggs to their pigs. Today these eggs constitute the caviar of Aquitaine - which is as
expensive as the Iranian product.
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Recent evolutions in west European attitudes towards horse meat reflect this cultural
and semiotic dimension of food: whereas, 50 years ago, eating horse meat was normal (and
often recommended for medical reasons), today most people consider this meat inedible,
because horses are too close to human beings to be transformed into food. As soon as
economists accept consideration of this semiotic dimension, they must also consider the social
dimension of food, which prevents them from starting the analysis with the study of the
purely individual functions of demand that are founded purely on individual tastes. Taste and
food attitudes result in the individual’s integration to a given community, in a given place and
at a given time.
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3) Heritages, commons and markets
Culinary cultures gather shared resources (recipes, ways of using natural resources and so on)
and these resources constitute commons. Oström’s (1990) study mainly concerned natural
resource commons — but this framework has also been used for cultural commons (Hess and
Oström, 2003). In this case, since the use of cultural resources is generally free of rivalry, the
problem is still more complex — because the efficiency question is about producing and
developing natural resources rather than avoiding waste and overuse (Madison, Frischmann
and Strandburg, 2010). But the notion of commons must be rigorously defined.
Oström (1990, 2006) distinguished Common-Pool Resources and Open Access
Resources, showing that their use could be managed by many different institutional rules.
Nevertheless, she fluctuated between a social and a technical definition of commons. On the
one hand she noted that commons were highly contextual, insisting that the context of their
institutional framework must be used in specifying different cases of commons - the devil is
in the detail, as she often said. On the other hand, she tried to link her analysis to mainstream
analysis by defining commons as a general category capable of being absorbed by the
traditional theory of public goods. Commons become a fourth category in the classification of
economic goods (or resources) according to their subtractability and exclusivity: private
goods (strong subtractability and easy exclusion), club goods (low subtractability and easy
exclusion), public goods (low subtractability and costly exclusion), and commons (strong
subtractability and costly exclusion) 2 . Commons, then, are resources held in common
according to technical characteristics - while other resources are held by clubs, by the state
and by private ownership. The relation between type of property and technical characteristics
(exclusivity and subtractability) derives from the constraint of minimising transaction costs;
for Oström, communities were often better managers of transaction costs than either market or
state.
As previously seen, in societies where market relations are either absent or
insignificant, culinary and gastronomic commons cannot be explained by a process of
reduction of transaction costs. Some commons analyses by the Oström team demonstrated -
contrary to the technical point of view - that their types of management derived from (often
rivalling) strategic choices and projects, themselves often not deriving from technical and
indisputable requirements. Moreover, culinary and gastronomic commons include resources
(recipes, knacks, suggestions of foodstuffs or meals, and so on), as well as the rules,
constraints, and taboos that organise food activity; these are a special kind of commons and
arise out of a social and cultural building of local communities and societies according to the
semiotic value of food, which connects the commons to the group’s identity in relation to other
groups, and expresses its specificity through collective idiosyncrasy (Di Giovine and Brulotte,
2014).
As the main elements of the culinary and gastronomic commons pass through time, by
a process of social and cultural transmission, and since they include structures (rules of
composition) and are connected to places, these commons constitute heritages that are defined
as sets “connected to a titular (individual or group) and expressing [their] specificity, …set[s]
historically instituted of assets built and transmitted by the past, material and immaterial
assets and institutions” (Barrère 2004: 116). The concept of heritage underlines the historical
and social dimension of culinary and gastronomic commons that determines their main
characteristics. These sets can be local, regional or national heritages, and are more or less
rigidly structured. The spatial dimension of heritage derives from the connection between
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The framework of commons was built to consider commons of natural resources but can include
cultural commons (Hess and Ostrom, 2003; Bertacchini et alii., 2012). In this case, as for gastronomy, the
efficiency criterion has to go beyond avoiding exhaustion or waste and towards their reproduction and extension
(Madison, Frischmann and Strandburg, 2010).
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heritage and communities. While a world set of shared gastronomic resources does exist, a
large part of these are strongly linked to local cultures and communities and belong to specific
heritages, to regional or local ways of cooking, largely dictating how dishes are made, how
flavours are blended, how textures are combined, and so on. The world set of gastronomic
commons collects shared resources worldwide: recipes, knowledge, know-how, and
organisation of meals, manners, and so on. This large commons includes different subsets that
are more or less specific - and thus, more or less compatible. For instance, for a long time,
western gastronomy borrowed spices and other condiments (though not indiscriminately)
from Asian gastronomies.
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regard to the positions of the different groups, their rights and powers, their relationships, the
relationship between individuals and society, etc.
The aristocratic paradigm of society conceived society as a set of two closed subsets,
aristocracy and people, radically distinct - the first having blue blood while the second had
only red. The corresponding paradigm of aristocratic luxury revolved around the idea that
good taste was specific to aristocracy - and thus that luxury goods should be reserved for it.
The vulgar people were incapable of appreciating luxury goods for which a taste had to be
acquired: “it would be as to throw pearls before swine”.
The vocabulary of aristocratic luxury expressed this relationship: Haute Couture,
Grande Cuisine or Haute Cuisine, Grands Vins (in the treatise of Carême two-thirds of the
dishes have names referencing the nobility - Lièvre à la Royale, for example). The aristocratic
product is exceptional in comparison to the everyday product, extraordinary in comparison to
the ordinary one - it is a ‘higher’ good marking the absolute superiority of aristocracy. This
distinction is primarily marked by the expensive nature of the product, the luxury and scarcity
of the raw materials (in the case of clothing: velvet, satins, gibes, embroidery, fur, etc.; in the
case of food: fine wines, ‘noble’ game - wild boar or stag but not rabbit). Even on
extraordinary occasions, popular consumption was different from aristocratic consumption:
aristocratic celebrations were not the same as village ones, and balls and dances were
different too - the popular banquet painted by Breughel is very different from the paintings of
court banquets.
The growing power of local and national Princes and Kings, and their enrichment,
within the context of the European Court culture (Elias, 1973) led to the constitution of
different aristocratic cuisines and gastronomies. During the 16th and 17th centuries French
gastronomy took the lead, for several reasons: the country had the biggest population in
Europe; it benefited from good natural conditions (a temperate climate and soil diversity that
allowed it to produce a broad variety of foodstuffs) - and the absolutist power of the King
meant that elites and wealth were concentrated at Versailles (whereas the regional Italian
courts remained smaller). Moreover, the English and Spanish courts, which could have been
rivals, were constrained by the development of different types of puritanism. The society of
Louis XIV’s Grand Siècle thus played an exceptional role in building, normalising and
exporting the classical model of aristocratic gastronomy, which constituted the foundation of
western gastronomic heritage.
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nowadays, throughout the world. Their transformation is effected by a highly-qualified
labour, in the context of lengthy preparations. As such, aristocratic cuisine is clearly very
different from popular cuisine. The cuisinier (chef) is defined in contrast to the cuisinière
(housewife) in exactly the same way as the grand couturier is defined in opposition to the
couturière (seamstress). This aristocratic gastronomic social model does make room for
individuals (mainly chefs) yet at the same time it defines both their function and the pattern of
their work. Aristocratic heritage extends this framing through time. Instead of stressing the
product, elitist cuisine is aestheticized, prioritising the presentation of the dish.
There are two main reasons for the export of the French model which thus became the
core of European aristocratic gastronomy:
- Its domination was connected to the domination of French culture during the siècle de
Louis XIV, constituting a French cultural patrimony and securing the reputation of French bon
goût (good taste).
- The journey made by the gastronomy and foodways through countries within top
aristocracy constituted a specific little world; many kings were supposed to have common
ancestors, and kings often married foreign princesses. This little world could then borrow
culinary and gastronomic innovations from the foreign courts. Certain sets of circumstances
even saw the development of ‘gastronomic fashions’.
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middle bourgeoisie wanted to stand out from ordinary people and live more comfortably,
periodically frequenting gastronomic restaurants. Other restaurants sought to capture this
clientele - and since the members of this bourgeoisie were often working, they offered a
euphemized version of the aristocratic (and now elitist) cuisine.
Competition and the search for profitability led to both rationalisation and
standardisation of the old aristocratic gastronomy. Aristocratic behaviour was characterised
by a distance from economic calculus and economic rationality. The development of market
logic implied an adaptation of aristocratic heritage, allowing costs and benefits to be taken
into consideration and building the cuisine’s rationality - to the detriment of the extravagant
sophistication of aristocratic cuisine. Creativity and novelty remained dominant - but
sophistication diminished. According to Parkhurst-Ferguson, Carême (1783-1833) achieved
“the reconfiguration of the aristocratic cuisine of the Ancien Régime into the elite and
assertively national cuisine of the nineteenth century” (Parkhurst-Ferguson, 2004: 10); he
reinvented cuisine by creating a coherent system of sauces, soups, pastries, cooked
vegetables, etc. He broke with the extravagance of court cuisine (henceforth too costly) yet
continued to draw inspiration from the old heritage of the aristocratic cuisine. In addition, he
developed the intellectualisation and scientification of cuisine. Instead of using traditional
recipes, preparation methods and routines, cooks sought to understand the ‘laws’ of cuisine,
the processes of transformation of inputs, and the mechanisms of taste.
Technological innovations were encouraged; cooking was defined as a professional
activity demanding specific and lengthy training, applying professional norms and routines
within the context of a rigid organisation (the brigade with its divisions, the sauciers, the
légumiers, the bakers, and so on). Plus, the type of organisation used by the elitist gastronomy
offered on the market, and professionally executed, gradually took it further from popular
gastronomy, which was mainly organised within the domestic arena.
A further aspect of the standardisation process was the selection made from within
other commons, coming from popular and regional cuisines. The powerful process of building
a national identity and developing central power against local powers leads to the definition of
a national cuisine - including some 'reconfigured' regional dishes and recipes, though others
were excluded as vulgar. Bourgeois cuisine was thus able to become a rationalised and
euphemized form of aristocratic cuisine, and to include certain elements of popular
gastronomy. A kind of continuum, in contrast to the old strong separation between aristocracy
and common people, developed from elitist gastronomy via bourgeois gastronomy to popular
gastronomy. It was a top-down continuum.
The Grand Restaurant, as the epitome of elitist gastronomy, constituted the ideal-type.
Its recipes showed off sophistication, creativity, and the fact that time had been lavished on
the food preparation. Every element was luxurious, including the crockery, glassware, and
tablecloths; the staff was large and competent. The restaurant presented a profusion of dishes
(mignardises, amuse-bouches, trous normands, etc.), offering very wide choice as well as
many complementary extras (famous wines, cigars and alcohols) – and doing so in a
sumptuous setting. Costs and prices were high - extremely high.
Two new factors further drove the organisation of western gastronomy along the lines
of the new elitist model – the latest incarnation of the aristocratic model. The fact that French
identity was not defined as a national typicality meant that the nation’s supremacy was all the
more successful. The French Enlightenment ushered in a new universalism based on reason.
What was good to eat for French people would also be good for other people. French 'culinary
imperialism' held, then, that the French knew what ‘good cuisine’ was, and thus could and
should pass it on to the rest of the world. Secondly, since Carême’s cuisine was no longer
empirical knowledge, now being defined rather as a scientific discipline based on technical
and professional learning, a coherent system of principles and applicative techniques:
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“Carême’s French cuisine is not tied to or rooted in a particular place” (Parkhurst-Ferguson,
2004: 71).
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implying a top-down process: from the famous, top restaurants with three stars to standard
restaurants, via a range of segments defined by decreasing prices and correspondingly
decreasing “quality”.
Experts and guides (mainly the Michelin-Red Guide) justify this model, defining
membership of each segment. They also contribute to the development of this model and the
corresponding segmentation in up-and-coming ‘culinary’ countries and cities (Spain, Italy,
Japan, London, New York, etc.), where gastronomic consumption is on the rise.
If French elitist restaurants are opening up throughout the world (Bocuse, Ducasse and
Robuchon have opened a lot of restaurants), native chefs have used applied the same
principles (in line with the interesting idea from Parkhurst-Ferguson that the French cuisine is
one of principles and techniques rather than of products) to develop new elitist cuisines.
Moreover, as in the leader-follower models, followers have had to over-invest in
innovation in order to challenge the innovative leader. They in turn have tended to develop an
increasingly creative and sophisticated cuisine.
An ionic example of this is the new Spanish creative cuisine, representing a strongly
strong challenge to French cuisine. Ferran Adrià (followed by numerous Spanish chefs)
embarked upon a creative bidding race, applying new technologies (based on liquid nitrogen
and centrifugation), inventing new textures, developing molecular cooking as a new semiotic
cooking style featuring dishes presented as ‘paintings’. Adrià’s claim to be an artist was
legitimated in 2007, when he was invited to the Documenta of Kassel.
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succession is very uncertain. When a son or a daughter steps into his shoes, consumers may
suppose some level of continuity. An alternative is, as in haute couture, transformation of the
griffe (the creator’s own name) into the trademark (as a guarantee of quality): everyone
knows, of course, that Alain Ducasse is not able to be simultaneously present at all eighteen
of his starred restaurants (indeed, he now states that he no longer cooks) and the same is true
of Gordon Ramsay, with his New York and Los Angeles establishments - but it is accepted
that they leave their restaurants in the capable hands of top-notch chefs (just as consumers
know that Christian Dior, who died in 1957, no longer creates dresses). Yet in gastronomy, as
elsewhere, establishing a trademark implies heavy investment, limiting this possibility to the
lucky few.
Observation of the situation in those countries in which the marketization of
gastronomy is most mature (such as the USA) reveals that a growing proportion of the profits
earned by top gastronomy are made outside the restaurant activity - through TV channels
dedicated to gastronomy and cuisine, for instance.
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aimed squarely at millions of potential consumers rather than remaining exclusively for the
elite, stimulating debate as well as mass demand for gastronomic information. This huge and
growing interest in gastronomy reflects a popular concern that derives from a mass people-
gastronomy relationship. A growing section of the population, even within the bourgeoisie, is
now beyond market elitist gastronomy and condemned to the pseudo-gastronomy supplied by
industrial cuisine groups. Ever higher prices erect an initial barrier. The concentrated
localisation of gastronomic restaurants is another. Furthermore, the growing gap between
professional and amateur cuisines - resulting from increasing sophistication and the race to
new technologies - cuts the ties that used to bind elitist, bourgeois and popular gastronomies.
Top gastronomy does not yet nourish the gastronomic commons that have been opened up to
all through mediation of the euphemization of bourgeois cuisine. It bears no more relation to
domestic cuisine than does a Formula One vehicle to a hatchback. As a result, more and more
people turn away from the present elitist gastronomy.
Beyond the western world, the west-dominant culture tends to impose this same model
of gastronomy - even in countries that have mainly developed popular gastronomies; this
leads to gastronomy being separate from the normal lifestyle. Is it then possible to imagine a
new development path for gastronomy, breaking with joint market-elitist gastronomy and
renewing by using the shared bases of gastronomy and cuisine? Are culinary and gastronomic
commons capable of re-forging a pluralist gastronomy that will allow its democratization?
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and mass consumption of gastronomy. The Michelin-Red Guide is also evolving, and has
created new awards: Bib for the French Red Guide, and “Small Plates”, selecting
establishments chosen for the originality of their menus, mood and service, in New York. The
emergence of this category reflects the growing popularity of restaurants providing
gastronomic quality at reasonable prices, and tends to illustrate the “massification” of the
gastronomic field. The same is true of Tokyo. Since 2011, Tokyo Michelin Guide has a new
pictogram indicating a starred restaurant offering a menu priced under 5,000 yen for lunch
and/or dinner. According to Michelin: “Value for money is one of five criteria [used] to select
star restaurants, and the new pictogram serves readers [by helping them] to find local eateries
at affordable prices”.
Moreover, western gastronomy is no longer the sole model of gastronomy, since
globalization is leading to the rediscovery of many different gastronomies, from Asia and
Latin America to the Arab world and Africa. The Old French model of gastronomy, based on
the leading role of the Grand Restaurant can therefore no longer lay claim to the organisation
of world gastronomy - and the rivalry between old and emerging cuisines is bound to also
affect the institutional form of consuming gastronomy. The globalization process mixes
cultures and heritages. Culinary heritages can be used beyond their areas of origin. Products,
sauces, spices and cooking methods are at everyone’s disposal, everywhere, and transport
costs are falling. Consumers are interested in experimentation; they are eager to encounter
new culinary heritages. Multiculturalism is growing, and world fusion cuisine is spreading,
drawing from culinary commons and heritages.
A gastronomic pluralism, based on unfettered access to culinary commons and
heritages, is able to knit a closer relationship between gastronomy and territory, leading to a
connection between gastronomic and local development, mainly for developing countries.
This does however imply recourse to strategy and public policy. Drawing on commons and
heritages alone is not enough for the development of a competitive gastronomy within the
global market. Some elements of the western model need to be kept, and developed: mainly
the idea that gastronomy must permanently create and move forward. A popular gastronomy,
based on local commons, has its place in the gastronomic field and can be mainly made by
amateurs. This can imply talent: some popular gastronomy dishes, even those drawn from
popular cuisine, were developed outside of the market in the domestic arena. Such dishes can
take a long time to cook and demand sophisticated preparation, and so relied on women’s
work being undervalued and held in low esteem. Nevertheless, commons and heritages can be
a basis for the development of new dishes through professional intervention that brings
creativity, technology and science into play. The individual talent of a grand chef plays a key
role in execution of the dishes as well as in the creation of new dishes and new ways of
cooking. Starred restaurants are obliged to maintain their role as innovators. Top gastronomy
(the two- and three- starred restaurant, for instance) has to develop new experiences,
techniques, ways of cooking and flavour combinations that demand professional competence
and talent. However, their results have to be useful to other areas of the gastronomic field, via
inclusion in the commons. This implies policy solutions designed to fight back against the
existing and growing divide between popular and bourgeois gastronomy, on the one hand and
elitist gastronomy on the other. Elitist gastronomy can function as a Formula One sector -
capable of sharing its production and building quality across the whole industry (the
gastronomic sector, in this case) and ruled either by the market, or by communities.
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References
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