The 101 Best Restaurants in America

The Daily Meal's 101 Best Restaurants In America
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"Best restaurant" lists are tricky. How can any sensible eater compare an iconic pizza parlor or the joint that serves that simply transcendent cheeseburger with the lapidary perfection of a French Laundry or the genre-bending inventiveness of a WD-50? On what terms is it possible to stack the culinary monuments of Manhattan, Chicago, or Los Angeles up against the really-very-good but necessarily more modest establishments of, say, Buellton or Murphysboro? Talk about apples and oranges.

And yet here we are offering a best restaurant list of our own. Which means that it's probably appropriate to explain exactly what this roster of eating places is supposed to be, and how we arrived at it.

The results were, well, thought-provoking. It probably didn't surprise anybody that Thomas Keller's superlative French Laundry in Napa Valley came out on top, but in a real coup his restaurant Per Se took the number two spot as well. It also might surprise a few people to find three barbecue places and two pizzerias outscoring pricey French restaurants run by Guy Savoy and Joël Robuchon -- or Katz's Delicatessen edging out WD-50.

Overall, New York beat out California in the top 10, garnering five spots. Taking a deeper look into the big winners, the more "experimental" chefs like Grant Achatz, Michel Richard and Jose Andres seem to be panelist favorites. What's America's favorite cuisine? It turns out American with French influence makes up about 50 percent of the highest rated restaurants.

You may quarrel with our results, quibble over the panel's choices; ask how we could call that dump a "best" or why we left out that temple of gastronomy. It would be astonishing if you didn't, in fact. We're not presenting objective truth here. In case you haven't noticed, there is no objective truth when it comes to taste in restaurants (or anything else).

Rather, think of this list as the Senate of Culinary Greatness in our country --

-- Colman Andrews, The Daily Meal

101 Best Restaurants in America
#1 The French Laundry, Yountville, Calif. (01 of10)
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How did a chef whose innovative restaurant in Manhattan failed and who headed west to cook in a downtown L.A. hotel suddenly emerge in the Napa Valley to create a restaurant to rival the great three-star establishments of rural France? Hard work and outsize talent, most probably. Taking over what had been a good but far simpler restaurant, chef Thomas Keller approached contemporary American food with French technique and his French Laundry established new standards for fine dining in this country.Recipe: Thomas Keller's Black Winter Truffle "Lasagna"
#2 Per Se, New York City(02 of10)
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Jonathan Benno was given a lot of press for being a great part of the success behind Per Se. He's moved on to the Lincoln to mixed reviews, but the reputation of Thomas Keller's triumphant New York return, Per Se, hasn't changed. It's still regarded as one of the best dining spots the city, and the country.Related: Tasting "New Australian" Cuisine at Per Se
#3 Le Bernadin, New York City(03 of10)
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Think Le Bernadin and you think accolades: Michelin, The New York Times, James Beard. Is it a little stuffy? Sure. But if cooking fish well is an art, then Chef Eric Ripert is a master. His contemporary French cuisine has led some to call this the world's best seafood.Recipe: Eric Ripert's Mussels with Tomato-Saffron Butter
#4 Daniel, New York City(04 of10)
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Daniel. This very grown-up restaurant on Manhattan's Upper East Side maintains standards of service and cuisine - French haute cuisine, very much an endangered species today - that hark back to an earlier era...But the cooking is up-to-date and really, really good.Related: Nouvelle Cuisine: The Next Big Thing?
#5 Alinea, Chicago, Ill. (05 of10)
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There's no question - Grant Achatz has taken the mantle as America's most creative chef. Forget his pedigree, which includes stints with Charlie Trotter, Thomas Keller, and Ferran Adria. At Alinea, Chef Achatz is America's leader when it comes to creativity on and off the plate.Related: 10 Optical Illusion Dishes
#6 Blue Hill Stone Barns, Pocantico Hills, N.Y.(06 of10)
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High-profile organo-loca-sustainavore Dan Barber has found the perfect home at Blue Hill Stone Barns, a beautiful restaurant in a bucolic but hard-working setting on a year-round farm and educational center. Most of what you eat here will be grown, raised, and/or processed on the property, and Barber's modern American food is full of color and flavor.Related: 8 Truly Farm-to-Table Restaurants
#7 Chez Panisse, Berkeley, Calif. (07 of10)
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Chez Panisse is, of course, where it all started, four decades ago this year. Before Chez Panisse, practically nobody in America served only fresh local foods and wrote menus according to the season, if not the day. Practically nobody cared like Alice Waters and her associates did. It has become fashionable to criticize this culinary icon as (take your pick) tired, irrelevant, pretentious-but the truth is that the food is still superb, both in the one-menu-a-night downstairs restaurant and the lively, diversified upstairs Cafe. A must.Related: America's 50 Most Powerful People in Food
#8 Jean Georges, New York City(08 of10)
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Jean-Georges is one of the few chefs in New York City with the distinction of four stars from The New York Times. At his eponymous restaurant in the Trump International Hotel and Tower, his classic French technique brokers old and new worlds, eschewing heavy sauces and embracing the spice and flavors of Asian cuisine.Related:Food Royalty: Famous Chef Families
#9 Citronelle, Washington, D.C.(09 of10)
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With his Santa Claus build, his amiable nature, and his obvious passion for his metier, Michel Richard sometimes looks like the happiest chef alive as he leans over a plate at Citronelle holding one of his imaginative, brilliantly executed specialties, smiling, putting on the finishing touches-a sight you can witness through the glass wall that encloses his sparkling kitchen at this D.C. classic. There are those who think Richard is the best contemporary French chef in America.Related: 8 Celebrity Chefs' Caribbean Outposts
#10 The Inn at Little Washington, Washington, Va. (10 of10)
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Patrick O'Connell's success sounds like the outline of a movie script. This self-taught chef opened this restaurant in 1978 in what was originally a garage in Washington, Va., an hour out of DC. He was allying with local farmers and artisanal producers long before it was fashionable. His partnership with co-founder, Reinhardt Lynch ended in 2007, but praise for The Inn at Little Washington has continued.Related:10 Excellent Hotels Run by Chefs

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