Outrage as Michelin strips star from French culinary legend Paul Bocuse’s flagship restaurant
- Move comes two years after death of renowned chef, prompting anger and dismay from his peers
- Auberge du Pont de Collonges was oldest three-starred establishment in the world, having held accolade for more than 50 years

Two years after the death of renowned French chef Paul Bocuse, the Michelin Guide has stripped his flagship restaurant of the coveted three-star ranking it held for half a century, prompting anger and dismay from his culinary peers.
The Auberge du Pont de Collonges, near food-obsessed Lyon in southeast France, was the oldest three-starred restaurant in the world, having held the accolade since 1965.
The Michelin Guide said on Friday that the establishment “remained excellent but no longer at the level of three stars” and will have only two in the 2020 edition of the famous red book dubbed the “bible” of French cuisine.
“Michelin stars have to be earned, not inherited,” Michelin Guide boss Gwendal Poullennec told RTL broadcaster.
Bocuse’s family and restaurant team said they were “upset” by the decision, and celebrity chef Marc Veyrat, who recently sued the Michelin Guide over a lost third star, described the move as “pathetic”.