There's big news on the Quebec restaurant scene with 9 Michelin Star awards in Quebec.
Michelin certainly has made a business of judging restaurant quality. They review 17,000 restaurants annually. There are 151 three-star restaurants globally. There are 26 Michelin-starred restaurants in Canada - 25 with one star and one restaurant with two stars.
Michelin ratings started out as a service offered by the tire company in 1889 for car owners in France - a guidebook for hotels.
Independently-reviewed restaurants were added in 1920 and stars emerged in 1926. A 3-star designation is the top level. Even today, the Michelin Guide supposedly does not make money. Instead, it is estimated that it "increases tire sales by 3%". And it sells Michelin Guides - about 250,000 a year. The Guide runs events and licenses the ranking system - e.g. TripAdvisor. And countries pay for coverage. That's what I found out when i initially asked Pearl Morisette about "star status" - their answer was they had to pay Michelin to make the trip and do the assessment. No promise of a star for that investment.
Most restaurants have 1 star. A star adds about 20% more traffic to the restaurant, 2 stars gets 40% more business and 3 stars gets 100% more business.
And how do the restaurants react after getting their star? The article I read says they increased pricing to signal new status, revamped menu language to more sophisticated terms and ingredients.
Would you like to be a Michelin guide "inspector?" You would eat around 250 anonymous meals a year which Michelin calls a table test. travel involves 150 nights in hotels, 600 total visits and 1,000 reports.
And then there are the chefs who "walk away" from their stars. Too much work, tired of making complex multi-course menus, get back to cooking simple dishes,
Get in the experts. Just over two weeks ago a tractor-trailer hauling $800,000 in dimes rolled over in an accident. Its contents spilled over the highway. This was northwest of Dallas, Texas. It was part of a fleet of trucks that moves cargo for the government. Some cargo.
I wondered how you pick up those 8,000,000 dimes. Were they just loose? Were they in rolls in boxes? They definitely came out of the truck loose. Check out the picture of them everywhere.
So was there now a fleet of people with metal detectors picking up dimes? There were crews who used shovels, brooms, industrial vacuums, street sweepers, as well as picking them up by hand. That was 14 hours of closed highway. I wonder how long the recovery went on for?
And what was the truck doing carrying "loose dimes" - doesn't that sound like they were just dumped into the truck? Seems like that was the case. I looked up how the Canadian Mint transports coins and I got the answer for the US:
How does the Mint distribute coins? The coins fall through a counting machine before they are dumped into bulk storage bags. All the bags are weighed and then stored until they travel to Federal Reserve Banks for distribution around the country.
So we know that's a story rather than a fact. I wondered how they decided to stop picking up the lost coins? It is unlikely that they collected all the dimes as it rained earlier in the day with a minor flood in the town.
The Globe and Mail had an article that used the term kleptocrat in relation to the U.S. president. And the New York Times has an article on the Trump's family increased wealth since he's taken office - $3 billion in three months.
The definition of a kleptocrat is a ruler who uses political power to steal his or her country's wealth. One can also use the spelling kleptocrat and that definition says a government official who is a thief or exploiter.
The synonyms for kleptarchy, kleptocracy, kleptocrat are thiefdom, corruption and graft. Also a corrupt and dishonest government characterized by greed. So a kleptocracy is where the ruling elite steals national resources.
"Klepto" has a lot of variations, it seems. If we look at kleptomaniac there are hundreds of synonyms.
Wikipedia tells me that kleptocracy is different from plutocracy - that's rule by the richest. It is different than oligarchy - that's rule by a small elite. The defining characteristic of kleptocracy is that corrupt politicians enrich themselves secretly outside the rule of law, through kickbacks, bribes and special favours from lobbyists and corporations.
What is notable here is that everyone knows about this - the New Republic described the Trump family as becoming $3 billion wealthier in the first three months of the Trump presidency. And that's just kleptocracy. What about all the other 'ocracies'?
I found an article in the Daily Kos which lists what it terms as Trumpocracy words. So many variations of ocracy are possible - This is an ambitious article - HERE.
Here's one I've not seen in the news articles so far and this time I am predicting it will turn up:
pathocracy - government by people with personality disorders.
I went to the TASC Tulip Festival in Niagara-on-the-Lake yesterday. It was vast with more than 3 million blooms of 175 varieties on 55 acres. It is a "farm" rather than a "festival". Watch where you step in the clay paths as they are bumpy. Their farm previously was in Fenwick so you can imagine that they are likely doubling the number of visitors being in Niagara-on-the-Lake.
There were likely a thousand people there yesterday - and that was on a Monday.
What distinguishes a tourist destination like this is that it is full of families - quite often 3 generations together. Everyone is smiling.
Flower events are perfect for our difficult political and social times.
I'll get to the Seventh and Fourth Avenue field this week - and then the tulips will all be over. Fleeting, don't you think?
Liberty of London is a luxury department store in London dating from 1875. The store's interior was made from the timbers from two ancient battle ships. The decks were used for the flooring. In all, there was 24,000 cubic feet of ship timbers.
My thoughts of Liberty are around its fabric print design and production. Liberty used the finest silks and cottons in the making of its beautiful floral designs. Liberty prints were readily available in Toronto in the 1970s into the 1980s. But those stores are now gone - Eaton's, Simpsons, and the Hudson's Bay. standalone fabric stores are gone from regular shopping places. There is a single Fabricland in St. Catharines on Welland Avenue, and that is unusual.
I went online to see if they still make the prints that I had worn. Yes, there is one of my favourites - poppy and daisy still available. It is part of Liberty Fabrics’ Classics collection which started in 1979, created to champion the most well-known and iconic designs from the Liberty archive all year around.
And the price? It is $62.00 a metre at 1.36m width. Ouch if you wanted to make anything to actually wear.
Here's are the Editor's Notes:
Poppy and Daisy is a fine-lined and meadowy layout, which has been part of the Liberty archive since the 1910s. An archetypal Liberty floral, it would have originally been a wood block print.
Our Tana Lawn™ cotton is a fabric built by obsession, perfected into a modern masterpiece of production through a bespoke process that has evolved over a century. Printed in our very own Liberty Printing Mill, located between Milan and Lake Como in northern Italy, Tana realises unmatchable fluidity with a silk-like touch, unique print quality and striking colour vibrancy. Machine washable and durable enough for daily wear, it can be used to create everything from simple separates to spectacular statement pieces.
Here's the screen print of the lovely design.
And this picture? A print from Liberty Village in Toronto.