@RhoninFire Sure, the Japanese are wealthy and cultured, no surprise if they have plenty of Michelin Star restaurants in Japan. But how many of those are restaurants serving Japanese cuisine? How many are actually French or Italian restaurants, just in Japan? And contrariwise, I think ramen is one of the greatest kinds of Japanese food, but how many of those Michelin Star restaurants are ramen joints? Probably none, not expensive and sophisticated enough. There's a certain stratum of modern upscale food culture that weirdly doesn't seem to care much if the food actually, you know,
tastes good as long as it's done in a very high quality way, is innovative enough that their jaded tastes find it interesting, and is well presented.
What I was talking about is more the basic nature of the cuisine, before you start sinking a ton of dollars into it. So like, I like Greek food, but if you look at classic Greek cooking there isn't a lot of variety there. Almost every Greek restaurant is pretty much the same. You got your souvlaki, you got your roast lamb, you got your dolmades, generally you got your usual suspects and they're always spiced in pretty much the same way; for desserts you got maybe what, four or five traditional Greek desserts and that's it. It's not what I'd call a powerful cuisine; there's only so much you can do with it. Really tasty within those limitations, mind. Similarly with say Ukrainian cuisine--OK, I like perogies, I like sausage, but then what? Or if you look at Scandinavian cuisine, it's a bit more variable but still fairly one dimensional, plus it has horrible things that nobody from anywhere else would ever want to eat, like lutefisk.
But French cuisine has a ton of different stuff done with a ton of different flavourings and sauces and cooking techniques and most of it is good. And for a lot of techniques and kinds of things, the measure of "This is how you do it" is set by how the French do it. It's fundamentally a powerful, versatile cuisine. If you go to other countries and look at their top restaurants, half of them are actually either French restaurants explicitly or use French cooking techniques. If you go to a typical "fine dining" restaurant in North America which doesn't really specify that it's a particular nationality or kind of restaurant, it's basically French.
Japanese cuisine is much more powerful and versatile than Ukrainian or even Greek. But in my opinion it has distinct limitations. Take karaage, for instance--it's good enough, but there are other countries that do that kind of thing better. Teriyaki stuff, the Chinese generally do similar but better dishes. Plus the Japanese have weird fermented things like Natto, and extensive use of seaweed, and stuff where they deliberately make a flavour like fish that's gone stale and fishy, which most people from anywhere else wouldn't be into. Basically, they have a rather idiosyncratic taste, which is somewhat unsuited to having some reincarnated person introduce their stuff to people from other cultures and have them swoon over it. You don't generally see other countries imitating Japanese cooking techniques or flavours the way you see with French food.