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National stereotypes die hard. Despite France?s poor showing in a recent list of the world?s top 10 restaurants, only one against the Britain?s four, the French still view England as a place with appalling weather and even worse sustenance.

National stereotypes die hard. Despite France?s poor showing in a recent list of the world?s top 10 restaurants, only one against the Britain?s four, the French still view England as a place with appalling weather and even worse sustenance.

When asked what they feared most about facing the English at Twickenham this year, the captain of the French rugby team replied ?the food?. France?s leading lingerie designer, Chantal Thomass, says she dreads going to her factory in Norfolk due to English cooking. ?I have to go on a diet when I get back to Paris,? she says. ?I blame the sandwiches. But what else is there to eat?? During the Jamie Oliver campaign for better school dinners, one French friend of mine suggested we needed a similar drive for the adult population. 

France, on the other hand, has always had a reputation for wonderful cuisine. The world?s greatest chefs  are traditionally French. The French attitude towards eating has always been revered, along with the markets and choice of fresh produce.

It is very easy to wander down to your local town and buy any number of delicacies depending on the season. I find there is no need to plan dinner more than half an hour in advance. You just go and see what?s around. ?I love the fact that what I eat is determined by the seasons here and what is good at the greengrocer?s next door to my house,? says Ken Hom, the celebrity chef, who has a home near Cahors.

The French custom of shopping for fresh food every day may be time-consuming, but there is something very satisfying about coming home with a basket filled with fresh goods that you eat straight away.

But try to go out for dinner in rural France and you will often be disappointed. Many restaurants are over-priced, second-rate, badly decorated and lit by searchlights. Added to which the choice is often limited. It seems the foodie revolution that has hit England in the last ten years has yet to reach rural France. Basically the choice is French food or more French food. Much of it is frozen. And even though France has this wonderful reputation for food, I have heard several people complain that they have had the worst meals of their lives here.

The chef and author John Burton-Race spent six months in south-western France researching his book and TV series, French Leave. ?During that time I drove 36,000 miles and ate in literally hundreds of restaurants,? he says. ?I would say maybe half a dozen were good. The rest were rubbish. If we served food like that in England we?d be shut down. They show no imagination and the choice is so limited. Basically it?s duck, duck, duck or duck.?

Burton-Race finds eating out in England a better option. ?I love France and if I can afford to I will probably end up there,? he says. ?But in terms of eating out we have far more variety, the quality is better and the prices are good. And it?s not even as if we have the luxury of fresh melons, asparagus and all the other wonderful fresh produce the French markets offer. I don?t think the French restaurateurs have any excuse. They don?t seem to have advanced at all since haute cuisine days.?

Burton-Race concedes that the low quality could in part be due to the 35 hour week which has led to increased costs. ?Restaurants are hiring 30% more staff because nobody is doing any work,? he says. A French friend of mine says the locals in rural France aren?t that discerning, so restaurants can get away with it. ?They?ve been eating under-cooked duck here for hundreds of years and can?t seem to get enough of it,? he says.

Laurent Pourcel, chef and co-founder of the two-Michelin-starred Jardin des Sens in Montpellier, defends French regional cuisine. ?We have always had great gastronomic areas in France but here in the Languedoc, for example, we were seen as a poor relation,? he says. ?But I think quality is finally improving throughout regional France.?

Pourcel, who recently opened a restaurant in Piccadilly called W? Sens, is not worried by France?s low standing in the top ten restaurants list. ?You have to be very wary of fads,? he says. ?Remember that French cuisine has been around for decades and has a lot of history behind it. It is here to stay. We will continue along our path and always be extremely important.?

Yet even he admits that eating out in London is more interesting than eating out in Paris.