
The Best Chef Awards 2025 in Milan show how much culinary awards have changed: away from pure rankings and toward vision, impact, and global relevance. Rasmus Munk defends his title—and, together with Ana Roš and Himanshu Saini, sets new standards for what haute cuisine means today.
On October 2, 2025, Milan became the global epicenter of gastronomy for two days. The Best Chef Awards 2025 brought together hundreds of chefs, industry leaders, and media representatives from more than 60 countries – impressively demonstrating how international, diverse, and interconnected modern haute cuisine is today.
Once again, the focus was on a name that stands for the future of fine dining like no other: Rasmus Munk from The Alchemist in Copenhagen. With his second consecutive title as The Best Chef in the World, he confirms his status as one of the most influential chefs of our time. Munk thinks of gastronomy not as a menu, but as an overall experience – a combination of science, art, storytelling, and social reflection.
In second place is Ana Roš from the legendary Hiša Franko in Slovenia. She stands for a radically personal, terroir-driven cuisine that has catapulted Slovenia onto the international gourmet map. Third in the group is Himanshu Saini from Trèsind Studio in Dubai – a chef who is redefining Indian cuisine with modernist precision while preserving its cultural depth.
The Best Chef Awards were founded in 2015 by Cristian Gadau and Joanna Ślusarczyk with a clear vision: the focus should be on people, not restaurants. The awards recognize not only technique, but also attitude, creativity, influence, and vision.
Since 2024, the award has taken a radically new approach: instead of a linear ranking, the system uses the Knife Recognition System, which divides chefs into three performance levels:
In 2025, 787 chefs were honored, evaluated by 972 jurors, including 572 active chefs from 64 countries and 400 international industry experts. This system is considered one of the most inclusive evaluation models in the industry – it enables visibility far beyond the classic fine dining elite.
In addition to the main prizes, The Best Chef presents a series of thematic awards that demonstrate how broadly gastronomy is conceived today:
This makes it clear that it is no longer just about taste – but about impact, innovation, sustainability, and cultural relevance.
For restaurants, destinations, and brands, an award like The Best Chef is much more than a seal of prestige. It is a global marketing accelerator.
A placement or Knife award means:
Above all, the Best Chef system, with its global community and interactive map on the website, makes award-winning establishments visible to foodies, travelers, and professionals worldwide—an economic factor that should not be underestimated.
The Best Chef Awards 2025 impressively demonstrate that awards today are strategic tools, not purely vanity projects. They create visibility, define narratives, and provide guidance for the industry.
To be successful today, you need more than perfect craftsmanship. It's about storytelling, attitude, identity, and relevance—precisely the values that distinguish The Best Chef. For restaurateurs and hoteliers, this means that awards are not an end in themselves, but part of a smart brand and future strategy.
Milan 2025 has proven that the future of gastronomy is not elitist—it is global, diverse, courageous, and deeply human.
When the new France edition of the Michelin Guide is presented on March 16, 2026, the international gourmet scene will turn its attention to Monaco for the first time. The Principality will host the official ceremony – a first in the history of the restaurant guide. The venue will be the Grimaldi Forum Monaco, organized as part of a joint initiative between the Principality of Monaco and Monte-Carlo Société des Bains de Mer, which is acting as the exclusive partner.
It is more than a cookbook. Kanaan – Cooking without borders is a manifesto for understanding, compassion, and what good food has always been able to do: bring people together. Every day at the Kanaan restaurant in Berlin, Israeli Oz Ben David and Palestinian Jalil Dabit demonstrate that cuisine speaks a universal language – and that where there is cooking, understanding begins.
INFO
Kanaan – Cooking Without Borders
Authors: Oz Ben David, Jalil Dabit
Photography: Elissavet Patrikiou
Publisher: Südwest Verlag
Length: 192 pages
ISBN: 978-3-517-10429-4
Price: €28.00 (Germany) / €28.80 (Austria) / CHF 38.50
Las Vegas is known for its long nights, which makes places that do mornings really well all the more important. Between the Strip and downtown, there are a surprising number of spots where breakfast and coffee are not just an afterthought, but are deliberately celebrated. It’s these places that make all the difference: quiet, high-quality, and offering just the right amount of enjoyment before the day gets going.
The Best Chef Awards 2025 in Milan show how much culinary awards have changed: away from pure rankings and toward vision, impact, and global relevance. Rasmus Munk defends his title—and, together with Ana Roš and Himanshu Saini, sets new standards for what haute cuisine means today.