The chef Dominique Crenn has become the first woman in the United States to receive three stars from the Michelin Guide, its highest rating, for her modernist San Francisco restaurant Atelier Crenn.
The guide’s 2019 stars for the Bay Area were announced Thursday afternoon amid intense speculation that Ms. Crenn, who has already won many of the culinary world’s top prizes, might break that barrier.
The restaurant Single Thread, opened in Sonoma County just two years ago by the chef Kyle Connaughton and his wife, Katina Connaughton, also won three stars. That brings the number of three-star restaurants in the Bay Area to eight, more than in any other metropolitan area in the world except Paris and Tokyo. (New York City currently has five three-star restaurants.)
Kyle ConnaughtonCreditJason Henry for The New York Times
Michelin’s global network of anonymous inspectors lends its ratings a bit more ballast than those of newer entries like the World’s 50 Best Restaurants list and La Liste (which announced its worldwide rankings on Thursday).
But there is a growing sense in the culinary world that the kind of elaborate dining favored by Michelin — whether a four-hour kaiseki meal in Kyoto or a 40-course tasting menu in the Napa Valley — is dated and impractical. With so many competing lists and algorithms, along with constant waves of diners’ reviews on TripAdvisor, Yelp and other platforms, Michelin may be less relevant than ever before.
Still, for many chefs — especially French-born ones like Ms. Crenn — three Michelin stars remains the pinnacle of achievement in the field.
In a telephone interview, Ms. Crenn was breathless. “It’s amazing,” she said. “Amazing for my team at Bar Crenn and especially at Atelier Crenn. I’m humbled. We worked so hard for so many years and this is a dream. Today we’re celebrating, but tomorrow we go back to work.”
As to the distinction of being the first woman chef in the United States to earn three stars, she said: “It’s a platform I now have; I must inspire others and make a difference.”
At Single Thread, Mr. Connaughton broke away from a celebration with his staff to say: “We’re incredibly excited. We’re a group of 64 people who have put their passion into this, and I’m so proud of what they accomplished.”
Florence Fabricant contributed reporting.