SEOUL, South Korea — When South Korean chef Jun Lee opened his restaurant SOIGNÉ in Seoul 13 years ago, explaining what fine dining meant was part of the job.
Customers would ask for à la carte items at his ''modern Seoul cuisine'' restaurant, which only serves a tasting menu, or question why a meal took so long.
Today Lee finds himself answering different questions — queries about flavor combinations, cooking techniques, and the philosophy behind his dishes.
''Many people either didn't know this culture existed or weren't particularly interested,'' said Lee, whose restaurant name means ''well-made'' in French. ''But now they're becoming interested, and when they come to dine, the questions they ask — the style of their questions — have more depth.''
Chefs and culinary experts say part of the shift is driven by Netflix's cooking competition series ''Culinary Class Wars,'' where Lee recently appeared in the second season.
The unscripted series pits acclaimed ''white spoon'' chefs — including Michelin-starred restaurateurs — against underdog ''black spoon'' challengers. The second season of ''Culinary Class Wars'' debuted at No. 1 on Netflix's Global Top 10 (Non-English TV) list in December, and has remained on the chart for five consecutive weeks. Netflix has officially confirmed a third season.
Hundreds of thousands of booking requests
Tei Yong, CEO of CATCHTABLE, South Korea's leading restaurant reservation platform, said the show's influence far exceeded entertainment value.