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The Economics of Everyday Things

10. Michelin Stars

The Economics of Everyday Things

Freakonomics Network

Business

4.81.6K Ratings

🗓️ 2 February 2026

⏱️ 17 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Only the finest restaurants have a chance to bask in their glow. Sometimes, it’s a bit too bright. Zachary Crockett squints at the menu. This episode was originally published on July 16th, 2023.

Transcript

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0:00.0

When he was growing up, Charlie Mitchell was surrounded by food.

0:07.2

Both my grandmothers on each side are from the south.

0:09.8

So collard greens, mac and cheese, ribs, fried chicken, all those things.

0:14.8

I was just that grand kid who was always around and wanted to be in the kitchen and wanted to be in the mix.

0:19.8

At the age of 20, he landed his first job in a kitchen, a little bar and grill in Detroit.

0:26.0

It was a good place to learn the ropes, but he had bigger ambitions.

0:30.6

He wanted to work in a kitchen that valued discipline and professionalism.

0:34.9

So, he Googled best restaurants in Metro Detroit and found a fine dining

0:40.0

restaurant in the suburbs. When I walked in there, I was like, I knew it was the right place

0:44.0

because I was so uncomfortable, so intimidated. I didn't know nothing that was going on. They have

0:49.1

their own knives. It was intense, you know, and I'm like, okay, this is what I like.

0:53.7

Mitchell worked there for three years.

0:55.8

Then he eventually found his way to New York City, where he ascended the ranks at prestigious eateries.

1:01.6

In 2021, he was brought on as a co-owner and executive chef at Clover Hill, a restaurant in the Brooklyn Heights neighborhood.

1:09.7

It serves dishes like Spanish bluefin tuna,

1:13.3

Ocetra caviar, and dry-aged squab.

1:16.6

As Mitchell built Cloverhill,

1:18.5

he was driven by one aim,

1:20.8

to win a mark of excellence

1:22.4

that many chefs aspire to,

1:24.5

but very few attain.

1:30.2

My goal was to get three mission stars.

...

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