New Yorkers make a fetish of being unimpressible. Reputations, however huge, built outside this city are uniformly met with the raised eyebrow of the show-us-what-you&rsquove-got-then persuasion. Gordon Ramsay, the world-class British chef, no longer the oxymoron it once was, arrived in New York with a firebrand&rsquos temperament, three stars from the Michelin Guide, that ultimate arbiter of affairs culinary, several hit television series, including one in the US, and a global purview that took in Dubai and Tokyo. The Michelin Guide&rsquos only three-starred restaurant in London is Ramsay&rsquos eponymous establishment in Chelsea by way of comparison, Paris has 10 three-starred restaurants and New York four, down to three now after Alain Ducasse&rsquos high-minded restaurant, Alain Ducasse at the Essex House, closed in January. Ramsay&rsquos New York venture was preceded by two seasons of a reality TV show called Hell&rsquos Kitchen, based on his successful British show of the same name, though the name, punning on a once notoriously grim, gritty Manhattan neighbourhood, has more resonance for a New York audience. So Ramsay arrived with considerable fanfare and his reception has been correspondingly gelid, or worse, lukewarm, tepid with indifference.