Bourbon wrote:I love JAM and am good friends with their staff but I just have to say, criticizing an omelet for being color free is like criticizing coffee for being hot or pasta being al dente. I have worked in one kitchen were cooking a perfect omelet is the first task given to you by the chef and he throws away every one until you finally get a beautiful, color free version to serve. This omelet, along with the one at Au Cheval are for me the best two textbook preparations in Chicago.
As for the rest, hey we all have our own opinions and yours are as good as mine, just couldn't let anyone think that a perfectly prepared omelet was somehow "wrong" in a technical sense.
Regards,
Bourbon
If you read my post carefully, you'd see that I wasn't criticizing that aspect of the omelet at all - I just noted it was very different from how I typically find omelets prepared. I cook a number of items sous vide at home, I understand (or think I understand) that Jam cooks some items sous vide, and was just wondering if that's what they're doing, at least in part. The criticism is that the omelet had some terrific ingredients that were all obscured by a very heavy tomato/pepper sauce.