JeffB wrote:I think that the modifications smack of korporate kitchen tastemaking, pan-Latino version, and definitely not the Puertoricanization of other cultures' dishes. For example, a traditional-thinking Puerto Rican cook would not put Mexican salsa and sour cream on Puerto Rican bean soup, or Puerto Rican anything else for that matter. I think that the obvious trend is to make non-Tex-Mex Latin American food more "familiar" by adding lowest-denominator cues such as chips n' salsa to everything.
Steve and Gary, you know I love you guys almost as much as Daisy. It was a small point. Put whatever you want in your beans, but by gum, don't post a recipe with the trappings of authenticity and call it Cuban, if it ain't.
I come to this discussion after it's pretty much over but I feel compelled to chime in, for the basic point Jeff is making is one that I very much agree with, have argued myself in the past and (especially in connexion with certain Italian dishes) have been taken to task for sometimes in rather ridiculous ways.
People tend to be far more willing to play fast and loose with recipes and traditional methods when they're making someone else's food and that's both normal and understandable and there's not much to say about it. And let's face it, is the prohibition against meat with black beans in Cuban cooking any stranger than the purist Chicagoan's horror for ketchup on a hot dog?
As I always say, everyone should make their food to their own tastes and enjoy it to the utmost, but it is wrong for someone in a position of teaching (as Daisy is or any of the tv chefs) to teach things that are wrong. When Batali puts garlic in his
matriciana or some other tv chef puts cream and garlic in their
carbonara and presents the recipe as if it is authentic -- i.e. true to the tradition, they are insulting all the people who really know and cherish that tradition. Is it too much to ask that food writers and television food personalities not pretend to be authorities about traditions they really don't know much about or, if they do know about them and prefer to deviate from tradition, that they briefly say how and why? The best ones -- e.g., Pépin and a few others -- do so and that's teaching.
Bon pro',
Antonius
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
________
Na sir is na seachain an cath.