It was refreshing to read something written by Bourdain where he's a bit more humble, less irrational, and a bit more subdued overall. If he could consistently conduct No Reservations and his general writing that way the food writing/producing community would be a much better place.tyrus wrote:Just an interesting tidbit I saw this morning on MSN.com http://tv.msn.com/culinary-picks-and-pans/
jpschust wrote:If he could consistently conduct No Reservations and his general writing that way the food writing/producing community would be a much better place.
I'm not suggesting he dilute his opinion, but rather he be more consistent and fair with it. For example, look at a number of the shows based in the US and watch him just critique the hell out of most things from the states and attempt to reinforce the view that americans are fat and lazy, and then watch him go to any number of foreign countries and just gush over food there. There's good food to be had everywhere, and a number of the shows reviewed in that piece are good, and he stepped up to the plate and said so, which I'm happy about.DeathByOrca wrote:jpschust wrote:If he could consistently conduct No Reservations and his general writing that way the food writing/producing community would be a much better place.
Why?
NR has been a lot tamer than ACT overall anyway, in my opinion. I'd be interested in your thoughts on how more dilution would help the particular community you mention. Less friction? More Sandra Lee powdered marinara?
Frankly, I was hoping for more unbridled vitriol and pot-stirring from him, if you will, although I appreciated the original link. It seemed like he's caving a bit to me.
MariaTheresa wrote:From Bourdain's discussion of "Spain . . . On the Road Again":
"And Mark Bittman, I don't think he adds value to anyone's TV show. He doesn't come off well on TV. Let's put it that way. I saw him make paella once on a TV show; he's been dead to me ever since. "
Good Lord, what did Bittman do to that paella? Now I really want to know.
MariaTheresa wrote:I watched the video. Bittman's "paella" contains oil, onion, rice, chicken broth, saffron, and shrimp. There is no other seasoning and none of the other customary paella ingredients. He cooks the shrimp with the rice for 15 minutes. It's more of a risotto gone terribly wrong -- or paella as made at the county hospital. If you ordered paella at a restaurant and were served this, you would be justified in feeling swindled, a the very least.
nr706 wrote:MariaTheresa wrote:I watched the video. Bittman's "paella" contains oil, onion, rice, chicken broth, saffron, and shrimp. There is no other seasoning and none of the other customary paella ingredients. He cooks the shrimp with the rice for 15 minutes. It's more of a risotto gone terribly wrong -- or paella as made at the county hospital. If you ordered paella at a restaurant and were served this, you would be justified in feeling swindled, a the very least.
You're way too kind to Bittman.
MariaTheresa wrote:I think I'm starting to understand some of the hostility toward Bittman's "minimalist" recipes. Some recipes have a lot of ingredients. If you reduce the number of ingredients and change the technique, you are not making the same dish.
Darren72 wrote:MariaTheresa wrote:I think I'm starting to understand some of the hostility toward Bittman's "minimalist" recipes. Some recipes have a lot of ingredients. If you reduce the number of ingredients and change the technique, you are not making the same dish.
Does he claim to be making the same dish?
Kennyz wrote:I'm with Darren. That recipe doesn't sound bad at all to me for a homemade, weeknight version of paella.
sundevilpeg wrote:I was shocked - shocked! - at his respectful comments regarding Martha Stewart. Son of a gun. He's either crushing on her - or he's scared to death of her, equally plausible scenarios.
I didn't find those comments about Martha Stewart shocking at all. In fact, I completely agree with them.
Odd Bourdain piece on MSN - some of it is old as the hills, and some is obviously brand new, like the unintentionally hilarious fawning over Marco Pierre White, the host of THE worst food-oriented show I've ever seen. Makes "Hell's Kitchen" look like "Masterpiece Theatre" - and is even worse than that Batali disaster, on which we totally concur. It is a parody, right? Right???
sundevilpeg wrote:Odd Bourdain piece on MSN - some of it is old as the hills, and some is obviously brand new, like the unintentionally hilarious fawning over Marco Pierre White, the host of THE worst food-oriented show I've ever seen. Makes "Hell's Kitchen" look like "Masterpiece Theatre" - and is even worse than that Batali disaster, on which we totally concur. It is a parody, right? Right???
Marco Pierre White is my favorite tv star right now. The way he stabs his finger at the camera and looks likes he ordering an assassination while uttering lines like, "he served me a dog's dinner"? I cannot get enough of it.
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Marco Pierre White is my favorite tv star right now. The way he stabs his finger at the camera and looks likes he ordering an assassination while uttering lines like, "he served me a dog's dinner"? I cannot get enough of it.
Unfortunately then, the show has just been canceled. No word on if/when the remaining episodes will be shown.