aschie30 wrote:But I agree that the super-focused elimination challenges do not allow them the opportunity to show off their chops. Hopefully they remedy that for next season.
I’m not so sure the prevalence of highly restrictive challenges isn’t a matter of perception.
All three seasons have followed pretty much the same format. The first third of the season is fairly open-ended, allowing the chefs to get their feet wet and to let us get to know them. The middle third bookends restaurant wars with a bunch of restrictive (sometimes ridiculously so) challenges. And the final third sets the cream of the crop loose.
I think it’s hard to see it right now since we’re right on the Act II / Act III transition and have just watched the two most restrictive episodes of the entire season, but in general there really haven’t been that many stupid challenges this season, and certainly I think there’s been vast improvement over the previous two seasons (for which I suspect we can credit LeAnn Wong and her new position as culinary consultant on the show). Grocery store aisle beats vending machine any day, and there’s been none of that “you have to shop and prep today, but your cooking equipment and utensils for tomorrow are a total mystery” crap.
I mean, take it episode by episode:
Episode 1
Quickfire – Improvised Amuse
Elimination – Exotic Proteins
Episode 2
Quickfire – Citrus
Elimination – Grilling / BBQ
Episode 3
Quickfire – Aquarium Seafood
Elimination – Reinvented Family Favorites
Episode 4
Quickfire – Gin Cocktail Pairings
Elimination – Upscale Trios
Episode 5
Quickfire – Frozen Pie Crust
Elimination – Soap Opera Latin Lunch
Episode 6
Quickfire – Culinary Bee
Elimination – Frozen Pastas
Episode 7
Quickfire – Coldstone Creamery
Elimination – Post-Bar Food
Episode 8
Quickfire – Creative Burgers
Elimination – Resturant Wars Part I
Episode 9
Quickfire – Mise en Place Race
Elimination – Restaurant Wars Part II
Episode 10
Quickfire – Grocery Store Aisle
Elimination – Tight Budget Hors d’Oeuvres
Episode 11
Quickfire – Blender Breakfast
Elimination – Airplane Food
So of those 22, the vast majority were extremely open-ended. I think the only highly restrictive and/or stupid challenges have been the improvised amuse, the frozen pie crust, the frozen pastas, the grocery store aisle and the airplane food. The Bombay Sapphire, Coldstone and Red Robin quickfires all had annoying product placements, but at their heart you had gin pairing, ice cream and creative burgers. Those are incredibly open-ended. Even the blender breakfast. They weren’t instructed to blend only, they were instructed to use the blender in some capacity. So I think what we’re really talking about is five highly-restrictive/dumb challenges out of 22. Which means that in more than three-quarters of the challenges thus far, the chefs have pretty much been free to do as they pleased.
Dominic Armato
Dining Critic
The Arizona Republic and
azcentral.com