Christopher Gordon wrote:and what's up with cooks being unfamiliar with the taste of beer(or beer pairing)?
brandon_w wrote:I think a couple of the Chefs just didn't like beer, not to be confused with turning their noses upwards at beer. If you don't enjoy drinking something, why would you know how to cook food that goes good with it?
Just recently have a I found a few beers that I enjoy drinking, and it has taken years of trying, and putting some actual effort into it. For me, it's not a beverage that I just loved right away, I guess I'm just a hard liquor person.
Matt wrote:One question for those in the food biz -- what is up with referring to others by the honorific "Chef"? Is this a relatively new development? I guess I can kind of understand it in a kitchen setting as addressed to a superior or perhaps more generally to a chef held in high esteem, but it seems to be perhaps a bit overused and pretentious. I can see referring to judges as "judge" (even outside of the courtroom), to military officers by their rank, to physicians as doctors, etc. All of those seem to be based to some extent in more long-standing historical practice. But when Padma says "Thank you, Chef" after sending one of the contestants home, it just bothers me for some reason.
Christopher Gordon wrote:Correct me if I'm wrong: in the classical hierarchy of a professional kitchen there used to be one "chef." All others were delineated within that hierarchy and/or were referred to as "cooks."
JoelF wrote:Christopher Gordon wrote:Correct me if I'm wrong: in the classical hierarchy of a professional kitchen there used to be one "chef." All others were delineated within that hierarchy and/or were referred to as "cooks."
Yeah, that bugs me too. You can have more than one, sort of lieutenants to the captain: "Sous chef," sure, "executive chef," definitely, "chef de cuisine" absolutely. But at least one of the contestants on Top Chef is listed as "Line Chef" (cough sputter). What next: chef plongeurique? (pardon my mangling of French).
DML wrote:Regarding Ryan,
(or maybe too dense to understand what tailgating was all about)?
Regarding Ryan,
Nobody else was bothered by the fact the he didn't seem to care what he was cooking for (or maybe too dense to understand what tailgating was all about)?
Was he that completely out of touch with the rest of us that he couldn't figure out what a Chicago Bears crowd might like? This was almost by definition of meat and potato audience. This was not the Alinea crowd. You cook to your clients.
He made it pretty clear that he was going to cook the food that he wanted to cook, and if it didn't fit the situation, too bad for everyone.
He was given an assignment and he chose to do something else altogether. They were right to give him the boot.
rickster wrote:Regarding Ryan,
Nobody else was bothered by the fact the he didn't seem to care what he was cooking for (or maybe too dense to understand what tailgating was all about)?
Was he that completely out of touch with the rest of us that he couldn't figure out what a Chicago Bears crowd might like? This was almost by definition of meat and potato audience. This was not the Alinea crowd. You cook to your clients.
He made it pretty clear that he was going to cook the food that he wanted to cook, and if it didn't fit the situation, too bad for everyone.
He was given an assignment and he chose to do something else altogether. They were right to give him the boot.
However, were't all the chefs criticized a couple of weeks ago in the block party episode for cooking to their clients, or at least to what they thought their clients would like? I wonder if Ryan had this in mind when he chose to go in a different direction. Which is not to say he made a good choice of dishes.
brandon_w wrote:I think a couple of the Chefs just didn't like beer, not to be confused with turning their noses upwards at beer. If you don't enjoy drinking something, why would you know how to cook food that goes good with it?
earthlydesire wrote:Nikki is so overdue for the boot. It seems to me (if I recall correctly) that she has skated through several elimination rounds despite not really doing that much. She always seems to take the easy way out (like not making her own sausage -- which, frankly folks, really doesn't take that much time) -- and she has this annoying habit of always including a "little drink" to dress up her messes.
I think our final three will be Stephanie, Richard and Dale. Spike needs to be drug off by the hat police as soon as possible but Nikki...Nikki needs to go already. She's not doing the work. How could you NOT have enough peppers and onions for the judges? That's a rookie mistake, fit for a first elimination round. And I've had that WF sausage -- it's decent at best -- certainly not worthy of a show to find out who is the best chef in all the land. Nikki just strikes me as always being a day late and a dollar short on things -- she miscalculates (the mushrooms that looked like dog turds, the mac and cheese that was drier than the Sahara on a hot summer day, etc.) And i can't stand her hairdo.
But that's beside the point.
Go Stephanie!
Shananon
DML wrote:Regarding Ryan,
Nobody else was bothered by the fact the he didn't seem to care what he was cooking for (or maybe too dense to understand what tailgating was all about)?
Was he that completely out of touch with the rest of us that he couldn't figure out what a Chicago Bears crowd might like? This was almost by definition of meat and potato audience. This was not the Alinea crowd. You cook to your clients.
He made it pretty clear that he was going to cook the food that he wanted to cook, and if it didn't fit the situation, too bad for everyone.
He was given an assignment and he chose to do something else altogether. They were right to give him the boot.
jaybo wrote:I have no problem with Ryan getting the axe, but it absolutely amazes me that Nikki is still cooking. She is this season's Mikey, only moreso. Nikki has been HORRIBLE in three of the six elimination challenges so far. If she lasts more than another week or two, I'll be stunned.
jaybo wrote:I have no problem with Ryan getting the axe...
the sleeve wrote:After this last episode, I'm really rooting heavily against Jennifer winning anything at all from this point forward. Why? Because if I hear her say that she's "doing this for Zoi" one more time, I'm going to puke.
jaybo wrote:I've been saying from the start that Bravo wants to keep the male/female ratio fairly even, considering what happened last year (at the halfway point, there were 6 men and 2 women left).
jaybo wrote:BTW, in her blog entry this week, Lee Anne mentions that ALL OF THE ELIMINATED CHEFS were at the game as well, grilling standard hot dogs and hamburgers. Since Zoi was still around at that time, Jennifer's whining kind of pisses me off.
jaybo wrote:Richard is still the favorite by most to win, but when has the favorite (Lee Anne, Sam and Tre) actually taken the title? Never!
Dmnkly wrote:I realize I'm always in the non-conspiracy corner, but FWIW, Ted Allen recently said -- don't remember if it was his official Top Chef blog or the blog on his website -- that Bravo does, indeed, reserve the right to alter their decisions whenever and however they see fit, but Allen swears up and down that they haven't -- NOT ONCE, he emphasizes -- ever exercised that right in even the most subtle way. I stand by the theory that they have far more to lose than to gain by messing with the judging, now that the show is a hit, and that they wouldn't be stupid enough to risk killing the golden goose like that.
jaybo wrote:BTW, in her blog entry this week, Lee Anne mentions that ALL OF THE ELIMINATED CHEFS were at the game as well, grilling standard hot dogs and hamburgers. Since Zoi was still around at that time, Jennifer's whining kind of pisses me off.
Dmnkly wrote:Maybe they flew the eliminated chefs in just for that challenge since it was so high-profile and so many people would see it? Just a thought.
Dmnkly wrote:As a trailing thought, I don't know that I agree with this. It's hard to remember what you thought of each chef at a specific point in the season, but at roughly the midway mark of their respective seasons, I remember having Harold and Hung pegged as favorites.
So I guess what I'm saying is, maybe your favorites never win
jaybo wrote:Dmnkly wrote:I realize I'm always in the non-conspiracy corner, but FWIW, Ted Allen recently said -- don't remember if it was his official Top Chef blog or the blog on his website -- that Bravo does, indeed, reserve the right to alter their decisions whenever and however they see fit, but Allen swears up and down that they haven't -- NOT ONCE, he emphasizes -- ever exercised that right in even the most subtle way. I stand by the theory that they have far more to lose than to gain by messing with the judging, now that the show is a hit, and that they wouldn't be stupid enough to risk killing the golden goose like that.
Maybe not Bravo directly; perhaps in conjunction with the producers of the show. For instance, don't you think Zoi should have gotten the boot after that pasta salad?! As bad as Erik's corn dogs seemed to be, Zoi's salad seemed far worse. But then that would have meant 3 women eliminated right off the bat. Also, scales on a piece of fish is a much greater sin than an underseasoned carpaccio, IMO. Even Richard himself thought he was a goner. I find the judging this season notably more suspicious.
jaybo wrote:Also, scales on a piece of fish is a much greater sin than an underseasoned carpaccio, IMO. Even Richard himself thought he was a goner.