Riding the el down to the office this morning, I zoned out for a while and my mind took some less-frequently-traveled paths. I can’t quite account for how I got where I ended up, but undoubtedly the Top Chef series (and, in particular, the polish sausage fiasco) got me wondering. One of the things that intrigues me about professional chefs…oh, hell, just about all good chefs…is their creativity. I know that if I were given a challenge a la Top Chef that I have serious doubts about my ability to perform on demand.
Let me put that a little more precisely: if I walked into a kitchen and someone said to me, here is your key ingredient (guess that sounds more like Iron Chef than Top Chef), make us dinner, I don’t think that I’d come up with some of the wonderfully creative things that I often see on Top Chef. Particularly given their extraordinary time constraints and (for many of them at least, their youth). Frankly, even if time weren’t a constraint, I don’t know that my imagination is really up to that kind of resourcefulness.
I’ve been cooking for myself (and others) for over 30 years and though I’ve made my share of excellent dinners, I don’t think any of them would be described as particularly inventive or surprising (in a positive way). Not that I’m complaining. I’m happy to have the skills I do and the opportunity to use them. But creativity will never be a hallmark of my cooking.
I enjoy meals of both types: the wildly imaginative, extraordinarily unexpected combinations and presentations as well as the classic types of meals. And everything in between. But that’s what got me thinking: where does that creativity come from? Do creative chefs learn that skill? Is it something that comes with time and familiarity with ingredients? Are you born with it?
I wouldn’t mind having just a little more of it; maybe it’s just a matter of spending more time thinking before doing. But I’m not so sure. What do you think?
Gypsy Boy
"I am not a glutton--I am an explorer of food." (Erma Bombeck)