Beauner wrote:In the great cities of Europe (Paris, Vienna, Florence, etc.) one expects to pay the equivalent of $7 to $10 for a great pastry and happily does so.

rickster wrote:I noticed that there is now a new twitter feed specifically for the business, while the existing one debated in this thread will be purely for personal musings.
aschie30 wrote:Bringing this discussion full-circle, Shut Up Foodie! has now blogged about Natalie's Twitter feed after discovering it via LTHForum.
jimswside wrote:aschie30 wrote:Bringing this discussion full-circle, Shut Up Foodie! has now blogged about Natalie's Twitter feed after discovering it via LTHForum.
thanks for the link.
I guess its kind of refreshing, in this p.c. world, that this Natalie character is brave enough to voice her seeming dislike for everyone, and sprays her venom to all areas of society without prejudice.
Kennyz wrote:While a $7 PN cannolo is cheaper than a flight to Boston, I think it's worth noting that Modern Pastry - makers of the best cannoli this side of the Atlantic - charges $3.
Modern Pastry
257 Hanover Street
(617)523-3783


(I'm not sure whether Natalie and Nick were on vacation that weekend and a few days after? I stopped in again on Thursday of that week, without buying anything, and the selection seemed much the same).
There’s no such thing as high-end vs. inexpensive pastry. Pastry is a luxury artform, period. Inexpensive pastry is simply imitation pastry.
There’s no such thing as high-end vs. inexpensive pastry. Pastry is a luxury artform, period. Inexpensive pastry is simply imitation pastry.
All luxury artforms are expensive.
Shaggywillis wrote:All luxury artforms are expensive.
I can't think of one that is not.
jbw wrote:All pastry is luxury artform.
Shaggywillis wrote:All luxury artforms are expensive.
I can't think of one that is not.
Should we lock the thread now and get ahead of the game?JLenart wrote:Of course all of this could lead us down the road to a semantic nightmare.
ronnie_suburban wrote:When a person refers to their own cooking as an art form, it's bordering on pretension.
MJN wrote:Ruhlman's right that most cooking is a craft. His tact is very smart for tempering a world where seemingly every half-ass cook buys a box of chard at the farmer's market, sautees it and then shaves some white truffle over it and gets a mention in the local paper and thinks they are the next Daniel Boulud. However, cooking at its highest form, i.e. where you're not just doing variations on hundreds of years of knowledge, but actually pushing major progress and invoking deep emotional and intellectual responses, like say Ferran Adria, there's a strong argument to made for it as an art form.
Natalie's in an interesting position because she's harkening back to a time when all pastries were hand-made with real butter and fresh eggs and not just all-purpose flour, but a range of flours appropriate to the pastry at hand. Now that sounds a bit like craft, but when you consider that most bakeries use sheeters, laminaters, dough rollers, tons of white sugar, industrial shortenings, etc, she's actually being quite revolutionary. She's teaching us what it means to eat well again, and that is an art form.
Even if you don't buy any of that, what I know on a very basic level is that one of her desserts takes 6 hours to make just 20 pieces (the cassatine I believe). If you think you know marzipan, you don't, until you've tried this. Likewise if you drive by that bakery on their days off, it's not uncommon to see her and Nick working until 9 or 10 at night behind that closed door. They're not doing it because they're money grubbing or they have to do this. Both of them are rediculously talented and could easily find better ways to make money. But they believe in this. They believe we all deserve better food. The discipline to work toward that regularly and do it well means a whole lot to me. They might charge a lot, but considering the effort, it's not really a lot at all. It's not because she's trying to gouge you, but because the labor that went in to this thing was extraordinary. That commitment and attention to detail is most definitely an art form, if only because it exists in very few places these days.
Gypsy Boy wrote:Golly. The world turns. GB agrees with every single word (every one!) that MJN posts. Who'da thunk it? But the man is 100% correct, imho.
eatchicago wrote:Gypsy Boy wrote:Golly. The world turns. GB agrees with every single word (every one!) that MJN posts. Who'da thunk it? But the man is 100% correct, imho.
It is a compelling point and much of it is hard to disagree with, but at the end of the day the customers still have to ask themselves if they want to spend $7 on a cannoli, even just once.
JLenart wrote:eatchicago wrote:Gypsy Boy wrote:Golly. The world turns. GB agrees with every single word (every one!) that MJN posts. Who'da thunk it? But the man is 100% correct, imho.
It is a compelling point and much of it is hard to disagree with, but at the end of the day the customers still have to ask themselves if they want to spend $7 on a cannoli, even just once.
It's not the cost that get's me so much but moreso the seeming deep contempt she has for her clients.
jesteinf wrote:
Not all of her clients. Just the ones who are fat and don't like anal.
eatchicago wrote:Gypsy Boy wrote:Golly. The world turns. GB agrees with every single word (every one!) that MJN posts. Who'da thunk it? But the man is 100% correct, imho.
It is a compelling point and much of it is hard to disagree with, ....