stevez wrote:JoelF wrote:PBS still gets a good show every once in a blue moon
This is my chance to put in a plug for my current new favorite cooking show, which happens to be on PBS on Saturdays. It's called Daisy Cooks. Daisy Martinez is a young, attractive New York born Puerto Rican woman who shows how to cook food with a Latino bent. Mostly, it's Puerto Rican favorites, but I have seen her do some Mexican and Cuban dishes as well. She cooks with many of the same sensibilities that I have, ie. she's not afraid to add some spice and heat to her recipes and doesn't seem to dumb things down for the Gringo audience. Daisy is not very full of herself, either. She has a pretty good sense of humor and it shows. I also love her NYC attitude.
Steve:
I'll agree with almost all of what you say except for the comment about Daisy being "young" -- no, I do not think of her as old but I suspect she belongs roughly to my generation and I'm afraid even the younger side of that isn't really 'young' anymore.
However young or old she be, though, yes, Daisy seems to be swell. I've only seen her show a few times but would really like to try to find a way to see it regularly (inconvenient time is the problem). All I've seen from her has been good: simple, delicous food clearly explained, with a minimum of the horseshit and disinformation that characterises FN programming... Plus, I love her devotion both to her father and the NYC Fire Department (my maternal grandfather was a highly decorated captain in that organisation, may I add with great pride). The Puerto Rican
mechado she made last week looked great... Maybe with continued viewing my positive impression may change a bit, but at least I feel drawn back to the show for something other than 'hoots' and maintaining my spleen-level...
And just before Daisy these Saturdays is the great Jacques Pepin...
These are precisely the kinds of shows that the Food Network should have but now does not. Unfortunately, as the allegedly excessively liberal PBS is pared down by an excessively not liberal government, the best of PBS is surely soon to go away in favour of more corporate informentaries, or whatever one calls their commerciaganda these days.
Bayless, Daisy M., Jacques Pepin, even the cooking in the real world series (I forget what it's actually called), all these are vastly superior to the entirety of that which is offered on the Food Network these days, at least with regard to serious cooking. On that score, Food Network, even with the size of its line-up and number of hours of broadcasting per week, gets in my book a 'D' and PBS, with all its limitations, gets a grade somewhere in the range of 'A-'.
In support of my claim here, I call attention to the case of Michael Chiarello, who has one of the better shows on FN these days with respect to the ratio between serious presentation of cooking to horseshit and hijinks. Even so, Chiarello's current show's ratio leans a little more toward the latter than it did when it was on PBS. But the real point here is that Chiarello was 'discovered' (i.e., first given a national profile) on PBS. The more recent 'discoveries' of the Food Network are such culinary frauds as Rachel Rae, Giada DeLaurentis, or the nincompoop they have recently touted as the next 'superstar' chef, the thoroughly inane and talentless Dave Lieberman.
On the other hand, Ming Tsai, who (I believe) got his start on FN, now has a show on PBS and his new show is - not surprisingly - even more focussed on cooking and more informative and well put together than his good FN show was. Ming was one of the last of the good, serious 'discoveries' that FN came up with.
Now, if only the corporate advocates in Washington can be stopped from pulling the funding...
Antonius
Typos fixed.
Last edited by
Antonius on July 16th, 2005, 11:54 am, edited 1 time in total.
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
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