Some responses.
Vervante –
"I just think that in the continuing corporatization of America, the masses who patronize a Starbucks seem like so many sheep to me"
"people spend way more for coffee that is no better than many other shops"
"and get with it attitude from frustrated writers who deign to serve you. "
"That was my one and only experience at S-Bucks (left without the coffee)."
Just to clarify, have you ever had their coffee? Because it sounds like your one Starbucks experience was to order a coffee and not actually receive it. If you've never actually tasted the coffee (and perhaps you have and I just misunderstood your post -- did you taste it and leave without it because you didn't like it), how do you know it's not any better than many other shops?
And a mere 1 visit and you're qualified to demean "the masses of sheep who patronize Starbucks?" Does that include, for example, Mike G, who posted about his Starbucks visit above? Bah Mike G, baaahhhhaahhhh I say.
"It's not snobbery; I just don't go for the Starbucks M-O."
Then why not just say "I don't go for Starbucks" and be done with it. The "sheeple" comment and all of the rest is completely unnecessary and in my opinion wholly counterproductive. Now maybe that stuff isn't snobbery, but other words I would use to describe it aren't as nice.
"And yes, there are local consequences when people flock to these highly-branded monoliths."
Fair enough. Though I note no one has pointed out Starbucks offers its employees (even very part-time ones) reasonable health care. I know people who have opted to work at Starbucks part-time instead of the local, independent shops precisely for this reason. And I also note others in this thread have pointed to situations where they prefer Starbucks to the local, non-monolith options. Big does not automatically equal bad.
And no, I am not affiliated with Starbucks in any way.
Edk –
If others have accused you of being a snob for being enthusiastic about something or even for just rejecting something, then I agree they are incorrect to do so. Enthusiasm and/or rejection does not amount to snobbery and I don't think I ever suggested such a thing. Mocking, however, or rejecting in a manner that does far more (and far worse) than express your individual preference, is a shame in my book. Again, I don't think myself immune from such things. But I sigh every time I see such behavior reinforced and even congratulated on lth. Why can't we just discuss the food without attacking or mocking people who happen to consume different items than you or me or anyone else involved in the discussion?
" So if we reject or, worse, mock, Starbucks, the Olive Garden, P.F. Chang's, Outback Steakhouse, Toby Keith, Christina Aguilera (and don't tell me she has a really good voice), Kenny G., Danielle Steele, Dan Brown, John Grisham, almost all Hollywood movies, Sex in the City and prefer Tacos del Pacifico (RIP), Casa de Samuel, Skylark, LTH, the Rainbo, Chet Baker, Buck Owens, Ted Leo, Lambchop, Alice Munroe, Raymond Carver, Michel Houllebeq (ok kind of a guilty pleasure), Ha Jin, Wang Kar Wei's movies OR WHATEVER we are snobs. Nonsense. It means we have taste. Not good necessarily good taste, but our own taste. One's taste does not make one a more or less valuable person but it does go some distance (but not the whole way) in making one an individual."
Preferring food A to B does not make you a snob, and I never said it does. Mocking people who don't prefer food A to B or who prefer food B to A, yes I think that makes you a snob. Maybe I'm misusing the word "snob" here. But again, other words I would use to describe this attitude are not as nice.
And again, it is not an attitude I am immune from. But it is one I try to avoid. It is not the sort of person I want to be and not the sort of food site I would prefer to visit and participate in.
Why do people who drink at Starbucks not have their own taste? Maybe they, like some others on this thread remember, think Starbucks tastes better than their other alternatives? And why does that mean any more than they just like the coffee at Starbucks?
"It seems to me that there is a strong current in the culture that frowns on this. We are constantly being sold the bland, banal and mediocre. That is fine as far it goes. The culture, however, seems to want us to accept this without question. If we don't we are not of the people. We are not nice. We are "snobs." I cannot accept this."
Just to clarify, I said no such thing. If you don't like Starbucks and want to drink something else, great, go for it. It's a free country and you are more than welcome to drink whatever coffee you want and eat whatever food you choose. Just as others are free to do so.
And of course you are free to mock people who happen to prefer P. F. Chang's to LTH (the restaurant). But I still think you're a snob to do so. Not because you have the preference, not because you are enthusiastic about the preference, not because you discuss why you prefer little three happiness to P.F. Chang's in minute and lengthy detail, but because you demean those who don't share your preference, absolutely yes I think that makes you a snob.
Antonius –
Fraudulent approach to Italian food aside (and that's a fair point – if Olive Garden is going to advertise any sort of authentic, representative of the actual Italian dining experience, they should be called to task if they come up short), I suspect we have very different understandings of the term "good food." I in no way think that qualities of goodness inhere in food in any sort qualitative way. And I know people who honest to goodness prefer Olive Garden's food to say, Merlo's. I don't share their tastes on these matters, and since I strongly prefer Merlo to Olive Garden I find it perplexing at times. But I don't think such people are mistaken in any way. Indeed, I don't think there is anything there for them to mistaken about. There simply is no fact of the matter there.
A related thought (in my brain anyway). The wine critic Robert Parker has insisted that when he assigns points to wines he is actually "seeing" qualities inherent in the wine itself. That Bordeaux just is a 94 point wine, in the same way that that rock has a certain density and that this book is a certain number of pages long. Parker, somewhat famously, is known for an amazing consistency in assigning points to wine. He has been given the same wine blind, at varying times (often years apart) and come up with the same points. He pretty clearly has an amazing taste memory and a freakishly consistent palate. But to me it is wrongheaded to think that Parker points are a quality of the wine itself. They are by all measures a very accurate representation of what Parker thinks about the wine. But nothing more.
I care about good food because I care about eating food that tastes good to me. I suspect you care about good food at least in part because you think certain dishes are not just more authentically, say, Italian, in a strictly descriptive way (which by the way is an area I have enjoyed reading about in your posts), but are normatively better. And I don't think it is possible for one dish to be normatively better than another. Which doesn't mean there isn't a lot to say about each dish of course.
"But these days, as EDK says, people are called snobs also just because they do have taste and are discriminating and refuse to go along with the popular and/or populist trend. That's silly and in some cases really just a reflection of the critic's awareness of and discomfort with his or her own ignorance. A sort of reverse snobism sometimes."
Just to clarify, I don't for a second think anyone is a snob for having tastes that run counter to popular culture. I don't think I ever said such a thing (and I realize you are not saying I did say so, but I just want to clarify). What bothers me is not at all "folks who care about knowing things and about reflecting critically on what they consume." But rather when folks who do eat certain foods outside the normal eating patterns of popular culture and who eat at restaurants not frequented by the average diner sit atop their lofty perch looking down at the silly masses who happen to not share their eating habits. And that is a sentiment that I think unfortunately crops up on a regular basis in lth. Certainly not every post, certainly not in every thread. But in to many posts, and in too many threads. And I wish it wouldn't. Because I think it makes lth a lesser food site.
I'm not saying lthers are eating what they eat so that they can be perceived as belonging to some sort of elite. I don't think that's the motivation. I'm saying that sometimes some posts have content generated on the mistaken assumption that they are coming from someone who does in fact belong to some sort of elite on the basis of their food and drink habits. And not an elite group who knows more about Chicago food than most people (because in that sense lth is surely an elite group of people), but an elite group because they know about good food in a way that others don't and in the way that Parker knows about how many points that wine really is.
Of course lth is free to do what it wants as a site. I don't pay a dime for the knowledge given freely and generously here. I'm just expressing a frustration. Disagree with it, delete it, ignore it, respond to it. Do as you will. I'll say no more on these matters and get back to thinking about my next meal.