Bob S. wrote:If they've changed the summary to read "fruit drink" (and how much more misleading could they be...), they must be pretty eager to foil people who are keeping an eye out for that episode.
Interesting about the possible change in the summary...
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I saw the show and, I have to say, it is pretty funny... One could, were one so inclined, make a case for the scrunched face to be in reaction to the intense cold of a mouthful of shaved ice and not to any possible repulsive flavour contour of her creation, but nonetheless, she looks both pained and disgusted...
I hadn't put myself through a Giada episode in a while and seeing this one, I remembered many of the past episodes. I wonder to what degree she has input in the recipes. Is she just in effect an actress who presents recipes concocted by some group of FN behind-the-scene chefs? I know she is alleged to have gone to cooking school and such but that doesn't mean anything with regard to how the show is put together.
In any event, there is something decidedly fake about the whole shtick. The conceit is she's Italian and teaching people simple Italian cooking but in fact, beyond her name, there doesn't seem much Italian about her (yes -- I know her family background). Her pronunciation of Italian is atrocious, which leads me to believe she just grew up speaking English in her Southern California home, and her cooking aesthetics, at least as revealed through the recipes and commentary on the show, are purely Ameri-Cali-Yuppie. Her secret insights and confidential advice regarding Italian cooking that she shares with the audience are banalities of the first order, at least when they're not in fact wrong.
I'm not saying the recipes are all 'bad' -- and certainly, if people like them, that's good and no skin off my back -- but she is most certainly not teaching anybody very much -- if anything -- about actual Italian cooking. Pure Americana, with Yuppie/cooking school takes on French frippery tacked on.
Am I a curmudgeon? Yes, but that's not relevant here. This show is different packaging of the same product sold by Raychil Reh -- quick and easy cooking that is born of and caters to somewhat enlightened mainstream American tastes. There's nothing inherently wrong with that, nothing whatsoever, since the audience is American. But, whereas with RR, the advertising is honest, with Giada
la Testaccia, the advertising and packaging is completely false.
- Camera slowly pan across piazza in Rome; pigeons take off; zoom in on Giada seated at outdoor café, with pensive smile, stirring cup of coffee. Cut to kitchen set where Giada makes cinnamon breakfast rolls alla Pillsbury.
You too can eat cinnamon rolls for breakfast and pretend you're being oh-so-Italian... But some of us might prefer a dose of prune Danish.
Dopo o lampo ven o tron.
Antonius
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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Na sir is na seachain an cath.