from Rouxbe - The Recipe to Better Cooking
Cook an entire meal by multi-tasking like a chef. Use our step-by-step video player and refer to helpful tips to create the perfect Thanksgiving meal.
Eat Different
November 12th, 2007 — article, recipe, reference, video
from Rouxbe - The Recipe to Better Cooking
Cook an entire meal by multi-tasking like a chef. Use our step-by-step video player and refer to helpful tips to create the perfect Thanksgiving meal.
October 10th, 2007 — article, food crimes, food politics
In 1988, the surgeon general, C. Everett Koop, proclaimed ice cream to a be public-health menace right up there with cigarettes. Alluding to his office’s famous 1964 report on the perils of smoking, Dr. Koop announced that the American diet was a problem of “comparable” magnitude, chiefly because of the high-fat foods that were causing coronary heart disease and other deadly ailments.
October 7th, 2007 — article, chefs, mexican
Legendary chef Jacques Pépin escapes to Playa del Carmen, Mexico, to watch the waves, drink chilled rosé and use his French technique to transform local ingredients into simple yet elegant recipes.
September 30th, 2007 — article, chefs, food tv
a PopMatters Television Feature
Before I started my research — two weeks of watching cooking series — I assumed that today’s tv cooks, even if they possessed Child’s technical prowess, wouldn’t be nearly so endearing. I was partly right. In fact, many vibrant personalities host cooking shows, as well as numerous exceptional culinary teachers. Few individuals are both.
September 27th, 2007 — article, la technique, molecular gastronomy
Gelatin filtration is a way to make sparklingly clear liquids that are intensely flavored with … well, whatever you like: meats, fruits, vegetables, cheeses, breads, any and all combinations of ingredients.
September 27th, 2007 — article, produce, recipe
One day I was in the kitchen rubbing salt onto some slices of fresh eggplant and tossing them in a colander. My husband paused to watch.”Putting lipstick on a pig, huh?” he said.
September 27th, 2007 — article, chefs
Notes of a Gastronome in The New Yorker
Gordon Ramsay, the only chef in London honored with three stars by the Guide Michelin, is not a monster. Ramsay, who is also the host of three uniquely adversarial in-your-face television shows (“Hell’s Kitchen” in the United States; “The F Word” and “Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares” in the United Kingdom), is not the most abusive person running a restaurant. And although a British undercover documentary once captured him in mid-torrent, profanities flowing in a diatribe directed at a young intern, earning Ramsay the title of one of the country’s “most unbearable bosses,” the people who work for him show a tenacious, irrational-seeming loyalty verging on love. But he does get angry, helplessly and uncontrollably angry—not an earthly anger but something darker—and has trouble knowing how to stop.
September 27th, 2007 — article, food writers
Or consider when I went to Macau to eat a Cantonese dog dinner for the Wall Street Journal. I wrote that “the meat had dark skin attached to it, was quite fatty and looked like pork … chewy, and had a very strong, though not disagreeable flavor.” Today’s foodie-writing fashion would demand that I confess that I’d never seen anything more repulsive than Rover’s skin. I’d need to itemize what happened to the tongue, brain, and genitalia of the—it turned out—stolen dog (and I’d need to go into grisly detail about the dog-napping itself, as well as its butchery).No, today’s market does not allow for food writing that aims to be allusive, playful, or elegantly simple. The prevailing style is like polenta or steel-cut oats: coarse.
September 27th, 2007 — article, chefs, food writers
via Epi Log: The latest in Food News, the Culinary Arts & Cooking
You obviously like food. And you must like reading. Hey, you’re just like me! But if you’re a true gastro-bibliophile, you’ll no doubt take issue with at least some of my picks below. Please, I invite you to beg to differ. What’s missing?
September 25th, 2007 — article, chefs, food tv
from the TV Review in the New York Times
Mr. Ramsay emerges as though he were Gwyneth Paltrow making an inspirational visit to a fat camp. Everyone around him just looks so shabby, seems to be so shabby. Peter’s, a family-run Italian restaurant in Babylon, is a mess because no one gets along. The eponymous Peter is a big clown of a guy who bleaches his teeth, squanders his money and seems to operate in an uninterrupted state of remorse over never having achieved his calling as an extra in “Goodfellas.”