Showing posts with label television. Show all posts
Showing posts with label television. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

I agree with Micheal Simon

On a aired episode of The Chew, 2/29/16, the topic of food destroyers and binge eating contest was brought up in the first segment. Chef Simon stated that he has never understood the phenomenon of eating more than a human can eat in a week choked down in a few minutes or the videos of people throwing or smashing food. I agree. I have never understood it either, add to that, the trend of folks making giant, over the top foods, from other foods, like taking 20 big macs and making a casserole from them. Yuck

This reminds me of the stories at the Romans before the fall of their society. We haven't yet began using vomitoriums but at this rate I would be surprised if it were to begin. This is the height of greed, excess and privilege. Only in a self centered community will you ever see such habits as their are too much famine in the world for this to make sense. Homelessness in America is the least talked about societal ill and with efforts, not to feed them and house them, but to install fixtures to detract homeless people from sleeping on bus stops and around buildings, I don't think it is at all reasonable to act in this manner. Yet, you can find many representations on social media depicting these acts.

In my opinion, the statement 'less is more' in this conversation is exactly right. We have so many people without and so many people with too much. Food waste is a big problem here. Every year we throw away an estimated 133 billion pounds of food. A lot of the waste happens in grocery retail outlets and in our own kitchens, as we may cook too much one day and not consume it before it spoils. Yet we have food stunts as I like to call them happening all the time. We have television series dedicated to this idea such as Man v. Food. Nothing succeeds like excess.

We humans think we are so clever and know so much but we are only gazing at the world through a peep hole wondering what it is we see. Hopefully the rise of obesity, heart disease, diabetes, hypertension and the lot, will wake up our society to eating to live instead of eating to excess.

http://www.travelchannel.com/shows/man-v-food
http://endhunger.org/food-waste/

Monday, February 15, 2016

TV Food

There isn't a television series or movie that does not have a food scene.  Why? Because so much of our lives revolves around food.

The romantic dinner date, a secret meeting in a diner, business lunch, the breakfast in bed, a wedding banquet, or the temper tantrum that flings food on the floor all are how we communicate with food in media. My biggest pet peeve is the old trope of the action movie chase through the restaurant kitchen with equipment being used as hurdles to slow down the bad guys. Who's gonna clean this up???? But this is my second most hated media food clique, the ruined the wedding cake stunt! I am sure that these images have added to my anxiety about delivering my wedding cakes to sites. Before I finish the set-up of your wedding cake, I am a nervous wreck, these projects are treated like my newborn child coming home from the hospital. After I take the pictures of your beauty in place on the table in your decorated room, I am done and exhausted. It's your newborn to protect after that, if your unsupervised child walks face first into the cake, I am not responsible and while I will be saddened by the news of its destruction, I have to be emotionally distant, otherwise I would never allow anyone to cut and serve them.

There are quite a few movies that focus on the life of the chef and therefore food becomes the "invisible" character in the cast, the MacGuffin that propels the story forward. Using the backdrop of a commercial kitchen often springs forth in dramas about the lead characters in the "will they, won't they" scenarios. Cinematic offerings such as Soul Food, 100 Foot Journey, Ratatouille, Eat Pray Love, Tortilla Soup, and many more all have a food center at the story, yet none of them have accurately depicted the life of a chef. Burnt is an attempt at the life of a chef and it is the second time that Bradley Cooper has played a chef in a movie. I have yet to see this depiction and looking forward to talking about this later.

Twenty four hour food television stations have brought about the new term "food porn". YouTube channels are filled with glutenous offerings that are over the top, beastly, recipes of

Viewers are no more likely to cook the foods they have been presented with on the broadcast and this type of television is no longer about food education. It is much more likely that the point of the shows are entertainment rather than education. Growing up, lots of us watched public television, this included the Great Chefs like Julia Child, Jacques Pipan, Justin Wilson, were the trailblazers that taught cuisine and technique to the masses of housewives and young children who were home during the day.

While media exposure of the profession can elevate and educate the public about this life we lead, these days it isn't much to separate its offerings from soap opera themes and game show audiences. Most of the offerings are just another style of reality competion show. Competition shows are abundant in food television. The Supermarket Sweep has birthed everything from  Chopped, Master Chef, and Great British Baking Show. Timed challenges of all sorts, build a bridge made of cereal treats and licorice, mystery boxes of foods to challenge the chefs, artistic wedding cake constructions using techniques such as fondant, molding chocolate, chocolate figurines, pulled sugar art, and the like.

The individual's culinary talent often takes a backseat to the selection of the right personality. Paula Deen, for example, first got her show due to her friendship with a producer of reality television programming. While he was correct that watching her was entertaining, her culinary accumin was spurrius at best. Most viewer have no idea how these sausages are made, no idea what has to go on behind the scenes in order to make a successful show of things. I was once called to test a recipe for a cooking show. Multiple outlets will be used to test a recipe for accuracy and quality. On set, a team of chefs do all the preparation and design so that the stat can come in a make magic on camera.

What a chef does is not what a celebrity chef does. When you become a brand, a bankable product, you begin down a path that takes you away from the production kitchen.  You can go from broadcast, to an interview, to a book signing, to a convention, all of which are designed to capitalize upon your cache. Watching television can broaden your understanding of how things work or what type or work a chef does. However, just like watching a medical show doesn't teach you how to be a doctor, watching a cooking show doesn't make you a chef.

Sunday, January 17, 2016

Food Movies

Bradley Cooper's Burnt, Helen Mirren's The Hundred-Foot Journey, Ratatouille, Adam Sandler's Spanglish (this one is mostly about the chef's personal life), Meryl Streep's Julie & Julia, Katherine Zeta-Jones' No Reservations, Tony Shalhoub's Big Night, the Asian movie Eat, Drink, Man, Woman or the American version with an all Hispanic cast Tortilla Soup (exactly the same plot), Johnny Depp's Chocolate, or one of my favorites Like Water for Chocolate (a Mexican Romance), no matter which of these you find tempting, these all represent strong food and culture influence.

As with many professions, such as police or doctors, the chef life and sometimes the production of foods can be high drama and perfect meat for feature films and television series. Lots of character development involve chef characters, Two Broke Girls the main characters open a cupcake business after a stint in culinary school, Micheal Ealy plays a chef in his upward cling within the industry in two movies Think Like a Man and Think Like a Man Too. Naturally, not all representations center around the food or the hard work of the chef, most of time the chef persona is merely a framework to build in the drama in the character's life. There have been some television series about chefs, and I don't mean the reality show cooking or baking competitions, but those are for another discussion.

Since food is a universal human experience and pursuit, its naturally a story that everyone can relate to no matter what language the story is told. You can change the city and the race of the actors, and the story will still hold up and be understood.

The story told by both the movie version or its inspired television series Soul Food communicates the saga of one African American extended family woven together by means of the tradition of Sunday dinner. No matter the challenges they face as individuals and individual households, they all come together through the bonds forged with the matriarchal teachings of a loving elder.

Sharing a tradition centered around shared food or having a peek into the cultures around food can lead an audience into interesting revelations and insights to cultural norms. Food procurement is in fact the root of civilization. Every group of people, tribes at the beginning, changed from foraging and hunting for food, being nomadic and following their hunted herds, to learning agriculture techniques that tied their lives to a particular geographical region. Once agriculture stabilized the lives of the tribes, the beginnings of barter and trade sprang out of a need to diversify available dietary resources. From trade came economies and money, tribes become villagers, and civilizations are formed. Therefore, food is the heart of all cultures and traditions, and much like mathematics, it speaks a universally understood language. The only movie that I have listed that I have yet to see is Burnt. Hopefully I will soon, and perhaps I will review it here.

No matter how strongly the movie or series tale is dependent upon food to communicate, few cinematic offerings are completely devoid of food scenes. Romances and romantic Comedies all have the ubiquitous date scene in a restaurant or at home dinner for two. Tons of family dramas come around the dinner table for holiday feasts and even some racy offerings, like 9 1/2 Weeks, have some food play scenes.

No matter what type of storytelling you like, you will be hard pressed to find one totally without a mentioning of food. Life is not sustainable with out food, the pursuit of food and the elevation of food to artistic levels is what chefs stride to accomplish.

Monday, January 11, 2016

Reality TV, the Celebrity Chef, and the Popularization of the Culinary Industry

The biggest remote influence upon my chef life and career was the nurturing image of Julia Childs coming into my home every weekend via PBS. She was later joined by greats like Justin Wilson, The Frugal Gourmet, and Jacques Pepin. I spent an endless number of days just enjoying the show, and marveling at their work, not even thinking about joining the brigade of the talented culinarians.

These titans gave a glimpse of a life unfamiliar to my Chicago West side experience. While I am the recipient of skills passed down in a long line of ancestral excellence in the kitchen, most of what I saw on the flickering screen was different than our dinning room fare. Since that time, many many more have stepped up to share culinary education and entertainment shows. As with just about anything in this world, there are pros and cons to this development. We now have a whole host of television food celebrities, a wide range of shows, and representations in many forms in the reality show format.

The Food Network, ABC, BBC America, CNBC, and many other television networks have some type of food show. Chopped, The Chew, Restaurant Startup, Kitchen Nightmare, Hell's Kitchen... you get the idea. As a chef in the industry, I have plenty of mixed feelings about this subject. I am here to tell you that now all of this glitter is gold. I love that there is much more exposure to the subject, however, not all that is seen on television is good, not all personalities are culinarians. So as a viewer who may not have had a lot of food training, how can you rely on what you have seen as 'reality' or not? It can be tricky.

When I announced that I wanted to enter culinary school, the imagery that was conjured was that of a cook or fry cook. None of the adults in my life understood what I wanted to embark upon, even still, all these years later, I still find other professionals that look down their noses at me when I am introduced as chef. There is still a misunderstanding of what chef means and when I say that my work is applied chemistry, with elements of art and construction, on top of all the other aspects of any other business such as P&L, ROI, HR requirements, and contract knowledge, for example, then the picture is a bit clearer.

So many shows are not good information or good example of what food business is all about. Many bakery related shows take over a weeks worth of taping and make it a half-hour or one hour show giving viewers a false since of the time needed to create the masterpieces and very little about the cost of these projects, for example. I find that often the savory cooking shows expose many of their viewers to food stuffs that are expensive or hard to find in their grocery stores leaving them unable to make the meals at home. I am not advocating that this isn't valid cooking but I am saying that it may lead to the viewer having a lack of confidence that they could produce a wonderful meal at home.

It was recently revealed that 2015 was the first year on record that American's spent more money in restaurants then in the grocery stores. This is not great news both from a nutritional point of view and socially. When we divorce ourselves from the skills of cooking and the control of our nutritional needs, we begin to put the most important aspect of our health, food intake, in the hands of others and corporations. A HORRIBLE IDEA.

I will talk more on the subject later, but my time is short today....

Peace