This will be a moan. I’m blessed with a wife who’s a wonderful cook. She knows about flavours, combinations, health stuff and is far more creative than most of the restaurants in
I don’t know if it’s the same elsewhere but
in the UK ,
the TV is crammed with cookery programmes. AND FOR THE MOST PART I HATE THE
PREMISS THEY’RE ALL BASED ON. Sorry, I must calm down and explain. Let’s start
back in the late 80s. I made a series of educational programmes in France about
various aspects of French culture and one of them, naturally enough, focused on
food and leisure. At the time, we’d all at last moved out of that vile
‘nouvelle cuisine’ phase – you know the one, where a chef would cut a pea into
maybe 7 or 8 slices, arrange them in a crescent in the middle of a plate the
size of a basketball court, put 3 millimetres of something red near them and
charge you £17.99 for it. BUT …
…when I interviewed a lecturer in the
cookery school of an excellent college of commerce in Agen, where we’d just
eaten a delicious lunch cooked by the students, he insisted that ‘presentation’
was a very important part of the discipline they had to learn. And presentation
has come to prevail. So what do we get nowadays?
I could sort of understand it when they
turned radishes into miniature roses or created crenellated carrots or turned
beetroots into red spaghetti, but they’ve gone mad now. First it was towers of
things – the same basketball plate but now with a tube of layered stuff in the
middle with a sprig of flat parsley stuck in the top, or maybe a biscuit made
out of a thin slice of pig. But soon that wasn’t enough. They had first to
drizzle stuff, then drizzling was passé so they took ages making a
flavour-filled sauce then put a small dollop of it somewhere on the plate and
scraped it with a spoon to form a smear. This smear was neighbour to a minute
portion of salmon or rabbit or venison or lamb or Gloucester Old Spot which was
sliced into a small fan with some fragments of coloured things (one assumed
vegetables) arranged on and around it. Nearby, if you were lucky, might be a
fraction of a potato carved and teased into a curly or flat shape. And it could
even be dusted with something that might be an exotic spice but looked like
dandruff.
And then, pièce de résistance and horror of
horrors, worse than Bram Stoker’s vilest imaginings, like something out of a receptacle
in a hospital, some ingredients whipped up into FOAM. Why, oh why does it never
occur to these Michelin-starred chefs that their delicious, slaved-over foam
looks exactly like mucus?
But still the critics and the top chefs crave
good presentation. Bafflingly, people who’ve sweated their apprenticeships out
over years in hot kitchens spend hours arranging on plates things which are
going to be scooped up with a fork, chewed and swallowed. OK, I don’t want to
be served a plate with a grey lump on it, but I’m equally against risking being
called a vandal because my fork desecrates a work of art. Food can look good
without being made to resemble a Matisse.
I’m not a food philistine. I love eating,
and no, I don’t just want huge platefuls of any old thing. But I want the chefs
who prepare the stuff I eat (and for which I pay lumps of cash) to concentrate
on getting the flavours and combinations right rather than on turning my plate
into a Turner prize entry.
1 comment:
I agree with you on the skimpy works of art. I do enjoy cooking shows, though, except for the reality show where the chef screams at the contestants.I don't call that a cooking show.
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