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Offline apskip

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #75 on: November 12, 2008, 12:18:56 PM »
Here's a New York Times article on top Chef 5 (premiering tonight at 10pm on BRAVO) which is highly provocative:

Trying to Stand the Heat in a Pressure Cooker
by Ginia Bellefante, 11/11/08

Last season on “Top Chef” we learned never to undercook beets. Undercooked beets will destroy you. As the show’s executioner in chief, Tom Colicchio, frigidly chided the cook who had inadvertently disrespected this root vegetable, “No one has ever heard of an al dente beet.” Though issued before the final verdict, the words felt ominous and settled.

So often on “Top Chef” (which begins its fifth season on Wednesday on Bravo), as in life, it is simple misjudgments that result in failure — the mistakes people make when they know better. Just when you think a contestant will be felled by a feat of crazed ambition — the deployment of liquid nitrogen, say, to make bacon ice cream — something more mundane humbles instead. People may lose it around Mile 12, even though you know they could really run the full marathon.

Overcooking a slab of pork belly might do you in, or letting a noodle get too gummy. Contestants, vying for $100,000 and coverage in Food & Wine, can be tossed off the kitchen island for undersalting, and it is painful to see this, as if you were watching someone bleed from a sports injury that could have been prevented with just a little padding.

I’m already feeling pangs for Ariane, a chef from Montclair, N.J., who is 41 and more experienced than many of the 16 other competitors this season, but who, during the first episode, gets into avoidable trouble with some faro.

Even more than “Project Runway,” “Top Chef,” in which success is so dependent on timing, reminds us that skill can become virtually meaningless in the face of an inability to manage performance anxiety. The series has been a hit among the people who go for high-priced cuts at the butcher, but not only because it is on Bravo, the network that so aggressively courts the rack-of-lamb demographic. The “Top Chef” kitchen also exquisitely mirrors a certain kind of creative workplace where the obsessively gifted flounder in the face of the coolly confident. The show is rife with inventive chokers, cooks who lack the stamina or emotional wherewithal to keep the flame under the magic burning. In them we see ourselves and a thousand promotions lost to the chumps who never permitted their heads to swivel.

This season “Top Chef” is set in New York, a city especially unkind to the inadequately secure. To symbolize the harsh realities of the environment, contestants must peel and dice apples in their first challenge, leaving no flesh on the skin. Ariane is a self-doubter — perhaps rightly; she isn’t a natural culinary improviser — so her prospects seem grim.

The Everyelitist, Mr. Colicchio tells Ariane, a suburban mother, that she should expand her epicurean repertory by traveling. He is at ease referring to a dish or culinary approach as “intellectual.” (Next time I encounter an interesting pork chop, I’ll ask it if it has read Bertrand Russell.)

In addition to the pretensions, there is xenophobic conflict brewing: two Americans with chips on their shoulders versus two Europeans, a Finland native named Stefan and an Italian-born chef named Fabio, who seems to be impersonating a Roberto Benigni impersonator.

Stefan imperiously goads his rivals into fights about emulsions, and obviously thinks Americans are too stupid to carry on a knowing conversation about vinaigrettes. Danny, a chef from Babylon on Long Island, who believes the world has failed to recognize his talents for far too long, is already taking offense.

And it is hard not to be right there with him. “Top Chef” promises more than a clash of personalities; it inspires patriotism.

TOP CHEF

Bravo, Wednesday nights at 10, Eastern and Pacific time; 9, Central time.

Produced for Bravo by Magical Elves. Dan Cutforth, Jane Lipsitz and Shauna Minoprio, executive producers for Magical Elves; Liz Cook, Gayle Gawlowski, Rich Buhrman and Fred Pichel, co-executive producers; Nan Strait, supervising producer; Steve Hryniewicz, director of photography.

WITH: Padma Lakshmi (host), Tom Colicchio (head judge and host), Toby Young (judge) and Gail Simmons (judge).


Where is new judge Toby Young when you need him? I understand he will mirror the "zap" approach of this author in his ooutspoken judging.
 
 
 


Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #76 on: November 12, 2008, 03:44:51 PM »


Hmmm interesting provocative indeed

This line here "carry on a knowing conversation about vinaigrettes" immediately reminded me of Season 1’s Stephen Asprinnio and his expertise in wine and his need to educate everyone lol I don’t know why but it brought back that bad memory  :lol:

Thanks for sharing apskip and enjoy the show, sooo looking forward to your thoughts after the show


Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #77 on: November 12, 2008, 04:19:09 PM »
An interview with Tom and Padma:

Top Chef’s Tom & Padma (Heart) New York’s Restaurant Scene

The chefs are packing up their knives and heading into the kitchen as Top Chef’s season 5 premieres tonight (Bravo, 10 p.m. ET). For the first time, New York will be the backdrop to all the cooking action –a prospect that makes the contestants and the judges excited. Both head judge Tom Colicchio and host Padma Lakshmi call New York home – and are actively involved in the city’s food landscape as food industry professionals, diners and yes, even volunteers. With Thanksgiving approaching, Colicchio is involved in the Cascade Feeding America program, dedicated to providing needy children with meals for the holiday. “Just the act of feeding people is . . . why I got into the business,” he explains. But back to the business at hand–the food competition–Colicchio and Lakshmi spoke to PEOPLE about what to expect now that the show has arrived in the Big Apple – and why they love eating in New York. –Brian Orloff

Everybody says this season is much harder than past seasons. Are the chefs just more accomplished or are the challenges harder or both?
Padma: We really try to make it interesting. We have really hardcore fans who are foodies themselves. We don’t want to repeat ourselves, but we want to keep some of the traditional elements of the challenges.
Tom: I think the caliber of the chefs has definitely improved overall. But I think also what happened is a lot of the contestants have seen three or four seasons of Top Chef, so they all have their own opinion of how it works. This season, it seemed they were always a little savvy about how to go about possibly winning. It’s kind of funny because in the end we don’t care about all that stuff. All we care about is food. We’re not privy to all the stuff that goes on behind the scenes.

You never judge based on people’s behavior in the kitchen?
Tom: Everyone assumes we see it and that’s how we judge. We don’t care. Last year, people were like, ‘I can’t believe you would take that from Lisa.’ Take what? I don’t care what she does. She can sit there with her arms folded all she wants.

How do you plan to take advantage of New York’s neighborhoods?
Padma: New York is such an expansive culinary landscape that it’s really hard to hit everything. I am sure there are going to be some people who said, “I can’t believe they didn’t do this.” That being said, I think we tried to do our best and highlight New York chefs and restaurants – but also street food and people on budgets. Everything from high to low.

Talk about what you love about New York’s culinary scene.
Tom: What makes New York such a great food town is its diversity. It’s such a demanding town that the chefs that are here . . . [are] on the top of their game. You can’t take a break here. You constantly have to reinvent yourself and what you do. Its friendly competition and its diversity are what makes New York such an exciting food town.

What are your favorite New York food spots?
Padma: I like Mamoun’s Falafel [in the West Village]. A falafel is good because it’s quick and you can hold it. I never have enough time. I totally grew up on street food. I love street food. I used to eat pretzels with mustard by Gracie Mansion because I grew up on the Upper East Side. What else? There’s a Dosa guy down in Washington Square Park, and he has a line around the block. The Shake Shack. I used to go to the Water Club and have blinis and caviar.

Link: http://tvwatch.people.com/2008/11/12/top-chefs-tom-padma-heart-new-yorks-restaurant-scene/

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #78 on: November 12, 2008, 04:37:34 PM »
An interesting article:

Big Apple-flavored 'Top Chef' is back



'Top Chef' contestants Hosea, Carla, Jamie and Leah work on dishes inspired by New York neighborhoods.

"Top Chef," which has evolved into a well-paced, no-nonsense show over its first four seasons, kicks off Season 5 Thursday night with more fast action and lots of food.

Based on the cast and tasks, it should have little trouble staying near the top of the food chain in the "reality show" world.

As an added bonus for New Yorkers, the new season takes place here. Wisely, it filmed during the summer, so while we look out the window at bare trees and chill winds, we can watch all these hopeful chefs gathering under bright, warm sunshine in the park.

While the creators never turn "Top Chef" into a travelogue, they smartly make the host city a major part of the action, not just the studio where food preparation takes place.

For the premiere episode, the 16 chefs draw knives labeled with the names of eight New York neighborhoods. Each chef then has to create a dish that reflects that neighborhood.

So even though the contestant from Colorado has never heard of Brighton Beach, he has to create something Russian and hope the judges find it better than whatever was created by the other chef who drew a Brighton Beach knife.

Happily, the contestants are all professionals. Tell them "Little Italy" and they've got a fairly good idea what would constitute a memorable Italian dish. The show's creators also realize that the food itself can be a star when it sounds or looks interesting, so the dishes themselves are not just an incidental prop. We get a look at pretty much every one.

The judges like a few, don't like a few others. Their critiques can be acidic, but even though two contestants are eliminated in the opening episode, no one is pounded into submission on the way out the door. Those who remain get some encouragement.

Just in general, the bar for getting onto "Top Chef" has been set high enough that the contestants aren't going to be fumbling around the kitchen and stumbling into the kind of disasters that so often mark, say, Gordon Ramsey shows.

That said, the contestants also have a sense of how to keep it lively for TV. The three gay entrants quickly bond, while others talk about how close they come to a meltdown when, say, the noodles came out gummy or the risotto half-raw.

In contrast to some "reality" shows where the question is whether anyone simply survives to the finish, "Top Chef" is a show where you wouldn't mind having almost any of these people fix your dinner. That may sound like a formula for disaster among these types of shows, but in reality, it works out well.

Link: http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/tv/2008/11/12/2008-11-12_big_appleflavored_top_chef_is_back.html

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #79 on: November 13, 2008, 01:18:45 AM »
An interesting article an interview with Padma:

Top Chef Host Padma Lakshmi's Food for Thought

Top Chef starts cookin' tonight with the premiere of season five.

I caught up with the reality show's sultry host Padma Lakshmi yesterday to talk hot dogs, the economy and her dreams of bringing the show to London.

Read on for all the—yeah, I'm gonna say it—dish…

Top Chef is in New York City this time around. How does that feel?

I was so excited to do it here. You know, every season I kept saying, "When are we going to do it in New York? When are we going to do it in New York?" And they kept saying, "Next season, next season." Finally, next season is this season.

Why is the city so special?

I really think it's the culinary capital of the world. I'm biased because I'm a New Yorker, but I think the greatest chefs are here and the best restaurants. And I'm not just talking only about the fine-dining restaurants. I'm talking about everything.

So, does that mean you eat hot dogs from hot-dog stands?

I do.

What do you like on them?

I like sauerkraut and mustard or relish and mustard.

What about Europe? When will Top Chef go overseas?

I'm dying to go to Europe. I don't know if it'll happen though...The airfares, the hotels and the dollar is so low against the pound and the euro.

What city would you pick?

Oh, gosh. It could be Rome. It could be Paris. But London's a great city, too. It's not that dissimilar from New York in that it's got all these great chefs but it also has an interesting mix of different ethnicities and restaurants...Obviously, countries like France and Italy have their own food traditions, as do Morocco and Spain, but if you're going to do a whole season in a city, I think the European city that I would go to first would be London.

Has the bad economy affected the tone of the show in terms of what the contestants are asked to prepare or how to prepare it?

That's a great question. You know, I think we have addressed it without knowing how timely it would become because, if you notice, a lot of our challenges have a really tight budget. We do it by making parameters of, you have this much money, but you have to feed this many people. So that's always a struggle. Every challenge is about balancing your food budget. Every single one.

Link: http://news.yahoo.com/s/eonline/20081112/en_tv_eo/68314


Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #80 on: November 13, 2008, 01:32:58 AM »

Tom Colicchio's Blog:

Home Sweet City

Welcome back to Top Chef! Thank you for tuning in for Season Five. I'm excited about the chefs who have assembled to compete this season. And welcome, too, to my hometown, New York City. To say that I'm glad we're here this season is an understatement. Aside from the obvious - staying put, being in my own home with my wife and son, not living out of suitcases - I'm also pleased to have this season of Top Chef happen in the city that is arguably the restaurant capital not only of the country but of the world.

Growing up a half-hour outside of New York, the city always had a pull for me, because I knew that that's where the food world was. But I saw that the city had one of two effects on those who grew up in its shadow: either you'd never go because you were too intimidated, or you felt the pull that I did, in which case the question was simply (and not so simply, as it turns out) "when." I faced this important question twice. I had been working in restaurants for almost nine years before I came to New York to work for the first time. My first job in the big city was at the Quilted Giraffe, where, after a scant four months, they gave me a sous-chef position. What a great intro to New York! I was working in what was widely considered one of the three top restaurants in the New York and, perhaps, the country. Coming off of that experience, my next move, logically, would have been to take a chef's position. But I chose to do so not in New York City, but back in New Jersey - I knew a chef should have a decidedly unique style and I wanted to develop and hone mine out of the spotlight. I worked in New Jersey for a year, then worked with Alfred Portale, and then traveled and did a stage in France. It was only all of these that I came back to New York and worked as a chef at Mondrian. This city has been my home ever since, and after all these years it still inspires both awe and love.

I believe that all of our competing chefs this season were simultaneously excited and intimidated about coming to New York. If you're working in Miami or Boulder, you always wonder, "Can I compete in New York?" I find it interesting, for example, that Fabio had never come to New York; he went straight from Italy to California ... perhaps in anticipation of coming here eventually. The question we all face and must decide for ourselves is "Am I happy to be a big fish in a small pond somewhere else ... or do I want to take a shot at the top?" New York draws the best from everywhere, all coming here trying to make it. And even those who don't make it to the top and who are toiling somewhere in the middle here in NYC are still operating at a level of professionalism and creativity above that at the top of the heap in many other places. Using acting as a metaphor, New York is not like Hollywood, where you might luck into a break. Here, you must either do something so unique and different as to be noteworthy, like David Chang did with Momofuku, or you must rise to the top through sheer excellence, like Jean-Georges Vongerichten, for example. There are several routes by which one might make it in New York, but one way or another, this city brings out the absolute best - and the worst - in everybody who comes and tries. The best, for obvious reasons. The worst, because there's something about coming here and being so driven that you tend to put blinders on and forget everything else the city has to offer, and you don't go out and experience it all. I speak from personal experience: I am so hyper-focused on Manhattan, for example, that it was a long time before I discovered the joys and wonders of Brighton Beach, of Ozone Park. Some of the best Chinese food in the world, for example, is in Queens. Did you know that there is a neighborhood in Queens that is the single most diverse neighborhood in the entire world? In its grade school at one point in recent years there were students speaking fifty-seven different languages and dialects. Fifty-seven. I didn't make that up - it's true. And the neighborhood is a thriving and harmonious community. Full of great food, I might add.

That community highlights what's amazing about New York. You are allowed to be your fullest self here, to bring everything with you, your food, your culture. You are encouraged not to assimilate. Mayor John Lindsay once said of the city he governed that "not only is New York the nation's melting pot, it is also the casserole, the chafing dish and the charcoal grill". He would have liked our first Elimination Challenge, which proved him right.

I loved this challenge, which was to go to a randomly assigned neighborhood such as Little Italy, Chinatown, Astoria or Brighton Beach, shop there, and then return to the Top Chef kitchen to create a meal inspired by what that neighborhood had to offer. I thought it was the perfect challenge to kick off this season. It gave us a chance to see the real New York, not just the rarified high-end restaurants that get all of the press.

And it gave us an opportunity to meet our Season Five chefs and get to know their personalities and particular styles. As you saw on the show tonight, some of the chefs were jazzed and motivated by the challenge; others were intimidated.

A word about that, if I may: I think this issue of inspiration vs. intimidation spoke not only to the chefs' individual personalities, but to their levels of experience as chefs, as well. I would love nothing better than to find a culinary student with such outsized talent that it preempts the need for experience, but I believe that a chef needs both. Remember, I wrote above that I spent nine years working with food before I came to New York. Not only working, but traveling, eating, experiencing food. A chef with more experience of the world and its food would not be intimidated by the thought of cooking with foods from another region, whether she or he had ever done so before. Rather, she or he would say "I understand this - it's still just cooking."

The point of our challenge was for the chefs to be inspired by new ingredients and then decide how to make them their own. In fact, that's what American cooking is about.

Hosea's dish is a good example of what I'm talking about. Hosea was clearly working with his Russian theme, serving smoked fish, caviar and potato pancakes, or latkes. (Each latke, by the way, was flavored to correspond with the sauce with which it was paired.) And yet Hosea managed to give us a clear sense of his own plating style; though it contained traditional Russian elements, the plate looked very modern. He didn't make the top three, but the dish was beautifully executed.

Let's contrast this with Patrick, still a culinary student, who simply lacks experience. Some things can't be learned in school - one must travel. This is why, for example, it's so important to do a stage if you're studying French food. There, you learn why; here, you just learn how. Food in Alsace is different than in Brittany or the Loire Valley. Similarly, as Jean-Georges pointed out, you can't just put bok choy on a plate and call it "Chinese Food." And what, if anything, did Patrick do to make that piece of salmon reflect Chinatown? He could have marinated it in plum wine, sesame oil, ginger...anything. There was nothing about the salmon that "spoke Chinese." This is why I believe a student just isn't ready to contend in this competition. Experience traveling, gaining familiarity with food and coming to understand it would have enabled Patrick to look at the unique items in Chinatown, put them together and make them his own.

One way Patrick might have been more successful would have been to think of one Chinese dish he loved - orange-flavored beef, for example, think about what was in that dish - beef cut thin, dipped in corn starch and fried; sauce with sezhuan peppers and burnt orange peel, and then play with how to take those flavors and turn them into a dish he could call his own. Hmmm ... perhaps take a short rib, braise it in orange and the chilis and some of the spices. What else could be brought in? What else would work with this? Chinese long beans, great in garlic and soy. OK. Maybe take the short-rib, mince it, and turn it into a wonton? Etc. I encourage chefs to take the idea of a full dish and rework it, making it your own, as Hosea did so successfully.

Like Hosea, Eugene's experience as a chef yielded him success in this Elimination Challenge. He didn't know anything about Indian food. He didn't have to - he's a smart enough cook, who cooked his way past the problem. Knowing how to cook lamb and how to cook curry were enough to get him through this challenge. Although Padma said that he created an authentic Indian dish, it is not traditionally made with rack of lamb. Alex used the knowledge of his own culture's cuisine and was excited to adapt it. Jamie took the idea of Greek ingredients - olives, eggplant puree - and then did her own play on a Greek Salad. It wasn't a Greek dish per se. It didn't have to be. The challenge was not to make an authentic dish but, rather, to use the neighborhood and foods for inspiration. If I take a vacation in Spain and eat around, it's almost impossible for me not to bring the ideas back and play with them. I find ingredients in my travels and then work them into what I do back home. If you're in a creative field, everything you do out in the world will find its expression in your work. Paul Simon traveled to Africa, to Brazil, and created albums that were fusions. His inspirations found their way into both the music and the lyrics in ways that were seamless, not forced.

By the way, while Patrick had the technique but not the inspiration, Ariane had the inspiration but not the technique. Her undercooking of the fava beans was such a rudimentary mistake that we just could not give her a pass on it. She knew it, too. I could all but see her kicking herself. I must add that I was a bit taken aback by her defense of her lack of knowledge of Mediterranean cuisine despite living so close to New York. She commented, basically, that she didn't need to explore because at home she had books to refer to were she faced with a particular cooking challenge. I have always taken to heart the words of Jacques Pepin, who wrote in La Technique not to read the book as a book, but, rather, to treat it as an apprenticeship. Don't just read ... DO. Cook your way through. In other words, gain experience.

So here we are, with chefs from diverse backgrounds and even diverse countries, all converging in New York for these next several weeks. We started them off with little apples in their first Quickfire Challenge. Now we'll see what the Big Apple has in store for each of them...

Link: http://www.bravotv.com/Top_Chef/season/5/blogs/index.php?blog=tom_colicchio

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #81 on: November 13, 2008, 01:47:55 AM »
Gail Simmons' Blog:

True to its Roots

Any epicurean-minded traveler who visits New York cannot help but be overwhelmed and excited at the chance to explore this vibrant, multicultural city. New York has always been considered the ultimate culinary mecca, and not just for its temples of haute cuisine. The blending and borrowing among cultures and communities over the last 200 years, and the history of immigration from every corner of the globe to all five boroughs, makes New York's edible landscape one of the most diverse in the world. Where else can you eat Polish, Indian, Italian, Chinese and Jamaican food in one day, all on a single subway line!

So it's of course fitting that Top Chef: New York begins with an Elimination Challenge requiring our contestants to investigate local markets in eight of New York's most famous ethnic neighborhoods, then asking them to create dishes inspired by what they've discovered. Pitting sets of two contestants against each other to determine whose dish ranks at the bottom of the challenge and whose comes out on top made our inaugural day in the Top Chef: New York kitchen all the more interesting. So too did the fact that our first Guest Judge of the season was none other than world-renowned chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten, himself a first-generation American, born and raised in Alsace. After spending time in some of the most respected kitchens in France, Chef Jean-Georges trained extensively in Asia before settling in New York. He now owns and operates more than a dozen exquisite restaurants stretching from Central Park South to Hong Kong and Shanghai. Suffice it to say that JG knows a thing or two about fusing exotic flavors.

Before we delve into the results of this challenge, I wanted to mention how shocked I was to learn that Padma and Tom had eliminated a contestant during the very first Quickfire! How heartless to tell someone to pack their knives and go before they have even unpacked in the first place. Poor Lauren, whom I never really met, suffered a sorry fate when she failed at her attempt to cook a dish for Tom using the perfect brunoise, from 15 apples she had been forced to peel by hand in the opening sequence. If nothing else, her swift exit made it clear from start that this will be no ordinary season, just as New York is no ordinary town.

I won't belabor the details of what I can only remember as one of the hottest days all summer (we had to break in between tasting every set of courses to cool down off- camera, for fear of practically passing out!). But I will tell you that in tasting the dishes prepared for us by the remaining 16 chefs, we discovered a few new and exciting flavor combinations ourselves. On the whole, the food we were served was really quite delicious. From Jamie's Deconstructed Greek Salad and Seared Black Bass to Jill's Jamaican Scallop Fritters, Hosea's Russian Trio of Smoked Fish, and Eugene's slam-dunk Indian Lamb, we were all pleasantly surprised at how creative they were, especially since a number of the chefs made it clear that the ethnic ingredients they used were unfamiliar to them until now.

The only true disappointments in terms one specific cuisine were the dishes from our Chinatown team. Both Patrick and Danny presented watered-down, uninspired dishes that did not do justice to the breadth of extraordinary Chinese food found in this city. When we tasted Patrick's Seared Salmon, Bok Choy and Black Rice Noodles, it was clear that his cooking did not measure up to that of his fellow contestants.

In contrast, Stefan's Middle Eastern Lamb Chops with Tabouli Salad and Beef Onion Skewer proved you don't have to be fluent in a given cuisine to understand the combinations of ingredients and techniques that make it work. His dish was modern in presentation but authentic in flavor, refined yet true to its roots ... just like New York itself.

Link: http://www.bravotv.com/Top_Chef/season/5/blogs/index.php?blog=gail_simmons

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #82 on: November 13, 2008, 02:02:57 AM »

Next week on TOP CHEF

Episode 2

SHOW YOUR CRAFT

In the second episode of "Top Chef: New York," the chef'testants find themselves at Tom's flagship restaurant, Craft.

They are challenged to cook and serve lunch to real customers – who may be their biggest critics yet.

Successful restaurateur, food expert and entertainment authority Donatella Arpaia serves as guest judge.

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #83 on: November 13, 2008, 02:21:42 AM »
An interesting article in EW:

17 Sauciest TV Chefs

TOM COLICCHIO


TV Show: Top Chef



As Tom Colicchio and company get ready to filet more would-be tastemakers on the new season of ''Top Chef,'' we're serving up the best small-screen cooks in the biz.

Chef Colicchio is one tough cookie. The owner of Craft restaurants (and a former owner and executive chef at Gramercy Tavern) was already a celebrated figure in New York City; now he's catapulted to national fame thanks to Top Chef, the Bravo gem that began in 2006. As a judge, Colicchio cuts out all the fat, but unlike Padma or Gail, his sage advice to the quivering contestants never feels cushioned or overly acerbic for dramatic effect. Perhaps his intuition is, as Goldilocks once said, ''Just right.'' So what if we never really see him cook.

Link: http://www.ew.com/ew/gallery/0,,20183500_5,00.html


Offline apskip

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #84 on: November 13, 2008, 07:59:39 PM »
TOP CHEF 5, episode 1

Chefs arrive in New York City and take a private ferry to Governor's Island. The QuickFire challenge starts with cutting 15 apples with only a knife. Some are quick, with Stefan the quickest. He wins immunity for finishing first.  The top 9 are exempt from further tasks on the QuickFire. The 8 slowest then have to compete to brunoise the apples to produce 2 cups of small apple cubes.  That exempts the 4 fastest, leaving Leah, Patrick, Lauren and Radhika. They then enter the third round, which is 20 minutes to make these apple-based dishes:

Lauren is judged by Tom to have the least tasty dish and she is eliminated, the first time ever in Top Chef history that there will be two eliminations in one episode. The remaining 16 chefs draw knives and are assigned with two to each of 8 areas of New York City. Each pair will compete against each other for qualification for the judging of the Winner to the chosen one and qualification for the judging of the Eliminee for the loser. Those pairings and areas are:
 
Brighton Beach(Russian) - Hosea vs. Carla
Long Island City (Middle Eastern) - Stefan vs. Ariane
Ozone Park (Latin) - Jeff vs. Fabio
Jamaican - Radhika vs. Jill
Little Italy - Leah vs. Melissa
Little India - Alec vs. Eugen
Astoria(Greek) Richard vs. Jamie
Chinatown - Patrick vs. Jamie

There also were major displays of two chefs with prominent tattoos all over the bodies, Eugene and Jamie. I am really glad that the Top Chef white chef jackets are worn almost always in competitions because the sight of those tatoos disgusts me.

The next morning teams go to designated markets appropriate for each cuisine. they buy their produce and meat, fish and whatever else their budget can afford. They then start cooking. The judges are Tom, Padma, and Gail (no surprises there) and Jean-Georges Vongerichten, one of the master chefs in the U.S. He has a lot to say and the other judges listen carefully. Here are the menus:
 
Patrick - Seared Salmon, Black Rice Noodles, Bok Choy;  Patrick, a CIA student, was over his head. He had major problems with those unfamiliar noodles.
Daniel - Ginger Chicken Salad, Bok Choy, Shiitake Mushrooms, Fried wontons
Hosea - Seafood Trio (Salmon, Trout, Turbot) w/ caviar, crème fraiche, apple chutney
Carla - smoked trout, Salmon Cakes w/ Sour Cream and Caviar over Potato Latkes
Jamie - Eggplant Puree, Seared Bass, Wild Arugula Salad
Richard - Lamb Slider w/ Orzo Feta pasta Salad
Leah - Farro Risotto, Seared Red Snapper, Mushrooms
Melissa - Rib-Eye w/ Arugula Salad, Fried Mushrooms and tomato Sauce
Alex - Grilled Lamb Chops, Savory Ragout w/ Basmati Rice
Eugene - Masala rubbed Lamb, Tzatziki w/Tandoori Glaze, Basmati Sweet Rice
Fabio - Mango and Jalapeno Demi-Glace Pork, Roasted Mushroom Arugula Salad
Jeff - Coffee Seared pork loin, smoked plantain w/black beans and rice
Jill - Macadamia crusted Scallops, Plantain Fritters, 3 Sauces
Radhika - Jerk rubbed halibut w/ ginger beer cocktail
Stefan - Lamb Chops w/ tabouli salad, Beef Skewers w/ Onions
Ariane - Curried Rack of Lamb, Farro Risotto, Dates w/Chick Peas
 
A number of comments are made as each pair is judged. Among them were one-note (to Patrick), minimum flavor (to Daniel) lamb undercooked and dry (to Richard), Stefan (excellent use of cinnamon, unusual in that type of savory dish), risotto a failure (to Ariane) and perfect example of rice and curds a traditional Indian dish (to Eugene). The judging resulted in the winner's group of Stefan, Eugene, Daniel, Hosea, Jamie, Leah, Jeff and Jill. The losers group was the other 8.  Stefan beat Eugene for Best. Patrick and Ariane were the ones considered for the elimination. There were many negative comments about both. Patrick was eliminated and Ariane stays (but probably not for long).

Someone announced that Gail would be taking a leave of absence after the 7th episode to get married. Tobey Young will replace her at that time. Ted Allen is gone permanently beacuse of a conflict with his Food Channel contract.

This was a frenetic and interesting episode. It looks like it will be an exciting season.
 

 


Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #85 on: November 13, 2008, 10:50:46 PM »

 :hearts: Thanks apskip for the great recap oh the good old days hehehe

Loved the premiere episode your soooo right looks like an exciting season yippie  :jumpy:

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #86 on: November 13, 2008, 10:52:57 PM »

BRAVO'S "TOP CHEF: NEW YORK" SIZZLES WITH HIGHEST RATED PREMIERE EVER

Published: November 13, 2008

Press Release

BRAVO'S "TOP CHEF: NEW YORK" SIZZLES WITH HIGHEST RATED PREMIERE EVER, UP DOUBLE DIGITS ACROSS ALL DEMOGRAPHICS

"The Real Housewives Of Atlanta" Continues Ratings Growth With Season Highs Across All Key Demos

NEW YORK – November 13, 2008 – The No. 1 rated food show on cable is back – Bravo's Emmy and James-Beard Award-winning series "Top Chef" served up the competition last night by scoring the show's highest rated premiere ever for the series, according to Nielsen Media Research. With supersized growth from its last cycle, the fifth season premiere attracted 1.870 million adults 18-49 and 2.695 million total viewers and ranked No. 1 in all key demos in its time period versus cable competition.

Last night's 10 p.m. "Top Chef: New York" debut increased double digits from the fourth season premiere, by 27 percent in adults 18-49 (1.870 vs. 1.475 million) and by 19 percent among total viewers (2.695 vs. 2.256 million). Online, BravoTV.com saw triple digit gains with the "Top Chef: New York" site generating a 105 percent increase in page views (1.1 million vs. 527,000) compared to the "Top Chef: Chicago" premiere (3/12/08).

Bravo's hit show "The Real Housewives of Atlanta" continues it ratings momentum, with this week's episode reaching a season high across all key demos, garnering an impressive 1.112 million adults 18-49 and 1.499 total viewers. Versus the prior week's episode, the series was up 41 percent among adults 18-49 (vs. 791,000) and up 49 percent among total viewers (vs. 1.009 million). Through six episodes, "The Real Housewives of Atlanta" is averaging 871,000 adults 18-49 and 1.158 million total viewers and online has streamed nearly 1.5 million video streams since its launch.

"Top Chef: New York" is produced by the Emmy-nominated Magical Elves. Dan Cutforth, Jane Lipsitz ("Project Runway," "Top Design") and Shauna Minoprio serve as executive producers.

"The Real Housewives of Atlanta" is produced by True Entertainment for Bravo. Steven Weinstock, Glenda Hersh, Shari Solomon Cedar and Kenny Hull serve as executive producers.

Source: Nielsen Media Research, Live + Same Day through 11/12/08. #1 Food Show source: Nielsen Media Research, Top Chef on Bravo Premiere Program Average (3/12/08-11/12/08) vs. All Food Network Program Averages, Excluding Specials (12/31/07-11/12/08), Most Current, P2+ & A18-49 (000), Galaxy Explorer, subject to qualifications available on request; Digital Source: Omniture SiteCatalyst - Top Chef: 11/12/08; Real Housewives of Atlanta: 10/1/08 - 11/13/08.

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #87 on: November 13, 2008, 11:19:21 PM »
An interview with eliminated chefs Lauren and Patrick:

‘Top Chef’ Exit Interview: Episode One

It came as a shock last night when not one, but two, doe-eyed cheftestants were sent home on the season premiere of Top Chef. Lauren Hope left her knife skills at home — not even her sweet southern charm worked on Colicchio after she served him an uninspired apple-and-bacon salad in the Quickfire. Soft-spoken and unequivocally adorable Patrick Dunlea managed to make it to the elimination, but fell short of the judges’ expectations when he represented Chinatown with a slab of salmon and some gummy noodles. We spoke to both this morning about the pleasure and pain of being the first contestants to get cut this season.

LAUREN HOPE

You had to go so quickly!
After getting to know my competitors and realizing how talented they were, it might have been fair that it was me.

Were you the least talented on there?
I don’t want to say the least talented, but I would certainly say that Patrick and I rank as the most inexperienced.

Is it awful to be sent home for something as basic as knife skills?
It was absolutely shocking! I have a special place in my heart for apples, as far as baking apple pies and going to apple orchards, so I was embarrassed.

What are you doing now?
I’ve been working in Cincinnati, at a restaurant called Jag’s Steak and Seafood. It’s a very upscale, very nice place. I’ve just been working every station there.

What do you see yourself doing in the future?
I would love to open my own wedding-cake shop. I’m definitely much more of a pastry chef than culinary.


PATRICK DUNLEA

Patrick, my condolences! It’s very unusual for a culinary student to be on Top Chef. Why did they cast you?
I gave them my heart and I poured it out to them and I told them that cooking is my life, and I wanted to prove that to them. I’ve got the skill set everyone else has, it’s just I’ve been tested on them more recently.

The Quickfire knife-skills challenge was as basic as it gets.
It always does come down to the basic skills. However, when those basic skills are put to a time test, or you’re competing against one another, the basic skills don’t become so basic, and things like peeling an apple become really difficult.

You lost the elimination challenge with bad noodles. Have you had any experience cooking Chinese cuisine?
There is a “Cuisines of Asia” class that we take for three weeks a year, but in that you’re also focusing on all of Asia, every cuisine from Indian to Thai and Korean as well. Other than going out and eating Americanized Chinese food, I don’t have a lot of experience cooking it.

You're back at CIA right now. Are you a celebrity?
I had the election for student government last night, and I got back to being the president.

Was it embarrassing to watch the episode last night?
It happened a little while ago, so I’ve had time to cope. My e-mail and my Facebook profile kind of exploded last night. I had a lot of great support.

Do you miss Team Rainbow?
I do! We’re all staying in touch. We’re very excited about the fact that there are T-shirts.

Link: http://nymag.com/daily/food/2008/11/top_chef_exit_interview_episod.html

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #88 on: November 13, 2008, 11:25:40 PM »
An interview with Patrick:

Ousted Top Chef’s Patrick: Some People Had ‘Uncertainty’ About My Skills

This season, Top Chef’s producers are promising a fiercer competition than ever–and Wednesday’s show made good with a double elimination. While chef Lauren Hope was ousted immediately, the remaining 16 competitors got to experience New York–venturing out into the city’s diverse neighborhoods and cooking up ethnic food in a head-to-head challenge. Unfortunately another chef had to leave. After failing to inspire the judges with his Chinese cuisine, culinary student Patrick Dunlea, 21, was sent packing. Calling from New York, the chef talked about being big man on campus (for a day!), why being a student caused some people to doubt him–and answered our five burning Top Chef questions. –Brian Orloff

Can you describe the feeling of almost being cut right away. And what it was like to see your friend Lauren go?
It’s such a surreal moment. You can barely hear anything, and then all of a sudden once [Tom Colicchio] said my name, I was just so happy to be staying. But I could just feel Lauren squeeze my hand and knew she was going home. It was a very emotional 10 seconds.

Looking back on the challenge, were you happy with what you presented?
Part of me was thinking, “Okay, it’s Top Chef, I’ve got to try something creative.” They’re looking for inspiration from this borough, so I can’t just rely on what I know about Chinese cuisine. I’m going to go out there and use something that will inspire them. The last thing I wanted to do was take white rice and serve with it. I tried to take a chance, and unfortunately not every chance works out as you expect it to.

What did you think of your competitor Daniel’s food?
I didn’t get to taste his food. I had seen his preparation. It looked good. He had a foam on the plate. I was like, “Oh gosh I’m going up against a foam and I’m totally not a foam type person.” It seemed like he had a pretty strong idea about what he was doing . . . but I too had seen a Chinese chicken salad like that before so I didn’t know what the judges reaction was going to be.

What was the reaction of your fellow culinary students when they found out you made it to Top Chef?
I had to take a semester off for the show, so I wasn’t on campus actually until two days ago. I kind of showed up and everyone was all excited. It was the big news on campus. I only had to deal with it for two days. [And] people knew that I had auditioned, so I came up with this rumor that I didn’t get it and I was really upset so I was taking time off for personal reasons.

Was being a culinary student an advantage or disadvantage for you on Top Chef?
[School is] such a positive learning environment based around food, so that was a strength for me. I knew going into it a lot of people are going to be having uncertainty about what to expect from me, and may feel that perhaps I need to go and get some more experience before I go back to taking on an endeavor like that.

Our Top Chef 5 Burning Questions:

Describe your Top Chef experience in one word.
Quirky.

What is in your refrigerator right now?
I just moved into my dorm room but right now my refrigerator is empty, but pretty soon it’s probably going to have a lot of white wine in it.

Name one food you cannot stand.
Artificial non-dairy whipped topping because I have no idea what it is.

Pick your favorite fast food restaurant.
I actually don’t eat fast food. The closest I get is I go out for Chinese buffet food sometimes.

Best thing about cooking in New York?
It literally is a melting pot. You turn a corner and there’s an entirely different culture and it’s incredible to see how they all hold their own identities but can work with each other.

Link: http://tvwatch.people.com/2008/11/13/ousted-top-chefs-patrick-some-people-had-uncertainty-about-my-skills/

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #89 on: November 14, 2008, 12:51:08 PM »
An interview with Patrick:

Top Chef Exit Intervew: Patrick Chopped, Would Have Liked To Cook Indian Cuisine

On Wednesday night's fifth season premiere of Top Chef, 21 year-old Patrick Dunlea became the youngest chef to ever pack up his knives after losing a chef-to-chef challenge. In an interview this morning the culinary school student admit that he would have changed his Chinatown-inspired dish by “doing something different to heighten the level of flavors,” and claims he’ll never use those gummy noodles again. The rest of his interview below.

Tom Collichio said using bok choy in your dish was too expected.
Well, the market I went to had a lot of bok choy and cabbage. That’s what I was inspired by.

Is there another neighborhood and it’s associated cuisine you would have rather worked with, instead of Chinatown?
I really love Indian cuisine. It would have been fun to cook a little bit of that, and see all the different ingredients.

What was the process like getting on the show?
Well my [Culinary Institute of America] classmates were joking with me, like ‘yeah right, you think you’ll get on that show?’ I can’t go into too much detail about the casting. My friends were watching as it was coming along. Then when I did get it, I couldn’t tell anyone. I had to come up with excuses and say I was going away for ‘personal reasons.’

Have you spoken to your former classmate and fellow eliminee, Lauren since being on the show?
We sent little text messages back and forth saying ‘you looked great!’ We’re both back to our normal lives. She’s with her husband who was home for a little while on leave, so she was very occupied with him. Then I went back to school. We still keep in touch through email, though.

Did you build any relationships with the other chefs? Or was it too brief?
There were instant kind of connections. Everyone was still jittery and anxious from the quickfire challenge. Everyone’s emotions were up. We all bonded and looked to each other for support. We were all in the same boat. There were obviously some connections as we were obviously sharing such an incredible, once-in-a-lifetime kind of experience.

It seems like Fabio and Stefan are being set up to be the two polarizing forces of the group. Did you get that vibe when you were around them?
Fabio and Stefan were hysterical together. They just feed off each other. They try to out-do each other every time they’re together. I really had no issues with them. They never tried to talk down or look down to me. They’re just guys being guys, trying to out-do one another.

Is there any ingredient or technique you’ve learned at school that people could do at home?
I think it’s more ingredients. Even if you can make a grilled cheese, make sure to use the best bread, the best cheese and the best butter, and it’ll be the best grilled cheese you’ve ever had. It’s really about the quality of the ingredients. Cooking is a skill that people can learn. It’s a part of everyone’s life. Everyone knows it a little bit. Even if you can only use your microwave, there are still pretty incredible things you can do with it.

At what point when you were growing up did you realize this was something you wanted to take seriously and turn into a career?
Probably when I was at the end of elementary school. I was around 10 or 11. I had always grown up cooking with my mom and grandmother in the kitchen. When I got to that age I started cooking on my own. I’d come home and try and put together for my family for dinner, which usually wound up being a potato, or a couple potato dishes and a vegetable. From there I moved on to bigger and better things.

What kind of things would you make with your mom and grandmother?
I’m from Massachusetts so my grandmother is famous for her baked beans. Growing up you could always just smell them. That's definitely a dish that brings me back to my childhood. My grandmother was also into going to farms, or stopping at farm stands on the side of the road to pick up stuff on the way home. She really inspired me to get back in touch with the land.

Do you have any secrets for making great baked beans?
She always cooked a whole onion in there to roast with it. It was so great, because by the end one half is roasted on top and the other half is soaking in beans the entire time. It's like heaven.

Is there any food that you absolutely can’t stand?
That non-dairy processed whipped cream product. I’m terrified of it. Who knows what its made of.

What's your favorite New York restaurant?
I really love Prune, Gabrielle Hamilton's restaurant, and Fatty Crab. Gabrielle Hamilton is a really awesome chef. She's so down to earth, and very forward. She likes to just cook food from her childhood.

Any dishes to recommend?
At Fatty Crab they have coconut keffir lime braised short ribs that are just so incredible. Gabrielle Hamilton, I haven't tried them yet, but I'm dying to try her sweetbreads. She boasts that they're the best in the country.

After culinary school, what’s the next step for you?
I want to travel. I’m trying to work on going to Europe. I’m working on getting a fellowship to go to Spain after I graduate. I’d like to get international experience and see the world.

Link: http://thebiz.fancast.com/2008/11/top_chef_exit_intervew_patrick.html

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #90 on: November 14, 2008, 01:47:17 PM »

Go Behind The Scenes at PEOPLE's Top Chef Shoot

"Top Chef" Season 5 began Nov. 12.

Go behind the scenes at PEOPLE's shoot - catch up with Tom Colicchio and Padma Lakshmi.


Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #91 on: November 17, 2008, 07:43:02 AM »
An interview with Lauren:

See Ya Later, Top Chef: Lauren Hope

Lauren Hope never thought she'd be sent home from Top Chef because of apples.

But that's what happened last night during the premiere of season five. She was the first contestant to go after failing to impress the judges with her apple-dicing skills and a spinach and apple salad.

Even so, Hope, who owns a cake-decorating business, holds no grudges.

Read on for what she has to say about her very brief stint on the show. It was so brief, she never even had the chance to see Top Chef's signature state-of-the-art kitchen.

Will you ever eat apples again?

I absolutely love apples. Actually, on my wedding day, I went home and baked an apple pie with my father between the ceremony and the reception because we had so much time.

Do you think it's fair to be eliminated for something like this?

I hate to say it, but absolutely. It was a test of skill and, quite frankly, everyone else outshined me.

Your husband is on a 15-month tour of Iraq with the Army. Did you get to talk to him last night?

He was able to call me after the episode aired. He's still very proud of me. We get to talk maybe once a month on the phone, so it was a real treat just to hear his voice during one of my darkest hours.

If you had the chance to try to convince the judges to let you back into the competition, what would you say to them?

I was born to do this. I am absolutely passionate about my food. I've known I was going to do this since I was 5 years old. I am destined to be Top Chef. It may not be on this show now, but in my own world and in my own right, I will be successful. If there's a will, there's a way.

Link: http://news.yahoo.com/s/eonline/20081113/en_tv_eo/68737

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #92 on: November 17, 2008, 07:45:11 AM »
An interview with Patrick:

See Ya Later, Top Chef: Patrick Dunlea

Patrick Dunlea is just old enough to drink, but that didn't keep him from being picked to compete in the new season of Top Chef. In fact, the baby-faced Dunlea is still in school at the Culinary Institute of America.

Unfortunately, he was the second of the two cheftestants given the boot during last night's premiere episode of Bravo's hit reality show. His Chinese-inspired noodle dish left the judges limp. But at least he got to meet guest judge Jean-Georges Vongerichten, arguably one of the world's most celebrated fine-dining chefs.

I caught up with Dunlea this morning as he was rushing off to class.

You're only 21 and still in school. Your classmates must have been pretty jealous, yes?

They didn't know I was on it at first. We weren't allowed to tell anyone, so they didn't know it until I started popping up in commercials.

Where did you tell them you went when you were in New York City shooting the show?

I had already planned to take a semester off—I didn't know if I was going to be on Top Chef or not, and I didn't want to have to leave school at the last minute to do the show. I just told everyone I needed a break and that I went to Bermuda.

Was it a complete shock to see Jean-Georges as guest judge for the challenge where you had to prepare your now fatal Chinese dish? I mean, he's major.

Yeah! And he knows a lot about Asian food!

But now you can say you know Jean-Georges.

Not really, but I do tell everyone that I shook Jean-Georges' hand and he ate my salmon.

That's not all the Top Chef I have for ya today. Check back later for my chat with this season's very first eliminated contestant, Lauren Hope, who was sent home because she failed to impress the judges with the way she cut...apples?

Link: http://news.yahoo.com/s/eonline/20081113/en_tv_eo/68678

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #93 on: November 19, 2008, 05:58:53 PM »

 :jumpy: Alison Sweeney Host of The Biggest Loser and actress from Days Of Our Lives

is a fan of Top Chef quoted from her blog "I've watch a couple reality shows (yay, Top Chef is back!!!)"



Link to her blog: http://blog.nbc.com/alison/the_biggest_loser/


Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #94 on: November 20, 2008, 12:39:57 AM »

Tom Colicchio's Blog:

Time Warp

At the close of Episode One, I mentioned how pleased I was by the level of cooking we experienced in the first Elimination Challenge. I wish I could say the same this week. Our diners - all applicants for Top Chef who weren't selected - were quite vocal in their displeasure (have I mentioned that they're all from New York?). The challenge: Come into Craft restaurant and prepare an appetizer, entrée, or dessert. The only requirement was that it be New American cuisine.

What exactly is New American cuisine? Originally, the cuisine was based more on regional American cooking than it is now. As you know, there can be no such thing as "American food" per se, because each region of this vast country has placed its own cultural stamp on its own food. If you look at America as a melting pot, there's too much in that pot to create one homogenous cuisine, so New American cuisine began as chefs doing their plays on regional cuisines using fresh, seasonal, regional ingredients. While it may have been influenced by fusion, please don't confuse the two - fusion is specifically the melding of foods from different traditions, while New American cuisine began as finely trained American chefs, steeped in traditional technique yet working with a lack of pretension, taking American regional idioms and striving to do something original and different.

Larry Forgione's work at the River Café in New York is a perfect example of one of the places from which New American cuisine sprung - rather than buying from one purveyor, he sussed out local farmers, procuring different ingredients from different sources and crafting them into his take on various American classic dishes. Chefs such as he, and Alice Waters on the West Coast, and Bradley Ogden in the Midwest, not to mention a spattering of teachers like James Beard and Julia Child, are all examples of the pioneers of New American Cuisine.

Looking at how the cuisine has morphed and where it is today: There are many chefs doing contemporary food, whether it's contemporary American, contemporary Spanish, contemporary French, etc. The traditions they are working within almost don't matter, since they are all basically using technique to apply great creativity and originality to terrific, generally seasonal, ingredients. Thirty years ago, you could spot the difference between an American muscle car and an Italian sports car a mile away. They were both cars, but they were created with widely divergent approaches to design and engineering, based on altogether different sensibilities. Now, those differences are far more nuanced. Ditto, contemporary cuisine. Take what Dan Barber is doing at Blue Hill: Is that considered "American Cuisine"? Well, he's an American chef using American food, so why not? Michael Ciramusti's seafood at Providence in LA utilizes cool techniques and intriguing juxtapositions of food. There's no question in my mind that it's contemporary cuisine, though people don't quite know how to label it. Is what Thomas Keller is doing considered French or American? Well, the French have a license on technique ... but so what? Is there more of a French sensibility or an American sensibility to what Thomas is doing? The better question is: Does it matter? The "wow" factor is there because it is contemporary cuisine. It's when New American cuisine started shifting from regional to contemporary that people started looking at it and saying "Wow."

For another example, look at Mario Batali's work: It is classified as Italian, though many die-hard Italian-cuisine lovers would quibble with that classification, arguing that it is merely based upon traditional Italian cuisine. And therein lies what makes it contemporary: As with our first Elimination Challenge last week, it comes down to "inspired by" vs. "authentic". And so it is with New American cuisine as well. "Inspired by" is part of the American vernacular in food as in all things - it's what takes all disciplines to new heights, and it is the story of America and Americans in general. The story of American food is illustrative of the larger story of America and American ingenuity.

Here's how that might play out in terms of food: Say the challenge is to take the iconic American "clambake" as inspiration for a dish. The elements include lobster, clams, corn, tomatoes. Do I want the chefs to do a whole clambake? No, just a dish evocative of a clambake. Give this task to 20 chefs and you'll get 20 different dishes. One will be very literal and do a mini-clambake. Another may make a tortellini, making sauce with butter and corn juice, and do something else with the tomato. Another may make a corn relish. It's how you rework the food while keeping it evocative of the clambake that makes it interesting.

And so I was discouraged in this Elimination Challenge that a bunch of young chefs all currently working in America were told to "do New American" and turned to quiche, to meatloaf, to homey, regional "comfort food," when I think that American food is so much more than that.

In general, the food looked clunky on the plate; almost nothing looked refined. The only dish I saw that I thought was very contemporary in its plating was Leah's. Padma thought it looked very '80s, but I thought it was very modern. But while it looked great, it lacked flavor. Jamie's dish was nice, corn-filled, which was appropriate, as we shot the season in the summertime. Carla's pastry was very good. I wish she'd done something with that cheddar to incorporate it, but it was a good dish. There was nothing new about it, but at least it was a good dish. Fabio won because his food was the best, but he actually took an Italian dish that has worked its way into American cuisine. Adding the olives was a nice touch, but one that was scarcely new - Fabio was using a technique that was actually seven years old. Nobody actually fulfilled the mandate.

Hosea got into trouble when he walked into the store and found himself facing bad canned crabmeat. He should have gone to Plan B right away and made a different dish. But that's a bad judgment call, not a bad dish.

Ariane tried to do a take on an American dish, a lemon meringue pie, and do something modern. At least she had the idea, but it was poorly executed. She knew in advance that the dessert was too sweet. She could have added more lemon juice, even reducing it down so it would not be too liquid. She could have used lemon zest. Dessert goes out last; Ariane had the time to do something to fix the problem ... why didn't she?

Jill's dish failed in so many ways. The goal is always to celebrate and elevate the ingredients, but she took a potentially special item - an ostrich egg - and made it unspectacular. No one can tell which bird egg has been mixed into a quiche by tasting it. And why quiche? The task called for New American and she did Old French. I don't understand how she thought she could win this competition with a quiche. Were this a one-shot deal - whoever wins this challenge wins the whole competition - would you make a quiche? Furthermore, it was a poorly made quiche, just a terrible dish. I remember looking at it and thinking "Oh my god, why would somebody do this?"

I understand that the term "New American cuisine" is a bit esoteric. Take Grant Achatz's work at his restaurant Alinea, in Chicago. The food is so contemporary as to even be considered bizarre by some. I was at a demo he gave a few weeks ago. He's really into playing with aromas and their effects upon taste. Let's say he's doing an autumn dish: He will burn apples and cinnamon, trap the vapors in a sealed plastic "pillow," and then cut the pillow and place it on the table beneath the food, so that the aromas escape and enhance the dining experience. The food certainly isn't French, though he employs plenty of French techniques. It isn't Italian, despite his using many Italian ingredients. It is not homespun, even though he his musings about fall lead to thoughts of burning leaves, and so a burning leaf garnishes an autumnal dish. Do I consider what he's doing "New American cuisine"? You bet. Do I think our chefs should be emulating Grant Achatz? No, that's not the point. I mention him because he is progressive and is ever challenging himself. It irked me that the chefs in this Elimination Challenge were turning out the American food of twenty-thirty years ago, not the American food of now ... or tomorrow. As a whole the food showed a lack of the American spirit, that ingenuity and forward thinking. Sometimes people cling too much to tradition. Our chefs weren't going "New American", just "American." Which is fine at Thanksgiving at Grandma's, but won't cut it at a top restaurant the rest of the year.

Link: http://www.bravotv.com/Top_Chef/season/5/blogs/index.php?blog=tom_colicchio&article=2008/11/time_warp


Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #95 on: November 20, 2008, 01:13:18 AM »

That was an interesting blog a 101 in cooking lessons helpful indeed

Interesting that Tom is asking this below:

"Ariane tried to do a take on an American dish, a lemon meringue pie, and do something modern. At least she had the idea, but it was poorly executed. She knew in advance that the dessert was too sweet. She could have added more lemon juice, even reducing it down so it would not be too liquid. She could have used lemon zest. Dessert goes out last; Ariane had the time to do something to fix the problem ... why didn't she?"

I think we can answer that one Ariane has a less than enthusiastic and who cares that’s what I’m serving attitude.

I could call it lazy and unmotivated and a clear reflection of her she has already given up.

I thought it was deserving enough for her to be sent back home, hopefully next week

Top Chef is not for her

Offline apskip

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #96 on: November 20, 2008, 02:19:38 PM »
The Quickfire Challenge was to reinvent the American hot dog. The dishes were:

Stefan - Italian sausage on French bread w/ Wisconsin cheese and Irish tartar sauce
Hosea - pork hot dog w/roasted poblano peppers, jalapeno, smoked bacon, red wine vinegar
Fabio - Andouille sausage w/goat cheese, roasted bell peppers, dun-dried tomatoes
Eugene - maki roll hot dog w/pita bread, boursin cheese, red onions
Daniel - pork hot dog, fried onion, garlic powder, horseradish, mustard
Ariane - chicken sausage w/ bacon, celery seed, garlic, white pepper sauce
Jill - store-bought hot dog with chili, soy sauce, red wine vinegar
Radhika - kabob-style sausage, cucumbers, caramelized onions and tomatoes jam
Carla - lamb and pork sausage, sauerkraut, caramelized onions
Jamie - pork and beef sausage w/bacon, onions, cayenne pepper
 
The losers group was Stefan and Jill. Winners group was Jamie, Radhika and Fabio. I thought Radhika would win, but Fabio won.
 
Elimination Challenge
Teams were then told they had $2500 to create and then cook a new American cuisine lunch the following for 50 guests(who proved to be New York area wannabes who did not make the cut for Top Chef 5). The divided themselves up into teams of 5 as follows:
 
Appetizer - Jamie, Hosea, Leah, Fabio, Melissa
Entrée - Jill, Eugene, Stefan, Jeff, Alex
Dessert - Radhika, Daniel, Ariane, Richard, Carla
 
Dishes were:
Jamie - chilled corn soup w/hot chili oil and mint
Hosea - crab salad w/ citrus vanilla, grilled mango, avocadp
Leah - Yukon potatoes and seared scallops, chives, green peppercorns
Fabio - beef carpaccio w/arugula salad, parmesan, grilled lemons and spherical olives
Melissa - grilled avocado w/white peaches, nectarines, balsamic vinaigrette
Jill - ostrich egg quiche w/ rice-pecan crust, asparagus, aged cheese
Eugene - open meatloaf sandwich w/ciabatta bread, gouda fondue, portabella ragout
Stefan - pan-seared halibut w/ microgreens, ravioli, champagne oil and dill oil
Jeff - southern chicken, honey mustard, chorizo corn spoonbread
Alex - grilled pork over potatoes w/mushroom, tomato and red beet demi-glace
Radhika - avocado mousse w/ chocolate wontons and chocolate milk/Kahlua shot
Daniel - ricotta poundcake w/toasted pistachios, strawberry + lemon coulis
Ariane - lemon meringue martini with lots of sugar, vanilla cookie crunch and cherry surprise
Richard - sandwich of banana nut bread w/ peanut butter and banana brulee w/grape gelato
Carla - rustic apple tart w/ginger peach tea, apple cider reduction, cheddar cheese

Winners' group was Carla, Jamie and Fabio. Fabio won again, primary for his use of lemon and olives. Losers' group was Hosea, Ariane and Jill (her second loser gorup in the same episode). Hosea had what was probably some bad crabmeat but did his best to overcome that. Ariane did a super-sweeet martini that everyone hated and this was her second Elimination Challenge out of 2 in the losers' group. Jill did about everything wrong that you can as judges hated the concept of quiche as a "new American cuisinse" and hated her execeution of a bad concept. Jill wass eliminated. I expect Ariane will not be far behind her.
 

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #97 on: November 20, 2008, 03:02:22 PM »
An interview with Jill:

Top Chef Exit Interview: Jill Wanted To Make Dessert, Will Use Ostrich Eggs Again!

Following a botched hot dog Quickfire and an ostrich egg quiche that left her with, for lack of a better expression – egg on her face, 28-year-old Jill Snyder was sent packing her knives on last night's episode of Top Chef. On a call this morning, the Baltimore local opened up about her culinary choices, her dessert-making skills, and how much time the judges really take to deliberate while the chefs sweat it out in the aptly named “stew room.” Read on.

Why did you use an ingredient that you’d never used before?
Well I’ve used eggs before and I thought using an ostrich egg, which is a really cool ingrdeient and original, I thought it would separate me.

How did it feel getting kicked off so early?
Oh, it felt wonderful. Kidding. It was disappointing because it was so early. I don’t think there was a good representation of my cooking from those few episodes. But you know, it’s just a show. I’ve cooked for many more people than the judges, and people enjoy my cooking, so it’s OK.

Did you get a sense that if you’d been able to defend your dish a little better, you would have been able to stay in the competition longer?
Yes I do think that. As soon as I left the room I thought of good points about the dish. Like, ‘it’s a cooking show, I actually cooked something. I made rice which came out perfect. It was set up really nice.’ I thought the flavors went well together, it was asparagus, mushrooms and cheese, you find that a lot.

Have you tried working with an ostrich egg since then?
I’m going to. I wanted to wait until this came out. It’s a creative dish. I think people will like to try it.

Do you wish you’d had a dish that you could have completely stood behind?
Well I wanted to make a dessert. I do really well with dessert. I’ve won a lot of awards. Or I guess I could have - coming out of Baltimore – pulled together one of my lobster crab cakes. I guess it was just too risky trying to use that original of an ingredient.

You’ve made a lot of desserts. Why didn’t you go on the dessert team when you had that opportunity?
Originally I did. A lot of people wanted to do desserts. I should have stood my ground and done the dessert, but since I botched the hot dog one, I figured an entrée would give me a better chance to show off a larger dish, you know? I was doing more cooking, and this is a cooking show. I thought an entrée would show off some cooking skills, at least.

Surprising that so many people wanted to do dessert when in previous seasons people lament the dessert challenges.
Yeah I really wish I had done a dessert. I thought all of those desserts were really bad! I think I would have done really well if I’d been on that team. It’s all hindsight!

Ariane said she wasn’t comfortable doing desserts. Why did she wind up on that team and you on entrees?
Well we kind of went back and forth. Just with the pressure and time, you’ve got to think quick and make a decision. She was really
uncomfortable. Her dessert didn’t turn out very well. It’s hard to see that. Ugh.

When you were standing there on the chopping block did you think you were going to go? Or did you think Ariane was going to go?
I thought Ariane was going to go. It’s a cooking show. She didn’t really cook anything. Padma spit it out. I know a lot of people ate [my] dish. The dishes came back from the dining room and I know that people did eat it. I thought it was well received. I was surprised. They were like ‘oh Jill,’ and I was like ‘oh no!’

Why do you think you were kicked off? Do you think you were trying to be too risky?
I don’t know. I guess all the judge’s opinions were of who they thought could go further in the competition, and they thought Ariane would eventually do better than me? I don’t know. I guess I should have been more dramatic, you know, threw someone else under the bus. Maybe that would have helped my chances of staying a little more. It’s hard to think when they’re staring at you with the cameras. It just completely destroyed all my hope.

In your time there did get a sense of other contestants who will go far?
Well we all came into it not really knowing what to expect. A lot of people are more confident than others. That will help them get further. Fabio and Stefan have these great personalities and they’re really confident. They’ve worked all over the world cooking. They’ve got a good advantage.

You faced a lot of harsh criticism last night - that your dish looked like dog food, and it tasted like glue. First of all, how did you react to actually
seeing that for the first time? And second of all, did you have an opportunity to taste it before it went out?
Yeah it didn’t taste bad. It is egg, asparagus, mushrooms and cheese with a rice crust. It would be really hard to make those flavors taste bad together. I didn’t think they did. It’s a TV show. What are you gonna do.

You also caught some flak for not making a hot dog in the Quickfire. Would you have done that differently?
As far as that goes, they asked for a gourmet hot dog. In that amount of time I thought ‘how can I make a hot dog gourmet?’ So I thought I could make a little bite-sized version of hot dogs. Being original and creative with that, I thought they’d appreciate that. ‘Gourmet hot dog,’ I wasn’t picturing sausages in a bun. I didn’t see that as gourmet. How do you make a hot dog gourmet? By taking it out of its element. I put the Asian twist on it. I thought they’d at least give me some creativity points for that.

It also seems like what everyone else made more resembled sausage, not hot dogs. So for all the non-gourmands, what’s the difference?
That’s kind of what I was struggling with. I’ve made plenty of sausage before. I really didn’t know what they were looking for. If I decided to make sausage instead of hot dogs, I guess it would have gone better.

How long did you have to wait to find out if you’d gotten kicked off?
It takes a while. At least a couple of hours.

What are you doing during that time?
We’re in the stew room. Everyone is just talking about what they did and what they think is going to happen. Or they just try to change the subject. We try to keep ourselves occupied. It’s brutal to wait that long though.

With Thanksgiving coming up, do you have any tips or recommendations for how to make dinner great, and easy?
Thanksgiving dinner is so exciting. If you’re not going to have many people over, you should do a turkey breast instead of a whole turkey. You can marinate it, you can brine it. You can get a lot more flavor out of just using the breast. I’ve done stuffing before and put it in muffin tins and then just baked it, so you wind up with individual servings of stuffing. Last year I made a pumpkin soup which I served while everything else was cooking. The easiest is just to have everyone make a dish and come together. Thanksgiving is always fun.

Link: http://thebiz.fancast.com/2008/11/top_chef_exit_interview_jill_w.html

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #98 on: November 20, 2008, 03:08:34 PM »
An interview with Jill:

Ousted Chef Jill Snyder Stands By Her Ostrich Eggs

The contestants on Top Chef got a taste of New York last night. But for one chef, Jill Snyder, she learned the Big Apple can bite back. During the Quickfire Challenge, Snyder’s sushi-inspired hot dog was an East-meets-West disappointment. Then for the next challenge–cooking an all-American lunch for fifty New York chefs who auditioned for season five–Snyder again landed in the bottom along with Ariane Duarte and Hosea Rosenberg. In the end, the judges sent Snyder packing for her ostrich egg quiche that they deemed tasted “like glue.” Snyder spoke to PEOPLE about her “bold” ostrich-egg quiche–and answered our burning questions. –Emmet Sullivan

Do you feel the judges too harsh on you on the Quickfire Challenge?
Obviously I misunderstood exactly what they wanted from there. I knew we were going to get some sort of New York-y challenge. I didn’t get that they wanted us to make a sausage, so I kind of went outside of the box. I did a seasoned hot dog sushi roll. I thought it was interesting. They wanted a gourmet hot dog, and my twist on gourmet was to make some sort of dim sum, something easy to pick up. I was going the neat, gourmet route.

Are you still happy you went with the ostrich egg quiche?
I still think it was a very creative, interesting dish–way more creative than anything else that anybody else put up. Obviously I can’t be that happy since I got voted off. I was going for originality. I’ve never seen ostrich egg on any menu ever. I’ve worked with it before, but at the same time, I’ve very rarely seen anybody else work with one. So using an original, bold, creative ingredient I thought I would score some points there.

What did you think of the other dishes from the chefs?
I had originally wanted to be on the dessert side, so I was really shocked that they didn’t give the dessert people more criticism. I was not impressed by any of the desserts, and I do pastries very well. I was disappointed I didn’t end up in that category for that challenge.

Looking back, what would you have done differently?
I would have tried harder to make a dessert that I know would have impressed everyone. By the same hand, at the time, I really thought that was going to be original and really creative, and there’s some skill to making a quiche. The crust was a rice crust, and you’ve seen in the past episodes that nobody can cook rice right. The rice was cooked perfectly. There’s skill involved in that.

What do you think of Ariane staying but you packing up your knives?
It was really surprising. When we were standing at the judges’ table, they said hers was so bad they spit it out. I knew all of my dishes came back empty. We got to see if people ate your dish or not when the servers brought the plates back, and all of mine were scraped clean. So I knew nobody spit it out. I was feeling confident after seeing that. I guess they wanted me to argue more, but it’s really hard to argue your point after standing in front of them as they rip apart your entire dish and then say, “Oh, defend yourself.”

So who’s your favorite to win now?
I like Eugene’s take on everything, so I’m pulling for Eugene.

Our Top Chef 5 Burning Questions

Describe your Top Chef experience in one word.
Anxiety.

What is in your refrigerator right now?
Leftover champagne and beer from a party last night.

Name one food you cannot stand.
Bananas.

Pick your favorite fast food restaurant.
Chick-fil-A. I don’t eat fast food very often but if I do, a regular Chick-fil-A sandwich is my first choice.

Best thing about cooking in New York?
It’s so inspiring and the energy there is great.

Link: http://tvwatch.people.com/2008/11/20/ousted-chef-jill-snyder-stands-by-her-ostrich-eggs/

Offline marigold

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Re: Top Chef New York Season 5
« Reply #99 on: November 20, 2008, 03:26:19 PM »
An interesting article:

Top Chef 5: Conference Call with Jill Snyder

On last night's episode of Top Chef 5, cheftestant Jill Snyder made an Asian-inspired hot dog and an ostrich egg quiche, but the judges found that her actual food didn't match up to her high concepts, and she was sent home.

We spoke with the chef today to get her take on the competition, the judges, and whether or not she'll ever attempt to cook with an ostrich egg again.

Like many of the viewers, Jill says she was a little surprised that it was her, not Ariane, who was sent home last night. Besides Padma Lakshmi spitting out Ariane's dessert, Jill pointed out that this is a cooking competition, and the dessert didn't really include cooking skill. Jill says that despite the “dog food” and “glue” comments made about her dish, her plates came back with the food eaten, so she feels it must have been a little more palatable than that. She also noted that her quiche contained cheese, asparagus and mushrooms, ingredients that commonly go together, so she doesn't buy the idea that the flavors were off.

Good points, and I asked Jill if she thought she would have had a better chance at staying had she been able to articulate this kind of defense in the judging room, since part of the judges' comments centered on her inability to outline her point of view. Jill's answering was a laughing and emphatic yes. It appears she had one of those classic and frustrating instances of thinking of all the right points only after the confrontation is over.

It turns out that making an entrée was actually not Jill's first choice. She would have preferred to be on the dessert team, but there were apparently too many chefs trying to get on that course. She moved to entrees, thinking the complexity of that might help undo some of the bad impression made by her hot dog dim sum in the Quickfire.

This was surprising to hear, considering the way that most Top Chef chefs have avoided desserts on previous seasons. It was also surprising to me, as I thought I'd heard Ariane commenting during the show that she wasn't very familiar with desserts. I asked Jill how Ariane wound up on the dessert team if – as it appeared – there was a battle to get there and she didn't seem too comfortable with that course. Jill seemed to think that was just part of the rushed flurry of competition.

If she could do it over again, she would either try a dessert or make a dish like lobster crab cakes that harkens to her current city, Baltimore. Despite the bad luck she had with them in the competition, she hasn't sworn off ostrich eggs and would like to try to cook with them again in the future.

She also explained some of her thinking with her Quickfire dish. She notes that she was a little unsure as to whether or not making a homemade sausage would fit the bill for a hot dog challenge. She knows how to make sausage, but thought the judges would be critical if she made something that didn't have the finely ground texture of an actual hot dog. She also thought that her dish was more in line with the concept of a “gourmet” hot dog, thinking that a hot dog or sausage on a bun slathered with toppings is not a gourmet presentation.

As to the behind the scenes in the competition, she thinks that Stefan and Fabio have the self-confidence to go far, and some other chefs' lack of confidence could be their undoing. She found the judges intimidating, but notes that's to be expected when you are in front of people who are famous for being critical.

Jill said she has been warned by former Top Chef contestants like Richard Blais to avoid reading the blogs about the show, but figures you can't take things too seriously, and so has been looking at the coverage a bit. She probably wouldn't do a reality show again, she said, but, possibly thinking of that meandering defense, she wouldn't mind being in front of the cameras again if it were a scripted show.

She hadn't seem to yet venture out to see how her loss is being received, but thinks overall, her time on Top Chef will be good for the food scene in Baltimore, and hopes it's help the town gain some additional exposure for its food scene.

Link: http://www.buddytv.com/articles/top-chef/top-chef-5-conference-call-wit-24690.aspx