General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.cooking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 173
Default Restaurant critic peeves

It seems to have become a cliche for restaurant reviewers to use the
phrase "a well-aged steak" when the steak hasn't been aged at all.
I know the difference between a dry-aged steak and an un-aged steak,
and sometimes the chef himself doesn't seem to know.

Another time, a reviewer described an undercooked potato as being
overcooked. I've gone to these places and found the opposite of the
food critic's opinion to be true.

Do these people know what they're talking about?

Do you have any other glaring errors in food writing?
Thanks for letting me vent.

  #3 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.cooking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 83
Default Restaurant critic peeves

> Another time, a reviewer described an undercooked potato as being
> overcooked. I've gone to these places and found the opposite of the
> food critic's opinion to be true.


Couldn't it have been one way when they went and another way when you went?
I don't understand.


  #4 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.cooking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 173
Default Restaurant critic peeves

On Jul 20, 8:50 pm, "Zippy P" > wrote:
> > Another time, a reviewer described an undercooked potato as being
> > overcooked. I've gone to these places and found the opposite of the
> > food critic's opinion to be true.

>
> Couldn't it have been one way when they went and another way when you went?
> I don't understand.


No, because the restaurants/steak houses didn't advertise aged beef,
which would have been a good selling point.
The critics just made it up.

I'm aware of day to day differences in food quality, staff, and
management. I'm writing about food critics who can't tell the
difference between frozen french fries and fresh and who think that
fish has no flavor until it's at least a day old. (I've read that,
too. My 85 year-old mother can smell the difference 10 feet away, why
can't they)?

If they have no taste buds, they have no business becoming food
writers.

  #5 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.cooking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 371
Default Restaurant critic peeves

On Fri, 20 Jul 2007 23:44:03 -0000, "
> wrote:

>It seems to have become a cliche for restaurant reviewers to use the
>phrase "a well-aged steak" when the steak hasn't been aged at all.
>I know the difference between a dry-aged steak and an un-aged steak,
>and sometimes the chef himself doesn't seem to know.
>
>Another time, a reviewer described an undercooked potato as being
>overcooked. I've gone to these places and found the opposite of the
>food critic's opinion to be true.
>
>Do these people know what they're talking about?
>
>Do you have any other glaring errors in food writing?
>Thanks for letting me vent.


I don't know where you are, but here in the DFW region of Texas we
have a decent new restaurant critic who has, beyond his writing and
critical experience, a healthy dose of line cooking and restaurant
work on his resume. I'm fairly confident he knows what he's talking
about.

(Full disclosu I'm a critic, too. Art critic, not food critic, but
it may have swayed my judgment.)
--

modom

--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com



  #6 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.cooking
bob bob is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 696
Default Restaurant critic peeves

On Sat, 21 Jul 2007 01:44:45 -0000, "
> magnanimously proffered:

>On Jul 20, 8:50 pm, "Zippy P" > wrote:
>> > Another time, a reviewer described an undercooked potato as being
>> > overcooked. I've gone to these places and found the opposite of the
>> > food critic's opinion to be true.

>>
>> Couldn't it have been one way when they went and another way when you went?
>> I don't understand.

>
>No, because the restaurants/steak houses didn't advertise aged beef,
>which would have been a good selling point.
>The critics just made it up.
>
>I'm aware of day to day differences in food quality, staff, and
>management. I'm writing about food critics who can't tell the
>difference between frozen french fries and fresh and who think that
>fish has no flavor until it's at least a day old. (I've read that,
>too. My 85 year-old mother can smell the difference 10 feet away, why
>can't they)?


When I first came to Auckland I worked several part time jobs the
first couple of years. One of them was in an upmarket retail fish shop
called Jaybell's Seafood Bazaar. It was down on Auckland's waterfront
and was the retail end of a huge fishing business - a joint venture
between New Zealand and Japanese interests.

In theory, the fish couldn't be fresher unless you caught them
yourself. Jaybell's fishing fleet would pull up to the processing
factory behind the retail store, unload (by that time the fish would
already have been graded), and either processed for export (mostly to
Japan to be flown out later that day) or for domestic consumption (our
shop, other shops, restaurants, supermarkets, etc). Of course the
weather sometimes made it impossible for the fleet to go out and
frozen fish would be thawed out during the day. But it was always
marked as having been frozen and customers informed of this.

I worked the busy days (Thursday, Friday and Saturday) and, because
I'd been made "assistant manager" and "weekend manager" I got to divvy
up all fish that hadn't sold by the time we closed on Saturday to the
other staff members at the shop. Even our cats got to dine on scallops
from time to time - but that's another story.

Anyway, there was this tiny woman in her seventies who used to come in
several times a week to buy fish and when I was there she'd insist on
me serving her. It was always the same routine and, if it was
available, she'd invariably buy skinned & boned gurnard.

First, she'd ask me if the fish had been frozen and if it was fresh.
Then she'd ask if it had come in today. Since the answer was usually
yes to all the questions, she'd then choose a couple of fillets. Then
she'd ask for me to put them on the paper we used before we wrapped
them and hold it up so she could smell each fillet. It was amazing.
This woman could tell the difference between fish that had come in
that morning or just a few hours later.

As I got to know her and her ways, she stopped verbally asking me to
smell the fish and would simply smile, wrinkle up her nose and I'd
know what she meant. She really had me trained.

One day I asked her if she'd like to try any of the other varieties of
fish on offer and she answered, "Oh no ... kitty likes gurnard the
best."

So all this time she'd been buying the fish for her cat! She didn't
even eat fish herself. "Can't stand it," she explained. "Never could."


--

una cerveza mas por favor ...

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~
Wax-up and drop-in of Surfing's Golden Years: <http://www.surfwriter.net>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~
  #10 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.cooking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,983
Default Restaurant critic peeves

On Sat, 21 Jul 2007 14:41:01 +1200, bob >
wrote:

>
>When I first came to Auckland I worked several part time jobs the
>first couple of years. One of them was in an upmarket retail fish shop
>called Jaybell's Seafood Bazaar. It was down on Auckland's waterfront
>and was the retail end of a huge fishing business - a joint venture
>between New Zealand and Japanese interests.
>

<rest of story nipped>

this is too funny. i think the cat had her trained better than she
had you.

your pal,
blake


  #11 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.cooking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,146
Default Restaurant critic peeves

blake murphy > wrote in message
...
> On Sat, 21 Jul 2007 14:41:01 +1200, bob
> >
> wrote:
>>When I first came to Auckland I worked several part time jobs
>>the
>>first couple of years. One of them was in an upmarket retail
>>fish shop
>>called Jaybell's Seafood Bazaar. It was down on Auckland's
>>waterfront
>>and was the retail end of a huge fishing business - a joint
>>venture
>>between New Zealand and Japanese interests.
>>

> <rest of story nipped>
>
> this is too funny. i think the cat had her trained better than
> she
> had you.


Brings whole levels of new meanings to the term "pussy whipped."

The Ranger


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
RFC Pet Peeves ... Nancy Young[_2_] General Cooking 36 23-05-2009 02:29 AM
Wedding Food Critic Goomba38 General Cooking 71 21-01-2008 11:54 PM
how can i be a pro food critic lubricant General Cooking 110 03-09-2006 06:56 PM
Sushi Restaurant Pet Peeves lazrowp Sushi 174 01-02-2005 05:11 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:49 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 FoodBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Food and drink"