Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
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 | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Anyone know of a chefs trick that would make flat leaf parsley make
extra green, succulent, and shiney? Its for a food presentation project. Pierre |
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Pierre wrote: > Anyone know of a chefs trick that would make flat leaf parsley make > extra green, succulent, and shiney? Its for a food presentation > project. Fertilizer. |
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Pierre" > wrote in message ups.com... > Anyone know of a chefs trick that would make flat leaf parsley make > extra green, succulent, and shiney? Its for a food presentation > project. > > Pierre > Post this question in one or more of the photography newsgroups. Years ago, a glycerine-based spray was one way of doing this, but I'm sure there are multiple ways of doing it. |
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Doug Kanter wrote: > > Post this question in one or more of the photography newsgroups. Years ago, > a glycerine-based spray was one way of doing this, but I'm sure there are > multiple ways of doing it. Thanks Doug; good idea. I appreciate your helpful response. I'll poke around their archives. Bound to be something. Pierre |
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Pierre" > wrote in message oups.com... > > Doug Kanter wrote: >> >> Post this question in one or more of the photography newsgroups. > Years ago, >> a glycerine-based spray was one way of doing this, but I'm sure there > are >> multiple ways of doing it. > > Thanks Doug; good idea. I appreciate your helpful response. I'll poke > around their archives. Bound to be something. > > > > Pierre > You might also poke around www.rit.edu (Rochester Institute of Technology). That school's got a photography program, and some schools put their course work notes online. Another would be www.syracuse.edu. Look for the Gannet school of communications. |
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Pierre wrote:
> Anyone know of a chefs trick that would make flat leaf parsley make > extra green, succulent, and shiney? Its for a food presentation > project. If you're not going to eat it, freshen it in soapy water. It will take up a good bit of it and become plumped. No matter what else you do with it, this is a good first step. 1) Dry it and mist it with Pam of any other spray like it. 2) Food stylists use glycerin to make sparkles, but completely coating the leaves would be difficult because of the viscosity of the glycerin. If it's for a short term show - under 1/2 hour or so, I'd go for the oil spray. 3) Once I used leaf shine spray that I bought at a florist's shop to make kale shiny. It was a pain but worked fine. Happy leaves... Pastorio |
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bob (this one) wrote:
> > 2) Food stylists use glycerin to make sparkles, but completely coating > the leaves would be difficult because of the viscosity of the glycerin. > If it's for a short term show - under 1/2 hour or so, I'd go for the oil > spray. > If it doesn't have to be edible, what about thinning the glycerin with rubbing alcohol? Or vodka, if it does have to be edible? Bob |
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
zxcvbob wrote:
> Bob (this one) wrote: > >> >> 2) Food stylists use glycerin to make sparkles, but completely coating >> the leaves would be difficult because of the viscosity of the >> glycerin. If it's for a short term show - under 1/2 hour or so, I'd go >> for the oil spray. >> > If it doesn't have to be edible, what about thinning the glycerin with > rubbing alcohol? Or vodka, if it does have to be edible? And if you don't use all the vodka on the stupid parsley... Pastorio |
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Pierre" > wrote in message ups.com... > Anyone know of a chefs trick that would make flat leaf parsley make > extra green, succulent, and shiney? Its for a food presentation > project. > > Pierre Yep. Treat the parsley as you would any cut flower. Trim the bottom of the stems and place in a glass with a little water and store in a cool place. Dimitri |
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bob (this one) wrote:
> zxcvbob wrote: > >> Bob (this one) wrote: >> >>> >>> 2) Food stylists use glycerin to make sparkles, but completely >>> coating the leaves would be difficult because of the viscosity of the >>> glycerin. If it's for a short term show - under 1/2 hour or so, I'd >>> go for the oil spray. >>> >> If it doesn't have to be edible, what about thinning the glycerin with >> rubbing alcohol? Or vodka, if it does have to be edible? > > > And if you don't use all the vodka on the stupid parsley... > > Pastorio > Well, I'd hate for it to go to waste... Bob |
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Pierre wrote:
> Doug Kanter wrote: > >>Post this question in one or more of the photography newsgroups. > > Years ago, > >>a glycerine-based spray was one way of doing this, but I'm sure there > > are > >>multiple ways of doing it. > > > Thanks Doug; good idea. I appreciate your helpful response. I'll poke > around their archives. Bound to be something. > > > > Pierre > gloss water base polyurethane. You're not going to eat it but just look/photograph? |
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Del Cecchi wrote: ><snip> > gloss water base polyurethane. You're not going to eat it but just > look/photograph? It's going to be a "nest" for food; the food will be eaten not the parsley. I'll take pix too, yes. Pierre |
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Pierre wrote: > > Anyone know of a chefs trick that would make flat leaf parsley make > extra green, succulent, and shiney? Its for a food presentation > project. > > Pierre Brush it with a light coating of veg oil or even medical mineral oil. It will still be edible. |
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
zxcvbob wrote:
> Bob (this one) wrote: > >> zxcvbob wrote: >> >>> Bob (this one) wrote: >>> >>>> 2) Food stylists use glycerin to make sparkles, but completely >>>> coating the leaves would be difficult because of the viscosity of >>>> the glycerin. If it's for a short term show - under 1/2 hour or so, >>>> I'd go for the oil spray. >>>> >>> If it doesn't have to be edible, what about thinning the glycerin >>> with rubbing alcohol? Or vodka, if it does have to be edible? >> >> And if you don't use all the vodka on the stupid parsley... >> >> Pastorio >> > Well, I'd hate for it to go to waste... Exactly. Leaving it all alone in the bottle like that... Who knows what could happen to it? Pastorio |
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed 16 Mar 2005 04:12:40a, Bob (this one) wrote in rec.food.cooking:
> zxcvbob wrote: > >> Bob (this one) wrote: >> >>> zxcvbob wrote: >>> >>>> Bob (this one) wrote: >>>> >>>>> 2) Food stylists use glycerin to make sparkles, but completely >>>>> coating the leaves would be difficult because of the viscosity of >>>>> the glycerin. If it's for a short term show - under 1/2 hour or so, >>>>> I'd go for the oil spray. >>>>> >>>> If it doesn't have to be edible, what about thinning the glycerin >>>> with rubbing alcohol? Or vodka, if it does have to be edible? >>> >>> And if you don't use all the vodka on the stupid parsley... >>> >>> Pastorio >>> >> Well, I'd hate for it to go to waste... > > Exactly. Leaving it all alone in the bottle like that... > > Who knows what could happen to it? It could get drunk. -- Wayne Boatwright ____________________________________________ Give me a smart idiot over a stupid genius any day. Sam Goldwyn, 1882-1974 |
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Wayne Boatwright" > wrote in message ... > On Wed 16 Mar 2005 04:12:40a, Bob (this one) wrote in rec.food.cooking: > > > zxcvbob wrote: > > > >> Bob (this one) wrote: > >> > >>> zxcvbob wrote: > >>> > >>>> Bob (this one) wrote: > >>> > >>> And if you don't use all the vodka on the stupid parsley... > >>> > >>> Pastorio > >>> > >> Well, I'd hate for it to go to waste... > > > > Exactly. Leaving it all alone in the bottle like that... > > > > Who knows what could happen to it? > > It could get drunk. > > -- > Wayne Boatwright Better than the cook. With enough vodka, the cook might start ironing the curly parsley to make it flat. Then again, would that really be so bad? Charlie, Stoli hugger |
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Charles Gifford wrote:
> "Wayne Boatwright" > wrote > >>On Wed 16 Mar 2005 04:12:40a, Bob (this one) wrote in rec.food.cooking: >> >>>zxcvbob wrote: >>> >>>>Bob (this one) wrote: >>>> >>>>>zxcvbob wrote: >>>>> >>>>>>Bob (this one) wrote: >>>>> >>>>>And if you don't use all the vodka on the stupid parsley... >>>>> >>>>>Pastorio >>>>> >>>>Well, I'd hate for it to go to waste... >>> >>>Exactly. Leaving it all alone in the bottle like that... >>> >>>Who knows what could happen to it? >> >>It could get drunk. > > Better than the cook. With enough vodka, the cook might start ironing the > curly parsley to make it flat. Then again, would that really be so bad? Pshaw, I say. The conscientious parsley shiner would get the flatleaf so no ironing necessary. That being the case, more time and energy to deal more properly with the vodka. Anybody knows that. Pastorio |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Parsley | General Cooking | |||
Parsley | General Cooking | |||
Eat Your Parsley | General Cooking | |||
How much $ do chefs make? | General Cooking | |||
TV Chefs and Real Chefs | General Cooking |