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NY POST/ADAM BUCKMAN
"Hell's Kitchen" Monday night at 9 on Fox ON his new Fox reality show, "Hell's Kitchen," British celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay wastes no opportunity for a put-down. "I think you're a plank!" he tells one contestant on this cooking-competition show when the contestant presents him with a dish of salmon roasted on a plank of cedar. "I don't even know what that means, Chef," says the bewildered contestant, Christopher North, 35, of Yorktown Heights, N.Y. That made two of us, since I didn't know what that meant either. "Plank means idiot!" says Chef Ramsay, who turns out to be correct. Plank does mean idiot, but not in the three dictionaries and one thesaurus I consulted before finding this particular usage in an on-line dictionary of British slang. In the same segment, Chef Ramsay declares one contestant's Absolut penne to be "absolute dog[bleep]!" and tells another, "You've got a palate like a cow's backside!" And there isn't a Web site on Earth that can explain that one. Chef Ramsay aims to become the Simon Cowell of cooking shows, but he needn't try so hard. "Hell's Kitchen" works just fine without the comparisons to Cowell that Fox is emphasizing in its publicity campaign for this new summer series. "Hell's Kitchen" has 12 amateur and professional cooks vying for a grand prize - their own restaurant. Each week, one contestant will be dismissed by Ramsay, who, in the first two episodes provided for preview, has yet to come up with a catchy and consistent way of "firing" each week's failure. In the manner of such shows as "The Apprentice," the 12 are divided into two teams - blue and red. They compete each week to serve dinner to hungry Hollywood types packed into a trendy, new restaurant called Hell's Kitchen that has been equipped with 72 cameras. It's in the manic kitchen scenes that Ramsay is at his best - or worst, depending on your point of view. Directing the contestants as they ruin dish after dish, Ramsay lectures, screams and curses at them - a style he seems to think will motivate them, but seemingly has the opposite effect. The show reaches its boiling point when restaurant patrons, who have waited for more than two hours without receiving their dinners, come to the kitchen's rim to complain to Ramsay, who unrepentently tells them to "F' off." The shocked looks on their faces would be reason enough to watch "Hell's Kitchen," if not for this show's many other appetizing ingredients. * * * NY DAILY NEWS/DAVID BIANCULLI Color me shocked. My appetite for reality shows is such that the prospect of new ones tends to make me nauseated, but with the new restaurant reality series "Hell's Kitchen," Fox is plating and serving something almost palatable. Based on a British series of the same name, and featuring the same star, "Hell's Kitchen" presents chef Gordon Ramsay, who's renowned in England for his world-class restaurants as well as his volatile temper. Here, Ramsay takes a dozen recruits - some experienced chefs, some raw recruits with a passion for cooking - and throws them into a sink-or-swim, fry-or-die competition. There are two teams of six chefs each; as with "Iron Chef," there are two identically equipped kitchens side by side. In "Hell's Kitchen," though, they're cooking for a Ramsay restaurant of the same name, opened in Los Angeles for the occasion. The aspirants, each hoping to win the grand prize of a restaurant of his or her own, are shown the kitchen and are given 45 minutes to whip up an introductory signature dish for Ramsay's inspection. And when he inspects, he's brutal. By the time he finally tells one person, "Not bad," you'd think they had hit the lottery. Then comes a stunning announcement: Both teams will be serving dinner that night, to opening-night patrons, under the direction of Ramsay and his equally tough sous chefs. For a while, Ramsay looks like a perfectionistic taskmaster, and your sympathies are with him as the trainees make one mistake after another. Then, when Ramsay reacts to an undercooked piece of fish by slamming the dish into the chest of the offending chef, he loses the patina of mentor and turns into a simple, unpredictable bully. And when one fiasco follows another, prompting Ramsay to toss out one course after another, and patrons are inquiring why their gourmet meals are taking hours to prepare, he reacts to their inquiries with almost psychotic hostility. Annoyed that two young blonds have approached the kitchen, and him, to complain about the delay, Ramsey says to his maitre d', "Would you escort these two ladies, please, back to plastic surgery?" That's not the only gasp-inducing remark or altercation, and it's a fascinating case study. How can a chef be so obsessed over the quality of food, yet simultaneously so hostile and dismissive to those waiting to eat it? Hidden cameras capture most of the action, which appears too raw and unchecked - from the teams, the patrons and Ramsay - to be explained away as grandstanding. More so than in "The Restaurant," the drama in "Hell's Kitchen" seems real, and the show itself seems perfectly titled...even before Ramsay cuts the kitchen air-conditioning to teach one team a lesson. Apparently, cooking for Ramsay, like war, is hell. Click here eveyday to feed a rescued animal: http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/ |
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On Mon, 30 May 2005 19:25:17 -0400, M. FERRANTE
wrote: [snip reviews] Thanks for the reviews. I missed the show -- I was cleaning up my kitchen, actually. Click here eveyday to feed a rescued animal: http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/ David Bianculi didn't include that in his review, did he? modom |
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