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| General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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hi! i have lots of cookboooks 32 but need more help in learning to
cook. someone said that i should take a job at a restaurant to learn but would i be stuck doing one job - sauces ? i have a cooking blog but there isnt much there yet http://dobyshow.blogspot.com/ |
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Doby wrote:
hi! i have lots of cookboooks 32 but need more help in learning to cook. someone said that i should take a job at a restaurant to learn but would i be stuck doing one job - sauces ? That would be a helluva big step just to learn to cook better. The work is hard, hot and intense, and the pay is bad. I would doubt you could be the saucier (if that's the right word for the sauce guy) in a really good restaurant. That's a job for the accomplished, not the learner. The sophistication of the sauces is the main reason we frequent two of our favorite restaurants here in L.A. If you aren't put off by the conditions, though, you might learn a lot. You'll develop various skills and learn the kind of discipline that leads to efficiency. One thing to guard against: the nature of restaurants requires certain compromises and substitutions in order to meet the demands of time and volume. Don't make the mistake of thinking those compromises are improvements over what can be done at home. Remember intstead that they represent the opportunities for home cooks to improve on restaurant fare. -aem |
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aem wrote:
Doby wrote: hi! i have lots of cookboooks 32 but need more help in learning to cook. someone said that i should take a job at a restaurant to learn but would i be stuck doing one job - sauces ? That would be a helluva big step just to learn to cook better. The work is hard, hot and intense, and the pay is bad. I would doubt you could be the saucier (if that's the right word for the sauce guy) in a really good restaurant. That's a job for the accomplished, not the learner. The sophistication of the sauces is the main reason we frequent two of our favorite restaurants here in L.A. If you aren't put off by the conditions, though, you might learn a lot. You'll develop various skills and learn the kind of discipline that leads to efficiency. One thing to guard against: the nature of restaurants requires certain compromises and substitutions in order to meet the demands of time and volume. Don't make the mistake of thinking those compromises are improvements over what can be done at home. Remember intstead that they represent the opportunities for home cooks to improve on restaurant fare. -aem For an almost Off Topic addendum, some would argue that the "love" or energy (of a metaphysical or supernatural sort) a individual puts into food they are preparing for themselves or others in a home setting can not really be done in the fast paced world of a busy restaurant. IMO even the best 4 star Michelin guide, top of the line, gourmet restaurants can't compare with really good home cooking. Which is one of the reasons i like the priee fixee (sp?)service of European restaurants, in many small working class restaurants a good cook will prepare an exceptionally hugh meal to serve all the clients on a given day, no menu or choosing what to have prepared but rather a meal the chef has cooked for that day, take it or leave it, but it allows the cook to perform in the kitchen more as they would in their own home. There used to be a restaurant sort of like this in Berkeley, a soup restaurant, its speciality and main product were fresh soup. Going in on a monday after noon was always the best as the cook had finished up making a weeks worth of stock and had just concocted his first few soups from it (think Sienfield's "soup nazi' only nice & with sit down seating) Sadly it became so popular that it was bought by an new group of people who have not kept up the original owners traditions. Its still an acceptable place to eat but no longer has the special quality it used to, its just another inexpensive restaurant now. --- JL |
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For an almost Off Topic addendum, some would argue that the "love" or
energy (of a metaphysical or supernatural sort) a individual puts into food they are preparing for themselves or others in a home setting can not really be done in the fast paced world of a busy restaurant. IMO even the best 4 star Michelin guide, top of the line, gourmet restaurants can't compare with really good home cooking. JL I've not had the opportunity to compare -- but I'd give it a go for a while. :-) Dee Dee |
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Joseph Littleshoes wrote: For an almost Off Topic addendum, some would argue that the "love" or energy (of a metaphysical or supernatural sort) a individual puts into food they are preparing for themselves or others in a home setting can not really be done in the fast paced world of a busy restaurant. IMO even the best 4 star Michelin guide, top of the line, gourmet restaurants can't compare with really good home cooking. What nonsense. First, the top Michelin award is three stars, second, the restaurants that receive this do stuff that no home cook could could even consider. Apples and oranges comparison. |
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"----- Original Message ----- From: "Joseph Littleshoes" Newsgroups: rec.food.cooking Sent: Sunday, April 09, 2006 4:43 PM Subject: cooking help? snip For an almost Off Topic addendum, some would argue that the "love" or energy (of a metaphysical or supernatural sort) a individual puts into food they are preparing for themselves or others in a home setting can not really be done in the fast paced world of a busy restaurant. IMO even the best 4 star Michelin guide, top of the line, gourmet restaurants can't compare with really good home cooking. Michelin doesn't have 4 stars. They top out at 3. If you had ever eaten at true 3 star restaurant you could never have expressed this view. I don't know how you equate a person's capacity to love (or similar metaphysical malarky) with preparing excellent food. It takes training, skill, perception, good taste, uncompromising standards and access to the best possible ingredients. I'm a home cook of what I consider to be better than average cooking skills and discernment but I could never realistically produce what I've experienced at some Michelin 2 or 3 star restaurants even on my best day. Maybe one or two things I could master but the totality? and on a daily basis? supported only by my *love* or *energy*. What utter hogwash! Which is one of the reasons i like the priee fixee (sp?)service of European restaurants, in many small working class restaurants a good cook will prepare an exceptionally hugh meal to serve all the clients on a given day, no menu or choosing what to have prepared but rather a meal the chef has cooked for that day, take it or leave it, but it allows the cook to perform in the kitchen more as they would in their own home. How many prix fixe, *inexpensive*, *working class* restaurants have you actually been to where no choice is offered to the patrons? I mean the mind boggles and I've spent a lot of time in Europe. more snips Kate |
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Kate B wrote:
How many prix fixe, *inexpensive*, *working class* restaurants have you actually been to where no choice is offered to the patrons? I mean the mind boggles and I've spent a lot of time in Europe. Kate I am with you and behind you up to here. Loads of trattorie do the no menu thing. Lunch ticket people get the number of courses their ticket is worth and the rest of us eat way too much. Sometimes it is great, and sometimes it isn't. It is never up to any Michelin stars. |
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"Umbrian" wrote in message ... Kate B wrote: How many prix fixe, *inexpensive*, *working class* restaurants have you actually been to where no choice is offered to the patrons? I mean the mind boggles and I've spent a lot of time in Europe. Kate I am with you and behind you up to here. Loads of trattorie do the no menu thing. Lunch ticket people get the number of courses their ticket is worth and the rest of us eat way too much. Sometimes it is great, and sometimes it isn't. It is never up to any Michelin stars. No choice at all? I just never encountered much along these lines. I have had very limited choice but rarely no choice. Live and learn. Kate |
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"Kate B" wrote in message news ![]() "Umbrian" wrote in message ... Kate B wrote: How many prix fixe, *inexpensive*, *working class* restaurants have you actually been to where no choice is offered to the patrons? I mean the mind boggles and I've spent a lot of time in Europe. Kate I am with you and behind you up to here. Loads of trattorie do the no menu thing. Lunch ticket people get the number of courses their ticket is worth and the rest of us eat way too much. Sometimes it is great, and sometimes it isn't. It is never up to any Michelin stars. No choice at all? I just never encountered much along these lines. I have had very limited choice but rarely no choice. Live and learn. Kate I've only had a no choice menu (at least 10 pages) in a nice hotel in Yugoslavia years ago. Each thing I pointed to, they didn't have. And I pointed to a lot of things. Then I got to looking around, everyone had the same thing on their plates. Dee Dee |
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Dee Randall wrote:
For an almost Off Topic addendum, some would argue that the "love" or energy (of a metaphysical or supernatural sort) a individual puts into food they are preparing for themselves or others in a home setting can not really be done in the fast paced world of a busy restaurant. IMO even the best 4 star Michelin guide, top of the line, gourmet restaurants can't compare with really good home cooking. JL I've not had the opportunity to compare -- but I'd give it a go for a while. :-) Dee Dee I expressed my self poorly, to my taste a good home cooked meal is better than the best 'gourmet' foods prepared for a paying clientele. --- JL |
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