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6.22.2014

Showtime

Show cooking as a real attractive art (picture from Fooding Social Club)

Since I live in Italy I’ve seen a lot of of show cooking events. To me it remains strange to see people that make cooking an event to animate the visitors. Usually it does not even animate me at all, as usually it is too far away too see something, the stories are boring (no one like to hear, cut this…, stir that….) and the result is disappointing. A blog about the sense and non sense of using food to entertain.

Show cooking is a form of entertainment that is typically of our days. In earlier periods, one could hardly afford to use food for these kind of events: most people would already feel lucky if they had enough to feed themselves.
For centuries, preparing food has been an act done by the whole family. The men collected the food, the woman prepared it and then it was eaten by the whole family. The preparation took hours or even days and it was not something that was perceived as a spectacle. Rather it was hard work and if you were not helping in the kitchen there were definitely lots of other things to do to keep the household running.

We now slowly seem to lose respect for this ‘profession’: ready-to-eat-breakfasts, quick lunches and cheap dinners at the sushi bar are now the order of the day. And that also enabled this to make a show out of it: open-plan kitchens in many restaurants and the earlier named show cooking.  

Even though show cooking seems something of these days, we should not forget about the examples of the past, of the rich that could afford to ‘play’ with food. This class has always used food to show off their guests as described in John Dicke’s Delizia. And we all know the still lifes, for example the ones by Caravaggio, in which food became the main subject of an artwork. If it interests you, I suggest you go and visit the Art&Foodexhibition that will be organized by Expo 2015 and Triennale Design Museum, Milan.

To get an idea of what we now do with food (besides eating it) you should do a google search on ‘food art’. I was amazed of the artworks that are created of products that are actually made to eat. Anyhow, back to the shows. I’ve (accidentally) visited a few of them, but hardly once I’ve been convinced about the intention. Usually it is not more than a (famous) cook that prepares a simple but tasty dish while explaining what he is doing. The only difference I see with watching a cooking program on the television is that you are now treated with the nice flavors that come with the cooking process. It is quiet boring anyhow.

As I said, once I was taken by the performance. During an aperitivo at the Festival delle Comunità del Cambiamento, FoodDj Nick Difino from Fooding Social Club did a good job. While preparing the dish he treated us with good music and interesting stories, not about the recipe, but about the ingredients, the history of the dish, and so on.  It was a real pleasure, not only for the mouths, but also for the ears and eyes. 

6.08.2014

Think before your sushi

Fresh fish is delicous, but make sure it comes from a sustainable source

Last Friday my colleagues proposed to go and have sushi for lunch: here in Italy the religious tradition of fish-on-Friday is still alive. It’s just that I was not very enthusiastic about it. I like fish and love sushi, but something withheld me. Time to reflect on the reason of this.

Close to my work there are not so many food places, so we have to do it with the available choices. Usually I have at least one pizza a week, I like to visit a restaurant with an Italian style menu or I bring my own food which I eat in a place we call a park, but which actually is a piece of grass with some trees and benches. And as I said, Friday usually is sushi day.

In the short period I work here, I went to the sushi restaurant about three times now. Each time however I ordered the freshly made ramen with vegetables. Once I added chicken to that, but the quality seemed so low, that I decided to stay with the vegetables the next times.

When last Friday I did not react very enthusiastic when my colleagues proposed to eat sushi, they thought it was because I did not eat fish. I knew this was not the reason that made me hesitate, but at the same time I could not tell them immediately what is was. It took me a walk down the stairs to make up my mind and explain them my dis-enthusiasm.

The price of a sushi menu is somewhere around ten euros. For a normal lunch in Italy on the higher side, but for a sushi made with fresh fish reasonably low. At least in my opinion. With my background and some (basic) knowledge of the what-and-how’s of the food chain, I know that it is almost impossible to make a profitable business with these prices. At least, when you buy the fish in places that offer fish of a certain quality. And actually you don’t even need to be an expert to understand this. Everyone with common sense and is able to make some simple calculations understands that these prices can’t buy sustainable products.

While walking to the restaurant I decided to start the discussion with my colleagues on this. When I explained my hesitations for the choice they made, they immediately agreed that also they know that it is ridiculous to have lunch for these prices. But they also told me also that the prices don’t change a lot at the other restaurants we eat. And they are right, but then I added that also there the choices I make are as sustainable as I can: I usually order something vegetarian and definitely never order a grilled ‘tuna’ with a side dish for only ten euros. I just know that this can’t be good and it will never taste good to me.

I guess I am at a point in which I cannot ignore the backdrops of the common food system anymore. My choices are influenced by what I know: eating things that are not right give me a wrong taste so I stopped doing it anymore. I hope someday I get some more people to act after their knowledge.


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