Top Chef D.C.–Hamburger’s Helper.
(This post is completely infested with spoilers) Top Chef’s annual prom night episode, Restaurant Wars, aired this week and by its end one confident, creative chef was sent schlumphing off toward home while several of his dullard colleagues stayed to cook another day. No, (big sigh), the idea of Kenny Gilbert being sent packing while Alex and Amanda remain on the show is sad and wrong. Yes, (bigger shrug), the reality of lesser chefs in real life (and on Top Chef) keeping their jobs while more talented people are booted off the line happens all of the time. Kenny made bad choices and dared to anger the food deities by being over-reaching, while carrying his teammates by their belt loops. Meanwhile, his lesser competition ducked and covered enough to get by. Quickfire Challenge: This week’s opener was an already classic match that’s appeared over the last couple of seasons, the blindfolded team relay. The chef’s drew knives and were picked by two of the cheftestants for either team red or blue. Each team used four chefs, three of which remained blindfolded and silent as their teammates took ten minute intervals to prepare a dish from assembled ingredients. The initial chefs were careful to lay out their ingredients and organize prep in a way that would signal to each team member following in the relay the nature of the dish being prepared. Team Red (Tiffany, Ed, Alex, Angelo) had problems, although Tiffany had laid out the preparations in a way that illustrated exactly the direction the plate should take. Alex followed her and goofed around with fish, seasoning it early and ruined the dish. Team Blue (Kelly, Kenny, Amanda, Kevin) calmly followed one another through the steps and made a pleasing shrimp and angel hair dish. The Blues were smart enough to do little things like prep the starches before the quick cooking seafood proteins and watch how the dish was seasoned. The guest judge for this Quickfire was House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D. California). Speaker Pelosi judged in that oddly diplomatic fashion. Instead of telling the chefs they were a bunch of punks and asking for a T-Bone cooked Pittsburgh style and a jug of Mad Dog, she carefully considered the two dishes and noted the over-saltiness of Team Red’s Roasted Snapper. She praised the Blue group’s shrimp and seemed reminded of home, where as a child she used to wrestle circus performers by the Bay. Shortly after Speaker Pelosi waved goodbye, the chefs were informed that the blue and red teams would stay together for Restaurant Wars. Elimination Challenge: Team Blue looked strong going in. Kelly was assigned front of the house duties, as well as responsibility for two dishes. Kenny took the Executive Chef’s role. They worked well together and looked like the winner all along. Ah, but America is built on the backs of jackasses. The Red’s were motley, but Angleo, Tiffany and Ed had the spark of an idea. Keep Alex in the front of the house and away from the food. The material he did lay hands on was a mess, leaving pin bones and scales in Tiffany’s fish and over-trimming beef. He was minimized and the two other guy’s produced “his” dish. Meanwhile, in the restaurant, Alex tried hard to lose the challenge. He treated his wait staff horribly and was generally a Richard Cranium. When the judges came to dine at the restaurant, cheesily named EVOO, Alex fumbled through the menu and mostly ignored them. This with famed New York Times hatchet wielding critic Frank Bruni dining with Padma, Tom and Gail. The food saved EVOO. Angelo’s Confit of Tomato Soup w/Summer Squash and Ed’s Slow Baked Turbot were enough to carry the day. Team Blue, and their restaurant 2121, had warm service with lots of customer attention thanks to Kelly. Their calm demeanor didn’t carry over to the food. Kelly’s corn soup and crab salad was bland, and the ice cream accompanying her flourless chocolate ganache cake was underwhelming. Amanda had trouble maintaining temps for grass-fed beef on a wood fire grill, but her sauce was tasty. Kevin produced a colorful, pleasing Halibut, but the judges felt he could have done more. Kenny made a what amounted to a muddled beet salad and a big hunk of fried goat cheese over rhubarb salad. Despite protests from Kevin and Kenny that Alex did nothing, Kenny got the ax and Ed got a ginormous bottle of wine. Top Chef Restaurant Wars Season 7 proved that it’s not how you treat people, or one’s integrity. It’s who works the hardest to cover up mistakes as a team and the basic quality of a team’s food. Be a jerk as long as you’re a righteous jerk. Hopefully that only works on Top Chef.
Spoilers. Lots Of Them. Nine episodes into Top Chef’s Washington D.C. season and the show is at what usually signals a crossroads. The next episode will feature the seasonal Restaurant War, a battle waged between two groups of four chefs in which each party sets up and establishes a functioning restaurant for an evening. The Restaurant Wars gimmick has been copied by other shows, most notably an entire series developed using the concept on Food Network. The reason for the success of this has something to do with the idea of seeing the cheftestants out of their rarified Bravo bubble and actually swimming/sinking with their own restaurant. I’m jumping way ahead, though. The chef’s still had this week’s stressful challenges to deal with, including preparation of an Ethiopian inspired dish and an embassy dinner. They also had to avoid chef Alex Reznik as he skidded around the kitchen like a maniac, and steer clear of Angelo’s plastic wrap on the toilet. A glance at this show may have reminded viewers of junior high home economics classes, but that diminishes the culinary skills of teenagers. Many of them cook acceptable rice, after all.
Abundant Spoilers Within. I skipped out on putting a Top Chef recap on the blog last week for various reasons. Well, okay, one reason. I find the cheftestants representing Season 7 of television’s most innovative culinary reality program detestable. On the last installment Tamesha went home after falling for the advice given by chef Angelo. His response was a shrug (“Gee, I really liked whatshername, but whadaya gonna do?”). This season’s chefs have a number of personal and kitchen habits that leave the viewer wondering how they’ve retained employment for this long. Kelly, the chef I really believe stands to win it all, has a penchant for crying. So, in fact does Andrea. I cry sometimes, too. When I found Ford had stopped making the Crown Victoria I shed a tear. There is also the habit of saying “I haven’t shown the judges my food yet.” This is a line that is repeated every season and was again uttered by tonight’s ‘had to pack it’ chef. Really? Really Really? You had something like 16 challenges to show them your food. An annoying thing to say as you pack your knives, but nowhere near as reprehensible as stealing someone’s prep items. Theft is a habit that will come back to bite. So now, despite the draggy, obnoxious participants, Top Chef has got me watching thanks to theft drama. Here we go with the spoilertastic details on episode 8 from Washington D.C.
preeminent pseudo-reality culinary series, the chefs have begun to couple. Angelo, paired for challenges with Tamesha, has begun whispering sweet nothings to her on the side. Frankly, after a number of days filming Top Chef, Angelo might have started whispering sweet nothings to Madea. He’s just glad she’s not Tracey, whose hand print is still on his backside. Ah, but this is TV and what has started to be dull viewing at that. So, the good folks editing the show have cobbled together love at the stove. There are no atheists in foxholes, but there is a lot of “bow-chicka-wowwow” in cooking if you’re pointing the camera in the right direction. Ed, the poor man’s Angelo, for instance, is starting an affair with Tiffany. She’s not exactly rejecting him and old Chef Droopy is all smiles this week. Oh, and they cook, too!







