We all know the jokes that are made every year when it comes to fruitcake. The same one has been going around the globe, passed from person to person, for the past 40 years, nobody likes fruitcake, fruitcake is a bad gift, etc. But let's talk about food beyond that cliche. What are some of the usual Christmas foods that you don't like or are overrated? What food does your family serve when you go back home and you dread it, even though you don't want to tell the person who cooked it that you've never liked it?
Beyond Fruitcake: What are the worst Christmas foods?
Continue reading Beyond Fruitcake: What are the worst Christmas foods?
Judging a restaurant by one dish
Interesting piece over at The Boston Phoenix. The writer asks several chefs what dish they order in a restaurant to see if the kitchen knows what it's doing. That one meal that you would judge the entire restaurant by.
Rialto chef Jody Adams orders a simple pasta dish, because she says that if a restaurant can screw that up, then they'll probably screw up a more complex meal. Michael Schlow (who is chef at two Boston restaurants, Radius and Via Matta), has a different dish for each type of restaurant. At Japanese restaurants, it's the rice. At steak houses, he goes by the side dishes and the wedge salad (what the heck is a wedge salad?). Michael Leviton over at Lumiere goes by the simple dishes at Asian restaurants: Shrimp and broccoli, drunken pasta, and for Italian restaurants it's the risotto.
I'll have to agree with the author of the article and say I often go by the chicken dishes, since they're a pretty basic dish, and I also go by the salads. But then again, I've had some awful meals at some restaurants where everything else I've had is first-rate, so I go back. Readers, how do you judge restaurants overall?
Don't try to use your "logic" on me
There are some restaurants that you just don't go to. Maybe you don't go to them because they're further than you'd like to drive, but – admit it – there are some in your neighborhood, like the restaurant a few blocks away that you have just never been to. It just isn't in your list of possibilities. You might not be able to say anything bad about it, but you don't want to go there, either.
I have a restaurant like this near me. Actually, it's one neighborhood over from mine, a branch of a chain of Mexican restaurants that I happen to like quite a lot. A big part of the reason I like the chain is that the one in my neighborhood had a great chef and was one of its original restaurants. The reason I'm saying "was" is that the restaurant's lease recently expired and, due to a huge spike in the rent, they opted not to renew it. Twenty plus years of good Mexican food and memories – gone.
When I discovered that the place had shut its doors, I was actually standing just outside of them. After I read the notice announcing their closure, as well as the notice announcing the grand opening of its replacement, I decided that I might as well head to the chain's other location. I still wanted Mexican food and my options were limited.
How bad could it be, I thought. I'm sure that the only reason I don't go there is because the parking is lousy.
Olympic food not meeting athletes' standards
The wonderful food that Turin, Italy is famous for is not making its way onto the plates of the Olympic athletes. In
fact, there have been numerous complaints about the food, including accusations of food
poisoning from the Canadian curling team. Athletes from all over the world, including America and Lithuania,
are saying that they "expected more from an Italian kitchen" and wonder "how can you
screw up pasta?" Because the Olympic Village is not in a central location, with athletes spread over many
villages, the food is not all being prepared by the same kitchen staff. Some athletes are fortunate enough to have a
personal or team nutritionist who will prepare all their meals, while others can only look forward to the time that
they can spend in Turin itself, sampling the city's non-Olympic offerings.











