Food TV
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This is some of your best photo shop work yet, I totally forgot Tom was in Closer. Padma did act super giddy during the dinner with Natalie, like they became super bffs in a matter of second over a glass of sparkling wine. Can't wait til next week when Robin hopefully gets sent home!
I was wondering if she had some sort of a wheat allergy or low-carb thing. There were a couple dishes with potato, but other than that.. wasn't it weird that nobody had pasta or rice?
Another good summary Drew. But how is Mike I on the top and the bottom? Wasn't it one of the brothers on top with the banana polenta? I can't tell them apart. And yes, they were all getting a little sloppy at the dinner table. Hopefully Pads wasn't preggo during filming!
G Nagle: Sorry, that was a typo ��Mike V at the top, Mike I at the bottom.
Thank goodness, I was worried at the beginning because you didn't a) have a Princess Amidala photo, and b) you didn't call NP another transcendent beauty. But you fixed it all by the end. Also, I think you should write menus. I'd totally order a triple asparagus/tomato sashimi/banana polenta dealie.
One of Tom c's dopest suites I might add.
[...] Portman, everyone’s favorite vegan child assassin, is attached to star and produce in the adaptation of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, according to [...]
[...] cocoon-like pods wind up dried; finding them fresh is akin to happening upon buried treasure. Remember how giddy Top Chef’s Robin got when she came upon a stash in the Craftsteak kitchen? She stuffed them [...]
[...] seven minutes after we posted, reader Samantha checked in with the right answer: The Flintstones. Here’s the Meal Ticket post featuring the answer, plus Tom Colicchio’s head Photoshopped onto lots of other people’s bodies. Have fun [...]
[...] cooking time in the Elimination). Since the transcendently beautiful cockles of Padma’s heart can be warmed only by Natalie Portman, she was probably like, “The fuck is Jen doing with her face right [...]
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Redeeming a late pass for this one. Blame it on the alcohol Phillies alcohol and Phillies.
So Episode 9 features what I think is the magic number for still-standing TC cheftestants � eight. This means a few things:
- The season's about to pop off from a stupid-but-enthralling drama standpoint.
- It's now way clearer who should be sent packing prior to the finals.
- RESTAURANT WARS!
But first, Quickfire: Accomplished chef/restaurateur and Top Chef Masters competitor Rick Moonen, along with the transcendently preggo-glow beautiful Padma, institute a TC first � the "Tag Team Cook-Off," for which the eight split up into groups of four and don blindfolds, creating weird David Lynchian tableaus such as this:
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The first chef strips off his/her blindfold, picks ingredients and has 10 minutes to start prep for a dish. After time's up, the second chef has to pick up right where the first one left off and so forth, culminating in the last guy/girl finishing it up for judgment.
Team Red � Eli, Robin, Bryan and Mike V � bust out a pan-roasted NY strip with pickled veg and a miso-avocado pur�e, while Blue � our girl Jen C, Laurine, Mike I and Kevin � offer a pan-seared cod in a mushroom broth. Sustainable seafood king Moonen is impressed with both plates but ends up giving the W to Blue, despite Jen accidentally referring to her protein as trout when she describes it. "I called my black cod trout on national TV ... awesome," she laments. Don't you sweat it, lady. I've called short ribs spare ribs and spare ribs short ribs so many times that I think the National Association for the Preservation of Rib Sanctity (NAPRS) has a hit out on me.
The squad earns $10K to split, but Padma informs them that they can take a risk and earn a $10K prize apiece if they emerge victorious from the Elimination. Jen C does that circular finger gesture that doubles as the universal symbol for "let that shit ride" and it is on.
Elimination: RESTAURANT WARS. It's a little different this year, as the two teams are told they're cooking in Moonen's split-level restaurant, meaning they're not responsible for paint or d�cor and votives and napkin rings and all the other stupid shit that has messed up the teams in past seasons. I think this is an excellent idea since I couldn't care less about whether or not a bunch of scary-talented chefs have an eye for sconces. Team Blue decides on Mission as their restaurant name, while Red goes with Revolt, a clever nod to Robin, Eli and the Voltaggio bros.
Before we get into what happened, LOOK IT'S PADMA IN A BAR/LOUNGE SITUATION:
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Mission screws up. Jen C's hazelnut butter sauce breaks, rendering her trout plate messy, and her bouillabaisse is poorly received. A lamb/carrot jam dish, conceived by Laurine but actually fired by Kevin, comes out of the kitchen both under- and overcooked. Mike I's asparagus dish and char tartar underwhelms. (Padma requests a side of salt at one point for her underseasoned dishes � so transcendently beautiful, SO COLD.) The most visible shortcoming of the team, however, is Laurine's mishandling of front-of-the-house duties � she looks les miserables the entire time, pouting and plopping plates down on the judges' table before skulking away with no explanation of what's being presented.
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Revolt, in stark contrast, destroys it. Excepting a few minor mess-ups, all their dishes are hits, especially Mike V's chicken and calamari "pasta" and his cod with billi-bi (mussel) sauce. Robin and Bryan win over the sweettooths in the room, too, with a pear pithivier and a chocolate ganache/spearmint ice cream thing (right) that sounds delicious, despite it looking like it was made by a pastry chef from The Chronicles of Riddick. We're treated to the usual Volt brother bickering here, but we also catch a peek into Mike V's insane control-freak world when he flips his shit on Robin and talks to her like she's a insipid little kid (see title of post).
At judges' table, Revolt is dubbed the best entrant in Restaurant Wars history (!), and Mike V, deservedly, takes home the win, plus the $10K the Mission team forfeited. He wants to split it with his teammates, but Bryan thinks that's patronizing and says so. Mission's carted in, and it looks bleak for our girl Jen for a second, as the panel boxes her ears over her trout. In the end, though, the combo of Laurine's failed lamb dish and her dyspeptic FOH presence translate into her packing her knives.
Real quick, here are my unscientific, gut-feeling power rankings for the rest of this Top Chef season. In descending order, ranked by likelihood of taking it home:
- Kevin
- TIE: Mike V and Jen C
- Bryan
- Mike I
- Eli
- Robin
Thoughts?
My fave part of the ep was when Padma asked for more salt. She kind of shrugged her shoulders and smirked. Oh, Padma, you devious ice queen bitch! How I love you so!
Not even a mention of Jen in a bathing suit?? Slacking Lazor! Agree 100% with your final 7...though I would have left at least seven more bullet points blank between Eli and Robin. Kevin is so humble that it hasn't even been mentioned that he is the Babe Ruth of Top Chef, destroying the competition. Excellent cheftestants this season, but Kevin is by far the best.
Mike I is cockier than Eli, but when it comes down to it, Eli is better.
Eli is too immature, The brothers need to lose the sibling rivalry on camera-It's Jen and Kevin all the way!!
Padma was in top ice queen form this episode-so many cold stares! Did anyone else feel bad for Jen C. when she told the judges she felt broken (like her sauce)? So sad, Jen!
I'm going, in descending order: Kevin and Jen C. (tie--they're both so understated and good!), Mike V., Bryan, Mike I., Eli, Robin (how is she still there?). Hoping our girl pulls it off, though. No mention of the horrific name Revolt (backwards E)? I thought Padma was going to hurl. I, too, felt bad when Jen said she felt as broken as her sauce. Aw.
I completely agree with that order. Kevin is probably the best contestant on this show, yet. If he f's up and doesn't win some how, I will be so disappointed.
Beardie is the best.
[...] see, kind of like the fine-dining telephone game. Last season, I thought this blindfolded shitshow evoked a certain Lynchian doom. This season, though? Straight vintage-ass Madonna, [...]
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| Courtesy of georges' |
Last night, French-born Jeremy Duclut (above), of georges' in Wayne (503 W. Lancaster Ave.), bested chef Peter Karapanagiotis of Priv� (246 Market St.), Lower Merion-based caterer Barbara Esmonde and one other competitor on an episode of Food Network's Chopped. (The group filmed the show back in April of this year.) Karapanagiotis made it to the final dessert round � secret ingredients of sharp cheddar, Limoncello, parsnips and Saltines � where he was edged by Duclut, who walked with $10,000. What's he going to do with the cash? "I have a wife, I will have to ask her," he says in a statement. Aw.
Chef Peter should have won. Jeremy was very dule, boring, and made out to be like a true frenchman, ignorent! Peter was humble and a great and creative good, good sport, and 10 years younger than Jeremy.
[...] Duclut, chef at georges‘ in Wayne, took it home in an October Chopped episode that also featured Prive chef Peter Karapanagiotis and local caterer Barbara Esmonde. Reminder: [...]
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Jennifer Carroll and Jose Garces aren't the only Philly chefs repping on the small screen right now. This coming Tuesday, Oct. 20, at 10 p.m., check out Prive chef Peter Karapanagiotis and georges' exec Jeremy Duclut duke it out on Chopped, the Food Network's fast-paced cook-off show. (It's basically an hour-long Quickfire Challenge, for any unfamiliar Top Chef heads out there.) Check out the description of the episode from the show site after the jump. Here's hoping neither of our boys are responsible for this "oh-my-gosh mistake."
UPDATE: Sorry that we failed to mention initially that there will be a third Philly rep on this episode � Lower Merion-based caterer Barbara Esmonde. (h/t Inqlings)
A slippery shocker in the appetizer basket starts things off on a terrifying note. Then in the Entr�e Round, the judges are stunned by the oh-my-gosh mistake one chef makes with an umeboshi-arugula salad. Good gracious, parsnips and soda crackers for dessert? The finalists have to act quickly to make it work.
[...] other Philly chefs recently appeared on an episode of the show back in the fall. terra’s Eric Paraskevas on Chopped next [...]
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We know, we know: Few things appear douchier to the average person than watching a bunch of people taste wine. But y'all oenophobes should know that all the sniffing and the swirling and the holding it up to the light stuff is imperative to the process. The dumping of perfectly good vino into classy silver spittoons, however? I could take it or leave it. This is probably why the only tasting notes I ever really write are about Fruit by the Foot.
Mike V, who found himself at the bottom last week, started off Episode 8 the only way a person coming off a poor performance should � by comparing himself to Babe Ruth. You know, the Bambino totally "struck out once our twice in his career," and last week's screwup was totally the same deal. I glossed over the sheer egotism of this comment and immediately moved on to the "What if Mike V was in The Sandlot?" stage of the process:
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Quickfire: Chef Charlie Palmer, the American culinary mogul who coincidentally employed both Mike V and his brother Bryan in the past, tasks the remaining nine cheftestants with creating a dish that somehow incorporates Alexia Crunchy Snacks, which are "made with real vegetables!" and have "lots of flavor!" (Y'all too good for Doritos? Snots.) Chaz was not feeling Robin, and used the phrase "too creamy" to describe her mousseline, which I found hilarious because I am mature; our girl Jen C, who accidentally overcooked her pork; and Ash, who did something "peculiar." At the top: Bryan with some steak; Kevin, who is always killing it (will he win?); and eventual winner Eli, who does a warm potato and clam salad and thinks it's cool to announce on national television that he lives with his parents rent-free. BALLER!
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Then Eli and Robin get in a stupid fight over some stupid scallop-related shit. It's stupid.
Elimination: Palmer has the kids pick out a Pinot Noir and pair it up with a random pork part for a charity tasting event. My two favorite portions of the tasting/judging part of this ep were typically erudite Food & Wine EIC Dana Cowin calling Laurine's botched pork rillette attempt "cat food" and Palmer lamenting that he could not taste any "porkiness" in Robin's ... pork chop. (You know you screwed up when your pork chop lacks porkiness.) At the top are the usual suspects: Both V bros, Kev and Jen C, the latter of whom earns high praise from Palmer for crafting the lightest rendition of pork belly the chef's ever tried. (I didn't even know that was possible.) Kevin takes her home again, though, earning himself a table at the 2010 Pigs and Pinot event in the process. The dude has a pig tattooed on him! He deserves it.
And at the bottom are, well, the usual suspects again � Robin, whose sauce was too gummy in addition to her missing porkiness; Laurine, whose "terrible" Friskies-caliber rillette earned her a (very polite) tongue-lashing from Palmer because she cooked it completely incorrectly; and Ash, who should've been hacked last week anyhow. He explains to the judges that he was planning on doing a dish with polenta and jack cheese, but second-guessed himself, and that's enough to convince the panel that his confidence is too shaky to let him continue on.
Next week: Mike and Bryan fightfightfight, possibly armed with kitchen apparati. Jesus, somebody throw Bryan a microplane or something.
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| bravotv.com |
Pigs and Pinot is an absolutely hilarious name for any event. Also, I said it before and I'll say it again" Kevin 4eva! Love that guy!!!
I totally support Kevin 4eva!! I also seriously love that picture with Eli. Your photoshop skills Drew are unmatched.
Totally saw Eli sous-ing it up for an Iron Chef America contestant last week. He looked like a smug mama's boy on that one, too.
I was hoping Robin would get the axe; she is totally exaggerating her annoying qualities because she has become the outsider. We can now see why Bryan V has the stiffest persona since Hubert Hoover. He had a good ten years working with the similarly rigid Charlie Palmer where he learned how to make every word, action and glance personify the enormous stick inserted into his anal cavity (or purse for my incarcerated friends). I want to grab him and be like, "lighten up dude, your name is spelled with a Y, your supposed to be fun..." I should prob scan the back comments before I ask but... Anyone not buying at all that Kevin is 26? I don't watch much TV but is this show the most pervasive display of product placement ever? Last thought- Ash said in his parting words that he was going to invite all the judges back to his restaurant except for Patima. Sup with that?
When will someone point out that Eli looks like a young Fat Mike from NOFX....Oh I guess I did.
yawn.
Kibby! Yes, I kept saying that Charlie Palmer=Mr. Belvedere but no one I was with knew who that was!! Also, who wants to hug Kevin every time he speaks? Because I do. Like, a lot.
Anyone know if Chef Charlie Palmer is on Twitter ?? Member name ?? ~Patricia
Joeblo - I used to live in Atlanta. Kevin really is 26. It's the beard. Yes, this show is one of the most pervasive product placement programs ever. Drew notes that at least once a season. Ash is gay. And Padma said something snarky about his dish lacking flavor. But mostly he said that because he's gay. Very gay. Wow, Padma is beautiful. - B
Patricia: Mr. Belevedere's Twitter is here: http://twitter.com/cpgrestaurant
I ate at Kevin Gillespie's restaurant Woodfire Grill in Atlanta this past July. We watched Kevin Fire things up from his open kitchen. He is a great Chef. This was my review: http://bit.ly/PF3re That look-a-like pic is pretty funny though! LOL!
So funny you posted this!!! I immediately thought the same thing when TC Season 6 first premiered!!! He's still a great chef though. Thank you for my morning laugh :)
Felicia thank you so much! I have been trying for so long to figure out who Kevin reminds me of and this is it!
Dude, WTF? Seriously Felicia, this cat is stealing my thunder. This is me and Yukon hanging in the brewery: http://photos-b.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc1/hs227.snc1/7433_620327461736_10514038_36047705_35917_n.jpg
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How diverse of you, Top Chef producers! A white dude, an Asian dude, a black dude, a woman and a dude who thinks this is OK!
Quickfire: Food Network's Tyler Florence shows up as a guest judge. "I recognized him right when I got there," says Kevin, demonstrating one of my favorite tactics of people who� avoid overtly talking shit on someone by making benign observations ("I noticed that he had skin"). The remaining cheftestants are instructed to yank the crank of a culinary keyword-spitting slot machine (a predatory gambling manifestation of cookstr.com) and then build a dish based around the descriptors they're dealt.
At the top: Mike I, whose raw mushroom dish properly conveyed the words Stressed, Asian and Umami ("Umami. It's not salty, it's not sweet, it's not spicy, it's not sour. It's ... umami," explains the chef. Thx!); Kevin, whose Stressed/Hot 'n' Spicy/Asian Viet spring roll-inspired plate impressed; and Mike V, whose yuzu Greek yogurt and seaweed cracker combo was at once Adventurous, Tangy and Asian. (Notice how all the contenders drew Asian? Empirical evidence that we run this.)
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At the bottom: Robin, who got ripped by the transcendently beautiful, now-preg Padma for acting like curry was Middle Eastern; Eli, whose umami was not ... umami enough for Ty Flo (look at that lady-ass coat he's wearing in that photo above); and our girl Jen C, because putting roe on top of a scallop did not meet Ty Flo's standards of Adventurous-ness. Kev wins and ends up choosing $15,000 over immunity. A solid decision, I think, because Kev knows he can cook. Other people on this show apparently don't think they can, but more on that in 5 seconds.
Elimination: As soon as I heard Padma be like "In these tough economic times ... " I had a feeling this would be the elimination equivalent of getting squirted in the eye with big wedge of lemon. I was right! In an apparent "celebration of the home chef," a cabal of celebrity toques provide teams of two cheftestants with grab bags full of stuff, and they're tasked with composing family-style dishes inside the Top Chef house using makeshift kitchen setups. There was also something about this being for the Macy's Culinary Council charity but I was too busy chuckling about how the world hates Ty Flo's Twitter account to take down the details.
Mike I gets paired with Robin, which causes him to start spitting out synonyms for "furious" to describe his mood ("I was livid! Angry! Upset!"). Then he calms down and they make seared tuna and scallops for Takashi Yagahashi. Ash and Mike V make egg yolk-filled ravioli and pancetta-wrapped halibut for Nancy Silverton. Kev and Jen C, who draw Seattle chef Tom Douglas' bag, do a Korean BBQ dish. Eli and Ashley grill spot prawns and chop up gnocchi for Govind Armstrong, who I think always wears white pants, and Bryan and Laurine roast fish for Ty-Ty.
The tasting/judging jumped off as expected, with high and low lights, but the one thing that really stuck out to me was Toby Young dropping a variation on the "full-on Monet" line from Clueless to describe one dish. Which made me start thinking like
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At the top this time are Jen C and Kevin and Laurine and Bryan. Ty Flo ends up giving the W to the former group, with individual glory going to none other than Jen C for a well-executed tomato cardamom sauce. She's happy, especially since her confidence waned in the beginning due to her being miserably ill � and also 'cause she cops a $10K Macy's giftcard for her trouble. There's a Macy's right by 10 Arts, too. Can you buy me some of those strap things that hold your dress socks up, Jen? That seems like something I would have to go to Macy's to buy.
At the bottom: Eli and Ashley, whose gnocchi was marred by saltiness; and Mike V and Ash, who served inconsistently cooked fish due to their electric plancha short-circuiting mid-sear. This is where Ash gets real weird with it, basically admitting to the judges that he thinks he's not as good of a chef as his workhorse partner � helping him cook is like "washing paintbrushes for Picasso," he states � while still arguing that he should remain in the running because he thinks he deserves it.
I think I kinda caught his strategy here � he wanted to project all the blame for the ambitious but ultimately flawed dish on Mike, so he took the sycophantic route to blur the fact that he contributed very little to the finished product. It may be part gamesmanship and it may be part sincere admiration on Ash's part, but either way it came off creepy and counterproductive, and I think he should've been sent packing because it's clear that at least part of him thinks he isn't good enough to compete � and that's the last thing you want to publicly announce on TC, no? But turns out Ashley's poorly executed pasta had her packing her knives instead. Dammit, she was my dark horse pick.
What'd you think of last night's elimination?
Omg Toby young totally quoted Clueless, thank you for noticing that too but no thanks for that picture that will haunt my dreams. Also, i love Kevin!!! Kevin 4eva.
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| bravotv.com |
Y'all already know how I feel about magic, so let's just get right into it.
Quickfire: Since Sin City is so full of goddamn temptation (we learn so much about Vegas on this show!), the transcendently beautiful Padma (who's on Twitter apparently!), plus celeb chef Michelle Bernstein, task the remaining cheftestants (most rocking kerchiefs to honor fallen comrade Mattin) with cooking a duo of dishes representing the angels and devils on their shoulders. At the top: Mike V, who "transported" Bernstein (like this?) with two preparations of salmon; self-proclaimed fat kid Eli, who made one healthy scallop and one fat kid scallop; and Miss Popular Robin, who brought up her lymphoma diagnosis while explaining the motivation behind her healthy salad/apple crisp pair-up. Bottom three: Bryan, who struggled with execution; Laurine, whose chicken was (gasp!) boring; and Ash, who provided only one of his two planned dishes.
Robin nabs the QF and immunity, which does NOT sit well with Eli. "That's a pretty good way to win a Quickfire � just tell people you have fucking cancer," he snorts. Cottdamn! Everyone's saying that they want Robin gone because they're not impressed with her cooking, but if you ask me, I think it's because they're scared she's going to pull a Hosea, bumbling through the season unnoticed until falling ass-first into the Top Chef title. In general, that TC winner's inoffensive, middle-of-the-road offerings last season were the opposite of risky � but they also featured the fewest flaws. Keep one eye on Robin, foreal.
Elimination: Penn and Teller show up, and Kevin is excited, perhaps because they're the first actual non-chef celebs to show up so far. Strangely enough, the pair refrains from spouting libertarian propaganda and telling everyone how stupid they are long enough to ask the cheftestants to "deconstruct" a classic comfort food-y dish. Knife-drawing commences.
Mike I gets eggs florentine and has no idea what to do because he doesn't know what eggs florentine is. (It's what your one mopey vegetarian friend always orders for brunch, Mike!) The classically trained Jen C is wicked stressed because she can't dream up a creative way to break down meat lasagna. Mike V is in hog heaven with his classic caesar draw because it means he can sphere-ifize the dressing on some Battlesalad Galactica shit. Ron seems excited about drawing paella, but then struggles with the "deconstructing." (Former TC finalist Richard Blais, no stranger to Star Wars references, tweeted this about Ron awhile back and I loved it.)
At the top: Ashley, who did a bang-up job on pot roast even though she was too poor to actually eat anything until like last month; Mike V; Kevin, who busted his ass on a chicken mole negro that blew away the judges; and, much to her surprise, Jen C, who thought she was going to go home. (Come on, Jen, you're not going anywhere.) Kevin takes it, and gets an empty box of CALPHALON UNISON NON-STICK COOKWARE � as a prize. Yay!
Bottom feeders this week: Ash, whose inconsistently cooked lamb and lack of potatoes screwed up his shepherd's pie interpretation; Laurine, with a mediocre fish and chips dish; and Ron, who was battered with all sorts of criticisms for his screwy paella. Big man from Haiti ends up getting hacked.
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| bravotv.com |
It's funny that both Ash and Laurine's low-scoring dishes were British in nature, as this week marked the return of everyone's least favorite Top Chef judge, one Mr. Toby Young. I realize this is an unpopular opinion, but I'm going to put it out there � I love that guy!
Here's why. Is he a dick? Yes. Do I think he's funny? No. Do I think he's insightful? Not really. Are there panelists on this show who discuss food much more intelligently and eloquently than he does? Absolutely. But I still think Young's important to Top Chef for one simple reason � he's the only person in the world with the ability to make the rest of the judges squirm.
After season after season of success, Padma, Tom C, Gail and the rotating celeb chefs who sit behind that raised platform are resting on their laurels so hard that they got leaf prints in their asses. They're in such insane positions of power that nothing makes them cringe. This is compounded by the fact that the chefs they toss around every week sweat like hobos down south in the summertime throughout filming. Young, somehow, is the only guy who can irritate the judges enough to elicit truly pissy reactions. Aside from Tom C clearly hating his British face, did you see last night, when Young angered guest judge Bernstein by saying that he thought it was stupid for non-Spanish speakers to pronounce "paella" like "pie-ey-uh," since none of us are nearly as adamant about pronouncing Mexico like "Meh-hee-ko"? The look of rage in her eyes was wondrous. Young's half-assed retraction while he smirked like a grammar school lad who'd just dropped a cherry bomb down the loo was even better.
So what do y'all think about Young? Perhaps his antics are an acquired taste, but I can't get enough.
Love the Transporter pic! Toby Young is a super douche but i think Michelle out-douched him with her forced pronunciation of "Mexico".
Toby is definitely an acquired taste - some of his comments are cringe-inducing, others are hilarious. I didn't understand Blais' tweet about Ron - "...sounds like a Hut"?
B: I'm mostly a fan of the cringe-inducing! Because he induces cringes in the generally emotionless Tom C, Padma, et al. Always a good thing. Hut as in Jabba The. Try saying Ron's full name in a Jabba voice and you'll know what he means. Haha.
So here's a bit of pre-challenge footage from last night's episode of Man v. Food, where host Adam Richman was challenged to eat a King Kong-sized cheesesteak by Tony Luke Jr. Our attempt to get a "provolone or Whiz" answer from Richman fell on deaf Twitter ears yesterday, but maybe that's because the answer was neither � boy went for American. If you want to know if Richman was able to finish eating this behemoth, head over to watch the post-eating press conference on Travel Channel's Web site.
So what do you think, Meal Ticketers? Was Philly eatin' represented well on Man v. Food?
I stopped into Jim's at 62nd and Noble yesterday while running errands in Overbrook. I prefer american & whiz, with hots on half, and a Budweiser 22. The Travel Channel's viewership should see both the incoming and return fire bullet holes at this classic Philly jawn. The all female staff are a bunch of sweethearts. They are what Philly eatin' is all about. Their attytoods and service are refreshing compared to the elitist mentality of South Philly.
It was a funny little mini slice of Philly, but I suppose that's the limitation of a half-hour program. It was certainly better than Samantha Brown's coverage ;-)
I can't believe he finished that beefy behemoth. That was a combination of awesome and disgusting. I would have to agree with ron w when I say that the attitudes of the staffs at Pat's and Genos are a little over the top sometimes. Showing a little friendly attitude never killed anyone. I mean we all know that you are cheesesteak badasses but when it comes down to it you are also working in the food and hospitality business which means you should be hospitable and not an asshole. Because when you leave work and remove your honorable apron which makes you a cheesesteak artist, you are just a sweaty dude stinking of onions whose hands are caked with old whiz. So next time I come down for my whiz fix and act politely, return the favor, I don't buy into the S.P. bullshit.
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Tonight, check out the Philly episode of The Travel Channel's Man v. Food, which filmed at the Franklin Fountain, among other spots, over the summer. Host Adam Richman will attempt to eat a five-pound cheesesteak from Tony Luke's as his extreme eating challenge.
The episode won't air till 10 p.m., but for now you can check out this Web clip of Richman goofing on South Street. It's not embeddable but it's worth the clickthrough, if only for the triumphant shot of the host single-swoop high-fiving a large group of dudes from a traditionally black fraternity.
I haven't seen this show in a while, but I am aware of Adam's eating prowess; I am hopeful but I doubt that he can conquer 5 lbs. of cheesesteak. My only question is provolone or whiz?
they had to go and mention Condom Kingdom...of course.
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