Joel Rebuchon is my favourite chef mainly I guess because I can actually use his book Simply French. He's down to earth. And even though he has a chain of restaurants worldwide, they still appear to uphold the standards of a multi-star Michelin chef. In the US, he has one of the five 3-star restos in the country at the MGM Grand in Vegas. Last week, Eater VegasWire's John Curtas had a chance to chat with the chef about food blogging...
John Curtas: What is your opinion of food/restaurant bloggers and the impact they have on the dining-out public?
Joël Robuchon: They can be helpful and they can be dangerous. Dangerous because anyone can write anything, even if they have no training or experience and don't make any sense. Genuine gastronomic critics bring a lot of experience to the table and you must respect that, but too often the internet can be used as a revenge tool by people who have something against the chef or the restaurant. But the public doesn't know when a review is being used as a way to ambush a restaurant. Too many restaurant critics these days are like me when I'm criticizing a soccer coach; I might have my opinion, but I don't know that much.
JC: How would you advise someone to get a proper gourmet education in this era of very expensive restaurants (like yours) and various cooking/restaurant styles?
Robochon: You must go out a lot. Try different concepts. Form a fine dining club. Try to get a true understanding of what is good and bad cooking. Follow a gastronomic critic whose tastes you understand and learn from them. Unfortunately, people don't take the time these days to become a true gourmand.
JC: What advice would you give a young chef (or a customer) about what to strive for in good cooking and good eating?
Robuchon: Young people/children have an inherent honesty and respect for what is good in food. But as they get older, from 18 to 25 years old, they tend to over think things...which is the most dangerous thing you can do as a chef. Young chefs try too hard to impress and constantly want their food to be exciting, but that doesn't mean it's any good. Too often they get lost in the method and end up overcomplicating things. Doing a simple thing well and perfectly is what great cooking is all about.
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Tuesday, March 4
by
Gina Mallet
on Tue 04 Mar 2008 08:21 AM EST
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PRAISE FOR LAST CHANCE TO EAT, The Fate of Taste in a Fast Food World Gina Mallet is right about absolutely everything. Part explanation, part memoir, part manifesto, Last Chance to Eat explains where it all went wrong - and what we can do about it. An invaluable antidote to the dark forces who want to deprive us of the good stuff..... Anthony Bourdain, author of Kitchen Confidential. This Month
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