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10-03-2009, 11:50 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: Charlotte, NC
Posts: 182
| | How do you feel about rustic presentation? Just curious about the general consensus. Is there a place in fine dining for a rustic presentation?
What I mean by that is, for instance; on a steak seasoned with garlic, could bits of diced, half black garlic be left on after cooking for presentation or would Michelin Three Star diners be horribly offended.
I ask purely out of curiosity(having never even set foot in a restaurant with more than one Michelin Star) and the above is just an example.
__________________ Dammi un coltello affilato e vi mostrerò l'arte più belle del mondo. | 
10-04-2009, 12:23 AM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Oct 2009 Location: Madison Wi
Posts: 26
| | To me their is nothing better than hight, small portions, and food in its most natural state. Thank God their are all kinds of people that like a full gambit of flare. It keeps us all in business. I give a touch of rustic a thumbs up. A china cap does have its rightful place in a kitchen though. | 
10-04-2009, 05:23 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: New Hampshire
Posts: 23
| | Regional rustic is the key to a diners heart.
I was a classicist for a long time but found that an 8 - 9 item signature menu kept 'em coming back. The small menu allowed me to concentrate on perfection.
No towering presentations, no perfectly cubed stuff.
Three small vegetables to each entree, ( smoked cauliflower w/ shaved Manchego - carrot ribbons poached in balsamic and port, summer squash barrels stuffed w/ roasted beet mousse, etc. )
Oversize plates / wide rim - no garnish. | 
10-04-2009, 11:08 AM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Culinary Instructor | | Join Date: May 2006 Location: PALM BEACH FLORIDA
Posts: 2,243
| | Michelin, is not only based on cooking, it is based on originality of personal presentation,so as long as it also tast good why not, thats your name on it.!!
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10-04-2009, 12:47 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: Cambridge England
Posts: 100
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by ChefRay Just curious about the general consensus. Is there a place in fine dining for a rustic presentation?
What I mean by that is, for instance; on a steak seasoned with garlic, could bits of diced, half black garlic be left on after cooking for presentation or would Michelin Three Star diners be horribly offended.
I ask purely out of curiosity(having never even set foot in a restaurant with more than one Michelin Star) and the above is just an example. | If the garlic is black it's burned. Bad, bad, bad. Rustic is nice when done neatly, i.e. several ingredients mixed together and then neatly piled on a plate. It really depends on presentation, if it looks neat then fine, if not it's messy.
__________________ UNDER PRESSURE AT PEMBROKE Cooking sous vide at Cambridge's third oldest College | 
10-04-2009, 02:00 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Oct 2008 Location: In the Lab
Posts: 533
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by pembroke If the garlic is black it's burned. Bad, bad, bad. Rustic is nice when done neatly, i.e. several ingredients mixed together and then neatly piled on a plate. It really depends on presentation, if it looks neat then fine, if not it's messy. | My thoughts exactly. Nothing worse that burnt garlic.
__________________ Taste: The sensation derived from food, as interpreted thru the tongue to brain sensory system.
Flavor: The overall impression combining taste, odor, mouthfeel and trigeminal perception. | 
10-04-2009, 02:15 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: Cambridge England
Posts: 100
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by chefhow My thoughts exactly. Nothing worse that burnt garlic. | I recently spent 6 hours preparing a roulade of duck, duck stock and duck confit. To accompany the duck we were serving fondant potatoes, my veg chef pan-fried the potatoes to seal them prior to poaching in the duck stock. He used chopped garlic in the pan with the potatoes and burned the garlic. I made him throw away 40 fondant potatoes and start again; my point was that if I spend 6 hours on the duck I wouldn't accept burnt potatoes that take 30 minutes to prep. Attention to detail is the most important part of cooking, regardless of the level you work at, or the food you serve.
__________________ UNDER PRESSURE AT PEMBROKE Cooking sous vide at Cambridge's third oldest College | 
10-04-2009, 02:19 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: Charlotte, NC
Posts: 182
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by pembroke If the garlic is black it's burned. Bad, bad, bad. Rustic is nice when done neatly, i.e. several ingredients mixed together and then neatly piled on a plate. It really depends on presentation, if it looks neat then fine, if not it's messy. | Not really black so much as browned and very dark at the edges. Perhaps I was a little loose in the description.
__________________ Dammi un coltello affilato e vi mostrerò l'arte più belle del mondo. | 
10-04-2009, 07:48 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Feb 2009 Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 238
| | One thing is there shouldn't be anything on the plate that you can't eat. Black garlic would be a harsh taste, brown would be roasted. Rustic would be a roasted piece of meat with fresh whole herbs..............I think in some cases its ok for presentation to leave this on to show the method of roasting and herbs used....IMHO I still don't like anything on the plate that can't be eatten...............Bill | 
10-05-2009, 08:45 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Pa.
Posts: 289
| | There is a huge difference between rustic and something slopped on the plate.
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10-05-2009, 10:08 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: Charlotte, NC
Posts: 182
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by rat There is a huge difference between rustic and something slopped on the plate. | That's really the root of the question. Presentation that is intentionally rustic.
I'm not referring to shoveling stuff onto a plate and chucking it from the pass ala Awful Waffle but thoughtful presentation that is intentionally unpolished, because a better word escapes me.
__________________ Dammi un coltello affilato e vi mostrerò l'arte più belle del mondo. | 
10-06-2009, 09:13 AM
|  | ChefTalk Moderator Culinary Experience: Professional Caterer | | Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: St. Louis Mo
Posts: 6,856
| | It's the way I serve food....$125pp on down.... | 
10-06-2009, 12:11 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Oct 2009 Location: Madison Wi
Posts: 26
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by ChefRay presentation that is intentionally unpolished, because a better word escapes me. | I feel allot of chef's try to achieve this, at least in the Chicago area and where i am now. The age old question "three baby carrots tied with scallion or four". this goes deeper and deeper. To me to use food and show it for the beautiful art it is. To show a garden of eggplant, tomato's, basil, and scallions in your presentation of eggplant Parmesan the dish. Food does have a natural beauty. Do i put a sauce within a sauce and pull with a toothpick for my artistic display on the plate, or do i drizzle both sauces for a rope display? Is this what you mean? I remember a chef i worked for at a holiday inn always talking about "asymmetrical and symmetrical types of garnishing" This is what i understand you to be talking about. These are words i haven't heard in a long time lol. Rustic as in asymmetrical. Below is a pdf you should check out. I found it on the net and thought it was interesting. http://www.therestaurantschool.com/I...esentation.pdf
Last edited by maniclowery; 10-06-2009 at 12:14 PM.
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10-06-2009, 12:15 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Oct 2008 Location: In the Lab
Posts: 533
| | I believe the question should be is the food rustic and thoughtfully/elegenatly/cleanly presented or is the food and its presentation done in a way that it looks like it came off a camp fire?
__________________ Taste: The sensation derived from food, as interpreted thru the tongue to brain sensory system.
Flavor: The overall impression combining taste, odor, mouthfeel and trigeminal perception. | 
10-06-2009, 12:49 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Oct 2009 Location: Madison Wi
Posts: 26
| | Ahhhh ya no campfire food in my place. I would serve some salmon en papiot, but would not wrap it in foil and throw it in the fire then serve. Also as stated above from someone . I would consider dark brown garlic "roasted", darker than dark brown to me would be burnt. Their is a fine line between the two. Once you cross it you can taste it.
Last edited by maniclowery; 10-06-2009 at 01:07 PM.
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