facook
Footballguy
Swedish Chef. Not that hard, holmes.
Swedish Chef. Not that hard, holmes.
I started catching up on AB's "Quarantine Quitchen" on YouTube over the weekend. It's basically him and his wife drinking and making dinner live from their house every Tuesday (7PM EDT). Pretty entertaining in a goofy way, and nice to see that his home kitchen is as messy and disorganized as mine.As others have mentioned Good Eats was my all time favorite. I loved how Alton told/explained the 'why' behind the steps of making food. I also liked how at the beginning he was not a 'chef' so much as he was a film maker, so his shows were fun to watch, and more than just him standing over a counter and a stove.
Weird how?James Bond said:Good Eats - Alton was gold before he got weird
The Great British Baking Show - Best with Mary Berry and Sue and Mel
The Original Iron Chef - The Japanese one
Nailed It - For pure comedy, the foreign ones were probably the best (Mexico, France etc.)
I wonder how much of that came from the producers wanting a certain "edge" to the show. I'm not a fan of the competition cooking genre (GBBO excluded) in general, due to the artificial stress/drama.Became very negative IMO. Almost like evil Alton (Star trek reference). I liked Good Eats because it seemed to translate to everyone, not just cooking fans. But his Cutthroat Kitchen was the opposite. Needless schtick and goofy twists that he appeared to relish. Too much.
If you catch his more recent "Good Eats: Reloaded" shows, I think you'll find he largely agrees with you. In addition to updating recipes/techniques, he spends a good bit of time mocking his earlier episodes.Alton Brown will always be revered for showing me how to properly cook a steak but the dude’s schtick was terrible. So annoying that if I ever see his show I change the channel immediately
in 200 words, or less.Alton Brown will always be revered for showing me how to properly cook a steak
i believe he cooks it inside out - gets the internal temperature up to code, then sears for crustin 200 words, or less.
How does one cook a steak?
Ingredientsin 200 words, or less.
How does one cook a steak?
#1 by farAmerica’s test kitchen
This. EasilyAmerica's test kitchen
She could talk to me in any language she wantsInteresting note: Nigella Lawson graduated from Oxford University with a degree in medieval and modern languages.