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Michel Bras – Inventing Cuisine

Michel Bras – Inventing Cuisine.m4v
[1 DVD – M4V]

Description

••• This is an M4V rip. The full DVD for this title can be found here. •••This is an exclusive product!  Help us keep elib.tech all the more special for its exclusivity.  Out of respect for the original authors and publishers, please do NOT make this product freely available to those outside of our community.You will be banned if you disregard this notice.~ Product Page ~This post is brought to you by the Inventing Cuisine Group Buy! Nine titles in all!Lots more content to come!Inventing Cuisine – Michel Bras – M4V ripProduct Description:Television is awash in food these days, most of it utterly forgettable, at best (I’m still having flashbacks from having accidentally watched five minutes of “The Chew”). Want to see what food on film could really be like? Check out this series of French documentaries. There are nine of them so far, each focusing on a different three-star chef, and they are absolutely splendid – maybe the best food programs that have ever been made.In fact, to call them “food television” is to miss their point. On these videos there is no shouting, no contrived competition, actually, not even any outsized personalities, despite the fact that the stars are some of the best, most creative chefs on the planet. At their cores, these videos by director Paul Cotat are 1-hour mediations on creativity and imagination, with food being the common medium. If that sounds lofty and intellectual, well, so be it. But that doesn’t mean that the shows aren’t also a lot of fun, albeit in a quiet, contemplative way.Each documentary is different in theme and in tone, varying with the chef. Michel Bras walks the stark landscape around his restaurant in Laguiole commenting on the interplay of light and shadow and suddenly his highly abstract plating comes into focus. Alain Passard contemplates the simple beauty of a roasted onion. Michel Troisgros emerges as an almost tragic figure as he repeatedly tries to reinvent dishes made famous by his pioneering father and uncle. Cotat visits Italian Nadia Santini (the only non-French chef in the series) starting with an attitude that could be most charitably described as paternalistic (maybe even condescending?), but comes away utterly seduced by the way she coaxes complex flavors from simple, perfect ingredients.This is what real cooking is about when done on the highest level. Yes, there are recipes, and, yes, there are techniques explained. But what the shows are really about – and what great cooking is really about – is the human element. Anyone can sauté eggplant, given the right set of instructions and a little practice. But the ability to turn that eggplant into art is the province of a very few. –Russ Parsons, Food Editor, LA Times

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