The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 

Welcome to the real world

Two Mainers bring chefs out of the movies and into the kitchen
By BRIAN DUFF  |  August 8, 2007
insidefilm_food_ratatouille

Bresca | 111 Middle St, Portland | 207.772.1004
Hugo’s | 88 Middle St, Portland | 207.774.8538
This summer’s two big food movies, Ratatouille and No Reservations, have virtually identical endings. In each case chefs leave behind the problematic and demanding world of chic high cuisine to open their own cheerful, humble, and cozy family-run restaurants. Labor problems are minimal since in one case the happy couple’s only employee is a child and in the other it’s a rodent. All the customers look like pleasant, satisfied regulars.

Such restaurants don’t really exist. If they did they would not be nearly as interesting as the realistically tension-filled kitchens that provide the main setting for these two movies. Seeking to better understand this world and the way it is depicted, I sat down to talk about cooking and film with Chef Krista Kern of Bresca, and her neighbor Chef Rob Evans of Hugo’s. Kern recently opened one of Portland’s most promising new restaurants, and Evans’s shop has received many of the nation’s most prestigious awards in its seven years. Unlike most chefs depicted in the movies, they are pleasant and completely unpretentious about food.

What they told me about being a chef also belied the message about cooking that the films, especially Ratatouille, convey. They both loved Ratatouille, and it is certainly the better film — beautiful to look at, funny, and genuinely exciting — with an attention to kitchen details (like the look of a particular make of knives) that Evans and Kern appreciated. The film develops the idea articulated by the character of Gusteau, a sort of guardian angel chef drawn as a fatty teardrop of a man: “anyone can cook, but only the fearless can be great.”

Kern and Evans did not agree that fearlessness is the measure of a chef. They both maintain that the real world of restaurant cooking is infrequently about daring and radical innovation. “It’s really more about technique and consistency,” Kern said. While it’s exciting to watch the cooks on television shows like Top Chef and Iron Chef invent something great with a few ingredients in limited time, the reality of kitchen life is more like Gordon Ramsay’s show Hell’s Kitchen, in which the star British chef berates inexperienced cooks until they can get a few dishes right every single time.

This surprised me, based on what I know about their restaurants. Evans is known for preparing some of the most interesting and creative cuisine in the country — including experiments with foams, pellets, bubbles and emulsions. But he insisted that he is usually working within tried and true approaches to combining flavors. “Adria does the same thing,” Evans said, referring to Ferran Adria, the Spanish chef who uses molecular science to invent novel meals. “He admits that he travels around trying other people’s stuff, finding things to recreate in his own way.”

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Buzz words, An inconvenient poop, Whack-a-mole, More more >
  Topics: Features , Entertainment, Movies, Movie Reviews,  More more >
| More

[ 05/25 ]   "2012 BFA Thesis Exhibition," mixed media student exhibition  @ Maine College of Art
[ 05/25 ]   Amy Allen  @ Empire Dine And Dance
[ 05/25 ]   Confusatron: "Return of the Jedi"  @ Geno's
ARTICLES BY BRIAN DUFF
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   TASTING EXCELLENCE AT MIYAKE  |  May 16, 2012
    There is a theory about the extreme inequality found in American culture and economy that goes something like this: inequality is the price of a culture designed to identify and reward great talent.
  •   REVIEW: HOLY DONUT  |  May 09, 2012
    All cuisines rely on the experience of regression for their deepest appeal.
  •   REVIEW: AL HUDA  |  April 18, 2012
    The long coastline of Somalia is at the root of its culture's many complexities.
  •   EXPLORING FRONTIER’S NEW MENU  |  April 11, 2012
    "Civilizing" the frontier was a long and complex process, with lasting effects on our culture.
  •   REVIEW: SEAGRASS BISTRO  |  March 21, 2012
    The day is coming when the baby boomers will bankrupt this country, sparing only their own nest-eggs and supplemental health insurance.

 See all articles by: BRIAN DUFF



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group