Daily Archives: November 20, 2008

Madam Chef

by Kay Steiger

Via Sadie at Jezebel, The Independent has an essay on how women are “everyday cooks” while men earn the title of “chefs.” I already wrote a post here on the IFA about my own personal aversion to the kitchen and attention to the gender stereotypes, but I think that Sophie Radice seems to hit on a fear that many women have: although men may be taking on more cooking responsibilities, there’s still a hierarchy there. Women are supposed to prepare the daily dinners while men take the stage and show off for the dinner parties.

The only time I ever suggested cooking for anyone other than the children he laughed. For he believes that only men can be truly great cooks. And though he is not a misogynist in real life, he certainly is in the kitchen.

The thing is, the kitchen is real life. It’s a perpetual problem that women allow their partners to imply that their role in the home is one of maintenance. Women need to ask that men take an equal share in the everyday cooking, and take the stage if they want to. The point of all this gender discussion isn’t just to make sure we have more Stephanies on Top Chef, it’s also about making home responsibilities more equitable.

Radice makes a lot of good points about the general feeling about skill levels of men and women in the kitchen, but she also seemed to imply that complicated recipes are overrated (and her piece is loaded with some gender stereotypes of her own). There’s no shame in taking on a complex dish — but they shouldn’t be expected for everyday. One thing I’ve discovered with my own cooking experiences is that a lot of it is about confidence. While I found a lot of joy in trying this asparagus souffle from Simply Recipes with Kate at home, I would’ve been terrified to serve something so complicated to guests. But if you have the confidence required, you don’t mind making complicated things, even if they fail.

The ego that goes with many Top Chef contestants (and other major chefs) is one that is broadly encouraged in men and discouraged in women. The kind of negative commentary Radice gets from her husband only furthers her lack of confidence in her cooking skills. So remember to compliment the chef — especially if that chef is a she.

The Best Beer Writing You’ll Read Today

By Tom Lee

Unlike a lot of the other folks here, I am not a perpetual chef.  I’m much more likely to, say, make the same omelet every night for three months (in order to perfect the technique) than I am to flit from recipe to recipe.  This has left me searching for things to discuss here — although when I find them I’m usually prepared to talk about them emphatically.

Beer is one of those things.  Emily and I have made homebrew; we’ve gone to beer festivals; we read Mid-Atlantic Brewing News; and we spend a lot of time in Philadelphia (which, trust me, is probably the best qualification of the ones listed).  So naturally the first post I wrote for the IFA was about beer: the reinheitsgebot, barley enzymes, the lyricism of the word “sparging” — all of it.  I was particularly excited as I went to bed last night, having just found a map of relative water hardnesses in England that, I thought, would  really cap the thing off nicely.

But damn if Burkhard Bilger hasn’t beaten me to the punch, cramming a tremendous amount of beer information into a New Yorker article that profiles Dogfish Head Brewery.  The result is a fantastic read.

So go have a look at that instead — I should have something for you about omelets in a few more months.

Red Bull Cola Will Make You Want To Factcheck New Yorker Pieces

By Spencer Ackerman
nosebleedI keep an irregular sleep schedule — three to four hours at a time, another hour awake, another asleep, etc. — and so I require a fair amount of artificial stimulation. Sometime around last year coffee stopped doing it for me. In a panic, I took more drastic measures: my morning routine typically involves two Red Bulls and then a cup of coffee. To take the edge off.

I consider myself a RB connaisseur. Regular is kind of a gamble, in both taste and intensity. Sugarless is the best — easiest to drink, far less cloying, milder in flavor. The heart palpitations are the biggest problem. Sometimes you can feel an additional… push, you might say, in your chest. That’s what I like to call the Horns of the Bull. Often the Bull bucks when you’ve consumed two cans in under an hour. I don’t recommend doing that, but if you do, you just have to ride out the effects.

Today I discovered at the 7-Eleven something I’d only heard about in rumors: Red Bull Simply Cola. Strong & Natural goes the tagline on the 12 oz red-silver-and-blue can. That’s about half-right. Right now I have drunk about half the can and the Horns are pretty sharp. I just felt a throb in a vein of my forearm. I’m not going to lie: I’m a little alarmed. But if I have an ironclad belief in one thing, it’s that hospitals are for pussies, so I’m going to ride this out, like I advised above. But maybe you shouldn’t buy this product.

Pork Chops in Tomato Reduction

by Amanda Mattos

A few months ago, I had a dinner party. I spent hours pitting cherries to make a cherry reduction sauce for pork chops. It was good… enough. But the whole time I was eating it, all I could think was, ketchup would have been better. And when you’ve spent hours pitting cherries, and more hours making a complicated sauce, that’s not exactly the feeling you want to walk away with. So, when making dinner last night (from bounty procured at the Bloomingdale Farmers’ Market), I decided to basically make a sauce that was as close to ketchup as I could come. I served it with mashed sweet red potatoes and a mustard green salad that were perfect compliments (I’ve included those recipes below, too). This was dinner for 2, so adjust quantities as needed. Recipe after the jump.

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Explaining the Top Chef Elimination Decision

by Ben Miller

After reading some of the blogs on Bravo’s website this morning, I think the judges’ decision makes more sense. For those who haven’t watched the episode yet, I’ll put my thoughts after the jump.

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Top Chef 5 Week 2 Liveblog

It’s only the second week of TC5 and already the IFA crew are trying to get out of liveblog duty. After a tense argument over fulfilling our promises to you, the reader, versus the luxorious ease of watching TV and enjoying a beer and some Kay Steiger/Kate Steadman/Matthew Yglesias/Mandy Simon-prepared food, we’ve roped in Sara Mead, Spencer Ackerman and Kriston Capps. We’ll be, as ever, updating at the commercial breaks. Will this feature survive another week? Stay tuned.

Sara: hi!

Kriston: woo from the IFA
Sara: woo!
recap!
10:03 PM do not buy things from colonial williamsburg.
they keep sneding you emails forever
and your bofriend makes fun of ou!
Kriston has left
Kriston has joined
10:04 PM Sara: why do they keep the discontinued people in the intro after they get kicked off?
I hate jeffrey and his winking!
ewww
Kriston: Because by the end of the season, the intro wouldn’t be long enough for the awesome song
Sara: jeffrey with his shirt off.
ezra was the loudest.
scary
team rainbow!
Kriston: Ezra with his shirt off?!!
Sara: ariane’s hair
Kriston: Oh sorry. Misread.
Sara: scary!
10:05 PM I still like her
Kriston: Courtney Cox is extremely irritating
Sara: no one “deserves” to stay
ooow
the ELLs are the biggest competition
can take home the princess
Kriston: I take home the princess.
Sara: so sexist!!!!
quickfire!
Kriston: Okay, so we’re entering the quickfire challenge.

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