Combinations and Overkillmrbarolo wrote:(I also have a tendency, now somewhat tamed, to do the same thing as a cook. I.e. use all my favorite seasonings all the time, rather than the pure expression of a single flavor. One of my college roommates -- the Italian from New Jersey who made the most amazing meat lasagne, not with ground meat in the sauce, but with about 1 billion tiny individual meatballs carefully layered-- was eating something I had made for dinner and said, gently, "you know, if you use all the crayons in the box, you just get brown.")
Mrb:
I know it wasn't me, cause I didn't have any roommates in college (lots of luck and a few strings pulled for me by the the soccer coach when I was a freshman)... But it could have been! The little meatballs are a pain to make but the finished dish tastes and feels and looks infinitely better. Loose ground meat in lasagne is looked upon in some circles as the height of barbarism and culinary slovenliness; I myself would never resort to such hyberbole but find the mini-meatballs (
piccoli polpettini) superior (please pardon the alliteration). But that's a digression from the topic.
dicksond wrote:This "combine as many good things as you can into one dish and it must be great" theory is spreading, and not just in the world of fusion travesties. What horrors have you encountered, or disappointments when you were pulled in by the marketers' devious creativity?
It may be just that I notice this trend more in the realm of Italian food than in other cuisines (or approximations thereof) but the kitchen-sink approach is both very prevalent in American takes on Italian food and also very much antithetical to the way Italians generally use their palette of flavours. As Mrbarolo indicates, the busy-is-better idea rears its Medusa-like head in pasta sauces very often and now that the pasta course as main course has become a common feature in all Italian restaurants here, the problem seems to have gone a step further, with the exuberant chef trying to get both protein and vegetables and various seasonings all mixed in with those overworked angel hair and farfalle.
One manner of marketed overkill that has become really widespread in recent years is the proliferation of things with
quattro formaggi: four cheese sauce, four cheese ravioli etc. Such combinations
can be very good but as always, if the ingredients are all of really high quality, simplicity is still hard to beat. The more-ingredients-is better-approach has really taken off in designer ravioli and related stuffed pastas (and I've tried a few of them), as well as in inventive versions of lasagne. In the end, my favourite stuffed pasta is a raviolo filled with ricotta, parsley and possibly -- but certainly not necessarily -- one further seasoning used with restraint. Many, more complex fillings are both traditional and delicious but the more complex the filling, the more simple and less assertive the dressing should be.
Here is a genuinely overblown pasta dish, as described in the menu of a higher end Italianish chain, which is a pure expression of the marketer's more-is-better approach, to which dicksond has called attention:
[i]"Four Cheese Ravioli. 6.95. Homemade ravioli stuffed with ricotta, parmesan, mozzarella, and provolone cheeses; topped with pesto alfredo sauce & finished with marinara. Available as an entrée."
Here the overkill involves the stuffing (how can one taste anything in that stuffing alongside the provolone?) and the saucing: pesto + alfredo + marinara?!?!? The sauce-combination here is really over the top.
Antonius
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Here are some further comments on specific items that are commonly made in too baroque a fashion to my (current) tastes:
- pizza: here, to my mind, several problems come up: not just too many ingredients but imbalance amongst the ingredients, as well as problems with basic elements (most especially the crust), but some of those issues fall outside the topic at hand. I stand by the belief that pizza is first and foremost bread which should be soberly dressed. The multiple toppings and extra cheese, culminating in the aptly named 'garbage' pizza, is a monstrosity (though it admittedly has a place in the universe, e.g., for college students struck by hunger late at night after a long session of killing brain-cells).
- subs: a sub is a sub and diversity of meats and cheeses and condiments and garnishes is part of what the thing is. I can enjoy a busy but well constructed sub. But in some cases, I think the combinations don't work so well and some ingredients are more or less wasted in such a busy context. My favourite "sub" in the world involves just three things beyond high quality bread: fresh mozzarella, prosciutto di parma, and black pepper (maybe it's really not a sub but just a sandwich). Luckily, the combinations in subs are wholly up to the consumer and so, one has no one to blame but oneself if one overdoes it and overdoes it badly.
- tacos: the garnishing of tacos is to a degree an open issue to be addressed by the individual fresser. But the tendency in restaurants is increasingly to put a bit of everything or at least a lot of different things on them. Cheese, guacamole, various vegetables, multiple salsas, sour cream... Some tacos of that sort are swell (e.g., at Nuevo Leon, the tacos de Sabinas are relatively busy but really good), but then the really simple combinations of meat and, say, just a little raw onion and a squirt of lime juice, are so focussed and refreshing (and more neatly consumed).
- burgers: I went through a phase in life when I got into the routine of ordering 'pub' burgers with multiple toppings and garnishes. They can be good but no longer interest me. I rarely eat burgers anymore and so now I really enjoy a good one that's presented simply. Not too long ago I had a big old pub-burger at Mighty-Nice-Grill (circumstances beyond my control led to this choice of restaurant) with nothing on it but a wee amount of steak sauce, lettuce and tomato. The flavour of the meat could really come through and it was a very nice meal.
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
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Na sir is na seachain an cath.