NFriday wrote:Did anybody else see 24 Hours to Hell and Back? I was wondering how he was going to revamp a restaurant in 24 hours. It turns out that secret cameras were placed in the restaurant several weeks before Gordon showed up, and several people involved with the show, ate at the restaurant a few times, and so they kind of knew what they were dealing with. Gordon Ramsey then went in incognito to the restaurant, and tried the food himself. After being thoroughly disgusted with his meal, Gordon took off his disguise, and said why he was there, and then immediately closed the restaurant down for 24 hours. In 24 hours they completely rehabbed the place. They painted in the dining room, and replaced all of the ceiling lighting, and replaced all of the furniture. They also replaced all of the equipment in the kitchen, and threw out a ton of food, and scrubbed the kitchen down. I don't know how they were able to do all of that in 24 hours. Ramsey also updated the menu.
Vinny the guy who owned the restaurant had a real temper, and nobody got along with him. He also was not courteous when dealing with customers. The restaurant had lost $100,000 in the last year. They went back to the restaurant three months later, and business had picked up, and Vinny got along better with the employees and customers, but it was still a work in progress.
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
Last year on PBS, 'I'll have what Phil has,' is now Netflix's, 'Somebody Feed Phil.'
That Phil, he really gets around. First episode, Phil is in Bangkok. What a lucky guy.
Regards,
Cathy2
ronnie_suburban wrote:I've been enjoying 2 shows that appear on the Japanese news and information channel, NHK World (377 on my Comcast) . . .
Lunch ON! and Trails to Tsukiji
Lunch ON! focuses on workplaces and their lunch traditions. There's generally quite a bit of information about the work itself and also plenty of specific details about the lunches and how those lunch traditions came to be -- often they are intertwined with the work itself. The show provides a fascinating and informative cross-sectional view of everyday Japanese culture from an interesting and unique perspective. I've seen episodes that showcased garbage collectors and artisanal charcoal makers, just to name a couple.
Trails to Tsukiji dedicates its entire 30-minute episodes to single ingredients that can be found at Tokyo's famed Tsukiji market. Subjects range from specific kinds fish and seafood to all sorts of produce. The show focuses on how the item is typically found and sold at the market and then follows its trail to see how and where it is caught or grown, how it is often prepared, how specialty establishments serve it and more. I've seen episodes on everything from Monkfish to Wasabi and they're all compelling.
If you have access to this channel and you're into Japanese food and culture, I highly recommend these 2 programs. Some episodes are available to stream online, so you don't necessarily even need the channel to view them. In any event, it's some great, highly informative, detailed content that you won't find anywhere else.
=R=
NFriday wrote:I'm sorry that I made a mistake. The link that I gave to No Reservations Needed said the program was on at 8:00pm, but it was on at 9:00pm on WTTW tonight.
Marshall K wrote:Not sure if this belongs here but Netflix has a new series premiering April 26th called "Street Food" it really doesn't indicate if it will be an ongoing series however the trailer on their site highlights Asia.
Marshall K wrote:Not sure if this belongs here but Netflix has a new series premiering April 26th called "Street Food" it really doesn't indicate if it will be an ongoing series however the trailer on their site highlights Asia.
WhyBeeSea wrote:Just binged through all 8 episodes of the Chef Show on Netflix. Revolves around Jon Favreau and Roy Choi cooking a bunch foods from the movie as well as other stuff.
One of the most enjoyable cooking shows I've watched. Highly recommend
jnm123 wrote:WhyBeeSea wrote:Just binged through all 8 episodes of the Chef Show on Netflix. Revolves around Jon Favreau and Roy Choi cooking a bunch foods from the movie as well as other stuff.
One of the most enjoyable cooking shows I've watched. Highly recommend
Very cool show. Favreau is self-effacing & engaging, and the talented Choi is a perfect sidekick. Because of their relationship from the movie 'Chef'--see it now if you haven't--they're very comfortable together, finishing each other's sentences with constant needling.
One episode, they made beignets, using the common Cafe du Monde mix you see in every supermarket. Favreau executed the recipe without error, ate a couple, thought them fine. Then Choi tasted one and exclaimed, "these things are stale!'. Favreau looked at the box, and sure enough the date was expired. They laughed like hell, and it was left in the show to boot.