How much does the presenttion of your food....
How much does the presenttion of your food....
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Cactussed

Original Poster:

5,357 posts

237 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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...contribute to your enjoyment of it?


CY88

2,808 posts

254 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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Cactussed

Original Poster:

5,357 posts

237 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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CY88 said:
hehe

Papoo

3,925 posts

222 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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By no means do I have the expertise to prepare to the level you do, OP, but if the meal lends itself well to it, then yes, I'd say it does.

My thing is slow-smoked bbq. A slab of ribs, coleslaw & potato salad and cheap stodgy wonderbread all dumped on a piece of foil does nicely in this instance!

bazking69

8,620 posts

214 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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I more interested in good food than fancy presentation.
Throw it on the plate man, it will only be wolfed down in a matter of minutes with no appreciation of pretty colours or fancy presentation.

taldo

1,357 posts

218 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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i think its important, i enjoy my food much more if it looks appealling in the first place.

sherman

14,928 posts

239 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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At the end of the day no matter how nice it looks on the plate its going to look exactly the same as anything else you ate the next morning.

okgo

41,570 posts

222 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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For me, 10%.

I really couldn't care how it looked as long as things that were meant to be apart on the plate were etc.

shirt

25,078 posts

225 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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even if i'm cooking for myself its important, but depends what mood i'm in. if cooking something for the first time or trying to improve upon a previous effort i'll do i properly,. if i'm starving its just slapped on the plate and scoffed. i don't 'dress' my plate though unless i'm cooking for someone besides myself.

Silver993tt

9,064 posts

263 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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5% same as all that nonsense about restaurant 'ambience'. That is just an excuse to rip people off. Charging people for the restaurant's decoration is the ultimate in theft. For a start it's offset as a business expense together with depreciation. It's a finite cost. Therefore, once it's paid off and say a 10% profit is made, do the prices go down?

Good, honest food needs no 'ambience' and the presentation is natural, no artistic rubbish trying to make a plate look like a bloody Picasso.

Edited by Silver993tt on Wednesday 12th August 19:29

Shaolin

2,955 posts

213 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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I came across this recently as it happens:

http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg18424793.000...

I've always thought the context of the meal (rather than ambience) is important in its enjoyment. Meals invariably taste better outdoors (as long as it's not too cold so it all goes cold too quickly), food is invariably tastier when you're hungry and when you've been working hard physically. Food is usually better when someone else makes it for you and when you have to do nothing at all in its preparation such as shop for it or wash-up afterwards.I suspect this is also partly why it's difficult to recreate restaurant meals properly at home.

Mrs.S. will frequently piss me off by eating any old crap when we're out and declaring how nice it was when I know for a fact that the equivalent meal at home is so much better - she just has this thing about it being somehow special if it's cooked for her to order. I do agree with her but to a lesser degree.

Cotty

41,955 posts

308 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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Im not really into presentation. If I cook something well it usually looks good on the plate. If I cook something badly then it looks bad on the plate.

Put it this way, cook a really nice bit of steak on a griddle and put it on a plain white plate. It will look juicy, with nice seared lines in it, when you cut into it it will cut easily and you will see a bit of pink in the middle.

Chuck a nice steak into a frying pan and cook the hell out of it, put it on the same plate and it will look like garbage and need a very sharp knive to put a dent into it.

If you cook something well it will look good. Plating it up and putting some parsely on top or drisling some olive oil round the plate won't make a huge amount of difference, but its what you pay for when you eat out.

grumbledoak

32,398 posts

257 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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While I wouldn't consider my presentation fancy, and I'd never have a sprig of parsley as garnish, I do care how my food looks. You lot upping the game on the photo thread hasn't helped; I shaped my mashed potato with a 'ring' tonight! paperbag

Cotty

41,955 posts

308 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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grumbledoak said:
I shaped my mashed potato with a 'ring' tonight! paperbag
I find throwing it at the plate with a spoon quite adequate, if you think im going to put it into a piping bag with a pretty nossel and make pretty pattens you are mistaken.

JamieBeeston

9,294 posts

289 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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For me, presentation and ambiance add tremendously to a meal.. it's all part of the overall experience and memory.

I love the feel of a good wineglass too, not the lightweight stuff they sometimes try and foist on you be default.

If it's for me at home, then I'll agree it's less important, more so as I'm just not that good at it.. but If I'm out with someone special then I want the whole experience (ok, maybe not the violinist every time!) but I'm certainly a believer in ambiance, setting and service.

CY88

2,808 posts

254 months

Wednesday 12th August 2009
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Serious response. Presentation is in my mind is often equally important when the food is not just food for nutrition's sake, but for enjoyment, especially when eating out.

When I was younger I waited tables in Bentley's just off Picadilly. Full silver service at the table. Fish filleted for customers in front of them, fat chip stacks built layer by layer hand like jenga towers, etc etc, all had to be done just so. Restaurant theatre. Presentation was all part of it. How I scoffed at the time. I often wonder now what's going through the servers mind when I eat out.

And some old habits die hard, even now when I'm throwing together a fry up for one, I'll wipe the rim of the plate with some kitchen roll to mop up any errant sauce before starting.


Edited by CY88 on Wednesday 12th August 22:32

Silver993tt

9,064 posts

263 months

Thursday 13th August 2009
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JamieBeeston said:
For me, presentation and ambiance add tremendously to a meal.. it's all part of the overall experience and memory.

I love the feel of a good wineglass too, not the lightweight stuff they sometimes try and foist on you be default.

If it's for me at home, then I'll agree it's less important, more so as I'm just not that good at it.. but If I'm out with someone special then I want the whole experience (ok, maybe not the violinist every time!) but I'm certainly a believer in ambiance, setting and service.
perfect restaurant marketing fodder hehe

sleep envy

62,260 posts

273 months

Thursday 13th August 2009
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it's half the enjoyment for me - no point trying to cook well if you're just going to slop the food onto the plate

agree with the decent wine glass comment too - a nice large glass to airate the wine please

havoc

32,723 posts

259 months

Thursday 13th August 2009
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It's secondary to taste/aroma and texture, IMHO. You go "ooh, that's pretty" then mess it up in seconds...


But yes, it is a factor, although if I'm cooking it's usually an afterthought as I'm trying to serve everything up at the same time while keeping it hot.