Top Chef, S11E08.

I analyzed the Kinsler-Fielder trade for Insiders last night, and answered some questions on that and lots of other subjects in today’s Klawchat.

The stew-room discussion after elimination brings up an interesting note – Patty has only been cooking for three years, yet managed to get almost halfway through the competition. That’s pretty damn impressive.

We also get this exchange between Sara and Shirley:

Sara: I’m starting to think im a gooch
Shirley: What’s that? What’s “a gooch” mean?

Which reminded me that this guy was supposed to be pretty good.

* Quickfire: Rock and Roll Hall of Fame guitarist Dr. John the Night Tripper is in the house, aged 73 and looking about 20 years older than that, with an outfit that … well, I guess I just don’t get Louisiana fashion. The chefs have to make their own hot sauce in 45 minutes. Dr. John says it needs that flavor “and a hip tang to it,” and, “if it has flavor nicety of the highest order and it has tang nicety that mixes in, killer sauce.” Is that even English?

* Brian refers to the habanero as “ha-ba-NYER-o.” There’s no ~ there, Brian. Stop it. Carlos, who of course says it correctly, is only husing habanero hin ‘is sauce.

* Nicholas had his “first” ulcer at 20, implying there have been more, and says he was very nervous in his 20s, so he’s not a fan of very spicy food. I can relate, although I do like spicy food even though I can’t eat too much of it.

* Dr. John’s least favorites include Nicholas’ sauce with smoked apricots, cider vinegar, and coffee, which was too sweet overall; Carrie’s habanero and green mango sauce inspired by her Trinidadian mother-in-law’s recipe, which was “Trinideadly” hot (okay, Dr. John, that was a good one); and Nina’s “head-slammin’ over-the-top hot” sauce of habanero, ginger, and apple cider, which even Padma, who snorts powdered ghost chilies off a mirror in the pantry between takes, found too hot.

* The leaders were Brian’s green jalapeno/serrano sauce with lime and yuzu juices, which was “verily hip;” Justin’s sauce of half-roasted and half-raw peppers with fermented anchovies for an umami kick, which “clipped mah wings, slick idea;” and Carlos’ habenero, mango, and passion fruit, which “maneuver hit a lot o’ corners for me.” Brian is the winner because his “hit me the hardest,” according to the good doctor, giving Brian immunity for the second episode in a row.

* Padma looks very different during this Quickfire. I can’t figure out why. Still smokin’, just different.

* Elimination challenge: A whole pig comes in on a gurney. It’s boucherie time, with chef and restaurateur Donald Link of Cochon and artist/sculptor Toby Rodriguez, who hosted a boucherie on Anthony Bourdain’s No Reservations two years ago. So we’re going snout-to-tail here, with each chef responsible for his/her own dish and the overall requirement that they use the whole animal. I’m not sure they actually did that, as the resulting dishes didn’t include the tail (fatty, but very tender meat if you can get to it) and I only heard pig ears once as a garnish.

* The effort involved in breaking down a whole animal like this is enormous, and they’re doing it with regular chef’s knives. I’ve never seen a whole hog butchered – wouldn’t you use different tools for this? Perhaps a saw?

* Meanwhile Sara is the backseat butcher here, yipping at Nicholas and the others who are breaking it down and seem to have a plan. I don’t have a lot of rules in my kitchen, but “don’t shout at the man with the knife” is one of them.

* Nicholas and Nina split the pig’s head. Nina wants to braise it for a ragu … but doesn’t that waste it? Head cheese, or testina, is a delicacy, emphasis on “delicate.” I don’t understand obliterating all that texture and flavor in a sauce.

* The editors faked me out with a red herring – we see Travis buying prefab dried ramen noodles at Whole Foods, which felt a hell of a lot like foreshadowing to me … but he skates on something that nearly always gets a chef sent home. It’s a competition. Make your own damn pasta.

* That night, the chefs return to their house to find Rodriguez and Link’s chefs cooking an indoor boucherie for them. I have no idea how maybe twenty people could consume that much food. I’m watching them, thinking I might be done after two items, only to see them putting away six or more plates apiece. A meal like that might give me stretch marks.

* Next morning, the chefs are drinking Dunkin’ Donuts coffee from a Keurig machine. I think I can speak for both Hugh Acheson and myself when I say that I am thoroughly disgusted by this disregard for the glorious Coffea arabica. You’re telling me none of these chefs brings a pour-over setup on the road? Come on. Step up your caffeine game, kids.

* And some drama out in the campground where the chefs are to cook: Justin finds a wood-burning grill, so he sets it up himself, lights the flame and gets it to his temperature, after which other chefs start to try to grab grill space, which he doesn’t want to share. He probably could have expressed that better – at least, based on what we saw on camera – but Nina’s response is “suck a dick, man.” Was that really necessary? Then again, she’s from St. Lucia, where it is actually illegal for a man to be gay, so maybe that’s perfectly acceptable to say in her worldview. Just not in mine.

* Alligator sighting. You gotta catch that and use the tail in your dish, Stephanie. It’s part of the challenge.

* Shirley says the boucherie reminds her of a shā zhū, an annual pig roast her family in northern China would hold every Chinese New Year. I have no comment on this other than that northern China just became far more interesting to me.

* Nina’s dish is “underwhelming” when she tastes it, so she adds adding cayenne at the last minute. That’s what I usually do – this dish is bland, let’s dump a bunch of heat into it so no one notices!

* Hugh’s back! And wearing a white shirt. Rookie move, Hugh.

* The dishes: Brian serves a porchetta (rolled pork loin, terrible for you but so very good) with oyster and shiitake mushrooms; Sara does a pork dim sum with crab and shrimp har gow; Justin serves tacos with wood roasted pork breast, pork liver, and salsa verde, earning some immediate comments that the meat is a little dry, probably from when his entire grill caught fire; Carlos makes his mother’s posole verde with fried chorizo tacos; and Shirley makes a “day-after Chinese New Year’s” jiaozi with pork shoulder, topped with grilled kidney and cracklins.

* Padma is giddy because the food is all so good. The shift in her character over the last five or six seasons has been enormous. When I jumped into Top Chef in the Vegas season, she was stark and often seemed rude. Now she’s at the other end of the spectrum, empathetic with ousted chefs and just generally enjoying one of the greatest jobs in the world.

* Back to the food: Louis does a pork leg with shiitake mushrooms and popcorn, of all things; Stephanie made a cured, grilled, braised pork belly, served in a pork brodo she made in the pressure cooker, topped with a summer vegetable pickle; Travis’ pork bone ramen with collard greens gets all over Hugh’s shirt; Carrie serves crispy pig trotters (feet) with snap peas and pickled onions, possibly with pickled skin too; Nicholas makes a “tête de cochon” (head cheese) rillette style, with lemon grass vinaigrette, wheat berries, and vegetables; Nina uses her pig’s head to make a ragout with mustard greens, crispy ears, and sweet corn spaetzle. I still don’t understand how you could taste the head, especially the cheek meat, in something that heavy.

* Judges table: Tom says it was the most enjoyable food he’s ever had in eleven seasons of the show. While I’m sure some of that is just how incredible high-quality pig meat and offal can be, the chefs obviously (from the judges’ comments) did a great job. Shirley, Nina, Brian, and Carlos all get some praise here, especially Shirley, whose dumpling alone might have put her in the top three. Justin’s meat was dry, and seemed to get drier as the party went on. Louis’ corn was too sweet and had texture issues. Travis’ ramen had good flavor, but the judges ding him for not making his own. Stephanie’s dish didn’t have much flavor.

* Justin is barking at the TV as they watch the comments. Hey Justin, I know you’re mad, but they can’t hear you.

* The top three are Nina, Shirley, and Carlos; Nina’s food must just taste really good, because I don’t know that she’s ever made anything that looked or sounded so good that she’d consistently be in the top three. Shirley talks about traveling three days on a train to her grandma’s house in northern China, to which Tom says, “I would travel three days for those dumplings.” Carlos’ mother made this pozole every Thursday; Hugh is gushing over it, saying the “structure was so perfect.” Tom says if Nina’s pork ragout isn’t a national dish of somewhere, it should be, maybe “Ninastan.” And the winner “by a very slim narrow margin” is … Carlos! Gooooooal!

* The bottom three are Justin, Louis, and Stephanie; I’m disappointed and somewhat annoyed that Travis could buy dried, packaged noodles and not even end up in the bottom group just for sheer laziness. Justin is defensive, but Padma says the pork was bland and two of the four judges said theirs was dry. Tom and Padma go out of their way to say that none of the dishes were bad – these were just the worst of a good lot. Stephanie reveals that she cured her pork an hour, grilled it, braised it, then glazed it, and grilled again to finish. Did she consider shooting it too, just to make sure it was dead? Louis felt like his “meat cookery” was good, channeling Dr. John there for a moment, but Link says the popcorn was unnecessary and Tom said the corn kernels’ skin was too thick. Hugh says it took away from the core idea of “treasuring that pig.” You slaughter a pig, you better be prepared to treasure it properly.

* Justin’s dish even looked dry on TV. I don’t love the lean cuts of pork, like the loin, for this very reason – we have bred the fat out of most commercial pork in this country, even the good stuff.

* Louis goes home. The ladies seem disappointed Louis is going. Stephanie also seemed on the cusp of elimination here; she seems unable to craft a plan up front that she can execute in the allotted time without losing her mind along the way.

* LCK: The two chefs to go French Market, but when they get back Tom cuts them back to just three ingredients. Louis wins despite a gritty, overthickened sauce. Was Janine’s dish too simple or boring? I’ll miss her accent more than her looks, to be honest. I’ll predict, boldly, that Louis isn’t running the table – and won’t be around for that much longer.

* Top three: Shirley, Nina, Nicholas, followed by Justin, Carrie, Carlos, Brian, Stephanie, Sara, and Travis at the bottom. I think Shirley’s far more likely to bust out something crazy in the finals than Nina is.

* Next episode: Restaurant Wars!

Comments

  1. God, Michael can still be annoying in five-second soundbites in Last Chance Kitchen. Kill that guy’s mic.

  2. Keith, Parma is on the cover of a fitness magazine this month looking quite good

  3. Keith,

    That was the second time Nina has said “suck a dick” on the show. She also said it in the opening of the episode after Michael’s elimination. Even though Michael was arrogant and obnoxious, I’m also not a fan of that phrase in any context.
    On a different note, I’ve been enjoying Dave Walker’s behind the scenes articles for the Times Picuyane. He usually has some interesting tidbits about each episode.
    http://www.nola.com/tv/index.ssf/2013/11/top_chef_new_orleans_the_local_5.html

  4. I think Nina has said “suck a dick” or “suck my dick” on nearly every episode. More than twice, anyway. I agree, it takes an otherwise relatively likable chef and makes me distinctly uncomfortable about her.

    Dr. John was my least favorite kind of celebrity Quickfire guest. Not only is he a heroin-addled mess who appears not to speak English, but he also brought no food insight to the table. I realize the Quickfire is where they bring in local color and celebrities who maybe don’t have the food chops of their chef guest judges for the Elimination, but he annoyed the hell out of me, music legend or no.

    Those two annoyances aside, it was a good episode. This season has no distinct frontrunner, but it also has no strong villain. Sara is super annoying but relatively harmless – she isn’t actively awful like Josie, or the Sara from a couple of years ago who bullied Bev. That makes for less drama, which is probably not what the producers want but which I am fine with. Nina and Justin both seem capable of moving into villain status with a little prodding and some savvy editing, however.

    As for Travis’s noodles, I am no huge supporter of his, but I can see it for an outdoor challenge. IIRC we have already had at least one instance of homemade pasta going bad in the heat and humidity of outdoor New Orleans (maybe I’m remembering an earlier season, though – Texas?), so making pasta could have turned into a disaster. Now, maybe this suggests that you shouldn’t make pasta on an outdoor challenge, period, but I think in this instance it is defensible, if not ideal.

  5. I seem to recall there being a hacksaw on the cart when they wheeled the pig in, so I’m guessing they just didn’t show them using it. For the most part though the saw would only be needed to start cuts on the spine, hip and ribs and the rest would be done with knives (or as they showed with the head, just starting with the saw and then snapping the joint).

  6. A reader tweeted at me that making ramen noodles is far harder than making fresh pasta, and that good ramen restaurants typically buy theirs from outside vendors. So I may be off base on that one – although Hugh seemed to echo my thoughts.

    Totally agreed on Michael being annoying even in the LCK peanut gallery. I’m not sure any of the guys there has anything to add. And their comments often sound prompted – “hey, shout out the time remaining!” “Someone ask Janine what she’s making?”

  7. Agree that Shirley and Nina are the favorites for the final three… but after that I see it really wide open as Justin, Carlos, Carrie and Nicholas all seem right there depending on what the challenge is. And even Shirley might be in the large group as she’s been good, but not always in the top like Nina.

    I think this season really is going to come down to the challenge itself. Take Carlos* for example, if the challenge is something where he can highlight his Mexican/French style, he’s going to be at or near the top. But if it’s something further away from that (like the potluck), then it opens up for Carrie or Nicholas. I’d have Justin over Nicholas btw, but Justin’s competitive side could be his downfall. He hasn’t handled criticism all that well, so I wonder if he’s going to ignore some advise at some point leading to him making a mistake.

    This has become a really fun season because no one is pulling away, despite Nina’s success and it appears the challenges will determine the final three.

    *BTW, I am bias having eaten at Mexique a few times.

  8. Nigel from Cameroon

    I was shocked they let the “suck my…” comment on-air (multiple times, apparently).

    I think Padma is high this year. Really. She is different for sure.

  9. Am I the only one who finds Tom Colicchio’s “beard” to be annoying/tacky? I guess he’s going for the stubble look, but it really doesn’t work for him. It just looks like he didn’t have time to shower and shave…

  10. Was it necessary to mock the way Dr. John and Carlos talked? What’s the point of that? One of them is not a native English speaker and the other is clearly of a dialect and culture different than your own. Why can’t you show respect for that? I agree that it wasn’t the wisest move to have the person giving criteria and ultimately judging the chefs be difficult to discern, but that is on the producers, not Dr. John. Your elitism is showing. Back off it.

  11. @Kazzy: I never mocked the way Carlos spoke. You may have missed the Eliza Doolittle reference. As for Dr. John, the chefs and Padma were also mocking or questioning his choice of vocabulary as well.

  12. I have to say that I just cannot get into this season. I fell asleep during this episode and when I woke up I debated whether I should re-watch the episode so I at least knew who was eliminated. Then I realized I really didn’t care and never watched it. Maybe Restaurant Wars will be more exciting? It’s just none of the chefs have made me get behind them. Last season I thought Kristin rocked, so I watched for her. And even Brooke was fairly interesting coming in 2nd. This season is just bland.

  13. Mike – I agree that this season has not been very compelling. Usually there are clear “fan favorites” to get behind and root for (or root against, for some). We used to stay up to watch it every Wednesday but this season it has been relegated to Thursday nights.