Chopped
#1
Posted 14 January 2009 - 08:54 AM
#2
Posted 14 January 2009 - 09:20 AM
I wonder if they are going to do this "mystery basket" for every episode or if that was just the gimmick for the first show.
The only thing I noticed that sort of perturbed me was that the second chef to be eliminated, during the "duck" course, in his rush to get his dishes plated before time expired seemed to have very sloppy looking plates. And yet, when the camera showed the judges tasting them, they appeared to be all neat and clean. Hmmm ...
I'm holding off further judgment until I see another episode or two.
I do think I like Ted Allen better as a judge than a moderator, however.
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#3
Posted 14 January 2009 - 09:38 AM
#4
Posted 14 January 2009 - 10:15 AM
I think this show is aimed at people who find IC & TC too "out-there" or fancy for thier tastes and maybe the FN is trying to keep things on a more accessible level. The overall quality of the food produced seemed like that of an accomplished amatuer / lower-tier pro. I was a little worried that none of the four even seemed to have ever tasted octopus, never mind prepared it; but overall, they seemed to produce food the the judges generally liked.
#5
Posted 14 January 2009 - 09:03 PM
I was disturbed by the woman who didn't know anything about green onions.
But, overall, I liked that they chose regular working cooks for the show rather than celebrities.
#6
Posted 15 January 2009 - 07:10 PM
Jon
#7
Posted 23 January 2009 - 09:54 AM
My only complaint with this show is that each episode has 4 new contestants. I would prefer that the winner of one show would move on to the next and compete against 3 others, similar to Jeopardy.
#8
Posted 23 January 2009 - 10:21 AM
I think Ted Allen is great, but he needs to loosen up a bit on this show and that Food Detectives.
My only complaint with this show is that each episode has 4 new contestants. I would prefer that the winner of one show would move on to the next and compete against 3 others, similar to Jeopardy.
Most chefs are lucky to get away and do one episode.
#9
Posted 23 January 2009 - 10:30 AM
I think Ted Allen is great, but he needs to loosen up a bit on this show and that Food Detectives.
My only complaint with this show is that each episode has 4 new contestants. I would prefer that the winner of one show would move on to the next and compete against 3 others, similar to Jeopardy.
Most chefs are lucky to get away and do one episode.
As I understand it, Jeopardy tapes a whole week in one day. I'm sure Chopped could do 4 or 5 episodes worth in a day....
Christopher
#10
Posted 23 January 2009 - 11:27 AM
I think Ted Allen is great, but he needs to loosen up a bit on this show and that Food Detectives.
I think this show and Food Detectives demonstrate that hosting is not Ted's forte and he's much better as a commentator.
#12
Posted 25 January 2009 - 10:27 AM
#13
Posted 26 January 2009 - 07:49 AM
I like it, though. The concept is simple and straightforward, and it is interesting to see 4 chefs' take on the items. At least in the episode I watched, the intentionally chose 4 chefs that were very different.
#14
Posted 26 January 2009 - 08:18 PM
I don't think the commercials for it do it justice, promising extremely exotic & challenging ingredients that turn out to be.....tofu!
#15
Posted 26 January 2009 - 09:14 PM
#16
Posted 27 January 2009 - 08:28 AM
My biggest complaint is that they always seem to throw one ingredient in that doesn't go with the others. I realize that Project Runway is a different beast completely, but many of the comments from those judges revolve around the need for the designer to edit themselves. In Chopped, the chefs are required to use all the basket ingredients---they are not permitted to edit. I realize that forces the contestants to be wildly creative, but is there ever a chance that the dish would be better (whatever that means in this context) if they were given the option of using (n-1) of the n ingredients given? Especially if their justification for omission wasn't edited out?
That said, my husband and I had great fun discussing what we would have done, both with and without a single-ingredient omission, especially given the thirty-minute timeframe.
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#17
Posted 27 January 2009 - 01:05 PM
The cooks were comprised of a young rocker dude, a vegan vegetarian gal, a female pastry chef, and a wizened catering chef fellow.
The vegan was out early when one of the ingredients was baby octopus.
The rocker was out next due to his being a bit loose with the rules and running right up against the clock (those rockers refuse to follow the crowd man).
It came down to the young gal and the wizened, slow but sure caterer. It was nice to see the caterer win. He wasn't flashy or hip but he got the food on the plate.
I kind of liked the format. The chefs did all their own work. No assistants or sous chefs in view.
I'll have to tune in again. There are much worse shows on the tube.
#18
Posted 28 January 2009 - 05:57 AM
My biggest complaint is that they always seem to throw one ingredient in that doesn't go with the others. I realize that Project Runway is a different beast completely, but many of the comments from those judges revolve around the need for the designer to edit themselves. In Chopped, the chefs are required to use all the basket ingredients---they are not permitted to edit. I realize that forces the contestants to be wildly creative, but is there ever a chance that the dish would be better (whatever that means in this context) if they were given the option of using (n-1) of the n ingredients given? Especially if their justification for omission wasn't edited out?
Yes. Especially when the judges ding the chefs for using it. Last night I gave this show a shot and the stinger ingredients were bran flakes on the app and grape jelly for the main. The judges' comments for the app courses routinely were about how they didn't like the bran flakes in there and one even said he preferred leaving them out of the dish.
#19
Posted 04 February 2009 - 09:34 AM
That Kyle Shadix was a smarmy SOB. He admitted that he didn't taste his dish as he was cooking.
Sean Chudoba just tossed out one of his elements because the bananas were falling apart? Gotta follow the rules of the game.
Then, apparently, Luis Gonzalez used salt instead of sugar in his cake. Again another one caught up because he didn't taste test.
The show is growing on me. There is not a lot of margin for error. Not a lot of time to redo things. They have to get it right the first time.
Edited by Hard H2O, 04 February 2009 - 09:39 AM.
#20
Posted 04 February 2009 - 10:41 AM
#21
Posted 05 February 2009 - 08:52 AM
I watched only minutes of this show last night. I was shocked at how bad the contestants were. They all looked like they screwed up the collard green, scallop dish. No excuse for their piss poor efforts.
If the gal had been on one of the previous episodes she wouldn't have made it past round 1.
#22
Posted 11 February 2009 - 08:49 AM
#24
Posted 23 March 2009 - 05:06 AM
I thought it was total nonsense that the woman who ended up winning (she cooks at a steak place in Astoria) served two dishes for the main (calamari savory and a papaya smoothie with granola). \
Bogus...the challenge is to use the incongruous stuff in the same dish.
#25
Posted 23 March 2009 - 09:08 AM
#26
Posted 23 March 2009 - 09:54 AM
Chicken wings
Soba noodles
Celery
String cheese
and 1 other ingredient
I enjoy it because sometimes you'll see things you never would've thought of -- one chef deboned the wing and stuffed it with the cheese.
Two chefs turned out dishes so horrible that they wanted to boot both. Both of them cooked the chicken wing, put it on top of the soba noodles, and placed the celery and cheese on the side because they couldn't think of what to do with it. Absolutely pathetic.
#27
Posted 24 March 2009 - 10:54 PM
Tonight, for the dessert, it was chocolate chips, dried strawberries, rice crispies, and I think maybe marshmallow creme? The 4th ingredient was certainly something that went with the others.
Come on. Even I could create a dessert out of this, and I have like zero creativity.
The entree selection was kielbasa, fingerling potatoes, pepperoncini and tarragon. Even though I don't think the tarragon goes with kielbasa, I still think I could've pulled something together out of that.
Same for the ap. Shrimp, peanut butter, apples and something I don't remember, but it wasn't out of left field. Like all the cheftestants, I thought Asian, maybe a curry over an apple slaw/chutney.
When the series started, it was like "Which one of these things is not like the others" where you'd sit there scratching your head thinking about how they'd use that oddball ingredient.
I figure if *I* can come up with something that sounds passable, certainly anyone who has any professional culinary chops can do the same. The thrill was in the ringer. Now that that's gone, well, it's just another bad FN program.
ETA: The dessert cereal was actually Cocoa Puffs, not Rice Krispies. And because I can never remember if *dessert* has 1 or 2 "s's".....
Edited by Pierogi, 24 March 2009 - 10:58 PM.
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#28
Posted 25 March 2009 - 03:35 AM
#29
Posted 08 July 2009 - 03:55 PM
I'm watching the episode where the dessert has purple sweet potatoes, the most recent one.
One chef served a messy plate and I thought chef Guarnaschelli was going to vault over the chopping block and beat her senseless. What's with all the glaring? This woman is eating food for a living and she can't get the sour look off her face?
I'm just hoping some competition will call for lemon and sauerkraut as ingredients to justify her expression. Do you think she's aware of how she comes off?
#30
Posted 08 July 2009 - 04:19 PM
I'm not sure why I'm still watching this, maybe because there are so few good shows in the summer.
I'm watching the episode where the dessert has purple sweet potatoes, the most recent one.
One chef served a messy plate and I thought chef Guarnaschelli was going to vault over the chopping block and beat her senseless. What's with all the glaring? This woman is eating food for a living and she can't get the sour look off her face?
I'm just hoping some competition will call for lemon and sauerkraut as ingredients to justify her expression. Do you think she's aware of how she comes off?
I always thought they must have been telling her to glare. I'm not sure why, though.










