Dear Chef Ripert,
I am interested in the mental process you go through when creating a dish for the restaurant. I think there is a tendancy with many young chefs try and obtain a name for themselves by combining many odd ingredients and hoping that the results work - innovation for innovations sake, not necessarily for the good of the diner. (I recently read of a chef in Spain, not Adria, who made noodles out of squid combined with oat bran foam and bacon ice cream...). I was hoping you could share with us the process you go through when creating a dish for the restaurant.
A student very much inspired by your work,
Perry
A New Dish
Started by
cookperrync
, Dec 16 2002 08:24 AM
1 reply to this topic
#1
Posted 16 December 2002 - 08:24 AM
#2
Posted 18 December 2002 - 12:03 PM
When I create, I always decide first which ingredient I am cooking for...who is the star of the plate.
Let's say cod; I define what are the characteristics of the fish itself (flaky, fatty, lean, etc...). From the characteristics, I decide what cooking method will work best. To prepare my cod (for example, sauteed cod is very crispy on the outside and very moist and tasty on the inside). Then I select which flavors will enhance the qualities of the fish. From there I decide the sauce and garnish (if any).
By purposely not focussing on the presentation at the beginning of the process, I am able to focus only on "pleasing" the fish with flavors. Presentation should come after, and should never be more important than taste (although I never neglect the presentation).
Let's say cod; I define what are the characteristics of the fish itself (flaky, fatty, lean, etc...). From the characteristics, I decide what cooking method will work best. To prepare my cod (for example, sauteed cod is very crispy on the outside and very moist and tasty on the inside). Then I select which flavors will enhance the qualities of the fish. From there I decide the sauce and garnish (if any).
By purposely not focussing on the presentation at the beginning of the process, I am able to focus only on "pleasing" the fish with flavors. Presentation should come after, and should never be more important than taste (although I never neglect the presentation).









