Site with fake pretentious dish names
#1
Posted 21 December 2006 - 06:00 AM
"Chez Louise Menu"
If you'd like to put any seriousness into this thread, you can talk about whether you find these kinds of long menu descriptions helpful, pretentious, or/and funny. (But there's probably another thread for that.) Or you could just enjoy the linked site.
#2
Posted 21 December 2006 - 06:11 AM
Sounds like a can of Starkist I've got leftover from the hurricane supplies.
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#4
Posted 21 December 2006 - 07:30 AM
#7
Posted 21 December 2006 - 08:24 AM
I'm intrigued by the Heston-esque cheese sorbets, however and the frequent use of dead sea salt.
#11
Posted 21 December 2006 - 02:24 PM
Actually doesn't sound that bad. The wasabi sorbet just might be interesting.
ETA: And the vodka mashed lentils are killing me. Also the heirloom brioche (I've actually had that - not recommended)
This post has been edited by FistFullaRoux: 21 December 2006 - 02:30 PM
#17
Posted 22 December 2006 - 09:35 AM
I actually make a Rosemary Sorbet. I also had a conversation with Nach Waxman, at Kitchen Arts and Letters, and he was describing a Wasabi Sorbet on raw oysters. Scary!
#19
Posted 22 December 2006 - 07:52 PM
#22
Posted 30 January 2007 - 07:27 PM
#23
Posted 31 January 2007 - 11:34 AM
Amuse Bouche
blowfish carpaccio fleurette on a "spoon" of cinnamon chewing gum
Entré
Fire-blackened quail's eggs embedded in a block of ice.
Suckling urchin en papillote
served with a brine shrimp aspic and a seasonal meddley of cured, distressed West Brooklyn riverfish.
Tossed Salad of Frisée and "Dirty Money"
fresh baby greens and "leaves" of various international paper currencies, tenderized in a week-long simmered balsamic reduction, sprinkled with fine grains of truffle soil.
PLAT PRINCIPALE
Twice-fingered Harris Ranch Wagyu beef, prepared sous vide in tepid water, garlanded with imported thistle and served in an unfired clay pot.
Handpicked, drawn and quartered young rabbit, punished with a shock of mezcal-infused habannero chili marmalade, steamed in a cornhusk and balanced on a pyramid of maize.
Medallions of milk-fed veal-fed veal, hand-hewn turrets of baby harp seal foie gras, wild dolphin roe, collard greens.
Partially sedated live monkey, bamboo shoots and papaya, moistened with coconut holandaise, wrapped in grilled banana leaves and presented on a skewer.
DESSERT
Demolished Cake
Five layers of time-ravaged angelfood, interleaved with dessicated bastions of ganache and creme anglaise, scorched and helmetted by a sheath of whipped cream fallen in ruin, served on crystal platter shards partially supported by a collapsing tower of butter.
Sweet Triage
a demitasse each of lightly sweetened waters, made with cane sugar from Hawaii, Barbados, and Suriname, served precisely at body temperature. Arrives with three brown rice flour "communion wafers" for cleansing the palate.
(Note: it is not legal and therefore impossible for us to serve sweetened water made with Cuban sugar cane. Please make a discreet inquiry with your server for more information.)
Black Opium
mixed valrhona bittersweet chocolate vapors, inhaled through a pâte feulleté hookah
#24
Posted 05 February 2007 - 02:03 AM
That's actually kind of awesome. I'm putting together a menu for my 'dream restaurant' and I'm worried it isn't pretentious enough to attract non-foodie bankers. I'm going to have to use the Pretentious Food Generator to lend credibility to my project.
Now THAT has the irony.
This post has been edited by Reefpimp: 05 February 2007 - 02:03 AM
This whole love/hate thing would be a lot easier if it was just hate.
Bring me your finest food, stuffed with your second finest!
#29
Posted 15 July 2007 - 08:16 PM
Joisey, on Dec 22 2006, 08:56 PM, said:
".....reclined upon a chaise lounge of free-range Ratte potatoes."
I think I found some heirloom food in the back of my fridge in a tupperware.
#30
Posted 15 July 2007 - 08:21 PM
mojoman, on Jul 15 2007, 01:31 PM, said:
So what? I think it is FUNNY ! (I'm so glad I don't live there anymore....those places that need these menus....)
(Even if it's not true, it makes a good story. )
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