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Top Chef Texas


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300 replies to this topic

#121 pastrygirl

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Posted 17 December 2011 - 04:47 PM

Nyesha now has the jacket.

#122 annabelle

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Posted 17 December 2011 - 04:57 PM

Go Nyesha!

#123 Lisa Shock

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Posted 19 December 2011 - 10:54 AM

It's interesting that they are allowing the eliminated chefs to be seated ringside in Last Chance Kitchen. They have been very helpful to the contestants.

I also think it's cool that the chefs in the show aren't aware of the existence of the Last Chance competition. Too bad this is the only season that this will be the case.

#124 Holly Moore

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Posted 21 December 2011 - 09:01 PM

Hope the chefs have now learned - you don't buy steaks at Whole Foods.
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#125 annabelle

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Posted 21 December 2011 - 09:47 PM

TG Heather is gone. That was one silly quick-fire challenge, too.

#126 gfweb

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Posted 21 December 2011 - 09:53 PM

Ill miss Heather. I have nobody to despise now.

#127 Pierogi

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Posted 21 December 2011 - 10:22 PM

Who the hell braises rib-eyes????? For that matter, who the hell braises their stroganoff? I guess if you're trying to feed a huge family a "one-pot" meal, like The Evil Heather was espousing, you do, but really...? My stroganoff's done in the time it takes me to cook the egg noodles to go under it.
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#128 Lisa Shock

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Posted 21 December 2011 - 11:22 PM

And, Heather also loses at Last Chance...

I'm glad that Nyesha still has the jacket, I don't think we really saw her full potential.

#129 GordonCooks

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Posted 22 December 2011 - 05:41 AM

Ding Dong the witch is dead....

#130 weinoo

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Posted 22 December 2011 - 06:46 AM

Hope the chefs have now learned - you don't buy steaks at Whole Foods.

I said to my wife two things as the show got under way:

1. Who buys rib eye for stroganoff?

2. Who buys steaks at Whole Foods?

The tipoff was at the very beginning of the show, when Beverly talked about karma...we knew it was over right then for the know-it-all.

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#131 Florida

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Posted 22 December 2011 - 10:00 AM

Wow, if I was Whole Foods I would be reconsidering my sponsorship of TC. I don't think the judges could've possibly shit on the quality of their rib eyes anymore than they did.

#132 annabelle

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Posted 22 December 2011 - 12:52 PM

If I were Whole Foods, I'd be reconsidering who my beef supplier was rather than the getting pissed off that a bunch of world famous chefs pronounced their meat crap.

Go Beverly! I knew she'd get even with Heather with her zen-fu.

#133 gfweb

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Posted 22 December 2011 - 01:26 PM

From what I read about Whole Foods that may be the least of their problems.
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#134 Derek J

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Posted 22 December 2011 - 03:40 PM

How was braising the steak going to caramelize it? I thought that's why you sear meat before braising it. If I am an idiot with my cooking vocabulary, please someone correct me.

#135 IndyRob

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Posted 22 December 2011 - 04:52 PM

Can anyone give an update of what's going on at Last Chance Kitchen? We can't watch it in Canada.


Perhaps we should have a separate topic for Last Chance Kitchen. There's a spoiler aspect since even those who can watch it on the 'net may not do so immediately.

#136 annabelle

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Posted 22 December 2011 - 06:29 PM

How was braising the steak going to caramelize it? I thought that's why you sear meat before braising it. If I am an idiot with my cooking vocabulary, please someone correct me.

You do sear meat before braising. I don't have a clue what Heather was trying to accomplish with her take on her mother's crockpot meal of beef stroganoff. As Pierogi said, stroganoff is a quick cook, not a stewed piece of beef. Heather was using the wrong cut and the wrong method. Even her abandoned idea of the pressure cooker wasn't going to save that mess.

#137 David Ross

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Posted 22 December 2011 - 07:21 PM

For good or bad, I watched the "X Factor" last night on Fox and missed the latest Top Chef episode. For good or bad......

#138 annabelle

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Posted 23 December 2011 - 12:59 PM

For shame, Dave. Start a thread and then forget all about it, sounds like something I would do. No worries, though, it'll be on many more times so you can catch up.

#139 David Ross

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Posted 01 January 2012 - 08:29 PM

For good or bad, I watched the "X Factor" last night on Fox and missed the latest Top Chef episode. For good or bad......


For shame, Dave. Start a thread and then forget all about it, sounds like something I would do. No worries, though, it'll be on many more times so you can catch up.


Trust me, missing Top Chef for the sake of the "X Factor" wasn't intentional. Maybe I should have watched some forgotten history author debut a talk about Calvin Coolidge on C-SPAN. It would have been far more interesting than the latest television talent show. And.....as I discovered a few days later, something on C-SPAN would have been more intriguing than watching Heather shove that Stroganoff mess in front of the judges. Do you have a dog? Would you serve Heather's stroganoff to your best friend?

#140 IndyRob

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Posted 05 January 2012 - 05:06 PM

Well, a nathanm appearance with MC as the Quickfire prize was a pleasant surprise. I didn't know that he had won a barbecue competition.

#141 Jaymes

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Posted 05 January 2012 - 05:24 PM

I didn't know that either, and was sorta startled. Talk about cooking opposites. Mastering the very newest. Mastering the very oldest.

And I sure got tired of Ed's whining. That loss was nobody's fault but theirs. They lost sight of the goal. They weren't running a restaurant. It didn't make a bit of difference how quickly they could serve the 300 "customers" that in fact weren't customers at all. They never should have even considered compromising the product. If the line was slow, it would be easy to say, "Sorry, we're short-handed." No big whoop. They weren't being judged by how quickly they could sling out hash.

The important thing was to put the best food they could on the table for the judges.
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#142 Slamdunkpro

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Posted 05 January 2012 - 07:03 PM

Well, a nathanm appearance with MC as the Quickfire prize was a pleasant surprise. I didn't know that he had won a barbecue competition.

He hasn't. :angry:

#143 IndyRob

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Posted 05 January 2012 - 07:22 PM


Well, a nathanm appearance with MC as the Quickfire prize was a pleasant surprise. I didn't know that he had won a barbecue competition.

He hasn't. :angry:


Well, I don't know. Wikipedia seems to think he has. Although elsewhere I did notice a reference to "...was on a team that..."

#144 Slamdunkpro

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Posted 05 January 2012 - 07:31 PM



Well, a nathanm appearance with MC as the Quickfire prize was a pleasant surprise. I didn't know that he had won a barbecue competition.

He hasn't. :angry:


Well, I don't know. Wikipedia seems to think he has. Although elsewhere I did notice a reference to "...was on a team that..."

Another reason one shouldn't put too much stock in Wikipedia....

He was at Memphis in May with David Cox's team in 1991 (Dave won the Grand Championship that year with ribs). Nathanm won an award in one of the side dish categories for pasta :blink: - that doesn't exactly make him a BBQ champion.

Edited by Slamdunkpro, 05 January 2012 - 07:32 PM.


#145 annabelle

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Posted 05 January 2012 - 08:52 PM

I see Ed is getting the villian edit. Look for him to pack his knives and go next week after Restaurant Wars.

#146 David Ross

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Posted 06 January 2012 - 07:57 AM

I didn't know that either, and was sorta startled. Talk about cooking opposites. Mastering the very newest. Mastering the very oldest.

And I sure got tired of Ed's whining. That loss was nobody's fault but theirs. They lost sight of the goal. They weren't running a restaurant. It didn't make a bit of difference how quickly they could serve the 300 "customers" that in fact weren't customers at all. They never should have even considered compromising the product. If the line was slow, it would be easy to say, "Sorry, we're short-handed." No big whoop. They weren't being judged by how quickly they could sling out hash.

The important thing was to put the best food they could on the table for the judges.

I totally agree. I wanted to slap Ed up the side of the head with a barbecue mop. Just because they are down one person he uses the asinine excuse to pre-slice the brisket and put it covered, in a steam tray. It looked, and I'm sure tasted, like grey beef by-product that was leftover army rations. How was the loss of one cook any different than a real-life situation in a restaurant where a cook calls in sick or doesn't show up for the service shift? You improvise and make do. And in the case of slicing meat, it doesn't matter. He took all that time to ruin the brisket ahead of service when he simply could have waited, displayed the brisket on a cutting board for the diners and then cut to order. He sacrificed quality and time early on when he should have kept it for when he needed to use it--in the moment of service.

#147 Lupinus

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Posted 06 January 2012 - 06:00 PM

I didn't know that either, and was sorta startled. Talk about cooking opposites. Mastering the very newest. Mastering the very oldest.

And I sure got tired of Ed's whining. That loss was nobody's fault but theirs. They lost sight of the goal. They weren't running a restaurant. It didn't make a bit of difference how quickly they could serve the 300 "customers" that in fact weren't customers at all. They never should have even considered compromising the product. If the line was slow, it would be easy to say, "Sorry, we're short-handed." No big whoop. They weren't being judged by how quickly they could sling out hash.

The important thing was to put the best food they could on the table for the judges.

Didn't we all? Being short handed isn't an excuse to screw something up that is so easily avoided. Suck it up buttercup, your teammate got sick and needed medical attention. It happens.

#148 gfweb

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Posted 06 January 2012 - 07:54 PM

Right. But she's clearly a pain in the ass too.

#149 jsmeeker

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Posted 07 January 2012 - 06:56 PM

A BBQ episode while they were in Central Texas. Home to the best BBQ in the great state of Texas, and arguably the whole nation (or world). Central Texas BBQ is pretty specific. I'm a little surprised they picked chicken as one of the meats. The "Big Three" are brisket, pork ribs, and sausage, with brisket being the "king of meats". That's the one most identified with Texas BBQ and the one people in the know tend to judge a BBQ place by. Not chicken. Certainly not side dishes. Side dishes? Please... Give me really awesome brisket and you could feed me the worst cole slaw ever and I wouldn't give a crap and would not hold it against you in the slightest. :D


I cringed when the team that lost Heather pre-sliced their brisket. Such a terrible, but very common thing to do in a big catering situation. Real BBQ places slice it all to order. Even when there is a line out the door. They don't slice until you actually get to the counter and place your order. Who was it that said "I love BBQ. I like to throw stuff on a grill". ? :blink: NOT BBQ!!!


The Asian BBQ won? Yikes. That makes me sad. Maybe it was good.. But it's sad people couldn't try to do good Central Texas BBQ. THen again, few people can really do it really well.

It was good to see Nathan M. I don't know his history of being a BBQ champ, but I know he did a lot of research on the matter for the book. Pretty sure e did a tour through Central Texas. His book has quite a bit to say about the subject, too. Would have been nice to see some other BBQ experts there too. Like maybe someone form Kreuz or Smitty or Blacks in Lockhart. Aaron Franklin from Austin. Daniel Vaughn from the blog Full Custom Gospel BBQ.
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#150 Jaymes

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Posted 07 January 2012 - 08:01 PM

I'm a little surprised they picked chicken as one of the meats. The "Big Three" are brisket, pork ribs, and sausage, with brisket being the "king of meats". That's the one most identified with Texas BBQ and the one people in the know tend to judge a BBQ place by. Not chicken. Certainly not side dishes. Side dishes? Please... Give me really awesome brisket and you could feed me the worst cole slaw ever and I wouldn't give a crap and would not hold it against you in the slightest. :D


I had the same thought about sausage but the main difference among the various BBQ sausages in Texas is in how it is made, not how it is cooked. The producers very well might not have wanted to tax the cheftestants with making sausage and didn't think there was much value in having them buy some, and then just throw it on the fire. Even I can do that. After all, if you start with a good premade sausage, there's not much to smoking it. They probably figured it was a better test of smoking skills to have them cook chicken.

And good smoked chicken is pretty dang tasty. When I lived in far NW Austin, I used to drive the hour or so over to Llano just to pick up a half-dozen of their smoked chickens.

Edited by Jaymes, 07 January 2012 - 08:59 PM.

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