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IndyRob

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Posts posted by IndyRob

  1. Hmmm...maybe maybe not. With artificial intelligence, information will exand exponentially and we'll be cracking these puzzles far sooner than you think. No one thought we'd ever be able to solve the genome, and that was a few years back.

    25 years ago I was actively researching and experimenting with artifical intelligence, and despite Watson winning Jeopardy, it really hasn't advanced much since that time. Whatever advancements have been made have been far outstripped by things like Wikipedia that feature a lot of real intelligence.

    We have sequenced several genomes, but have we solved them? Not really. We've gotten some valuable clues, but we really haven't put the whole picture together. In the meantime, the advances are more about genetic modifications which are more akin to artificial food than VR or AI.

    We really don't have a lack of information, we have a challenge in organizing and understanding it all.

  2. Although we already have foods that "trick" the brain into thinking we're eating real and nutritious foods - sugars, flavors, MSG - I think the virtual tasting experience will happen before we find we can synthesize food that tastes exactly like the real thing.

    While I think our early goals would be aimed at reliably reproducing, say, the perfect Kobe steak, once accomplished, there'd be no need remain true to anything authentic and we'd drift away from tradition and down paths guided only by our whims. The end result would be dishes far removed from anything that ever existed naturally.

    I don't look for virtual reality to beat artificial food in the short term since we really know a lot more about mimicking meat growing processes than what makes the sense of taste work. The former is more mechanical than the latter, which includes a lot of cognitive psychology/neurology.

  3. I see it either leading to the end of cuisine or a headlong dive into a hedonistic wonderland.

    On the one hand, once you can have anything you want, any time you want, how could food remain special?

    But then, with a nearly infinite range of culinary special effects, the people who today are sneaking Pop Rocks into desserts will acquire a new and fearsome arsenal of the bizarre.

  4. The process of cooking is definitely important to the cook. But I don't see why the process of these new techniques is intrisically unsatisfying to the cook.

    I'm actually with you on this, but just to play the devil's advocate, I think it could be said that learning to cook with the God given senses is an act of self improvement - and the results are a direct reflection of your talents. It's the difference between inner aspirations of excellence, versus coldly calculated methods to eliminate mistakes.

    A statue of David could be created with a computer controlled 5 axis milling machine, but could such a process create a Michelangelo?

  5. My first reaction after reading the article was:

    "This is CRAZY! It's a service business and not supposed to be a platform where culinary demi-god-chefs dictate to the pions far below what they should eat and how. Of course chefs and restaurants should met all reasonable special requests and they should do it with a flourish and a smile!"

    Then I remembered the singular best restaurant meal I've ever eaten.

    ...

    That night she knew better than I exactly what I should be eating. It was perfect and I would, without reservation, put myself in her hands again anytime. I would not dream of asking her for a substitution.

    This is what exactly what Bourdain was talking about - dining being an act of submission - that I alluded to earlier.

    But I think that unless we limit the conversation to a particular type of resto, we're not going to get anywhere. Probably 8 out of 10 chefs would really love to put their best efforts into satisfying, say, a vegan client - well, maybe, once. But it would only make financial sense for maybe one of those 10 chefs.

  6. Take Peach. Slice. Add raspberries. Eat peach and raspberries.

    Alfredo: pasta, cream, cheese, butter.

    I'm a little surprised that posting those two options so close to each other didn't cause some sort of matter/anti-matter annihilation. :biggrin:

  7. In (I think) the Sous Vide Eggs thread I speculated that some cooking techniques that are passed down to us were developed because they rely on visual cues rather than kitchen timers or other gadgets. Cooking in water is well suited to this because boiling water (altitude notwithstanding) is a pretty exact temperature. So I suspect this is about timing.

    But the question that comes to mind is, since adding 1 cup (or whatever) of cold water is specified, is the beginning volume of water specified as well? For this to work on any level it seems as though it would have to be.

    Assuming we started with, say, a couple of quarts of water, I doubt that one cup of cold water would have enough impact to justify the term 'quench' (although I have a pretty vivid mental picture of that term left over from my high school metal shop classes).

  8. This could be the best Food Network show of this type yet. The celebs just stuck to what they were there to do. My only complaint is the same one I have with other shows like Masterchef or even Top Chef. They start out with too many people to cover in a single episode. Make two episodes or a two-hour premier.

  9. I'm going to go out on a limb here and say it's all about heat distribution. When I look at the picture of the two loaves, the left sides of each are amazingly similar. Given that, I want to rule proofing out.

    Yes, there may have been a difference in proofing, but why did they both behave the same on the left side, and so radically different on the right? Oven location has already been implicated, so I say let's go with that as the primary suspect.

    I think the next step has to be a controlled study with the same dough batches, the same proofing, the same everything. I'm homing in on my baguettes in a similar way. Once you're getting a good result (which it certainly appears you are), you have to tip-toe around in a methodical fashion to find the path to perfection.

    And one of the most amazing truths I found from the internet is that no one can ever give you advice suited to the oven you're using. Or in the way you're using it.

  10. I haven't been able to read the article, as it requires registration, but it seems to me that the old saw that "the customer is always right" is having it's meaning extended - or at least some are attempting to accomplish this.

    In a dispute regarding whether a given steak was cooked med-rare or rare, the customer is indeed always right (even if they aren't).

    When a customer looks at a menu and doesn't find what they want, they are not ever right -except perhaps by excusing themselves, or asking for small accomodations.

  11. Wikipedia has an article for each season, and they are quite detailed. There's info on the challenges and the outcomes, etc.

    I was just looking at this as you posted this. Then I hit my back button and lost my notes in the quick reply. But there have been three prior cases of no one being eliminated. One was the restaurant wars tie, another involved refrigeration failures, and the other was a calorie team challenge where there were allegations of cheating levied against both camps, so all contestents continued on 'on probation'.

    But it doesn't look like, other than perhaps finales, that there's been a previous case of no one being eliminated because of the lack of any flaws.

  12. Well, I'm glad Google is trying to tackle this. Recipe searches have long been a problem IMHO. There are just too many shovelware sites that will just publish anything.

    I like the idea that they're using some specialized markup to help Google index, but this looks like it will take some time to be further refined and prove itself.

    But it could also get contentious given the copyright status of recipes. If I create a killer original recipe and The Food Network posts it on their site, will I get buried in the search results?

  13. I think that keeping all five was a clever strategic decision for TC as a whole: it is an interesting twist that doesn't harm the competition, and since this is "All Stars" I could see them wanting to encourage the notion going into the finals that all of these people really deserve to be there. I'd be very curious to know if this was the plan all along, or if it actually did come to pass at Judge's table that night.

    Based on what I've seen, keeping all of them was the correct decision. Outside of finales, I don't think I've seen many episodes where someone didn't put a foot wrong. So I tend to think that it couldn't have been planned. Regardless of intent, someone could've choked in many different ways.

    Conversely, for all the evil editing elves, I think the result actually played against the producer's goals. A happy ending doesn't really stoke any flames. Even Bourdain's blog post is unusually brief. Despite the sillyness of the quickfire, we got to see the chefs do what they do with few constraints (although Mike's return to the Italian kitchen is worthy of note in its own way). They all did well, we saw good food, and it left us, well, without much to talk about.

  14. OT, but I envy your friend's freedom. A few years ago I got caught up in the adjudication of a spot of murder, and while we weren't totally sequestered, at lunch time we were severely limited. The jury had to lunch together. For three of the four days, that simply meant being being escorted across the street to a building with a food court where we would be let loose.

    But the last day, before going into deliberations, a few people decided we should all go to a fast food place across the street from the food court. The defendant's family, meanwhile, um..., coincidentally had the same idea - although they didn't bother to order any food. Apparently, they just took the opportunity to enjoy the ambience in close proximity to the jury.

    I felt just a wee bit uncomfortable.

  15. My son had bought some pork ribs and wanted and easy way to cook good ones for his GF. I thought back to a method I got from Top Secret Restaurnt Recipes for Tony Roma's ribs that was easy to convey in a minute....

    Put a sheet of aluminum foil on a sheet pan. Cover half with barbecue sauce. Put ribs on top of that. Cover ribs with more barbecue sauce. Fold other half of aluminum foil over the ribs. Seal, but leave the bone tips exposed. Roast at 300F for a couple of hours until meat is meat has retreated from the bone tips and is falling off the bone. Optionally, finish on grill or under broiler.

    This will not pass the purist test, but is extremely simple and will wow most.

    *Simple cleanup of sheet pan requires medium or large dog - sold separately.

  16. While cooking some fettucine, saute some bite sized pieces pieces of shrimp in (preferably herbed) oil. Remove from pan and pour in some cream, and a spoonful of pesto. Mix and reduce slightly. Combine pasta, shrimp and sauce.

    If on Top Chef, add some lemon juice and garnish with chopped fresh basil.

  17. What astounds me is their value for money. Not long ago I was routinely buying a dozen large eggs for under $1. That gives me very nearly a week of breakfasts for ONE DOLLAR.

    Their nutritional value, along with the number of completely different ways they can be economically used are simply mind boggling for the money.

    And the super/mega marts move A LOT of eggs. The only time I've seena an obvious freshness problem was when I bought eggs from a drugstore.

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