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per "se"


chankonabe

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So, a friend of mine just handed over a menu from Per Se and I just was wondering what was with all of the quotation marks. It made me remember my dinner at The French Laundry where I thought the same thing. Am I being ridiculous? Or is putting "emulsion" in quotes ridiculous. I absolutely respect and admire Thomas Keller's craftsmanship, and attention to detail. I'm just wondering which detail he was paying "attention" to. I mean "oysters and pearls" I can understand, because there aren't really any pearls, dig? Which went along with that whole "macaroni and cheese" thing he was doing, now things have gone too far they've dropped the "kitch" but kept the quote. Every French word on the whole menu is "quotized" and it’s starting to drive me batty, stand back far enough and it resembles arabic for crying out loud. And then I notice that even all of the French and Spanish and Italian words are in quotes, how is "compote" more deserving than the undignified Frisée, I mean it has an accent and everything, or would it just look to funny having them both in quotations along side each other. "Amandine" but not -sautéed-, is it not really amandine? Is "Cuit sous vide" not really cooked sous vide and just a play on the process. I think we all know what a "purée" is by now, no? If not then "coulis" has surely homogenized itself into the English language by now, how about "crouton"? How about "shichimi Togarashi" maybe not, but why the emphasis? Why not - Toasted "Brioche"- or -"Niçoise" olives-? What language is -Ossetra- in while I'm at it, Iranian? And to kick me while I'm down I end up on "Sweetened Salty Hazelnuts" help me out here Tom, what the freak are you up to? I didn't have OCD until I read this menu but now consider myself a victim, starving for a system to make it all make sense. 26 words in quotations on the Chef's tasting menu alone, with no discernable rhyme or reason. Would have liked to have seen: PRIX FIX "150.00" at the bottom just to spice things up a bit, some kind of sliding scale. Around 68 on the regular menu, sixty freakin’ eight words in quotes. It starts to feel like being "shouted" at after a while, did I over do it with the 19 in this post? Or maybe I'm just jealous because my friend went to Per Se and all I got was this stupid menu.

Edited by chankonabe (log)
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I tend to do the samething on my menus, but I do it more to compare the item to a similar one. For example, last week we made coffee infused duck pate "bon bons", and I put that in quotation because of course it is not a real bon bon. I also do it because we do a lot of play on words or puns on the menu - I think it loosens up the guest and lets them see that we are not all serious as things used to be! It's only food after all.

.... cheers

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Unfortunately, it's like some sort of punctuation Avian Flu. The problem is "everywhere." From Per Se-level fine dining down to mid market family joints, everyone's getting the quotation "fever."

I'd love to see a Jeffery Steingarten article on it. I think his comments would be priceless and cutting.

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He's undoubtedly catering an old clientele. In these days of SMS jargon, assuming that your audience can interpret the subtleties introduced by quotes is, to say the least, an exercise of naivety.

PedroEspinosa (aka pedro)

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Six posts on this thread already and nobody even bothered to "welcome" chankonabe to eGullet? Well, welcome to eGullet Chankonabe, no quotations needed for this welcome!

John Sconzo, M.D. aka "docsconz"

"Remember that a very good sardine is always preferable to a not that good lobster."

- Ferran Adria on eGullet 12/16/2004.

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I don't "know" but the "rediculous series of quotes" is starting to make this "eccentric foodie bulletin board" look like a "goddamned Zagat entry".

Jason Perlow, Co-Founder eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters

Foodies who Review South Florida (Facebook) | offthebroiler.com - Food Blog (archived) | View my food photos on Instagram

Twittter: @jperlow | Mastodon @jperlow@journa.host

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Well, honestly, when you're a chef, and some "jackass" doesn't "get it" when you don't "use the quotes", everybody gets miserable.

The diner gets irate because he or she says " that's not a ("fill in the blank"") which of course, makes you want to "strangle "the imbecile" and.... you get my "drift".

If we were in Europe, would we have to be so "cute" ???

Keller is "pushing" the limit though, 'don'cha think?

2317/5000

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I would say Keller is doing "fine"

w/o a 'chef de puncuation'.

Seeing as how Keller is a perfectionist and isn't shy about hiring more people to get the job done, why don't you let him know your objection? Maybe he'll hire you as "chef du ponctuation."

2317/5000

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This was probably the only thing that bothered me on my only visit to Per Se. I knew I wanted to do the tasting menu no matter what was on it, so I gave up on trying to decipher all of the quotation marks.

Looking back, some of it does seem pretty silly, like:

Snake River Farm's "Calotte de Boeuf Grillee", "Wagyu" Beef Brisket "Hachis Parmentier", Black Trumpet Mushroom "Duxelles" and "Haricots Verts" with "Sauce Bordelaise"

Now, come on. Under what circumstances is Haricots Verts not Haricots Verts? :wacko:

Edited by jesteinf (log)

-Josh

Now blogging at http://jesteinf.wordpress.com/

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Well, the spate of quote abuse does point to a deficiency in standard written English-- lack of an irony mark. When there is not enough context to allow a reader to infer a less than literal intention, how should a writer try to convey a less than literal intention?

We've got ready access to a zillion typefaces and enough random little marks that we encode characters in 8 bits (256 possibilities) for each one. Using something that already has a meaning, like quotation marks, as an irony mark seems silly. Pick a new mark and stick with it.

I nominate the ~ mark... it's wavery and visually implies not exactitude... and in math it actually means "similar to"... and it is already on everybody's keyboard and nobody ever uses it for anything substantive outside of math.

So instead of a "raspberry coulis" it would be a ~raspberry coulis~ ... much prettier, I think.

Christopher D. Holst aka "cdh"

Learn to brew beer with my eGCI course

Chris Holst, Attorney-at-Lunch

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Well, the spate of quote abuse does point to a deficiency in standard written English-- lack of an irony mark.  When there is not enough context to allow a reader to infer a less than literal intention, how should a writer try to convey a less than literal intention?

Like any literary device, irony becomes tiresome when overused. I think quotes work just fine for this purpose, but the Per Se menu has abused the custom, and now it's just a joke.
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Well, the spate of quote abuse does point to a deficiency in standard written English-- lack of an irony mark.  When there is not enough context to allow a reader to infer a less than literal intention, how should a writer try to convey a less than literal intention?

Like any literary device, irony becomes tiresome when overused. I think quotes work just fine for this purpose, but the Per Se menu has abused the custom, and now it's just a joke.

So here:

Snake River Farm's "Calotte de Boeuf Grillee", "Wagyu" Beef Brisket "Hachis Parmentier", Black Trumpet Mushroom "Duxelles" and "Haricots Verts" with "Sauce Bordelaise"

Ces-ci n'est pas haricots verts?

Ceci n'est pas sauce bordelaise aussi?

Sandy Smith, Exile on Oxford Circle, Philadelphia

"95% of success in life is showing up." --Woody Allen

My foodblogs: 1 | 2 | 3

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