Michelin-Star Chef Rates 11 Fine Dining Scenes In Movies & TV (w/ Paul Liebrandt) | How Real Is It?

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  • Опубліковано 12 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,3 тис.

  • @imanmukhlis5052
    @imanmukhlis5052 6 місяців тому +17418

    Actual people cooking food : "6,7,8.. doesn't look very real to me."
    3D rat cooking : "10/10! Very realistic!"
    I love that energy lol

    • @rp-hr1qs
      @rp-hr1qs 6 місяців тому +538

      No one can beat down ratatouille.

    • @TheMuffinMan408
      @TheMuffinMan408 6 місяців тому +18

      Fr

    • @seniors4life
      @seniors4life 6 місяців тому +172

      ive worked fine dining (front of house though) for some time and would give the same ratings as he did :) Rat cooking is Best cooking!

    • @drakeonyou
      @drakeonyou 6 місяців тому +116

      Real recognizes real

    • @1998Cebola
      @1998Cebola 6 місяців тому +34

      and his top one has people f'cking in the kitchen and the titular chef cooking a man whole and forcing someone to eat it

  • @mirojone
    @mirojone 6 місяців тому +20482

    I love that a Michelin Star chef agrees with me that Ratatouille is a 10/10. It's so magnificent.

    • @jeemoon1626
      @jeemoon1626 6 місяців тому +384

      I have been saying this since I saw Ratatouille, but that movie is top tier for the accuracy. Also there are Easter Eggs in the movie for restaurant folk.

    • @adamseidel9780
      @adamseidel9780 6 місяців тому +373

      The ending scene with Ego eating the Ratatouille and having a flashback to his childhood is still the best depiction of food in cinema history.

    • @KimKim-001
      @KimKim-001 6 місяців тому +45

      it's a masterpiece

    • @Fetish-Footage-Forum
      @Fetish-Footage-Forum 6 місяців тому +92

      I don't agree. It is beyond any grading system known to man.
      Or mice.
      To mice and man.

    • @jamespohl-md2eq
      @jamespohl-md2eq 6 місяців тому +16

      @@adamseidel9780So, basically Proust and Madeleines.

  • @saturnv2419
    @saturnv2419 6 місяців тому +8499

    Not to be stereotypical or anything, but the way he talks, the slow and informative tone, is exactly what I expected from a Michelin star chef.

    • @KindredBrujah
      @KindredBrujah 6 місяців тому +428

      And the barely simmering anger that you can see ready to boil over the moment a young commis puts parsley onto the dish as a garnish instead of basil.

    • @papiagua
      @papiagua 6 місяців тому +89

      Wait till you see one blow up at you holy sheeeeyit. Also we never did "heard" at my kitchen...WHAT did you hear? We repeated orders back

    • @Dzokhar
      @Dzokhar 6 місяців тому +26

      I'm a sommelier and that's a huge yes from me.

    • @suzyani474
      @suzyani474 6 місяців тому +4

      so sterotypical! cNT EXPECT ANY BETTER

    • @ChauNyan
      @ChauNyan 6 місяців тому +15

      There are hot-blooded chefs, but this Chef is a grandmaster.

  • @tmankewl5355
    @tmankewl5355 6 місяців тому +3346

    Feels so good to hear a Chef of this caliber say "It's happened in my Kitchen before." about Carmie being locked in the walk-in in the s2 finale of The Bear.
    I really could not believe how many people went as far as to say the entire season was ruined for them bc they found it oh soooo implausible that someone could be accidentally locked in a walk-in.

    • @samuelrhee2625
      @samuelrhee2625 6 місяців тому +304

      Especially when they'd been foreshadowing it for multiple episodes lol

    • @MrAcethesecond
      @MrAcethesecond 6 місяців тому +369

      @@samuelrhee2625the fact that he was well aware and didn’t deal with it and it caused a catastrophe at the worst possible time is the most realistic part of the entire show. Lmao

    • @berlynhale2962
      @berlynhale2962 6 місяців тому +32

      I thought he was in the walk in because he needed to cool off

    • @ParkityParkPark
      @ParkityParkPark 6 місяців тому +59

      honestly all the people saying s2 was a miss can shove it, if anything I think it was way better than s1. Yes, the vibe was entirely different from s1, but it was different in the right way, it was progressing the story, and everything that happened felt right for the story. Genuinely don't understand the complaints

    • @melenesearmbrister5801
      @melenesearmbrister5801 6 місяців тому +39

      Do you know how many times I’ve accidentally gotten stuck in the walk in? This scene was accurate because it does in fact happen at least once when you work in a kitchen 😂

  • @stephenholmgren405
    @stephenholmgren405 6 місяців тому +1420

    Haha they way he casually says, "Is he locked in the walk-in? Ahh I see." 😂

    • @jamest3002
      @jamest3002 5 місяців тому +12

      The walk-in is a universal, even if there is none.

    • @noedurand-roger542
      @noedurand-roger542 4 місяці тому +9

      To be fair, that's the only calm place in a kitchen

    • @MurderBong
      @MurderBong 3 місяці тому +1

      Surprised he didn’t have a fridge axe. 😂

    • @largol33t1
      @largol33t1 2 місяці тому +1

      That happened to me in a fast food place once. They had a tiny opening door in the middle of the main door so you could shout for help, LOL...

    • @misteryace21
      @misteryace21 Місяць тому

      I used to work in a fast food place and thankfully we had a button you'd press from the inside to get out. My friends would always shut the door on me and I'd do the same back to them 😂

  • @mattlozinski1700
    @mattlozinski1700 6 місяців тому +3745

    I worked on lines for over 10 years. I couldn't keep watching "the bear" because it was so accurate to my life it wasn't entertainment anymore. But it's so honest about the immense joys and immense stress and trauma of working in a restaurant. If ever anyone wants an honest account of what life is like in the culinary industry, it's the closest to actually doing it yourself

    • @ceceytell5325
      @ceceytell5325 6 місяців тому +176

      Agreed, I couldn’t finish the first season. And I wasn’t even on the line, I was FOH but man I don’t miss that level of anxiety

    • @5tr4nge75
      @5tr4nge75 6 місяців тому +150

      Yeah, I watched 4 episodes and couldn’t handle it anymore.
      It was giving me panic attacks, and stress dreams that I was back working in a kitchen.
      I work in a warehouse now, dealing with tens of thousands of items a day, and vastly more expensive items, and it’s less stressful than working in a kitchen.

    • @arissaiglinski482
      @arissaiglinski482 6 місяців тому +131

      My uncle owns restaurants and is taking forever to finish the show because he has to take month long breaks in between, it's just too real and multiple problems they have in that show have actually happened to him.

    • @atomknight8361
      @atomknight8361 6 місяців тому +43

      The second season was even more manic than the first

    • @doglucky04
      @doglucky04 6 місяців тому +27

      @@ceceytell5325 relax pal it was a steakhouse not vietnam

  • @midgetwars1
    @midgetwars1 6 місяців тому +4296

    I love how nearly every chef reaction video to Ratatouille is always 10/10 it's accurate.

    • @MrZebraButt
      @MrZebraButt 6 місяців тому +155

      I think it’s because Ratatouille shows the essence, or the feeling of cooking when you truly love it. I don’t think any of these shows or movies captures the passion for cooking in the way Ratatouille does

    • @sweetpatate2729
      @sweetpatate2729 5 місяців тому +18

      It's what push me (and many other) into this profession so of course xD

    • @rottensquid
      @rottensquid 5 місяців тому +9

      At the same time, he's like "Yeah, we serve peasant dishes in fine restaurants all the time." So he's admitting to the film's inaccuracy.
      I kinda got the impression Ratatouille took place in the 60s or 70s, before Alice Waters and the whole nouvelle cuisine thing went global. I don't remember any mobile phones or computers or anything. Maybe they didn't do stuff like that in three-star Parisian restaurants back then. But that fancy vertical presentation seemed more modern. So I think it was just a story convenience idea. After all, it went perfectly with the theme.

    • @SulliMike23
      @SulliMike23 4 місяці тому +6

      Gordon Ramsay actually said it's one of his favorite movies.

  • @satvindersingh1506
    @satvindersingh1506 6 місяців тому +6249

    "Yelling at the critic? I respect that." LOL I'm pretty sure many chefs would have the same answer.

    • @Menuki
      @Menuki 6 місяців тому +156

      Here’s a revelation: critics are the influencers of the pre internet era

    • @JTD472
      @JTD472 6 місяців тому +18

      @@Menukiwhat a revelation that comment you made is

    • @jasmadams
      @jasmadams 6 місяців тому +18

      I'm biased, because I absolutely love Oliver Platt, but one of my favourite lines ever comes at the end of that movie, right before he tells the chef that he wants to bankroll his new restaurant. He asks him about his taking on a critic and says "why would you come at me? I buy ink by the barrel!"

    • @kirsche5574
      @kirsche5574 6 місяців тому +14

      The best part about that scene is that the critic was actually purposely lying about his food to “seem tough”

    • @ashb7
      @ashb7 6 місяців тому +7

      ​@@Menuki to play devil's advocate, critics (especially from big publications) did/do actually have some credentials to grant them a degree of legitimacy. Meanwhile literally anyone can be an influencer as long as they have a phone. And also be successful at it as long as they're loud enough.

  • @Gravuun
    @Gravuun 6 місяців тому +560

    This chef has a very calm energy about him. Love it. Also "yelling at the critic? I respect that" had me laughing

  • @shawnrosler2408
    @shawnrosler2408 5 місяців тому +136

    6:18 - As a food podcaster, and as someone who can no longer "go home" (dad passed, mom in memory care), there are moments...brief ones...where a flavor takes you back to that innocence. Brings me to tears every single time I watch it. Glad to hear Chef whisper "So true...so true".

  • @flaviochavez1747
    @flaviochavez1747 6 місяців тому +2127

    No BS, his look at 6:15 is the essence of why anyone gets into cooking. When I was 16, I went to Ikea and had pumpkin soup for the first time since my grandmother had made it for me as a baby, she died when I was 9 but I hadn’t seen her since I was a baby. I immediately recognized the flavor but couldn’t ever recall having pumpkin soup, and my mom told me it was because my grandmother loved making it for me as baby food.

    • @burpie3258
      @burpie3258 6 місяців тому +23

      amazing!

    • @MrsBlack88
      @MrsBlack88 6 місяців тому +21

      Ohhhh the tear I just shed 🤍

    • @zombiiesque
      @zombiiesque 6 місяців тому +2

      1000%.

    • @tkyo2025
      @tkyo2025 6 місяців тому +6

      Food is all about great memories & experiences!

    • @cheetahrose97
      @cheetahrose97 3 місяці тому +1

      When I got my wisdom teeth out my dad made me mashed carrots the same way he used to make for me as a baby. It was such a comforting experience.

  • @RawBerserker
    @RawBerserker 6 місяців тому +5170

    "The Voldemort of chefs, quite literally"
    Loved that line hahaha

    • @valeriepark9444
      @valeriepark9444 6 місяців тому +11

      A fellow Millenial!

    • @kevwwong
      @kevwwong 6 місяців тому +6

      I love Chef's low-key humour.

    • @carok6817
      @carok6817 4 місяці тому +1

      This and the ratatouille moment are my favorite parts fo the clip 😊

  • @jetfire245
    @jetfire245 6 місяців тому +1924

    6:29 “that is what food is about…memory.” Amazing sense of appreciation from chef Liebrandt. I aspire to cook with that thought process.

    • @anthonyfrench3169
      @anthonyfrench3169 6 місяців тому +15

      So true!! Even when I'm cutting peppers and sautéing onions. No matter how many videos and shows I see saying it's the best way...I still do it as my dad taught me.

    • @ThisIsMyFullName
      @ThisIsMyFullName 6 місяців тому +4

      That's what all art is about, the emotional correlation.

    • @BatCaveOz
      @BatCaveOz 6 місяців тому

      I aspire to reduce my intake of soy products.

    • @Kefka2010
      @Kefka2010 6 місяців тому

      Never had a food take me to childhood.

    • @jetfire245
      @jetfire245 6 місяців тому +3

      @@anthonyfrench3169 That's awesome. I'll keep that in mind for the people I learn from next. Maybe the "best" way isn't always the right way.

  • @LeonelArriano
    @LeonelArriano 6 місяців тому +198

    It’s great to hear that a Michelin Star chef agrees that Ratatouille is a 10/10. It really is a magnificent film, capturing the passion and artistry of cooking so beautifully. Plus, it’s always nice to have your taste validated by an expert!

  • @AZN7
    @AZN7 6 місяців тому +437

    wasn't expecting shokugeki no soma to be thrown in there, got me a chuckle, this whole video and his commentary was fun to listen to

    • @monishagowda8928
      @monishagowda8928 6 місяців тому +8

      I swear😂

    • @TeckTheBlooded
      @TeckTheBlooded 5 місяців тому +7

      Agreed. Would have picked a better scene for the humor, like the final round in the S1 contest, but glad he saw enough to get a feeling for what might be going on

    • @PeterParker-tb7ce
      @PeterParker-tb7ce 5 місяців тому +6

      @@TeckTheBlooded I would have like them to have used Soma's Taste testing of new dishes. But yeah they could have picked a better scene or scenes since they used so many from the Bear.

    • @octopuss1918
      @octopuss1918 Місяць тому

      Just call it food wars. C'mon nobody cares about the japanese name, unless your japanese

  • @xantiom
    @xantiom 6 місяців тому +8201

    Ratatouille: the Harry Potter of cooking
    The Menu: the Voldemort of cooking

    • @ColoringKaria
      @ColoringKaria 6 місяців тому +69

      I’m not a foodie and loved the menu so much! It’s turned me into a foodie.

    • @andreasarmiento1999
      @andreasarmiento1999 6 місяців тому +13

      @@ColoringKariaoh no that one was a flop for me just watched for some of the actors tbh

    • @mcsaucess
      @mcsaucess 6 місяців тому +11

      the guy loves his harry potters

    • @tedjomuljono3052
      @tedjomuljono3052 6 місяців тому +110

      i mean The Menu literally has Voldemort in it

    • @andreasarmiento1999
      @andreasarmiento1999 6 місяців тому +6

      @@tedjomuljono3052 you’re right I take all my critiques back

  • @bln8285
    @bln8285 6 місяців тому +3351

    "I don't get it. 7/10" what a kind guy

    • @kruger4444
      @kruger4444 6 місяців тому +216

      That's the point. You may not "get it" but still understand that it has overall value to others. More people should think like that.

    • @Bigmojojo
      @Bigmojojo 6 місяців тому +44

      It's obvious the edited out a lot of that conversation

    • @democard1199
      @democard1199 6 місяців тому +2

      ​@@kruger4444
      At least it's "educational" and the author did a good job with his homework + creativity. Somehow I also didn't get it/ understand (especially the fanservice).

    • @peachpink2831
      @peachpink2831 6 місяців тому +4

      @@kruger4444 I think it comes to him more naturally as someone who makes fancier food that people have different tastes and that's normal, same with other creative ventures, people in the field acknowledges that people like different stuff. While people who arent tends to be more polar about their preferences.

    • @KasaiKouhai
      @KasaiKouhai 6 місяців тому

      @@democard1199fanservice is easy to buster and tbh, Japanese teens like it so authors keep putting it in.

  • @yutian5884
    @yutian5884 6 місяців тому +1443

    "It's cheap to fill the stomach but expensive to please the palate."
    Fine dining in one sentence.

    • @ryanboscoe9670
      @ryanboscoe9670 6 місяців тому +52

      I actually disagree. You can please the palate easily and cheaply. Food should never be so ridiculously expensive unless it's incredibly rare and/or complex and time-consuming to prepare.

    • @yutian5884
      @yutian5884 6 місяців тому +65

      @@ryanboscoe9670 Fine dining do use expensive ingredients and complex/time consuming preparation techniques. Even the basic vegetables and herbs they use are grown to almost perfection by their suppliers and beyond what you and I can normally purchase from stores.
      Just to give you an idea. The best vegetable dish I ever tasted to date was a simple peas dish cooked in butter with shaved cheese and truffle on top. But each peas was plump and sweet with the strongest peas flavor that was out worldly compared to what I had expected from peas.
      Fine dining is not for everyone. Everyone eats, but not everyone eats well. The "well" aspect is up to your own interpretation.

    • @saicharand7765
      @saicharand7765 6 місяців тому +22

      That sounds as pretentious as most ‘fine dining’ restaurants…

    • @SalmanRavoof
      @SalmanRavoof 6 місяців тому +24

      Bullshit as always from the privileged classists. I've eaten at both fine dining and the streets, and what feeds and pleases my whole soul, not just my palate, is the street food.

    • @yutian5884
      @yutian5884 6 місяців тому +12

      @@SalmanRavoof You're being very reverse snobbery yourself. Do you have a chip on your shoulder against people that enjoy fine dining?

  • @EricTitterud
    @EricTitterud 5 місяців тому +126

    I don't think people's objections to foie gras is how long it's been done. Even with factory farming, which is obviously far more recent, the objection is the suffering, and the fact that the suffering is being inflicted purely for the aesthetic, unnecessary enjoyment of people who typically never see that suffering.

    • @funkystrunk9228
      @funkystrunk9228 4 місяці тому +47

      yes!! also his argument is (in my opinion) a classic version of "it's ok because it's always been done" which isn't an argument at all

    • @steph1986
      @steph1986 3 місяці тому +16

      ​@funkystrunk9228 exactly. People have been enslaved for millennia doesn't mean it's right or ethical. I would never eat fois gras or at a restaurant that serves it.

    • @funkystrunk9228
      @funkystrunk9228 3 місяці тому

      @@steph1986 yes!! thank you! :))

    • @anaburda4807
      @anaburda4807 2 місяці тому

      this

    • @kedb621
      @kedb621 2 місяці тому +7

      100% and I raise my own meat animals (chicken and goat) but you bet as heck I make sure I hey have the best life till it’s their time to head to the freezer, and the method of dispatching them is as quick, calm and painless as possible. But force feeding and forcibly giving the animal a horrible life is just… I can’t imagine doing that

  • @BoopinSnakeBandito
    @BoopinSnakeBandito 5 місяців тому +57

    I love the call/respond style of speech in a back of house. "Coming down line hot" and "Sharps behind" are lifesavers. Responding with "Heard" when you're addressed has become engrained into my soul.

    • @hallesdad
      @hallesdad 4 місяці тому +4

      Randomly walking around a building or an aisle somewhere and instinctually saying “Corner” …. More times than I can count

  • @mjthomasjohansen
    @mjthomasjohansen 6 місяців тому +863

    The way his eyes lit up when ratatouille was on the roster, so knowledgeable and fair! What a lovely guy🥹

    • @epicyamiphobs5217
      @epicyamiphobs5217 6 місяців тому +8

      His former employees in the comments said he was a verbally abusive boss that would degrade one’s height lol. Lovely wouldn’t be an accurate adjective for him

    • @OnechanDaisuki
      @OnechanDaisuki 6 місяців тому +5

      @@epicyamiphobs5217isnt all head chef like that lmao

    • @jetvoidweller
      @jetvoidweller 6 місяців тому +10

      ​@@epicyamiphobs5217to be fair, allegedly a former employee

    • @mjthomasjohansen
      @mjthomasjohansen 6 місяців тому +1

      @@epicyamiphobs5217 okie dokie keyboard warrior 🫡 💀

    • @Kilmer5
      @Kilmer5 6 місяців тому

      A lovely guy who approves of animal torture.

  • @jjthejetplane1220
    @jjthejetplane1220 6 місяців тому +1062

    Ratatouille is a masterpiece and should be kept under museum glass. Ego's flashback, Chef Gusteau's ghost, and Ego's monologue at the end made me respect cooking. I've never much cared for food in general, but Ratatouille was the first piece of media to make me see cooking as art. It made me understand why people love food.

    • @karigrandii
      @karigrandii 6 місяців тому +12

      No wonder its regarded as one of the top 5 movies of all time in the movie art scene.

    • @chriswright4677
      @chriswright4677 6 місяців тому +1

      @@karigrandiimovie art scene?

    • @catedoge3206
      @catedoge3206 6 місяців тому

      yuh

    • @evansinclair1999
      @evansinclair1999 6 місяців тому +1

      Never much cared for food?

    • @jjthejetplane1220
      @jjthejetplane1220 6 місяців тому +9

      @evansinclair1999 Yeah, I have an allergy, so growing up, I didn't really care about eating. Especially not at parties or events, etc. I have very little emotional association with food, and I have to force myself to eat bc I just don't get that hungry. I can go a day or two without eating and feel fine (though this has left me very dehydrated before). Frankly, eating is a chore to me, which I know sounds insane, but I just never really enjoyed it. Which is not to say I don't like food that tastes good, I do, but it's not something that's ever actively on my mind, I sort of just eat out of routine.

  • @tiredluke129
    @tiredluke129 6 місяців тому +521

    Timestamps
    0:33 "The Bear" S2E10
    2:48 "The Bear" S1E2
    4:42 "Ratatouille"
    7:33 "The Menu"
    9:19 "Burnt"
    11:07 "Chef"
    12:41 "The Bear" S2E3
    14:25 "Food Wars!: Shokugeki No Soma" S3E12
    16:08 "Cook Up A Storm"
    17:40 "Julie & Julia"
    19:28 "The Hundred-Foot Journey"
    20:48 (bonus) "The Cook, The Thief, His Wife & Her Lover"

  • @brandonvaladez9414
    @brandonvaladez9414 6 місяців тому +41

    I love the chefs energy in explaining each scene…what a video!

  • @toobasaurus23
    @toobasaurus23 5 місяців тому +24

    I was in some top Australian Restaurants and Hotels in my career (1998-2003) as a waiter, and so much of 'The Bear' is real. Service on a capacity night is intense. Plates being thrown happened on many occasions. The swearing an berating is a bit overblown in film. Gordon Ramsay made that a thing in his shows and it really doesn't happen as often as people think. There is a job to be done and cursing someone out in front of everyone doesn't get it done. If you mess up, you'll hear about it after service.
    It's a mad industry to work in but the pace of service is a rush, and the comradeship between staff is something else. You go to war with each other every single night.
    I've seen some of my former Head Chefs in their Restaurants since I left (20 years ago) and still address them as 'Chef'. Respect for the position continues well after your time in the Kitchen. I still miss it sometimes.

    • @penelopew77
      @penelopew77 Місяць тому +2

      I worked somewhere that had that level of swearing and berating. Once, while being trained on expo, I was holding a plate that the KM didn’t think was up to snuff, so he grabbed me by the arm and yanked me so the line cooks could see the plate and then screamed at them about how unacceptable it was. We even had a semi open kitchen, so some guests could both see and hear it.

  • @ringosis
    @ringosis 6 місяців тому +1040

    This guy: Absolutely we have a timer, that's accurate, the etiquette and kitchen vocabulary is 100% accurate, getting trapped in a walk in freezer is something that's happened in my kitchen. 7/10
    Also this guy: I wasn't really sure the point they were trying to get across. 7/10

    • @mechasatsu6214
      @mechasatsu6214 6 місяців тому +27

      He probably dont know the context or what kind of show Food Wars is trying to be about.
      Most cooking show just shows the process, then explain the details later.
      Then here we have Food Wars, they do the thing, we get a reaction, an explaination, a perspective from a veteran, etc. if you drop a casual t.v enjoyer in the middle of the show, they'd deffenitely get information overload.

    • @eloschk
      @eloschk 6 місяців тому +55

      Rat cooking through pulling the hair of a human: 10/10

    • @Prinsbros
      @Prinsbros 6 місяців тому +7

      @@eloschk rat food mmm 10/10

    • @lostlearning8654
      @lostlearning8654 6 місяців тому +8

      Editing. We don't see everything he's seen or everything he's said.

    • @chrillex91
      @chrillex91 6 місяців тому +11

      He judges the scenes in isolation, it's not a comparison. You should learn this so you don't have to continue making garbage comments.

  • @J1995M
    @J1995M 6 місяців тому +801

    I appreciate his love for the movie Ratatouille. I work with individuals with autism who want to cook but for some they lack the total muscle control to safely use knives. Thankfully items like the Slapchop exist. I see everyday "professional" chefs mocking tools like this for various reasons but accessibility tools like this give the people I work with an ability to cook safely for themselves. It is important to remember that a knife may be the fastest way to do most kitchen tasks, but not every kitchen is concerned with speed and efficiency. Some just want to cook food for themselves.

    • @philipmarlowe5249
      @philipmarlowe5249 6 місяців тому +50

      I run a cooking group for people with mental health disorders and I do similar things. I show them the "right" way to do things then I show them more simplified ways to do the same things if they have issues with the standard way.

    • @YuriyDel
      @YuriyDel 6 місяців тому +11

      I generally just use knives, except when I had surgery-I learned how a food processor can make life a lot easier.
      I think chefs 'mock those tools' because most people should learn basic skills instead of using a crutch-learn the right way before using the shortcut in other words. I've had to teach basic knife skills to seniors who've cooked their entire lives, always easier to learn right the first time instead of fixing bad habits later.

    • @BlazeMiskulin
      @BlazeMiskulin 6 місяців тому +23

      Thank you for doing this.
      Far too many people get hung up on the techniques and forget that it's about *the food*. I've been cooking for 50 years (since I was tall enough to stand on a chair and help Mom stir stuff in a bowl). I am constantly learning new techniques--because I love learning them. But... I'll break out a blender to make my tomatoes easier to cook down. And sometimes I just throw stuff into a pot and then into a bowl.
      If a Slapchop gets your students diced veggies, and a mandolin gets them sliced veggies, and a pizza cutter lets them make chicken strips... go for it! I'm working to build up content to start a "cooking for normals" UA-cam channel, and you've inspired me to look at tools and techniques for people who can't use the tools that we take for granted.
      Thank you!

    • @TrappedinSLC
      @TrappedinSLC 6 місяців тому +23

      You see the same thing with people complaining about stuff like pre-chopped onions in the store. Look - I know how to cook. I'm good at it. I do have knife skills. I also have autoimmune arthritis and some days now chopping stuff is just not something my hands want to do much of. If I can get things like onions pre-chopped so I have much less to do myself, that means I can enjoy cooking and creating something without ending up in horrible pain afterwards.
      Or cut up fruit, same thing. Plus portion sizes - if it's just me and my SO at home, and our bottomless pit (aka our teenager) is away off at college or whatever, sometimes that stupid cup of pre-cut watermelon is the right amount of watermelon for us compared to getting a whole melon and having it go bad. I'd rather pay a little extra if I can and not waste most of a watermelon.

    • @BlazeMiskulin
      @BlazeMiskulin 6 місяців тому +19

      @@TrappedinSLC Chopped produce are a way for the store to reduce food waste (I used to work in a store in the meat and produce departments). When produce starts *looking* bad (not actually rotting, just not "perfect looking") it gets pulled. Many places just throw it away. Others will cut off the "ugly" parts, put the rest into a container and put it back on the shelves.
      The same with things like "Fajita mix"--the ugly peppers and onions get sliced up, wrapped on a tray, and put back on the shelf. It adds several days to the shelf life and reduces the amount of perfectly good food that gets tossed in the dumpster.
      So go ahead and buy that stuff. And encourage your grocer to put it on the shelves. It saves them money and reduces the absolutely enormous amount of food waste that happens because people need perfect-looking produce.

  • @iwatchyoutube523
    @iwatchyoutube523 6 місяців тому +1105

    I'm personally not against foie gras, but ancient Egyptians also producing it doesn't really have anything to do with whether or not it belongs on contemporary menus.

    • @ishrendon6435
      @ishrendon6435 6 місяців тому +20

      It does it means humans have been doing it for a long time morals aside weve perfected it much like how old beeer and other foods and drinks are

    • @dancenow1337
      @dancenow1337 6 місяців тому +372

      @@ishrendon6435 Morals aside indeed. Maybe we should consider morals when it comes to harming sentient beings. Personally I'd be against force feeding dogs to slaugher them, so I'm also against doing it to birds.

    • @iwatchyoutube523
      @iwatchyoutube523 6 місяців тому +121

      @@ishrendon6435 It sounds just as ludicrous when you say it as it did in the video.

    • @FPSBuzz
      @FPSBuzz 6 місяців тому +52

      ​@ishrendon6435 maybe we should ever put "morals aside," ever consider that?

    • @bloodangel13
      @bloodangel13 6 місяців тому +16

      @@dancenow1337 From what I know the Egyptians invented the force feeding method, their Jewish slaves (who introduced the practice of eating fattened liver of ducks) however used the ducks natural tendencies of ducks to gorge themselves before they fly off for winter.

  • @LHCB6
    @LHCB6 6 місяців тому +35

    "Yelling at the citric? I respect that"
    Let's go!

  • @haley2926
    @haley2926 6 місяців тому +4

    He is very generous and straightforward. We’ve all seen chefs that rip media apart and say it’s nothing like that irl. No pretense

  • @Ineddiblehulk
    @Ineddiblehulk 6 місяців тому +165

    I love that he loved Ratatouille - the filmmakers put as much love into the making of that film as he does in his food

  • @marikastewart2730
    @marikastewart2730 6 місяців тому +141

    I don't think he had seen "The One Hundred Foot Journey" before because his comment that "it was playing with food, rather than being a restaurant" was one of the messages in the movie. The chef went to Paris and started leading a high profile top tier restaurant using fancy techniques, but he realized it stifled his love of food and cooking. He eventually returned to his roots to reclaim his love of "real cooking"

    • @mattg2091
      @mattg2091 5 місяців тому +5

      That makes it even more impressive that he essentially intuited the meaning of an entire movie from one clip!

    • @sianwarwick633
      @sianwarwick633 3 місяці тому

      Is this movie a documentary ? I don't think I've heard of it .... which is good for me

  • @yucuytifbyuiom
    @yucuytifbyuiom 6 місяців тому +75

    I was enjoying this video & hearing a Michelin star chef's perspective greatly, but I absolutely hit the roof when he mentioned The Cook, the Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover towards the end. This is one of my favorite movies, that I feel is largely forgotten and deserves MUCH more love. Great video, thanks!

    • @itsbonkerjojo9028
      @itsbonkerjojo9028 6 місяців тому

      Tell me more about it . When you watch it and your watch experience and review that you have for that movie to this day ?

    • @yucuytifbyuiom
      @yucuytifbyuiom 6 місяців тому +3

      @@itsbonkerjojo9028 It's visually unique and stunning, first of all. I have never seen anything like it. There aren't really any camera angles-- it is shot as if you're viewing a stage production. Additionally, each area of the film is color coded to some degree. The dining room is red, the kitchen is green, etc. And I don't mean the set itself is color coded, per se. It is more like the lighting is, and the lighting changes a lot of what it touches. A woman's dress is red in the dining room, but seamlessly becomes green in the kitchen, for example. Speaking of dresses, the costume design was done by famed designer Jean-Paul Gaultier. So the costuming in the film is extremely interesting and top notch haute couture, even for small parts such as the waitstaff. There are so many outfits unlike anything I have seen, that mix together different styles and different time periods spanning fashion across several centuries. Strictly on aesthetics, this film is a 10/10 and a rare sort.
      The story is also very compelling. I will warn you it is VERY graphic and would be hard to stomach for some. For example, in the opening scene, the titular "thief" (essentially a local mob boss) and his cronies beat a man, strip his clothes, urinate on him, and smear feces on him to humiliate him. Almost all of the scenes take place in a restaurant, recently acquired by the "thief." The film is a true tragedy, the "wife" is effectively the main character and it follows her meeting and falling in love with the "lover" at this restaurant, all while the profoundly violent, vulgar, and abusive "thief" is present at the restaurant, requiring them to operate secretively. While she is unfaithful to the "thief," she is an extremely sympathetic character due to how horrible the "thief" is and it is interesting learning how these relationship dynamics are, and how they develop through the film. It is the epitome of show, don't tell. Masterful storytelling with a bit of a shocking twist towards the end.
      A friend introduced me to this a few years ago and it was so good that I watched it every day for three days straight after we initially watched it together. I think I have seen it an additional three times since then (so 7 times total?) If my amateur review manages to convince you to watch it, please let me know what you think!

    • @itsbonkerjojo9028
      @itsbonkerjojo9028 6 місяців тому

      @@yucuytifbyuiom oh wow that's a heck of a respond 😅 Got me emotional. Someone even care for my words to respond like this . I will read and get to you later . The thing with me us I am interested over anything taking Ss or reminding myself I will watch this , that , this too , that too ..... just to be scrolling on UA-cam and saving everything like taking SS or making playlist on UA-cam but then again being more confused or just finding new contents and recommendations. Unable to watch anything accompanied with the shittiest and stressful life or phase i am dealing with . It's just constant stimulation with destroyed attention.... something ( i forgot the term ) .
      Thanx so mych for this tho . I will respond accordingly once I read your reply thoroughly 🙏

    • @gabriellafejer9887
      @gabriellafejer9887 5 місяців тому

      SAME HERE!!!My favorit movie when I was a teenager. Also the Eat, drink, man and woman or Babette’s feast.

  • @KamendereCZ
    @KamendereCZ 5 місяців тому +6

    Great energy, I loved the commenting style! I giggled when I saw Shokugeki, that was unexpected, but really appreciated!
    I will nitpick the foie gras part a bit. "Humans have been doing that for X years" is a poor argument under any circumstances. The ability to think critically about ourselves, including our habits, is what transforms the society.

  • @JessiJackson13
    @JessiJackson13 6 місяців тому +11

    This interview has been one of the best for this series. Absolutely loved watching him.

  • @NoFutureInThis
    @NoFutureInThis 6 місяців тому +533

    LOVE that he shouted out The Cook, The Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover!

    • @crys383
      @crys383 6 місяців тому +19

      Shame it came at the end; I wanted him to expound on it.

    • @BlazeMiskulin
      @BlazeMiskulin 6 місяців тому +4

      @@crys383 Yes! I may have to go back and rewatch it (it's been a few decades).

    • @hqi1321
      @hqi1321 6 місяців тому +16

      He gave a shoutout to Ratatouille and he earned my appreciation, but when he busted The Cook, The Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover he earned my admiration!

    • @MrRezRising
      @MrRezRising 6 місяців тому +7

      I started this video thinking, "Man, I bet CTWL won't get no love. Always a bridesmaid..."
      Happy to be wrong.

    • @gethaunted
      @gethaunted 6 місяців тому +3

      Great movie, although certainly more of a horror film than anything

  • @tonyibberson4261
    @tonyibberson4261 6 місяців тому +139

    His passion, enthusiasm and knowledge is infectious.

  • @grantzolldan
    @grantzolldan 6 місяців тому +1207

    Hearing him call Ratatouille the Harry Potter of cooking made me very happy.

    • @godzillavkk
      @godzillavkk 6 місяців тому +14

      And it's not transphobic.

    • @_Iscream
      @_Iscream 6 місяців тому +19

      @@godzillavkkwtf man

    • @_Iscream
      @_Iscream 6 місяців тому +11

      @@godzillavkkneither is Harry Potter.

    • @rlsoaxnds
      @rlsoaxnds 6 місяців тому

      @@godzillavkk

    • @m1sh474
      @m1sh474 6 місяців тому

      That makes 0 sense.

  • @linaloveslove
    @linaloveslove 6 місяців тому +13

    Loved to see you rating these scenes! It was a total privilege to be in your kitchen and and taste your creations. Gilt should have been a Michelin 3 star restaurant! I still remember the perfect meal I had there.

  • @therusstalians
    @therusstalians 6 місяців тому +5

    6:56 When I was like idk 8 or 9 I told the waiter to give my compliments to the chef and dude literally came out and spoke to me. I was so taken a back and loved talking to him and this just reminded me of that moment

    • @helenchelmicka
      @helenchelmicka 3 місяці тому

      that's so lovely 😍 Shows just how awesome of that chef, you remember it all these years later! ❤❤

  • @VanHalenDrummer
    @VanHalenDrummer 6 місяців тому +214

    How awesome that this was released as my wife and I just finished the first two seasons of “The Bear”. It’s such an amazing show and cannot wait for season three!

    • @hellfish2309
      @hellfish2309 6 місяців тому +18

      As a Day 1 fanatic, I’m so grateful the show is getting its bread and roses
      Even if cooking or even family drama isn’t the viewer’s usual consumption, I have a hard time thinking of a more professionally accomplished production that likely wouldn’t exist w/o the streaming model - got my $ again fx hulu

    • @rumblefish9
      @rumblefish9 6 місяців тому

      One critique of The Bear is that there's way too many staff for a place that makes Italian beef. Like how do they even break even?

    • @hellfish2309
      @hellfish2309 6 місяців тому +6

      @@rumblefish9 it can be gleaned from the dialogue that the show restaurant even before Carmy gets there serves more than just italian beefs, unlike the restaurant it’s based on which has fewer options

    • @rahulsinha6391
      @rahulsinha6391 6 місяців тому +5

      Already out, you can watch it now :)

    • @fruzzle3352
      @fruzzle3352 6 місяців тому

      S3 kinda slow.... Shouldve been 14 or 15 eps...

  • @thedarkknight2221
    @thedarkknight2221 6 місяців тому +387

    From now on I’m saying to people that love Ratatouille that a Michelin Star chef called this the Harry Potter of cooking.

  • @GwynneDear
    @GwynneDear 6 місяців тому +648

    I’m a lady chef with 18 years of experience and I can say, with confidence, that chefs still undermine their subordinates with words.

    • @Dubeli2
      @Dubeli2 6 місяців тому +174

      I think you can stop undermining them now, lady chef with 18 years of experience

    • @moon_moodlet
      @moon_moodlet 6 місяців тому +14

      @@Dubeli2 hahahaha

    • @F9109-r1e
      @F9109-r1e 6 місяців тому +63

      Eleven Madison Park is the perfect example. To say that type of hostility doesn't exist anymore is inaccurate. Unfortunately a lot of chefs are still out there thinking that breaking someone's spirit is the order of the day.

    • @robertmatthews9650
      @robertmatthews9650 6 місяців тому +12

      I saw an episode of the original Japanese Iron Chef where he was literally slapping the cook. Hard.

    • @yuckychucky6987
      @yuckychucky6987 6 місяців тому +2

      I guess it depends where in the world you are a chef at. Maybe where he(British) is from, its different now.

  • @mdh1961
    @mdh1961 6 місяців тому +8

    I was hoping you’d get to a few older films like Babette’s Feast, and Big Night. Regardless, this segment was thoroughly enjoyable. Thanks for sharing it!

  • @polarberri
    @polarberri 6 місяців тому +11

    Loved this video! Very informative and fun. Chef Liebrandt is a true professional and it's amazing to see his passion and what he arrives for. It gave me a new perspective on fine dining!

  • @Timmycoo
    @Timmycoo 6 місяців тому +198

    Yuki Morisaki was the food consultant on the anime Food Wars that was shown. She's a chef/author and a lot of the show is educating the audience about cooking and different ingredients; how they interact when using them in certain applications.

    • @cesarlemos1337
      @cesarlemos1337 6 місяців тому +20

      I can see his confusion. Even though Food Wars presents a lot of important cooking information, they make a fuss over almost every little thing, like those simple things make the dish completely different and that's not true at all. That's quite common with anime, I know, but it's not actually impressive when you know the basics about the subject.
      Food Wars is fun, but none of the characters has chef-level knowledge or are in fact cooking above a common person.

    • @Timmycoo
      @Timmycoo 6 місяців тому +10

      @@cesarlemos1337 lol you might want to reconsider the last part of that post :s If you watched Food Wars then you know why that is entirely incorrect :P

    • @Menuki
      @Menuki 6 місяців тому +15

      @@cesarlemos1337she was the author….the artist, on the other hand, drew porn early in their career.
      I hope that informs the artistic direction

    • @chloeleau
      @chloeleau 6 місяців тому +3

      food wars is my comfort anime and i’ve tried some of the recipes from the show! they have all been delicious!!

    • @Timmycoo
      @Timmycoo 6 місяців тому +3

      @@chloeleau Chef Paul on Chef PK YT vids recreated some of his recipes and it is super fun to watch lol. Even the peanut butter squid. :s

  • @therealfolkblues2526
    @therealfolkblues2526 6 місяців тому +93

    I worked at a golf club that used instant coffee in some of their barbecue sauces. Since then I've used it in so many other sauces/soups/marinades. Definitely one of my crutches when building flavor.

  • @cornellius5897
    @cornellius5897 6 місяців тому +180

    12:10 "Yelling at the critic... I respect that!" lmaooo

  • @casparwhittey
    @casparwhittey 6 місяців тому +6

    Excellent video. Really appreciated Chef’s insight. Learned so much, and have a ton of respect for what goes into fine dining (having not tried much of it)

  • @ak_hoops
    @ak_hoops 4 місяці тому +3

    Yea this is on of my favorite episodes. Really like how detailed he explains everything.

  • @Lunapple1
    @Lunapple1 6 місяців тому +26

    Have him over again! He was so relaxing to listen to and really good at reviewing the clips

  • @musicguy1987
    @musicguy1987 6 місяців тому +13

    Paul Liebrandt is a legend. Incredible that you got him.

  • @michaelwashington7139
    @michaelwashington7139 6 місяців тому +12

    I love this video series you have here and this video was near the top for me. I could feel his passion for cooking and it was so interesting to listen to him speak. Another fine video!

  • @samanthawoods8000
    @samanthawoods8000 3 місяці тому +8

    Foie gras is fattened goose liver. There’s a huge difference between giving the geese a few extra figs … and MECHANICALLY FORCE FEEDING them, which is how the majority of foie gras is produced.
    A lot of fine dining restaurants do have it on their menu, but it’s ridiculous to pretend that the process isn’t horrific. Animals deserve to be raised on farms, plain and simple.

  • @dameanvil
    @dameanvil 6 місяців тому +22

    0:33 The Bear S2 7/10
    2:50 The Bear S1 6/10
    4:47 Ratatouille 10/10
    7:35 The Menu 6/10
    9:23 Burnt 9/10
    11:08 Chef 8/10
    12:43 The Bear S2 9/10
    14:27 Food Wars S3 7/10
    16:11 Cook up a Storm 7/10
    19:32 The Hundred-Foot Journey 6/10

  • @artisdying
    @artisdying 6 місяців тому +54

    Fun Fact: The flashback of the critic in Ratatouille is constructed around a real psychological concept called the Proust-Effect after Marcel Proust, who described a flashback of tasting madeleines, a food from his childhood, in his work "

  • @einundsiebenziger5488
    @einundsiebenziger5488 6 місяців тому +17

    3:45 - "a kitchen is run (like) a military unit". Exactly! That's why the staff of a professional kitchen is the kitchen brigade! The phrase was coined by none other than Auguste Escoffier, the father of fine dining. He used to serve in the French military as a chef for several years before opening his first restaurant and applied military principles to the organisation of a kitchen. Like the chart shown at 4:28, this hyrarchy established by Escoffier is still used in restaurants today.

  • @stock694
    @stock694 6 місяців тому +31

    This was surprisingly engaging! I didn't think I would be so interested in the world of cooking and all of the nuances involved

  • @champ6436
    @champ6436 5 місяців тому +5

    4:40 fun fact but in the French version, they didn't called ratatouille a peasant dish. instead she just said that it is a "rustic" dish. small nuance there.

  • @stab0602
    @stab0602 4 місяці тому +2

    I once went to a Michelin restaurant with one star and the service was just like it was shown at 9:43. They knew my allergies, my food preferences, that I’d never been to a fine dining experience before. It was freaky but also amazing! I thought I’d be judged for being naive to that world but the staff were nothing but welcoming and informative. Not to mention the food was out of this world! They closed during Covid but I’ll never forget them!

    • @placeholder3853
      @placeholder3853 4 місяці тому +2

      How did they know all that? Did you tell them beforehand?

    • @sianwarwick633
      @sianwarwick633 3 місяці тому

      Where, and the name of the chef and restaurant ? How Would you recommend it ? Who would the restaurant appeal to ?

  • @natashagalaxy7228
    @natashagalaxy7228 6 місяців тому +33

    I don't work in a kitchen anymore, but kitchen etiquette is something that sticks with you. I always say "behind" when I'm walking behind people and "heard" when people tell me things.

    • @thenosieyartist6924
      @thenosieyartist6924 5 місяців тому +1

      Me and my fiance both still every now and then say "corner" or "sharp" or "hot open"
      ...we haven't been in a kitchen work place in over 5 years

    • @sianwarwick633
      @sianwarwick633 3 місяці тому

      I worked in kitchens. No one, and i mean no one did this. Maybe they would say, door, dish, knife, floor

  • @tessat338
    @tessat338 6 місяців тому +124

    I haven't worked in a professional kitchen in 35 years, and I STILL say "BEHIND!" in the kitchen.

    • @JerseyDevilJerseyGirl
      @JerseyDevilJerseyGirl 6 місяців тому +4

      Same 😂

    • @kg-Whatthehelliseventhat
      @kg-Whatthehelliseventhat 6 місяців тому +13

      Coming around hot
      Coming around sharp

    • @BlazeMiskulin
      @BlazeMiskulin 6 місяців тому +7

      Yep.
      And it carried over into my stagehand days. Spinning blades and pans full of hot oil are more similar than you'd think. :D

    • @kg-Whatthehelliseventhat
      @kg-Whatthehelliseventhat 6 місяців тому

      @@BlazeMiskulin hello,
      What is a spinning blade?

    • @BlazeMiskulin
      @BlazeMiskulin 6 місяців тому +3

      @@kg-Whatthehelliseventhat Table saws, circular saws, band saws, etc. It's also a general term for any power tool including nail guns, drills, and such.
      You do NOT want to bump into a nail gun if the person using it is holding the trigger down. You'll deactivate the safety, and get a nail driven into your bones.

  • @sk84lafs
    @sk84lafs 6 місяців тому +72

    The point of “Chef” is the removal of modern sensibilities in the kitchen and getting back to the roots of flavor is king. Ive spent the past decade at the “tweezer level” where people scoff at using hands - but applaud sushi for coming directly from the chef’s palms.
    The objective is to be health conscious and safe, yes, but we are also craftsmen and have to feel our medium.

    • @Alsry1
      @Alsry1 6 місяців тому +11

      I think the difference really is just precision, sushi doesn't have to be precise. But if you're plating with flowers/herbs its much less accurate.
      this shows in kyushu-mae sushi, where oftentimes you prepare the nigiri with bare hands and toppings with tweezers.

    • @CalmClamFam
      @CalmClamFam 6 місяців тому +9

      But sushi chefs will use chopsticks to plate sashimi which is equivalent to using tweezers. I think you’re conflating a method of plating with a process of creating food itself.

    • @Seebeejeebees
      @Seebeejeebees 6 місяців тому +4

      If you go back, though, the chef in this video didn't call out the use of hands when plating for health or food safety reasons. I think everyone in the kitchen understands using your hands is perfectly fine. He simply commented on how it can become more of a hassle when working in a busy restaurant setting because you're getting grease and juices on your hands which can then smear on the plates as you handle them. I can totally see his point since at a certain level of fine dining the presentation and cleanliness of how the food is presented to you is crucial and can make a big difference for critics. You eat with your eyes first.

    • @sk84lafs
      @sk84lafs 6 місяців тому

      @@Seebeejeebees Agreed, I consistently see posts online about non-industry places having serious concerns and/or increasingly aggressive about this feeling of “use of hands” as dirty.
      Context is needed; I think most of us can agree that the level of trust we put into fast food workers in terms of culinary safety/cleanliness is substantially lower than those of seasoned professionals at higher grade locations.
      I, and my coworkers, hate being told to “just put gloves on” because it insinuates lack of care/standards - and merely wish to reinforce to regular society that health and safety are paramount and taken seriously; whilst we also enjoy a level of comfortability and resign to not wishing to scrub up as though we were prepping for surgery.
      Food is sacred, and I/we get tired of the insinuation that our lack of PPE is due to carelessness.

  • @shermanthompson871
    @shermanthompson871 4 місяці тому +4

    It’s crazy how every chef has the same 10/10 reaction to ratatouille

    • @mathiasstrom7790
      @mathiasstrom7790 4 місяці тому +1

      Ratatouille might be one of the greatest animated masterpieces in cinema history. I do not know anyone who hasnt heard of it and havent met anyone who has disliked it

  • @seandachtler365
    @seandachtler365 6 місяців тому +5

    This was my favorite of this series so far!

  • @saralynfosnight5139
    @saralynfosnight5139 6 місяців тому +12

    So interesting! Thanks for taking the time to do this.

  • @methodlab07
    @methodlab07 6 місяців тому +352

    Having worked under Paul… “calm” was not his best asset… also told me I was short and needed a ladder. Heard him call his Sous Chefs worse, so not 6/10

    • @WOSSquee
      @WOSSquee 6 місяців тому +146

      There's something unsettling about this dude. I got the sense he was not exactly a teddy bear for a boss.

    • @jten6632
      @jten6632 6 місяців тому +44

      Yeah, chef I wouldn’t want to work in his kitchen. You can tell.

    • @Krul6
      @Krul6 6 місяців тому +172

      Any chef who says that verbal abuse doesn't happen anymore is doing it himself.

    • @methodlab07
      @methodlab07 6 місяців тому +18

      @@jten6632 I can 1000% tell you it was an experience, but wouldn’t put my hand in the fire a second time

    • @methodlab07
      @methodlab07 6 місяців тому +47

      @@WOSSquee C’mon! Watching him threaten to put a young cook’s head through a wall is TOTALLY a teddy bear move 🤣
      You are very correct

  • @theblackunicorn261
    @theblackunicorn261 6 місяців тому +12

    "You're doing lunch and dinner during the day your kitchen's full of people, you don't have time to be creative."
    The Head Chef that I worked under for 7 months that barged into our stations in the middle of service to do his own stuff with zero regard of what we were doing: :)

  • @UberOwl
    @UberOwl 6 місяців тому +3

    „Every child in the world should watch this movie so they have the appreciation for food and cooking“
    CAn‘t think about this sentence too much lmao

  • @HarveyPeckar
    @HarveyPeckar 6 місяців тому +5

    It's so fantastic to hear somebody with so much passion. Great vid!

  • @MisterMusic117
    @MisterMusic117 6 місяців тому +22

    This is such a sweet piece. What a lovely, knowledgeable man.

  • @amandagamess
    @amandagamess 6 місяців тому +14

    His commentary is lovely. Insightful and engaging. Thank you chef!

    • @museofthesea
      @museofthesea 16 днів тому

      He supports torturing geese because it's traditional. This is not a good man.

  • @lunes7
    @lunes7 6 місяців тому +17

    16:53 just because something has been done for a long time, it doesn’t mean it is right. Cannibalism has been recorded in history for a long time too, so should we be eating human meat too, chef?
    Foie gras is still cruel, forcing a duck to eat and literally making them sick so they can enlarge their liver to 10 times its normal size. Gastronomy shouldn’t rely on torturing animals.

  • @marlenecatto
    @marlenecatto 6 місяців тому +6

    All of my favorite cooking films are on the list! Great capture depicting the essence of cooking skills and the cinematic views chef!

  • @TheViciousVendetta
    @TheViciousVendetta 6 місяців тому +1

    The Cook, The Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover!!! Such a one of a kind movie with spectacular production design. Definitely a must watch.

  • @yarnandpets
    @yarnandpets 6 місяців тому +8

    I LOVE that he loves the movie Ratatouille. I would have expected a fine dining chef to dismiss a “cartoon”. That’s one of my favorite movies

  • @edgecrusher018
    @edgecrusher018 6 місяців тому +19

    This was, quite simply, a really excellent video.

  • @KaleidoSTAR_PH
    @KaleidoSTAR_PH 6 місяців тому +5

    6:29 “that is what food is about, memory.”
    Yep, this is the exact reason why some restaurant thrives and customers/diners keeps coming back for more

  • @amelianeary1025
    @amelianeary1025 2 місяці тому +2

    8:26 the way he said style is perfection

  • @wolfgangmeesenburg8256
    @wolfgangmeesenburg8256 5 місяців тому +8

    7:35 Walt Disney Studios made The Menu 😂

  • @phoqueme
    @phoqueme 6 місяців тому +5

    This dude in definitely in the Top 5 experts so far, very eloquent scene explanations and culinary insight 🔥 bring him back in the future!

  • @anthonykutz9944
    @anthonykutz9944 6 місяців тому +7

    "yelling at rhe critic i respect that " that killed me 😂

  • @dbryn2
    @dbryn2 6 місяців тому +78

    The bear deserves better than 7/10. He literally says it's 100% spot on and doesn't criticize it...

    • @lazysundayzz
      @lazysundayzz 6 місяців тому +40

      Didn't he criticize the amount of swearing on opening night and the level of abuse experienced by Carmy?

    • @valdeezycleaver
      @valdeezycleaver 6 місяців тому +11

      It’s a little over the top.

    • @SalmanRavoof
      @SalmanRavoof 6 місяців тому +7

      @@valdeezycleaver It is, but that's because almost all of them are from dysfunctional families, and the restaurant is only a canvas to portray that.

    • @einundsiebenziger5488
      @einundsiebenziger5488 6 місяців тому +15

      He does not rate the whole show, he rates this specific scene. He critisizes the abundant swearing which has its place in streaming TV where it's allowed other than in Network TV in the US, but it's still inappropriate in a work place.

    • @bocelott
      @bocelott 6 місяців тому

      It definitely turns up the stress to an unreal level.

  • @Hana-cc7wu
    @Hana-cc7wu 5 місяців тому +2

    Love his energy when he explains the scenes from ratatouille

  • @The_Razielim
    @The_Razielim 4 місяці тому +1

    lmao the casualness of "I know he worked with a friend of mine, in London.... Gordon Ramsay... to gain the experience."

  • @jodenise894
    @jodenise894 6 місяців тому +29

    Im just here for the ratatouille scene 🎬

  • @НікітаХоменко-ь7у
    @НікітаХоменко-ь7у 6 місяців тому +4

    Brilliant work as always.

  • @andrewfleming611
    @andrewfleming611 6 місяців тому +5

    One movie I would love to have seen on this list is Ang Lee's Eat, Drink, Man, Woman; especially the opening sequence.

  • @jdnic1
    @jdnic1 6 місяців тому +1

    i like the way this guy describes why he rates the scene. some people just gives a rating and never elaborates.

  • @JonSudano
    @JonSudano 6 місяців тому +2

    I never knew Walt Disney Studios did The Menu 😮

  • @YungReezy22onPS3
    @YungReezy22onPS3 6 місяців тому +5

    This is absolutely magnificent and Chef Paul must come back and do a part 2!!

  • @nicheoco
    @nicheoco 6 місяців тому +5

    I’ve never been so locked in for a video before. Love the way he talks

  • @joshhoward6351
    @joshhoward6351 4 місяці тому +3

    Ratatouille is kind of the same situation as Chef Kojiro Shinomiya from FOOD WARS!!! The problem with Gusteau was that as soon as he became famous, he was on a plateau, thus his food became stagnant, never changed, and no new recipes. Skinner kept that going, ignorant of what was going on around him. That's what I think.

  • @techno6106
    @techno6106 5 місяців тому +1

    Very soothing to listen to this man

  • @EricDoesFitness
    @EricDoesFitness 6 місяців тому +1

    Blows my mind when chefs reach his stature without going to Culinary school, huge respect for chef 🙏🏽

  • @momcatx2
    @momcatx2 6 місяців тому +3

    Just stumbled upin this video and absolutely loved it. Especially the review of Ratatouille.

  • @ArtemSheverenov
    @ArtemSheverenov 6 місяців тому +42

    It's a shame they did not include a single clip from the Boiling Point (2021), but instead had several clips from The Bear.
    Big respect for the Chef for mentioning "The Cook, The Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover", it's a great art film

    • @CristianMunoz-wb3rv
      @CristianMunoz-wb3rv 6 місяців тому +2

      Yes- I was also hoping to see Boiling Point included in the video.. I watched it recently and I really loved it. I wanted to see his thoughts on that film

  • @MattyPGood
    @MattyPGood 6 місяців тому +47

    Bro hit us with the 🤨 when he said he wasn't pretentious

  • @lafilledemiel_
    @lafilledemiel_ 6 місяців тому

    Taking me out that he hasn't seen The Bear but immediately when Ratatouille comes out he's like "Cinema...". Loved the vid! Would love to see him react to The Bear fully.

  • @re_animatedabby6791
    @re_animatedabby6791 Місяць тому +1

    I respect this guys attitude and earned level of snobbery. Not to say hes a snob or pretentious per say more to say he clearly knows what hes doing and talking about and has earned the rightt to talk about it with the cofidence and experience to back it up. Like a professor whos been in the field of the subject their teaching. ❤