aris wrote:I think you are being too critical about the ribs. I cook them like that all the time - but, I don't have a smoker (yet).
Will they be of competition standard - of course not. But as a quick and easy entry into BBQ - it works well.
I actually quite liked the show. I like improvisation - and Jamie did that well. He showed that you don't need loads of gizmos to make nice food.
What really irritates me are people like Heston Blumenthal who seem to cook in a science laboratory, or chefs who use unobtainable elitist ingredients. I would love to see a show where they dumped all these celebrity chefs into the African bush with nothing but a knife, and a box of matches - and challenged them to make a meal. For me, THAT's cooking.
Just curious - if you were camping and only had basic cooking implements, how would you prepare ribs?
They're alright - they're all doing their own thing.
Heston is good at what he does, and I like the concept. He looks at cooking techniques, finds out why they work scientifically, then uses that science to see how far you can perfect a dish. It's largely thanks to Heston that it's become popular to cook meats by heating them at a very low temperature for a very long time, then blasting them to crisp the outside. This is not unlike low & slow cooking, taken to its Nth degree.
Jamie has a gob, but he likes to cook, and is easy to understand. His recipes are generally easy, tasty, and natural.
Of course either can be annoying, but I think anyone who has a distinctive style will annoy people, and only the very bland won't get up anyone's nose.
Steve W