Tag Top Chef Las Vegas

Top Chef in the Wild West

Finally, the episode when Tom spits something out has arrived! With the amount of commercials that that clip was running on, I felt that it was the Olympics, but I guess you could consider Top Chef an Olympic-like showdown.

The guest judge for this episode was Tim Love, who is the owner of the Lonesome Dove in Texas. He brings traditional southwestern rural food into a more formal dining arena. With that reputation, I think the chefs began to know what they were in for. Padma reveals that the viewers voted to decide the quickfire. They were to choose between rattlesnake, cactus, and kangaroo. I was expecting snake, but maybe I’m underestimating my fellow viewers. The quickfire challenge turns out to be “make something succulent with cactus”. It is a high stakes quickfire and the winner wins 15,000 dollars. Many of the chefs were a bit overwhelmed with the challenge because working with cactus does not come up in everyday life, if ever. It has a very gooey and slimy consistency that could be difficult to get rid of. Mike introduced the idea of curing it by submerging it in salt so the liquid inside of the cactus is taken out.

At the end of the 45 minutes, Tim comes in to judge the plates. His least favorite plates were Ash, whose dish had no cactus flavors and also had a tortilla that was much too thick, Michael, whose dish he described as two trains coming together, and Ron, whose fish was overcooked and the crab tasted rancid. His favorites were Laurine, Mike, and Mattin. Tim Love gave the win to Mike, saying that he showcased the cactus the best and that preparing it in a classic way really worked for him.

Continuing on the Southwestern theme, the elimination challenge is for them to prepare lunch outdoors on a ranch for two dozen cowboys. They can do anything they want, as long as it is high end. The cheftestants are frustrated because the mystery of their working environments left too much to the imagination. Although, the chefs who have more experience with catering probably have the upper-hand since they are a little bit more accustomed to not knowing their working conditions. But as they drive up to the Sandy Valley Ranch, the chefs swear and curse the top chef gods above. As they settle into their surroundings, Ron is breaking down trees and keeping away the snakes, Jennifer sprays everything with bug spray, and Eli worries that his girlfriend will think that this means he will go camping with her and leave the safety of a roof and hair gel.

The next morning, the chefs are given an hour and 15 minutes to make their meals with four fire pits, some cast iron plans, and crappy plates. These are not the conditions that any of the chefs want to work in, and they are not conditions that are good for food.

When it came down to it, the judges favorites were Laurine, Ashley, Michael, and Bryan. Ashley was applauded because cooking fish in that type of environment is very difficult. This was her strongest dish yet! Bryan had a very focused dish that was restaurant quality but perfect for outdoors. Tim Love liked the way Laurine used the grill and incorporated the flavors into her dish. The simplicity of it really made her dish shine. Michael wanted to bring white table cloth ingredients to a non-traditional environment. The chefs said it was cooked well, the flavors worked well together and it was very unexpected. Bryan comes out with his third elimination challenge win! He even gloats that he wins over his brother every time they are at judges table together.

Now for the gauntlet. Robin, Rob, and Mattin are called into judges table. Robin starts off by saying that BBQ was the first thing that came to mind with a ranch challenge. She wanted to play off the idea of steak. Tim Love points out that she was explaining a very different dish than what she served them. The shrimp was not good to the point of them not being able to eat it. They recognize that it was a good concept, it was just not executed well. Mattin is stunned that he is in the bottom, and this frustrates the judges even more. Tom explains that there were chunks of raw cod in his ceviche and it was very poorly put together. Tom spit out the bite he had and Tim said he was feeling sick after eating it. Ron’s ceviche was good, and he probably would not be in the bottom had he not made the drink. He made a coconut drink that was “one of the worst things the judges ever tasted”.

In the end, Mattin’s ignorance of his bad dish got him sent home. We have lost both of our home court chefs (Preeti and Mattin)! Maybe if the chefs had our delicious cactus recipes from Bibby’s trip to Mexico, they would have taken that top spot!

Contributed by Leigh Hermansen

Singing for the Beatles, Top Chef Week 4

Week 4 had all of the chefs admitting that they were ready to cry or wet their pants. Victory seemed like a mirage in the desert, making it a nail-biting hour. From snails to Whole Foods debauchery, my eyes were peeled.

The episode started with the chefs walking into Daniel Boulud’s restaurant. He stands, looking unimpressed and quite frankly a little disgusted. He has a restaurant in the Wynn hotel and is one of the pioneers of making classic French food in a modern context. He announces that they will be working with snails in a High Stakes Quick Fire challenge, meaning the loser of the challenge will be going home. He tells them they must include tastes that are unique; something he has never experienced. That is one heck of a request out of a chef and restaurateur who has probably traveled the globe eating.

Jennifer sums up probably everyone’s thoughts on Escargot by saying, “Whoever thought snails looked good to eat must have been really ******* hungry”. Stated like a true chef, Jen!

They are given full reign over Boulud’s kitchen, and before they take off, Bravo makes sure to give us a quick shot of Daniel’s face looking utterly frightened about that. Mattin seems to be the only confident one since he has grown up and lived in France until 2002 when he moved to San Francisco. He has always dreamed of being a chef in the U.S. and of course chose our beautiful city as his jumping point.

The chefs bring out plates 3 or 4 at a time and Daniel refers to everything as “interesting”, which is just a tad better than Padmas usual “yummy”. His favorites come out to be Mike, Kevin (who did a bacon jam! There’s a taste you’ve never tried, Boulud!), and Jennifer. Kevin wins and gets immunity in the elimination challenge plus another bonus to be revealed later in the show. Daniel then announces that his least favorites were Jesse, Ashley, and Robin and that they will be preparing an amuse bouche in 20 minutes: “one bite to save your life”. Jesse is subsequently sent home. She says she hasn’t felt like herself the entire time and wants people to know she doesn’t suck that bad. It always felt like she was a little out of her element with the classically trained chefs, but her down home vibe had us all rooting for her. Farewell! Ashley makes a good point when she says that being in the competition and performing poorly is a huge risk. It puts your business and career on the line with every comment chefs make. Hats off chefs for putting yourselves out there!

For the elimination challenge, all of the chefs draw knives. Each knife has a classical French sauce or a classical French protein. Mike smiles happily, as he has no idea what is going on because he knows no French. Cheers! Tom announces that they will be working in pairs doing a 6 course meal and will be serving this meal to some of the best French chefs in the world. Kevin not only doesn’t have to cook, but gets to sit and enjoy the fruits of everyone else’s labor with these renowned French gods of the kitchen.

Michael and Jennifer are paired, doing rabbit with sauce chaussir. They can immediately be tagged as the power couple with their training and intensity behind a stove. Ashley and Mattin are to do a poussin (young chicken) with velouté (a fancified French version of gravy). Isn’t French a synonym for fancified? Robin and Ron are to do frog legs and sauce meunière. Ron is immediately taken aback by Robin’s frenzied nature and hopes for the best. Bryan and Mike are paired to do trout and sauce béarnaise, which is a sauce similar to hollandaise. Mike makes the executive decision to breakdown the béarnaise sauce, which is a huge risk when preparing for a table of classical French chefs. My first, and probably only, time I’ll give a thumbs up for a really smart bold move. Eli and Laurine are to do lobster with Sauce Americain. Finally, Hector and Ash do a chateaubriand with sauce au poivre. They have prep time and then an hour the next day to put together the meal of a lifetime. Oh, and did I mention that they will be working in Joel Robuchon’s kitchen AND serving to him?? Nix that wetting your pants idea chefs, his kitchen is probably made of gold.

(P.S. what is with the shameless Mazda marketing??) Mid commercial break, they show the chefs partying for Mattin’s birthday, and Mattin wandering around in small underwear. Happy Birthday?

The next day they feature stressed chefs and Kevin, a happy little boy at the dinner table. Eli is taken aback by being in Joel Robuchon’s kitchen because he was under the impression that he didn’t actually exist and is actually a unicorn. Well, along with the real, human Joel Robuchon, Daniel Roubud, Hubert Keller, Jean Joho, and Laurent Tourondel grace the screen with their presence and discerning French tastes.

All of the chefs seem a little nervous when out of the kitchen and encountering their idols sitting in front of them. The classical French chefs seem impressed with the young talent and are proud to have such promising up and comers to continue their art.

Bryan, Mike, Michael, and Jennifer are called to the Judge’s table and are announced to be the best of the evening. Bryan and Mike prepared a warm cured trout with deconstructed béarnaise. Joel says that he believes a good chef can take something simple and make it excellent, and this dish did exactly that. They used a unique process by using only the top half of the filet, then reconstructing the fish with two top pieces. Jennifer and Michael did a rabbit with chausseur, mustard noodle, and shiso. Joel says that rabbit is incredibly difficult to cook and it was done perfectly. Tom says the first nice thing in a few episodes and states that this was very mature work for young chefs. Michael tells the judges that he was nervous to work with Jennifer because she is so talented and he didn’t want her to outdo him. I think they should date. Bryan comes out with the win and chef Robuchon has invited him to basically moonlight in his restaurant at the MGM Grand for a week. Michael looks displeased because his brother’s win basically trumps all wins…ever.

Mattin, Ashley, Hector, and Ash are then called to the Judge’s Table for being the two worst dishes. Mattin and Ashley did a seared poussin in ravioli with velouté. The poussin was dried out and the ravioli was much too thick. The velouté also had a disturbing amount of bacon in it, resulting in Tom describing it as a bacon cream sauce. Yikes. There goes Mattin’s legitimacy as a French chef. There seems to be a complete disconnect between Mattin and Ashley: Ashley is too overwhelmed to answer questions with a yes or a no, and Mattin is too nervous to make sentences. Hector and Ash created chateaubriand with sauce au poivre. All of the cuts of meat were different, the slicing was more like hacking, and the sauce barely made it onto the plate. In the end, Hector goes home with regrets that he didn’t represent his background better. He felt that the time restrictions and the specific tastes that the judges had made the competition incredibly difficult.

This was a tough episode for me because I have seen Ashley in the bottom every single week, and even when she seems unphased by being in the bottom at Judge’s Table, and answers “sure, I guess” to one of the questions the judges posed, she still stays around. I almost feel like her consistently low performance should have come up with the judges. However, it is completely clear who is on top, and who is staying on top (Michael, Bryan, Kevin, Jennifer, and Mike). Next week, they will be cooking in the desert and Padma continues her uppity attitude as Tom spits out food. Until next time, au revoir from your favorite Top Chef blogger.

Contributed by Leigh Hermansen

p.s. gourmetbebe – at least Padma spoke about one sentence this entire episode, eh?