Ben Starr

The Ultimate Food Geek

MasterChef 4 recap: Burgers and Lobsters in Las Vegas (S4E8)

(PLEASE NOTE: This blog is not approved or endorsed by MasterChef or Fox, and you probably shouldn’t read it.  These are opinions from a former MasterChef season 2 contestant who officially has no inside knowledge of the making of this season.  …well, not officially, anyway.)

Because of the disastrous Eggs Benedict pressure test, the judges absolutely couldn’t come to a conclusion on which contestant to eliminate, so the ONLY option is to walk out the door of the MasterChef kitchen in Culver City, CA and into Gordon’s “BurGR” restaurant in Las Vegas, in the Planet Hollywood complex.  (I’ve actually overnighted in that hotel on backpacking trips before, I had NO CLUE Gordon had a restaurant there.  Maybe it wasn’t open when I stayed there.)

I have to pause for a moment and express my disdain for Las Vegas.  I think it embodies all the worst in America.  Excess indulgence in an environment that can’t afford it…neither in resources nor manpower.  The desert CANNOT support the megastructures and exponential visitors it receives in a year.  If you’ve been to Lake Mead and seen the alarmingly low water level, you know what I’m talking about.  Lake Mead, held back the by Hoover Dam, provides Vegas with its two lifebloods: water and electricity.  The lake has been consistently BELOW the drought level (which is 1125 feet above sea level…at its “full” level it should be 1229 feet, more than A HUNDRED FEET above that) since the late 1980s.  So the lake has been about 150 feet BELOW the level it should be for a long time.  If the lake level drops below 1050 feet, the Hoover Dam stops producing electricity.  (It reached 1082 feet in 2010.)  If the Hoover Dam loses electrical capability, not only will Las Vegas find itself without power, so will most of Southern California.  Scientists forecast that by 2021, the lake can no longer be used as a water supply.  But rather than focusing development of the world’s biggest resort city in a place where it actually might be SUSTAINABLE, such as the Great Lakes region (where there is plenty of water and power for such an indulgent city of excess), Vegas continues to expand, despite the city planners knowing that, come 2021, there will be NO water and NO power for the city.  Like…none.  Massive emergency plans are being developed for when this happens, including power plant construction and the development of pipelines to bring in water from far flung areas outside the drought-prone West, all of which will make the city even less sustainable than it is now, if such a thing is possible.

In addition to it being a stupendously irresponsible place to build a megacity, I find it to be very depressing.  Sure, the fabulous hotels and lights and fountains can be impressive at first.  But a walk through a casino at 6am, when the blaring desert sun is just piercing through the doors, and you smell the stale smoke and see the lifeless, desperate folks with hollow eyes still trying to eke out a win from the slot machine…a walk through the streets to chat with the homeless kids who moved out there to become prostitutes and now have HIV and a meth addiction…a visit to the crash pad where 10 hotel workers share a single bedroom and work two 8-hour shifts, 7 days a week at minimum wage to stay afloat and support their families in Mexico or the Philippines…your impression of Las Vegas will change.  (My method of travel tends to land me in situations where I’m exposed to this stuff, rather than the glitz and glamour of the tourist side of a destination.  Vegas is the single most depressing place I’ve ever visited, and I’ve traveled extensively in developing countries around the world.)

Vegas is a scourge and it should not exist.  Luckily, Mother Nature will take care of this for us in a decade or two!

So the four contestants in danger of elimination, Luca, Kathy, Natasha, and Beth, are led into Gordon’s restaurant to run the dinner service for the evening.  Gordon tells us that they average 860 burgers a night.  The burgers are not reported to be huge, so I’m assuming they are 1/4 pound patties, which means they’re blasting through 215 pounds of meat a night (about a cow every 2 nights), or more than 78,000 pounds of meat in a year.  That’s a LOT of meat!

They don’t make their menu available online, but you can read their reviews on Yelp and UrbanSpoon.  The burgers apparently run $15-$20 with no sides…most folks who make an evening of it end up spending about $75-$100 a person for their burger meal.  (Most of that is probably going to the wall of fire and the big portrait of Ramsay smiling down on his diner, and to help offset the hotels’ astronomical water and electricity bill!)

For tonight, the restaurant is closed to normal operation, and the contestants will be running it.  Brings back horrific memories of cooking at Gordon’s The London and at Joachim Splichal’s Patina during my season.  (For the record, Splichal is actually a certified MasterChef, and to my knowledge, none of the MasterChef judges are actually certified MasterChefs.)  You can’t imagine the pressure, cooking in a kitchen like this, renowned for producing world-class cuisine.  Very few MasterChef contestants have a clue how a restaurant kitchen really works.  I certainly didn’t.  It was a rude awakening, and made me realize that the last thing on earth I want to be is a chef.  I have to sit down with the people I cook for.  Not churn out carbon copy after carbon copy of the same plate each night, for all of eternity, never getting to even glimpse the folks I’m cooking for.

Graham says that BurGR normally operates with 13 chefs…the exec, 3 sous, and 9 line cooks.  Tonight it will only be the 4 contestants.  (Though, undoubtedly, they will serve a very restricted number of guests.)  Gordon will be filling the role of “expediter” which is basically the orchestral conductor for the kitchen.  He keeps everyone together and on pace.  He calls out the orders, so they know what to make.  He gathers the orders at the window and coordinates with waitstaff to get the right orders to the right table.  Luckily, things are a bit simplified because the contestants only have to produce a single type of burger over and over.  (When WE cooked at The London, we had to make 5 different mini-courses, and when we cooked at Patina, we had to replicate 4 of the executive chef’s complex dishes, to order.)

The judges assign the teams: Beth is cooking with Natasha (of course, after their spat over the cauliflower puree in the firefighter steak challenge), and Luca is cooking with Kathy.  Luca and Kathy definitely have the upper hand here.  Luca manages a restaurant, so he KNOWS how all this works.  (Which means, of course, that they’re going to lose.)

The teams have 1 hour of prep time, followed by 75 minutes of continuous service, to churn out a “signature burger” of their own invention.  (I’m curious as to why Walmart’s USDA Choice ground beef isn’t being used in Gordon’s restaurant?!?  No Steakover, Gordon?)  Luca designates an all-beef burger with caramelized onions, a sauce, and no cheese.  Kathy is worried, because she’s in touch with the predominant American obsession with cheese on a burger.  (I want my burger with cheese, too, Kathy!)  Beth wants theirs to be a “hangover burger” with Gruyere, crispy prosciutto, a sunny-side-up egg, with truffle aioli.  That’s got my mouth watering…it sounds AMAZING.  (I’ve noticed when I’ve posted burgers with fried eggs on Facebook, a lot of my fans are grossed out by that.  If you’ve never tried it, you have to.  It is DIVINE!)  Natasha is justifiably concerned about adding another cook-to-order feature to their burger.  They have to worry about not only the patties being done, but the eggs, as well.  And devoting real estate on the flat top to eggs, rather than burgers, is a risk.  But Natasha is strategically allowing Beth to make all the decisions (and immediately gave up the team leadership position to Beth) so that, if their team looses, she can say it wasn’t her fault.  Not a very admirable strategy, but a shrewd one.

The judges begin discussing the “pâté” or the meat mixture that should go into the perfect burger.  I’ve never heard burger mix called pâté before, pâté is usually a spreadable paste of cooked meat.  Perhaps “patty” came from pâté.  Who knows?  They all seem very insistent that burgers should not be adulterated with egg or breadcrumbs, because then you’re making meatloaf.  When I make burgers, which is not that often, I fold minced onion and garlic into the meat, along with lots of black pepper and a bit of chili powder and salt, and then I stuff them with bleu cheese.  That’s my favorite way to make a burger.  Gordon is VERY worried when Beth is adding egg to her pâté, but I think that’s just for the camera.  The egg isn’t going to change the flavor of the burger, just add richness.  He later has to intervene because they seem to be focusing more on their toppings rather than on the burger itself.  He projects that they’ll be losing.  (Which, of course, means they’ll win.  It’s so funny, Jennie Kelley can predict with almost 100% accuracy within the first 5 minutes of an episode who is going to win and who will be eliminated.  The editing can be very formulaic.)

Both teams have to abandon part of their plans.  The onions aren’t getting prepped fast enough, so Luca has to abandon his sauce to help Kathy with the caramelized onions.  The eggs aren’t manageable, so Beth and Natasha cancel them in favor of goat cheese and arugula with their crispy prosciutto.

Gordon designates a rule out-of-the-blue when service begins.  Once he calls for an order and one team’s order is up in the window, he will wait no longer than 60 seconds for the other team’s order before sending the food.  (In reality, this was probably announced to the teams during the “rules” meeting which happens before every challenge.  There’s all sorts of crazy legal mumbo jumbo that governs each challenge, and lawyers are brought in to explain the rules just before the challenge begins.  Most contestants, however, are too busy conceptualizing their menu and planning to actually listen to the rules.)  This makes things MUCH more complex for the teams, but since they’re producing the same plate over and over, it’s far easier than coordinating different kitchen lines producing different dishes that have to be up at the same time, which is what happens nightly in a restaurant kitchen.  Since working the line at The London and Patina, and discovering exactly what a miracle it is that an entire table’s food arrives simultaneously, I am always completely astounded when I dine out.

Beth has a priceless quote: “The kitchen during service is just fire and noise and the voice of Gordon Ramsay screaming.”  She’s right.  The expediter is the most important person in the kitchen, and Gordon is probably an excellent one in real life, but when the camera is on, he causes as much chaos as he does organization.  Yelling at someone to “get it together” has never, ever been effective at any point in the history of the human race.  People always know when things are chaotic that they need to get it together.  They just may not know HOW.  So screaming the obvious at the top of your lungs only adds to the frustration and confusion.  At one point, Beth and Natasha have an order in the window, and Kathy and Luca don’t have any patties done…they are still on the grill.  Ramsay is screaming at Luca as if that will make the patties cook faster.  All that’s doing is making Luca frustrated and helpless.  (Which you WANT on reality TV, and most certainly DO NOT WANT in a restaurant kitchen.)  Luca responds by plating rare burgers, and then Gordon lights into him for doing so, despite the fact that 5 seconds earlier, he was screaming for Luca to plate the burgers.

It’s no cakewalk over on Beth and Natasha’s team.  One of their buns gets burned in the salamander (the broiler), and Gordon STOPS them and screams at them.  (As if they were going to plate a charred bun, anyway.)  Hey, Gordon…they KNOW the bun is burned.  And they’re starting over.

Luca and Kathy’s burgers are coming back raw, and Gordon says they need to “Stop, rethink, and get a grip.”  This is an issue of time, and no amount of rethinking will help here.  Burgers take a certain amount of time to cook through.  If Luca can think above Einstein and perhaps devise some sort of time portal through which he can get a burger to cook faster, MAYBE rethinking will help here.  But Luca’s only got 2 choices when Gordon screams for a plate:  Plate a raw burger.  Or put nothing up.  (Some people LOVE rare burgers, so your chances of getting a vote in this situation seem to favor sending a raw burger over sending nothing.)  That’s my 2 cents.

The VIPs for the evening arrive, and of course it’s the other contestants.  Luca has learned from the previous events of the evening, and decides to rush the window with his orders, leaving Natasha and Beth without enough time in that 60 second window to keep up.  It works only for the final 4 burgers, so we know that Team N/B is automatically down 4 votes.  (Probably about as many as Team L/K lost to raw burgers, so in reality, they’re even.  VIP votes don’t count any more than the regular diners do.)

The results are revealed, with Beth and Natasha garnering the most votes.  We’re never told how many burgers they cooked, but the voting device is labeled in increments and it appears to be 30 chips on one side, and just under 25 chips on the other.  So I’m guessing they only served 50-60 burgers, as opposed to the 860 the restaurant normally puts out in a night.

In her relief, Natasha spouts that age old axiom, “I’m here for a competition, not to make friends.”  I wish that phrase was illegal.  It clearly displays what Capitalism has done to the American psyche.  This “win at the expense of everyone else” is the Achilles heel of Capitalism…which is certainly the best economic system we’ve got, but is far from perfect and CANNOT operate purely on its own, simply because of that statement.  Because when humanity is disregarded in favor of winning, evil things happen.  Lives are destroyed.  And that eventually brings EVERYTHING down.  (Capitalism may last a few centuries longer than Socialism or Communism, but it always ends up in the same place: Revolution by the Have Nots over the Have Everythings.)

Wow, that was a tangent!  But even in reality TV, I have a hard time acknowledging the humanity of ANY contestant who spouts this.  Though, in fairness, it has become such a standard phrase that I think most people just spout it without ACTUALLY THINKING about it.  (And I’ve heard that people are heaping hate on contestants like Natasha and Krissi…let’s be civilized, folks, and give them the benefit of the doubt.  You can NEVER judge someone’s character by how they are edited on reality TV.)

Again I return to the position that, if people entered a competition with personal integrity and compassion for their rivals, we would see a FAR more captivating and interesting competition.  I will ALWAYS share ingredients with a competitor…even if I have to rethink my dish and go without.  ESPECIALLY if that competitor has been mean to me previously.  I will ALWAYS stop what I’m doing to help someone in need, even if it means I lose.  Because, in the end, I don’t lose.  I win.  Because I gain the respect of the audience, the respect of my loved ones, and the most important respect of all…SELF RESPECT.  Sure, self respect doesn’t pay me $250k.  But that money will be vanished in a few years, anyway, and I’d be left with my lack of self respect, despised by the audience for competing selfishly, and my personal integrity in question by the people who love me the most.  What price are we to put on our humanity?  I keep returning to a phrase coined by Marie Porter, a contestant from this season’s top 100: “In today’s society, we need to be encouraging people to have empathy for each other… not training the masses to lack it.”  Which is exactly what the bulk of reality TV is doing…including, increasingly, MasterChef.

So Kathy and Luca have to endure yet ANOTHER challenge in this endless pressure test that has spread across almost 2 episodes.  They will be working with “one of the most expensive, luxurious ingredients in the entire world.”  Alvin and Jennie and I immediately shout “FOIE” at the same time.  (Foie gras, the engorged, fatty livers of ducks or geese that have gorged, or been force-fed, food.)  The sale of foie gras has recently been outlawed in California due to its controversial production, so it would make perfect sense that they would cook with it in Vegas, where it is legal and graces the menus of many restaurants there.

For the record, lobster is not even close to being one of the most expensive ingredients in the world.  In most places, lobster can be found live for $10-$15 a pound.  (Foie is closer to $50.)  Visit any gourmet fish market and you’ll see the fish fillets for most species priced up to twice the price for lobster.  (I bought swordfish on sale the other day for $24.99 a pound.  Sushi grade ahi tuna?  Fuggetabouddit.)  But lobster, at least to the masses, has an air of sophistication about it.

Personally, I could care less about these roaches of the sea.  I find their meat to be flavorless and often tough.  (Especially the coveted big lobsters.)  Give me king crab legs over lobster tail ANY day of the week.  Or properly cooked octopus.  Or a scallop seared to perfection.  But if I have to eat lobster, I want it to be small, when the meat is still tender.

NOT a world record lobster, just a big one.

For the record, the largest lobster ever officially documented was caught off Nova Scotia.  It weighed 44 pounds and was 3 1/2 feet long.  I cannot imagine how tough that meat was!  On my season, the behemoths we worked with were only around 4 pounds, which is still a BIG lobster, but resulted in tail meat that was just too tough, no matter how gently you cooked it.

Graham reveals a full butter poached lobster, meat completely removed from the shell, and tells us that 6 million lobsters are devoured in Vegas each year.  (If that statistic is correct, that’s about 15% of the average domestic lobster catch, FYI.)  Luca and Kathy will have 45 minutes to present a shell-less butter poached lobster with a small salad.  Pie.

Lobster doesn’t take long to cook.  First you dispatch the lobster.  If you don’t like the idea of a direct kill, you can put the lobster in the freezer for an hour, which doesn’t kill it, but puts it in a coma.  According to conventional knowledge, the most humane way to dispatch them is what Luca and Kathy both do, split it right between the eyes, severing an important nerve.  (Though some scientists say that this doesn’t kill the lobster, since, as an insect…okay “arthropod”… it has no central brain.)  It also allows the poaching water to flood the lobster’s body cavity, diluting the flavor.

Then, you do a quick water poach to help the meat pull away from the shell.  A few minutes, max, then chill it immediately in a water bath to stop the cooking.  Then you twist off the tail and carefully peel away the shell.  Cracking out the claw meat is the toughest part, especially on a big lobster.  In Season 2 I spent almost 20 minutes trying to get a perfectly intact claw out of the shell, and once I had it plated (seconds before time was called) I realized how humorous that GIANT claw looked, it practically covered my entire bowl of red curry and draped off each side of the bowl.  The claw shell is the thickest part of the whole lobster.  The contestants are also supposed to take out the knuckle meat, which can be tricky, but if you have a lobster cracker, careful use of this tool can make it easier to do than the claw, by gently cracking it all over, like peeling an egg.

Here’s a video of mine on how to grill a lobster:

Once the meat is out, it’s time for the butter poach, which first involves emulsifying butter into simmering water, then, if you’re smart, adding the juices from the lobster’s body cavity (and any roe/eggs and possibly the green organ called the “tomalley”) to the poaching liquid to flavor it, in addition to salting it.  Then you gently poach the meat at below-simmering temps (160F is perfect).  Then you toss together your salad, and you’re done.

Both contestants plate their lobster, and both have imperfections.  Kathy’s lobster is perfectly cooked: “glistening inside” (there’s that word again…gross), but the knuckles were a bit too raggedly removed from the shell for Gordon’s taste.  Her salad is too acidic.  Joe shows a rare tender moment with Kathy, saying she has one of the biggest hearts they’ve ever seen.  (Too bad they didn’t edit this into the show.  I would LOVE to have seen more of Kathy.)

Luca’s lobster is presented perfectly, but the meat is too pale…that means his water wasn’t at a full rolling boil for the first poach, or he removed it too quickly.  Luckily, his lobster is also “glistening.”

It’s close, but the axe falls to Kathy.  Joe continues to show us his soft side, as he admits to being wrong about Kathy when he first judged her.  Gordon offers her the opportunity to stage (pronounced “stahhhhzh,” basically an unpaid intern) at one of his NY restaurants.  A cool offer, to be sure, but he’s not giving her a job, he’s getting free labor out of it.  It will be interesting to see if Kathy takes him up on that offer.  That’s an EXCELLENT way to learn first-hand, and looks amazing on a resume.

Kathy, we didn’t see enough of you, unfortunately.  I would have loved to have seen more.  You can follow Kathy on Twitter and Facebook, and wish her all the best!

Please post your comments on this episode below, and subscribe to my blog in the upper right corner of your screen so you don’t miss any of the exciting behind-the-scenes and where-are-they-now stuff coming up!

78 responses to “MasterChef 4 recap: Burgers and Lobsters in Las Vegas (S4E8)”

  1. Andrea Avatar
    Andrea

    I’m with you on the lobster issue, Ben. I found it to be bitter and not too nice, so I’m better off enjoying my calamari.

  2. Shirley Avatar
    Shirley

    Love reading your recaps, Ben! I’ve been a fan and follower since you were on Masterchef! At the end of the episode, I thought it was pretty cruel for everyone to leave Kathy alone on the roof crying. They should have let her walk out first.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Oh, Shirley, that’s just TV magic. They probably filmed that scene 10 times. Yes, Kathy was upset. Most people are upset at elimination. But she was hurried right into a room with a psychologist after, I promise. (Still not exactly what you want in that situation, but definitely safe.)

  3. Skye Bachmeier Avatar
    Skye Bachmeier

    Crab legs or scallops please!

  4. Shawn Guenther Avatar

    I couldn’t agree more on every point, brother! Much love, man!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Awwwww…I miss you guys!

  5. Cawatson Avatar
    Cawatson

    Ben,

    We know that communism doesn’t work (only exists in totalitarianism, and the hundreds of millions killed last century are a testament to that). Socialism hasn’t worked. And capitalism hasn’t worked – necessarily. I think the problem may lie with humanity itself. A business that exists only to make a profit will make that profit on the backs of its employees (to their poverty), while offering the consumer the worst experience for the most of their money. Agreed – this is evil. There are a few companies that have tried (at least on paper) putting their people first – but usually this idea ends up falling prey to the pockets of the shareholders. Perhaps the only solution is small, localized economies with skilled specialists and artisans making do as best as possible…

    My burger: Beef, seasoned with chili powder, cumin, a tiny hint of cinnamon, salt, pepper, smoked paprika; Chipoltle crema, serrano-lime cabbage slaw, and manchego cheese

    1. Ben Avatar

      Nice comment, and the burger sounds amazing!

    2. Maria Avatar
      Maria

      Actually, socialism and capitalism aren’t opposed to one another, and socialism is working beautifully as we speak in Scandinavia!

      1. Ben Avatar

        Maria, Socialism has proven to work fairly well on smaller scales. Sweden has 9 million people in it. Norway and Finland each have 4 million. Combine them all, and you’re about half the population of the state I live in, Texas, and the US has a population of 315 million. The economics of scale would absolutely prevent it being effective for such a vast population. Don’t get me wrong, I am NOT a critic of socialism. I am an outspoken critic of Capitalism. But they haven’t yet invented the kind of economic system that can successfully drive a country the size of the US.

        1. Maria Avatar
          Maria

          Ben, I would agree that this system probably wouldn’t work in the US- I think the problem isn’t so much with the size of the population, but much more so with the attitudes of the masses. When more people are focused on making money, avoiding taxes, and taking advantage of others instead of helping others, I think it’s hard to set up a system where you rely on taxation to fund public programming. I know that not everyone in the US is like that, but there’s certainly a much more “every man for himself” attitude there, a much more “individualistic” rather than “collectivistic” approach towards interacting with others. Some of the most generous people I know are from the States, but then some of the most unethical and money-centered ones are, too- and even if the proportions are the same, the larger population means that you just have that many more people who can oppose changes in policy (think of all the people who oppose universal healthcare even though they would directly benefit from it!). I think some of the most recent legislation in the US (e.g. movement towards public healthcare) may help change attitudes, as people don’t like giving up better care once they receive it.

          I’m from Canada, and here socialism has been somewhat alive and somewhat well- from public healthcare, to publicly funded schools and daycare centers. It’s not enough because our current government is against the idea that we should be trying to help people who are poor- a misguided perspective, in my personal view, that rests on a false assumption that poor/uneducated/unemployed people are to blame for their difficulties and that people “get what they deserve” and somehow deserve to be badly off by virtue of the family they were born into and the discrimination they face or the abuse they’ve faced (something we often don’t talk about). Having traveled to Scandinavia, I’ve been astounded to hear how much people care about others, how much they don’t mind having to pay higher taxes because it means they have free schooling and university education, free healthcare, amazing infrastructure, and some amazing social programs (e.g. those to specially educate and train people with congenital health problems like Down syndrome for employment).

          Ultimately, I think the problem with capitalism is the assumption that you can never have enough- enough stuff, enough money, enough material wealth. Its success rests on the assumption of never-ending consumption. It’s unsustainable. I don’t know what better system will replace it. But I do think it’s possible to have both capitalism and socialism- some of the richest people in the world are from Norway, and it’s one of the most planned, socialistic countries on the planet. I just don’t like it when people assume that you’re in support of one or the other. You can make lots of money (not my focus, but lots of people believe it’s the primary goal of life), but still live in a country that chooses to look after its people, especially its poorest and most vulnerable. It’s a matter of supporting the right governments, right public policies, and getting over the “S” word because of decades of anti-socialist/communist propaganda.

          Anyway, that’s a big digression from the purpose of your blog, but I love these sorts of discussions. I love how you manage to delve into deeper social issues when doing recaps of a reality TV show (the irony!). I look forward to your posts more than I look forward to the show itself!

          1. Ben Avatar

            Maria, you’re now speaking my language, but the fact is that any pure economic system will be imperfect, and it requires a perfect hybridization of systems to avoid the imbalances in wealth that result in revolution. I tell people I’m a “socialist libertarian” and while many folks think that’s a total contradiction, I think it’s the ONLY way our country will ever get itself right.

          2. Steve Avatar

            Ultimately, I think the problem with capitalism is the assumption that you can never have enough- enough stuff, enough money, enough material wealth. Its success rests on the assumption of never-ending consumption.

            Maria, that’s part of it. Also, the fiction that (some) capitalism supporters maintain that there is actually equal opportunity under the current system. Relatedly, the lack of appreciation of just how much control of economic resources benefits some sectors of society while massively disadvantaging the rest. People don’t even realise how much the wealth in the US is MASSIVELY unfair.

            I think this video on You Tube explains it very well.

            http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=QPKKQnijnsM

            Then there’s the notion that it’s as simple as being committed to working hard and a person will always ‘make it’, and if you’re poor its because you’re lazy. This is naive. I could go on. There are many problems with unconstrained capitalism.

  6. Tich Tran Avatar
    Tich Tran

    Capitalism may not be perfect but it had improved people lives a lot. You Ben may not believe in what you call “indulgences” but I sure don’t want to live in a economic system where there is no incentive to do better in work(ie communism). In some way leftist(yes I know you consider yourself mainly libertarian) can be prudish just as the religious right. And yes I do believe there must be regulations to make sure that business don’t exploit the workers. If you don’t believe in living in mansions and etc fine. Just don’t look down on it. But definitely the lives of people in africa and etc should be improved. And to be on fun side they most likely don’t use the word “line cooks” in Gordon Ramsey restaurants. It would most likely be CHEF DE PARTIE. He is british after all.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Tich, I’m not sure where my damnation of Vegas got transported over to people living in mansions! Ha ha ha… My beef with Vegas is that it’s an irresponsibly-placed city set up to drain people’s pockets with nothing to show for it. They spend money on gambling, on sex, on drugs…in far greater excess than they might spend on these items at home. (Or, families go and spend overinflated amounts on hotels, food, and shows.) They flaunt the line “What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.” You can spend a MONTH in Europe with the amount of money most people sink into a long weekend in Vegas, and that just hurts me to the core.

      I have NO problem with affluence. Affluence and indulgence are two TOTALLY different things. Now, if they desire to, affluent people can generally afford to be MORE indulgent than the middle class, to be sure. But certainly not all of them do.

      I believe that Vegas encourages us to WASTE our money, rather than do GOOD with it. It doesn’t improve YOUR life, or anyone else’s life, when you blow $20k in Vegas. Spend that money selfishly in a way that BENEFITS you, like a trip to explore another culture, or buying something that will launch a new hobby. Or spend that money selflessly in a way that benefits OTHERS. But don’t just throw it down the toilet in Vegas on a weekend you’ll regret the instant you get on the plane home, in a way that continues to fuel the irresponsible development of an unsustainable city in the middle of the desert that’s going to lose its power and water supply in a decade.

  7. Georgia Avatar

    I’ve cooked lobster at home a couple of times, but never butter poached. That was new to me. That said, I actually made some great burgers a couple of weeks ago totally on accident. We had the meat, but nothing else really in the way of trimmings. I pulled out a random can of jalapeno slices I had in the pantry and what remained of some shredded white cheddar in the fridge, mixed all of that up with the meat and grilled it off. It was actually pretty good albeit a little messy >_<;

    1. Ben Avatar

      Sounds yummy, Georgia!

  8. Natasha Avatar
    Natasha

    “But Natasha is strategically allowing Beth to make all the decisions (and immediately gave up the team leadership position to Beth) so that, if their team looses, she can say it wasn’t her fault. Not a very admirable strategy, but a shrewd one.”

    Sorry Ben, going to have to strongly disagree with you on this one. I gave up leadership because, as you wouldn’t know.. Beth is a very opinionated person, Not in a bad way at all. Therefore, I gave it up because I knew regardless of whatever I said it would probably have been shut down, or fixed or whatever you want to call it. Now, if you watch closely I do believe I work respectfully as a teammate, and change the course of things when it needed to be done. I wasn’t going to let us fail, I just wasn’t going to explode or have the problems from the previous challenge. That was me being subtle, and a teammate.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Hey, girl! What an HONOR for you to comment on my blog! I really do appreciate you chiming in and clarifying your position. This is one thing that’s incredibly frustrating about watching reality TV, because the edit is very pointed and we rarely get to see the full spectrum of someone’s character. I hear from fans that people are being nasty to you on your social media which is NEVER acceptable to me. Someone just watching my season of the show would have absolutely HATED Christian Collins and would never have dreamed that he’s probably the closest friend I have from the show (excepting Jennie Kelley, who is like my sister now since we work together). It is refreshing to hear your point made without the screen of the editing room. You are MORE than welcome to chime in at any time on this blog, and I hope we get to meet when I’m in SoCal this August prepping for Burning Man. (San Diego is home base.)

      Forgive anything you may interpret as harsh criticism on my blog. I tend to use examples from MasterChef to draw larger statements about American culture and reality TV in general. Nothing should EVER be considered a personal attack on you. I have made it clear that I think you’d incredibly talented and I think you’re a crucial part of the show this year. I’m so glad you’re reading these blogs!

      1. Natasha Avatar
        Natasha

        Just let me know the time and place and we can meet up 100%. As for the edit, we both know how it goes…. FOX has made it a point to completely change it now into a drama show, the questions in the interview rooms got more intense, the story boarders just begging for what drama was going on and happening, on and off camera! (actually making us say certain things, “well can you just say it like this” or “how about rephrase it like this”… Unfortunately for me, they take a strong personality and change me into the “mean girl”. I honestly for all its worth can not bare to watch the show anymore and finding out private information about how they producers had it all predetermined from the top so and so just makes me sick. As far as the haters, I know what’s important in my life at the end of the day and it’s my family and what makes me happy as a person. Learning to have thicker skin already with these social media bullies. I love your blog, liked it before the show and still do. Keep up the amazing writting, can’t say the same for mine. 🙂 Cheers!

        1. Adam Avatar
          Adam

          Natasha, I’m glad you chimed in. Part of the beauty of Ben’s blog is getting to see the contestants for who they really are instead of who the producers decide they should be. Please don’t be shy about coming back to comment here where you can (I know NDCs are a pain).

          It’s been painful to see people getting painted into their roles. Looks like you’re shaping up to be a villain, and that’s unfortunate. The caricature the show creates of you may be an uncaring, arrogant jerk, but the people on social media are downright evil. I hope you find a sanctuary in Ben’s group, and remember that those horrible comments are directed at that caricature, and not the real you.

          Come back soon!

          1. Ben Avatar

            Well said, Adam! I’ve been chiming in on Natasha’s Facebook in her defense. Hope she comes back!

  9. Lisa Launius Avatar

    We did our own ground meat: 1/3 chuck, 1/3 ribeye, 1/3 brisket. The first batch was 15 lbs and it’s almost gone. For burgers I season with salt, pepper, cumin, garlic and onion. Cheese goes on top instead of mixed in since everyone has very different preferences. Re: MasterChef IMO this season is set up for Luca barring massive catastrophe. I was disappointed to see Kathy go from angry and belligerent to sympathetic and heart of gold in less than one episode. The editors should know how to maintain villain/hero for continuity.

    1. Joi Castillo Avatar
      Joi Castillo

      Can i ask what do you mean by barring massive catastrophe?

      1. Ben Avatar

        I think she means that, if Luca can avoid a situation where his food is so disastrous and everyone else’s is great…a situation where he would HAVE to be eliminated or the audience would cry foul…then he will win. And I pretty much agree.

    2. Steve Avatar

      Really? I didn’t feel Kathy changed that much. Never thought she was being presented as a villain.

    3. Ben Avatar

      I’m starting to agree with your Luca statement, Lisa!

  10. Joi Castillo Avatar
    Joi Castillo

    Sir ben ever since you appeared on season 2 i am one of your biggest fan and follower!!!

    I always wait for your opinion blog and analysis of the masterchef show, since it shows us the other side of things!

    I hope you can make more new food recipes and i love all your recipes sir ben!!!
    Hope you can also upload them in youtube if you ever have the time.

    Thank you sir ben you are always an inspiration to everyone!!!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Thank you so much, Joi! I will be producing more videos this summer.

  11. Suzie the Foodie Avatar

    Personally, this episode made want to eat lobster so badly it was ridiculous! I live in Nova Scotia and I never get tired of it (although I am not an official Maritimer since I wasn’t born there). I thought both dishes looked amazing and it was such a close call. Thank you for describing how to butter poach the lobster BTW, I had no idea it was an emulsification process which now, of course, makes total sense. Thank you and awesome blog post!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Yeah, Suzie, if you just use nothing but butter, you’ll be frying the lobster, and the temperature of the butter can easily get away from you once the small amount of water in it has cooked off. So you dilute the butter with water so you can carefully control the temperature.

  12. Shahriyar Avatar
    Shahriyar

    Ask any Aussie what burger they would order at the local corner shop and the answer is almost guaranteed to be “hamburger with the lot.”

    Roughly translated, a hamburger with the lot contains the following:

    Toasted sesame seed bun,
    Beef patty (flattened),
    Cheese,
    Sliced tomato,
    Sauteed onions,
    Lettuce,
    Sliced pineapple (grilled),
    Sliced beetroot,
    Fried egg,
    Bacon.

    Choice of Tomato or BBQ sauce (there are other available, but no one ever orders them for the hamburger).

    1. Ben Avatar

      Beetroot on a burger! Now that’s something I’ve NEVER heard of before. Sounds interesting!

      1. Steve Avatar

        Common to have beetroot in burgers here in NZ as well. A lot of takeaway stores and fish and chip shops will have beetroot in their regular burgers. I used to take it out as I didn’t like beetroot, but now I’ve grown to like beetroot I actually quite like it in the burgers.

        1. carrie Avatar
          carrie

          I noticed when I was in NZ that beetroot was on many sandwiches/wraps/burgers. I assume it’s like here in CA where avocado comes on just about everything (or at least it’s an option)…widely available and thus inexpensive, and conveniently delicious. I never used to be a fan of just straight up beets (in Greek salads I would pick them off) but I find when they are cooked into something or used with a myriad of other ingredients they are quite tasty. So I guess it grew on me too 🙂

          The Australian “lot” burger sounds super delicious!

        2. tactfactory Avatar
          tactfactory

          This totally justifies my plan to move to New Zealand. Beetroot on burgers. Amazing.

  13. Jen Avatar

    I did feel bad for Kathy but it did seem like she was one of the less experienced chefs, so it wasn’t a complete shock. I hate the first cuts though b/c it feels like they were cut for the sake of cutting someone rather than them deserving to go. I really enjoyed the first couple seasons of Masterchef but I feel that often the people I’m cheering for the most (because their food looks AMAZING or they seem to have a lot of cool techniques) are cut earlier. I’m really curious to see what Lynn is cooking but its seems he is getting no screen time (and thus no following) so I guess he won’t be long for this season.

    I’ve tried checking out some of the overseas versions and I find that I like the setup of Masterchef: The Professionals better b/c there is more focus on the food and I’ve actually picked up a lot of great ideas and recipes. I know very little about “classical” recipes so for me it is fascinating. Here’s a link to the past season so you know what I mean – http://www.free-tv-video-online.me/player/putlocker.php?id=B8253BDB3C991EE8

    It was hilarious hearing Michel Roux say le petit pâté de Pézenas so many times. It sounds like a tongue twister. Points to anyone who can say that five times fast.

    My burger: sesame bun, beef patty, lettuce, tomato, red onion, avocado, chili sauce. I agree with Luca on this one, no cheese need apply. 🙂

    1. Ben Avatar

      Well, just because he’s not getting screen time NOW doesn’t mean he won’t be prominently featured later. If you recall, I was not featured AT ALL in the first 4-5 episodes after my audition. They never showed my food, and fans were begging to me explain what I cooked. They were “saving” me to feature later. My guess it that Lynn will become featured VERY prominently once the pool of candidates narrows.

  14. Nick Shiraef Avatar
    Nick Shiraef

    What’s the absolute most overrated and worst combination of edible foodstuffs to ever grace a plate? Beef tenderloin and roasted lobster tail.

  15. Rob Avatar
    Rob

    Check your links. Your link to Kathy’s FB page actually goes to Twitter

    1. Ben Avatar

      Thanks, Rob. *fixed*

  16. MsShay Avatar
    MsShay

    I know you’re not into reality tv, but I was wondering if you. Ever saw The Taste and if you would consider auditioning for it?

    1. Ben Avatar

      I was contacted regarding auditioning for that show. I’ve already been on reality TV 3 times. If I EVER do it again, it will be a “last hurrah” because no one will EVER touch me again if I’ve done 4 shows. Food Network asked me to audition for FNS last year, but ended up going in a “different direction” and after watching their selection of candidates this year, I sorta see why. I may consider FNS in a future season, but that’s probably it! Unless there’s some AMAZING show that pops up about cooking and gardening and beer and wine and cheesemaking and helping people! Ha ha ha ha

      1. tich tran Avatar
        tich tran

        Go for it. Even if you have to write cookbooks or do endorsement deals. Hey FN have to make money. NOTHING WRONG WITH MAKING MONEY. As for the Paula Deen thing.while I don’t approve of what she did look at Oprah. She had a 2006 Legend Ball only honoring black female “legends” and a ALL WHITE SERVING STAFFS(I could see the pictures very CLEARLY on OPRAH website on it). Plus SHE HAVE BEEN KNOWN TO SAY BAD THINGS ON WHITE PEOPLE. I understand in the old days the right wing(my type sometimes) said you CAN’T BE PROUD TO BE BLACK but now the left wing control government(affirmative action) and media(MSM) and it ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE TO SAY BEING PROUD TO BE WHITE OR MALE(LIKE ME HA) WITHOUT BEING LABELED SEXIST OR RACIST.

  17. MsShay Avatar
    MsShay

    I wish you could do a show like that. I know I would watch it.

  18. Amanda McKay Avatar
    Amanda McKay

    Ben, Ben, Ben…again hating the lobsters! (Just kidding)

  19. Jamie C. Baker Avatar

    I guessed foie gras too! I would have enjoyed seeing that as a challenge, but I understand why it likely won’t be one, as obtaining it is seen as cruel (and definitely is in some instances). I had a chance to try foie at Hot Doug’s in Chicago and it was amazing…. but I felt guilty eating it 🙂

  20. Daniel DeHart (@danieldehart) Avatar

    Natasha commenting on your blog throws a whole new bunch of “ingredients” into this big pot of MasterChef opinions…mind is officially blown!

  21. Minda Avatar
    Minda

    Ugh…arugula on a burger. Every restaurant seems to think that makes it “gourmet” and all it does is get stuck in your teeth.
    Again, they make Natasha seem like she’s “the villain”. I’m glad she posted about how the crew asks the cooks to rephrase what they said…guessing her more outrageous comments are made under pressure. I just want to watch a happy show where I can learn something…not some Real Home Cooks of the OC drama.

  22. J.T. Avatar
    J.T.

    Ben…your blog is the only reason I am still watching this show. I completely agree that the conflict is despicable. The first few episodes were actually somewhat tolerable for me, but this one was definitely the hardest for me to sit through. To me, it was obvious from the beginning that Kathy was going to be eliminated. Natasha and Beth wouldn’t be going because the producers need some people to fight with each other, and I feel that Luca’s accent is a real charmer and is making fans fall in love with him. I can’t stop overanalyzing these episodes; the best thing to do is turn your brain off.

    Also, those “hash tag” suggestions at the bottom of the screen are ridiculous. “#itsraw.” Seriously?

    Rant over. Sorry.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Rant away, JT! I feel ya…

    2. Hetaira Avatar
      Hetaira

      The hash tag thing makes me far angrier than it should. I don’t work for you, I’ll hash tag whatever I want! The official contestant twitter accounts seemed oddly controlling too…now that they’re printed on the aprons, genuinely creepy.

      1. Ben Avatar

        Twitter is God at the moment…thus the weird forced hashtags in the lower left corner. But strangely enough, the target audience of MasterChef doesn’t have a clue what Twitter even is…

  23. Elly Avatar
    Elly

    This episode really left me disappointed. With the incredibly elaborate, flashy super-extended elimination challenge, they’re pretty much totally giving up on the illusion that everything wasn’t planned ahead of time. It wasn’t even as fun to watch as the usual routine. And I’m getting more and more of those little moments that feel like the producers manufacturing drama. I liked watching MasterChef last season for the most part (although it was of course never free from these issues), and it helped get me more interested in food (which is something I need) but this season’s shaping up to have too many reminders of why I don’t usually watch reality TV.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Thanks for the input, Elly. Sadly, the ratings for the show continue to rise the more dramatic it becomes, so I think we’re the minority in wishing things were less manufactured. But the producers have 1 goal: ratings. So they’d be acting conversely to their goals by bringing the show back to a more natural level.

      1. Elly Avatar
        Elly

        Yeah, I realize that when I say I don’t usually watch reality TV, that instantly means the producers aren’t interested in me. Why should they try to win people like me over when they have a bigger audience who already digs this stuff? It’s a shame that I don’t get the same enjoyment out of the show that I did before, but worst come to worst I can do other things with my Wednesdays, after all.

  24. Marie Porter Avatar

    LOL!

    So, I finally wrote my review this morning, and then came over here to see what you thought of the two episodes. Seriously, with very few exceptions… I could pretty much just link to your blog and skip recapping it myself!

    I may just do that, if watching continues to be as excruciating as last week’s episodes were.

    Here’s a link, if you’re interested: http://www.celebrationgeneration.com/blog/2013/06/19/masterchef-recap-season-4-episodes-7-8/

    1. Ben Avatar

      Wow, we really do think alike. Spooky! Ha ha ha…

      But you MUST keep blogging because we’re getting fascinating stuff from you that I could NEVER give, like the forced image transformation of Kathy, and Bethy’s bow hunting. Holy crap! That’s interesting stuff. WHY WHY WHY aren’t we shown that?!?

  25. Marie Porter Avatar

    Now do you see why you were the person I picked to contact? I swear, when I was reading your blogs before heading to LA, even your syntax was similar. Also appreciated that you saw things the same way as me with regards to sportsmanship, etc!

    I have NO idea why they’re showing nothing of Bethy! You know, when she introduced herself the first day I was there, she said something to the effect of her being “Like Katniss”, and I was SURE they were going to whore that out for all it’s worth. They spent at least half a day filming her doing archery at the warehouse, something about her shooting either an apple or an apron (I think they did both, I forget?), etc… it sounded spectacular. NEVER USED A SECOND OF IT. WHY!?

    1. Ben Avatar

      Well…that’s just bizarre. I would imagine they’d be using the sh!t out of that footage, as popular as the Hunger Games are. (Though, for a reality TV survivor, that series is supremely creepy.)

  26. Marie Porter Avatar

    I watched the first movie right before leaving for LA… and my original audition shirt was based on the “training shirt” design from the movie, LOL. Tried to quietly make a little statement, they wouldn’t allow my flag.. boo. I DID do a diagonal braid for audition, though.

    I’m guessing they’ll use some of her huntress stuff when they do the “drop contestants in the wilderness and not feed them for 24 hours because we’re combining MasterChef with Survivor” challenge?

  27. Shawna Avatar
    Shawna

    Ben what would you say is the “best” most “real” cooking show like masterchef, If any. I know you said the masterchef in other countries is a million times better because it focuses on actual cooking.

    I’m also not liking the fighting drama, which is one reason I loved Season 3 so much. There wasn’t as much fighting and there was a lot of love and unity between the contestants.

    I understand the way they edit things is terrible and make people like Christian, Ryan, David, Josh, and Natasha seem like really mean people and turn them into villains. But I just don’t know what to think about Krissi. I admit that it could be editing thats making everyone hate her, but why does she have to say such hateful things about the other contestants? Despite editing tricks, she still does say hateful things about the other contestants.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Shawna, I don’t watch TV, so I can’t really speak to another TV show that’s “better” than MasterChef. Lots of fans are really liking the Great American Baking Contest, or whatever it’s called.

      Regarding Krissi, she’s from the northeast. She’s very much like Christian from my season. Their culture admires straightforwardness and frowns upon artificial tact and decorum. They shoot it straight. They say what they think. She’s not being hateful, she’s behaving the way everyone in her neighborhood behaves. (Ever watch Jersey Shore?) It’s part of their culture, and she doesn’t see herself behaving unusually. That’s just the way folks are up there. It has its benefits and drawbacks. At least you always know where you stand with people, and you know exactly what they think about everything. No “glossing it up.”

      1. Marie Porter Avatar

        I’ve also heard a lot of good stuff about that baking show… too bad it’s up against MasterChef, at the same time. :/

        As an Aspie living in the land of passive aggression (MN), I’ve gotta say… I like Krissi. I never have to try and interpret a word of what she’s saying – makes life a lot easier!

        1. Ben Avatar

          That’s fascinating, Marie! As someone who lives entirely by a strict code of decorum, tact, and politeness, I do find it a little hard to deal with folks in the northeast, but it makes perfect sense that you would gravitate toward them because everything they feel, they say. My best friend J-P always gets SO FRUSTRATED with me when he sees me being polite to someone that I don’t particularly care for, or for saying something nice to make someone feel good about themselves, rather than being totally honest. He doesn’t get that. Of course, I have an ocean of friends, and he has very few, and I keep reminding him of that. But he says that true friends value honesty and upfrontness over all, and he would HATE for me to humor him just to make him feel better. So some people just love brutal honesty. Others are more delicate and need to be treated with care. I’m not sure why I’m rambling on about this, but your comment was VERY fascinating to me.

          1. Sam Avatar
            Sam

            Ben, I am from the northeast and I don’t think people like you are the problem. I think you are the kind of person who truly tries to see good in people. And while your niceness sometimes extends even where you don’t want it to, I find it hard to believe that you are constantly badmouthing people behind their backs while being courteous to their face. There are some people I am brutally honest with, but for the most part I am courteous to people (especially the ones I don’t know who happen to have annoyed me one time or two). The problem is when people speak to you in one manner to your face and in another behind your back. I don’t get turned off by people who are nice, hence my attraction to your blog. I absolutely detest lack of being genuine. I hate it both ways. I hate it when people are overly nice when it is clear they don’t like me and I hate when people are rude when completely uncalled for. To bring it back to Masterchef, it is kind of the same thing with the judges. I hate Joe’s over the top reactions to food. I have hated dishes before and I have never met a person who absolutely felt compelled to throw out the whole plate while ranting about how personally offensive it was (BTW, I get that a large part of it is an act). I do, on the other hand, respect Gordon Ramsay much more because he is completely straight up. I have seen footage of him interacting with his own staff (check out Boiling Point made way back when he didn’t yet have 3 Michelin stars). He seems to lash out at them when there is a genuine frustration but he will praise them and joke around with them and even treat them as equals when that is called for. Graham is kind of the best of both worlds. He will generally be straightforward but appears to be generally at least trying to be nice.

  28. tigersue Avatar

    I appreciate your blog, but I will disagree with you that capitalism is the problem with “the I have to win” scenario. We have seen this all throughout world history regardless of economic or political ties. It comes down to pride and that desire to prove that you are better than another person no matter what. This is a choice of the individual, nothing can make us that way, not politics, or economics, it is down right individual choice. You can’t tell me that you don’t see it in communism or socialism. It happen every where, that is why pride is one of the deadly sins, it keeps a person from feeling compassion, love, and sensitivity to others around them.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Sue I NEVER said communism or socialism is better than capitalism. I said capitalism is the best system we’ve got. But it will STILL land us where every other economic system lands any society…revolution. Because wealth ALWAYS concentrates over time, in ANY economic system, due to greed…leaving more and more people in the gutter. Capitalism doesn’t make us selfish. Humans are selfish by nature, some more than others. And that is what leads to the downfall of EVERY economic system, including capitalism.

  29. jenevieves Avatar

    I was just watching a clip from your season where you guys cooked in the cafeteria (group challenge)….and Gordon SPECIFICALLY says to add egg to the burger patty mixture! hilarious. I guess he’s changed his tune in the last 2 years 😛

  30. Kristin Avatar
    Kristin

    Hi Ben, I just discovered that you have a blog after I liked Christine Ha’s facebook page. I couldn’t be more excited. I have been devouring your posts-insightful, thought provoking, intelligent, and hilarious. I’m sure you hear this all the time, but my husband and I fell in love with you after you made that pumpkin carrot cake. I found your blog and it is the first thing I looked for! I will make it next time I’m in the cake mood. I’d already suspected many of the things you have “revealed,” but it is so interesting to hear your perspective. Reality TV, Walmart, Capitalism…all of it sucks out the humanity of everything, but has the potential to be great. Masterchef is the only reality TV show I watch, because I love all things food, but even after the first episode of this season I was disappointed that they had made it even more “dramatic.” I wish I lived in the Dallas area, so I could visit FRANK (one day maybe I’ll have the opportunity).

  31. KarenKaren Avatar
    KarenKaren

    Hi Ben. I’ve been following you on FB since your own MC season, but never made it over to your blog until today. I wish I had been reading here all along. I just had to comment on what you said, “Vegas is the single most depressing place I’ve ever visited,” to say that it’s refreshing to hear someone say that. I dislike Vegas and always feel like the only adult who doesn’t go “yay! Vegas!” And you so aptly summarized what I dislike about it. I’m also very interested in hearing about the behind the scenes aspects of this (and other) reality shows. I generally dislike reality shows except for the ones that highlight creativity while also showing compassion and humanity. I go all over the board on MC. I love the home chefs and their passion and I wonder about how much things may be manipulated or staged. I’ll be reading backwards in your blog. Thanks for sharing.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Well, thanks Karen! And I’m so glad you ended up here. Though I’m a bit nervous to hear what you think about MasterChef after reading back through my blog! *chuckle* Be sure to let us know…

  32. Anna Avatar
    Anna

    Hey Ben, I love your commentary on Masterchef as well as your insight into other things. How do you feel about Trader Joe? Just curious. Thanks and continue to write!

    1. Ben Avatar

      Anna, I’m jealous of you folks who have Trader Joe’s…though their sister store Aldi is opening up all over my city, and Trader Joe’s isn’t far behind. I love their commitment to avoid GMO products entirely. I love what they did to the economy wine industry, and that we can now get an acceptable bottle of wine at most stores for $3-$4, rather than resorting to boxes or jugs, for casual drinking. I’ve never really bought many of their packaged products (snacks, chips, etc.) because I just don’t buy that stuff anyway, but I’d KILL to have a Trader Joe’s near me, if only for the fresh meats and veggies and cheeses and great wine selection.

  33. Amanda Avatar
    Amanda

    Hi Ben, I just found your blog and love it! Just wanted to tell you that I’m really thrilled to see such thoughtful (and funny) critique of MasterChef and, in this instance, of Capitalism. In my experience, expressing any sort of anti-capitalist viewpoint is severely frowned up, but I think your connection between the microcosm of MasterChef and the larger and far more pervasive system of capitalism that informs so much of what we do is very well-put and, in my opinion, very accurate.

    I watched MasterChef with near-religious fervor every week until this season. The theatrics and the obnoxious Walmart plugs and Joe’s verbal abuse of contestants became way too much. If I’m going to watch bad TV, I’d much rather watch something that actually makes me feel good or really entertains me. (I’ve taken to watching the Gilmore Girls while I cook and try to learn real cooking techniques, which MasterChef clearly has no interest in doing.)

    Long story short (too late), I’m thrilled I stumbled across your blog. I look forward to reading more!

  34. Ehsan Avatar
    Ehsan

    i watched the show but cant recall what were the main ingredient of Luca’s burger other than carmalized onions. Please tell me what it is. thanks in advance.

    1. Ben Avatar

      Ehsan, this was a year ago and I don’t remember either! Sorry…

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