Cheesey and Zombie,
I'm not a great cook yet. But I am good enough now that I am much more frequently disappointed when I eat out. It isn't all the price though -- I've had $75 dollar meals that out and out sucked and $15 meals that'll knock your socks off. And, by and large, I'd rather risk the $15 buck place than most places that think cloth napkins mean its okay to add $10 bucks to an entree price.
And who think that every starter should be deep fried.
But Zombie's right about that "next level" of cooking. Once or twice a year I brave cooking multiple courses for about 8 people. It takes me days of work, and I'm still scrambling to get done enough before people start arriving. (and usually, to be frank, I don't.)
I'd probably do it more often, though, if I could find fellow food crazies around here. But apart from my neighbors (who are both past 80), I haven't found anyone. In NE Iowa we don't do dinner parties. We do potlucks.
And I fucking hate potlucks.
One time I had 2 pounds of sashimi grade tuna overnighted from somewhere on the left coast (in the Pacific Thursday, on my plates Friday night). Only to find that no one I invited was willing to try "raw fish?? Yuck!"
I love tuna...but it takes a long time for one person to eat two bloody pounds of it. (And it had almost been worse; I only deleted the uni (sea urchin) from my order at the last minute.)
But back to the restaurants. I have no idea how these chefs manage to do it for 100 people every night. And, here's the kicker, I have no idea how they manage to get it done so cheaply. I know I couldn't, even if I could manage to get the food done so fine.
Because its not just food, its presentation and atmosphere and an artist's fanaticism for blending taste and color and temperature and God know's what else.
To put it another way, food at that level can be more compelling than the length of a waitress's skirt. And even more ephemeral.
$180 for a meal is, absolutely and positively, extravagant. But I know for a fact that if you add in a minimum wage for the cook's time, I expect I've cooked several meals that exceeded that in personal cost. Perhaps not on a per person basis, but I've done meals that have cost me out of pocket over $500. I can't speak for zombie, but this amateur has wasted a lot of food! And a lot of money on wasted food.
And some of those expensive experiments ...well, lets just say I've ended up going to Pizza Hut at the last minute more than once.
Like the first time I tried to do a squid and octopus dish. I misread the recipe (this was back when I cooked most of the time from recipe books) -- it called for the squid to be cut in 1/2" squares. I read it as 2" squares. And then, because after cleaning the damn thing (yes, I bought the thing whole) I was worried about what undercooked squid might do to my innards), I committed the cardinal sin when cooking squid. I left it in a few more minutes "just to make sure."
I'm betting the Marine's used boots had more taste -- and they definitely would have been easier to chew.
Basically food is the expensive adult hobby I over-indulge in.
I used to think that I'd like to open a restaurant some day, but I really wouldn't. I just like the cooking and entertaining (and the occasional showing off when something just hits a home run). It's weird, but I *like* chopping vegetables (though mangoes are a messy pain in the ass). And I love playing mad artist in the kitchen.
I think of all the people I admire most, almost all of them have been artists of one sort or another -- musicians and singers, collagists, poets, my dad the plumbing and sheet metal God, Masahiro Morimoto of Iron Chef. But I haven't got the ear to create music or the eye to paint or draw. My poems are strictly pedestrian.
So doubtless is most of my cookie -- its a hobby my job rarely gives enough time to indulge, much less the money.
But such as it is, its about as good as it gets for me. A great meal with fellow foodies, or dashing about the kitchen wondering "what the fuck? the cliantro's gone bad again. What do I do?" -- I think that's as close as I get to happy.
But it is a crazy hobby. (Aren't most of them?) No doubt about that.
Only thing I can think of as crazier -- maybe being a Viking fan. 🙂
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Romans 12:2 (NKJV)