Thursday, September 21, 2006

Foie gras on a stick anyone?


Last night, I went to a cocktail party at the Palais de Tokyo for the launch of a new magazine (Courrier Cadres). After the necessary small-talk, I went to the buffet, and there I found a waiter in front of a bowl of liquid nitrogen in which he kept dipping little brochettes of salmon and foie gras! A-ma-zing. I ended up with a sort of foie gras ice cream (can you imagine?!) very cold (you have to wait a little bit before eating it). If you want to know more, the caterer's name is Nomad, and he is based in Paris and London.

43 comments:

  1. how do you manage to get invited to all these events??

    ReplyDelete
  2. He he... Highly classified anonymous, highly classified!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Is this the French version of fast-food? ;)
    Anyway, "Courrier Cadres" is the title of an ANPE magazine that's been on for years, so what's the beans about his one?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Oops, sorry, it was APEC [been in the U.S. for too long]. So, what's the news about it?

    ReplyDelete
  5. I've never seen Foie gras before. I have to say....it doesn't look very appetizing....green???

    ReplyDelete
  6. The green is actually a sauce they added during the process of trying to be extra chic...

    LA Frog. They made a new format for Courrier Cadres splitting the job ads and the editorial part. The cocktail party was the occasion to announce this split.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Liquid Nitrogen? My dermetologist used to keep some in a thermos and dipped cotton swabs in for use in freezing off warts. Never in a million years would it occur to me to use it in food preparation. How did the chef keep his fingers from becoming frozen? A-ma-zing indeed! (and nice photo, BTW!)
    -Kim

    ReplyDelete
  8. Liquid nitrogen ?
    marrant. c'est ce qu'ils utilisent pour bruler les verrues...

    ReplyDelete
  9. Um...doesn't look very appetizing. And since I have no idea what foie gras is and my browser keeps freezing every time I try to open a new window I'm just gonna stick with a general EW. And since a foods appearance is very connected to it's success I'm gonna sayt hat the chef wasn't too successful in being extra chic.

    Eric, are you a photographer for a living as well? Maybe for some swanky magazine or something and that's how you get invited to all these awesome events?

    ReplyDelete
  10. Okay Eric, I give up.
    I guess now I have to live in hope that someday in the future you'll show us again some hot parisian gendarme on your great blog...

    Without adding fuel to yesterday's fat woman forum's fire, here is an interesting "gendarme" which will fit with absolutly any body shape...
    Weird isn't it?

    ReplyDelete
  11. Hmmm...wonder if it's fattening...or if the liquid nitrogen burns it off before it hits your system...now that would be cool!

    ReplyDelete
  12. Do you think I could get him to come out to Salt Lake City, Utah to cater a wedding? Maybe if I paid him enough?

    ReplyDelete
  13. I wonder if this liquid nitrogen will take off as a new foody must do????

    ReplyDelete
  14. Blondtown - you crack me up!

    Yes, the liquid nitrogen experience as a kid to burn off warts makes it strange to think of it as a "chic" accessory, but how come nobody has raised the same level of debate about the treatment of animals for the making of foie gras as yesterday's "obese" post? Is there some duck discrimination going on here? Don't you care? (said tongue in cheek)

    ReplyDelete
  15. hmm....the idea of foie gras is not appealing to me....but since i'm going to france in the spring i guess i should try it to be officially parisienne.....

    ReplyDelete
  16. I hope this tasted good, because it is about the most unappetizing looking thing I have ever seen!

    ReplyDelete
  17. J'ai récemment mangé de la crème brûlée au foie gras, mais je n'ai pas imaginé une glace fois gras !

    ReplyDelete
  18. here is something to consider = http://www.GourmetCruelty.com/

    ReplyDelete
  19. Despite the comments, I think I'd give it a try.
    I checked the caterer's site and I have to admit that any of the coktails they show there have a better look than this foie gras ice cream...

    ReplyDelete
  20. Just a question Eric, are you sure it wasn't dry ice he was doing this in and not liquid nitrogen? I wonder if that's safe to eat.

    Lucy in L.A... Interesting link, but I still love the stuff.

    ::nahal::...you'll definitely have to try it when you're here. A good one has lots of flavour and with toast and perhaps a little bit of prunes....yumm!!!

    ReplyDelete
  21. Eric - that sounds amazing! Looks a bit weird, but then so do snails and frogs legs (!). Fois Gras is amazing...

    Michael - it will be liquid nitrogen. It is a neutral gas and quite safe - why should it be a problem? It boils off at -200 C or something so there is nothing left in the food, just very cold!

    It is a process I believe originated in the UK (good food from the UK! yes it does exist... in fact better than France...?!) by a chef called Heston Blumethal and his infamous restaurant called The Fat Duck.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Think I'll keep to the cucumber sandwiches.

    ReplyDelete
  23. > Michael : about the other subject… oh please no ! I like Eric's pictures and their diversity but find the controversial comments sometime not so COOL and even quite depressing !…
    ;o)

    ReplyDelete
  24. Yes please, I'd love some ;o)))

    Caters work hard make something new out of antique food, so they can keep their customers (foie gras was invented by the Romans, I think)

    Instant freeze by dipping in a liquid gaz is a recently promoted process. This comes from Hervé This, who is a professeur au College de France, by the way. (We French people take food soooo seriously we teach it in Sorbonne University)
    http://www.college-de-france.fr/chaires/chaire10/page_herve/recherche_herve.htm

    This has inspired a some chefs around the world, the most famous one being Ferran Adria of ElBulli's

    http://www.elbulli.com/

    ReplyDelete
  25. oops, sorry, my link to ElBulli's restaurant is not what I expected, I'm afraid

    ReplyDelete
  26. The "mystaire"...perfect for the upcoming Halloween. At first glance I thought the lumps on the sticks were green skulls. Love the photo but I started avoiding foie gras when I was 4years old. Here in the U.S. hotdogs made of salmon served with wasabi sauce will be featured at a new chain restaurant called "Frankatude". The target market is Yuppie folks.

    ReplyDelete
  27. I just checked the website of Nomad... and guess what ????? Now I'm hungry !!!! Forunately, it's lunch time in Paris ;-))))

    Bon Appétit !!!!

    ReplyDelete
  28. Eric - What fascinates me is that you go everywhere with your camera! That stuff looks fairly gross, by the way.

    ReplyDelete
  29. “Avant garde” Catalan chef Ferran Adria is considered by Gourmet magazine as “the Salvador Dali of the kitchen". He launched this innovative (and controversial) method of cooking in the 80’s using nitrogen also called “molecular gastronomy” . His restaurant “Ell Bulli” (a trendy place with long queues as you can imagine) is closed for 6 months every year and turns into an a ultra-modern laboratory where he experiments and creates new flavors combinations using “foam” techniques… We saw a very interesting documentary about him on French TV5 “Envoyé Spécial”about 2 years ago. It was amazing and fascinating. Many of have tried said that you get a real sense of taste like an “explosion” of flavors in your mouth… I think I'd like to try it! Did you get this feeling of explosition Eric? :-)

    ReplyDelete
  30. Interesting shot Eric! Looks like green tea ice cream, in the shape of mutant heads, atop a pair of chopsticks! LOL! Looooooooooove GTI by the way--have it at my fave Japanese restaurant (Yukisushi) everytime I eat there! ;-)

    ReplyDelete
  31. A recent Wine Spectator called fois gras one of the pillars of French cuisine. It's amazing stuff...ice cream, though...

    ReplyDelete
  32. Pas surprenant que les fliquettes soient bien grasses si elles se gavent de foie gras au Palais e Tokyo!!

    ReplyDelete
  33. The green coloring does not make it look appetizing. Reminds me of green eggs and ham.

    ReplyDelete
  34. Soosha: FOIE GRAS: "the liver of specially fattened geese or ducks, used as a table delicacy, esp. in the form of a paste (pâté de foie gras). " Trader's Joe carries some, in the US, although it's usually a cheaper version, made with chicken.

    (PS. Try cleaning your cache, it might help your browser problems)

    ReplyDelete
  35. To dxbluey from a Yank: "Spam spam spam spam,..." In fact that crap comes from the state where I live. Not something this boy's proud of, but there you go.

    Food experimentation is cool. (Just paid a royalty to Michael.) Good to hear from Arnaud: bon jour. It's lunchtime here, time for, um, chicken sandwich. And apple! Oh, I'm healthy.

    Just bought tickets for the first round of baseball. Allez Twins!!

    ReplyDelete
  36. Here in the States, the city of Chicago enacted a ban on the serving of foie gras at any restaurant located within city limits. The point of the resolution was to "eliminate cruelty to animals." Perhaps they should visit one of the slaughterhouses that the city made famous - but I can't see them banning filet mignon at Morton's (the nation's top steak house chain that got its start in Chicago).

    ReplyDelete
  37. Hé hé, bonne idée. But what about the taste ? Whas is good ?

    ReplyDelete
  38. Le foie gras, j'ais ete eleve dedans etant originaire du perigord noir, avec un petit cahors 'haut de serre'...Hummmmmmmmmmm
    La photo est bien prise et originale. Bravo

    ReplyDelete
  39. Paul, are you serious? Chicago banned foie gras? That can't be true...do the government officials not have enough to do?

    ReplyDelete
  40. tomate, nope, not my browser. It just randomly started happening when we got our last software update for our internet no matter how many times we refresh or clean or restart or whatever. I'm guessing there was a bug, but our anti-virus and anti-spyware can't find it. Thanks, though. So COOL of you. (sorry, Michael. You know I luff ya! But not in that way!!!)

    ReplyDelete
  41. Wahoo lots of comments tonight (not as much as yesterday of course, but foie gras is less controversial - well, maybe not in the States actually LOL)

    So the taste first: it was in fact more surprising than good. The cold tend to kinda soften the taste. The one on the photo is not foie gras but Salmon with a gree sauce.

    Alex, you're right, the idea, apparently, originated from this spannish guy who, seems to be very famous.

    Soosha, I am not a professionnal photographer but still get invited to a few parties (I said a few, not a lot!)

    Ama, I am sorry, I cannot put hot gendarmes everyday! LOL.

    Thanks everyone for all your comments, I love it when my photos start conversations.

    ReplyDelete
  42. You're just friends with someone semi-important to important, aren't you?!?

    ReplyDelete