Chef Sean Brock

with Sean Brock
in Current Affairs
on Thursday, March 1, 2012 * * * * *

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Chef Sean Brock

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Keywords:
Southern food
chef
Virginia
Husk
Sean Brock
Food
south
Tattoo

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  • Comments 6
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    1. SharkswithfrikingLazers  03/03/2012 04:10 AM Report

      He says he has been trying for two years to perfect fried chicken.

      Perhaps he should watch a CNBC documentary on Colonel Sanders. He was able to reduce the two years down considerably.

      The perfect fried chicken is not fried at all because it is starts a very bad habit of making a comfort food into a heart attack and stroke food. The perfect fried chicken then would be equal to baked chicken in artery clogging cholesterol.

    2. SharkswithfrikingLazers  03/03/2012 04:04 AM Report

      He says he wears his heart on his sleeve.

      An elaborate tattoo of a vegetable garden on your arm however is still not a sleeve.

      You are right Charlie, it was kind of distracting popping out from under a suit.

    3. SharkswithfrikingLazers  03/03/2012 04:00 AM Report

      Yea, them pigs.

      Too bad the Jews and the Muslims can't get it right or perhaps it is the Christians?

    4. SharkswithfrikingLazers  03/03/2012 03:58 AM Report

      He says food of the 19th century was so pure because of no genetic engineering nor poison soil—this is pure bunk.

      By the way, how does he travel back to the 19th century to taste the food?

    5. REMant  03/02/2012 11:27 AM Report

      Nice tattoo, I just noticed

    6. REMant  03/02/2012 11:26 AM Report

      It's like listening to old music played on modern instruments, not even retuned to at least imitate the sound. Chez Panisse, inspired by rural French restaurants, popularized this movement here beginning in the 1970s, but it's certainly taking an awfully long time to get off the ground, and, like a lot of things "bobo," it's both too expensive and something of a fetish. I really have no idea how we can overcome this save ending the Fed. Back when SC was overrun with New Englanders seeking their fortunes planting rice and indigo, houses of all sizes had their own gardens, which persisted into the era of truck farms. Maybe it will come back to that.