The Proustian Effect of Confit Byaldi – And More!

newssm.gifScott Shampine, formerly of Olea is now formerly of Gracies. He was booted earlier this week. They go through chefs like Burgerville goes through grill cooks. I’m wondering what the problem is. Something tells me there is a story behind this.


Pasta Bangs on Mississippi is closing. They’ll have free food the last day of business. Not sure what day that will be yet, but think it is towards the middle of July. Rumors are that the owners of Delta Cafe will be putting something in that spot.


From Portland Mercury’s Blogtown, Acme BBQ is changing hands. They are saying it will become a (brace yourself) punk club. I’m sure PFD readers will be coming in such droves they’ll give us a discount.


Ratatouille, the new animated movie from Pixar, about a rat that sneaks around a Paris bistro, adding spices and whatnot to bland dishes. The animators and producers spent a huge amount of time in restaurant kitchens, studying every aspect of a chef’s daily life. One of the consultants was Thomas Keller of The French Laundry. In addition, great effort was spent in getting details of food exactly right – colors, texture, etc. From The NY Times,

The team at Pixar, which is owned by Disney, worked with Mr. Keller and other chefs to create a menu for the restaurant. Michael Warch, manager of the film’s sets and layout department, also holds a culinary degree. He used the kitchens at the Pixar studios in the San Francisco Bay Area to recreate dishes for the animators to study.

Throughout the film, the characters work on dishes like steamed pike with butter, braised fennel and heirloom potatoes or grilled petit filet mignon with oxtail and baby onion ragout topped with truffled bordelaise and shaved Perigord truffle. The idea was to create food so authentic that people would leave the theater with an urge to cook and eat.

The chef’s handiwork is most evident in the final dish, the one on which the entire plot hangs. The dish is the movie’s namesake, and needs to be so special it will impress the restaurant critic.

Mr. Keller cooked a fancy layered version of ratatouille called confit byaldi. “We had to think about what would make the food transformed,” Mr. Keller said. “What would transport him back to his childhood in a Proustian sort of way.”

With the Pixar team recording his every move, Mr. Keller had a last-minute inspiration as he took a palette knife to the vegetables. “When I picked up a layer of the byaldi and it compacted, I realized at that moment how the dish would come together.” The solution was fanning the vegetables out accordion-style.

I watched a ten minute preview from Tivo the other day, and have to say I was quite impressed. If you have Tivo, it’s there waiting for you. What! Don’t have Tivo? Next you’ll tell me you don’t want an IPhone! Cough.

It opens June 29th. Food Dude may actually go see it.

Food Dude

"I have a wide-range of food experience - working in the restaurant industry on both sides of the house, later in the wine industry, and finally traveling/tasting my way around the world. Whether you agree or disagree, you can always count on my unbiased opinion. I don't take free meals, and the restaurants don't know when, or if, I am coming."