Image Credit: Evan Sung for the New York Times
A recent article
in the Dining and Wine section of the New
York Times led me to rethink the importance of visual culture in the
current round of debates about food in America. In a shift from the usual conversation about how food is deceitfully misrepresented in branding or
advertising, the article at hand got me thinking about the role played by the
visual presentations of actual meals. Thinking about plating allows us to
revisit the relationship between food and visual culture and reimagine sight as a
creative component of foodways—instead of a predatory marketing ploy—with the
potential to positively impact the ways we eat.
The role of
visual culture and rhetoric in marketing, branding and otherwise selling food
has received a fair share of attention lately.
The opening sequence of Food Inc.
(read Tim’s review here), for instance, tells us how the agrarian ideal depicted on our grocery store
products masks the lurid industrialization of agribusiness. The seemingly
omnipresent Michael Pollan (whose In
Defense of Food is currently playing a central role in the rhetoric
curriculum at UT Austin)
often portrays sight as a villain, warning us never to eat anything we’ve SEEN
advertised. Visual critiques of the fast food industry have even shown up in
different ways on this blog (see here
and here )
. For the moment, I want to ignore all
of that and think about tweezers.
Oliver Strand’s Times article on the culinary uses of
surgical tweezers is unlikely to draw the attention of any but a niche audience
of foodies and kitchen enthusiasts, but the descriptions of plating offered by
the chefs he interviewed should catch the eye of anyone familiar with theories
about photography, poetry or any number of aesthetic and cultural productions:
“It’s harder to make it
look like you didn’t try,” said the chef David
Chang, whose kitchen crew at Momofuku Ko tweezes extensively. “It’s more
difficult to make it seem it’s plated as it falls. That’s what we call it, ‘as
it falls.’ It’s not rustic. It’s naturalistic. It sounds stupid, but you’re
using tweezers to make it seem natural.”
There are a
number of points here, but the first thing to notice is the difference between
natural and naturalistic. “Rustic,” for those who don’t keep up on
gastronomical lingo, is another term for “country” or “home-style”
presentations of food. Rustic dishes can be accomplished with much less
precision than what is typical of haute cuisine. Chef Chang wants to draw a
distinction between “rustic” plating—food that actually falls where it will—and
a “naturalistic” presentation that is painstakingly made to appear plated “as
it falls.” Strand sees this as part of a
larger trend:
Increasingly, this kind
of naturalism is the look of fine dining. Symmetry and geometry are giving way
to artful jumbles and cascading forms. Microgreens, for instance, seem to have
drifted in on a gentle breeze. It all might look tossed together, but it’s
about as accidental as a $200 bed-head haircut.
The plating
should LOOK accidental, but the presentation isn’t any more natural than the
dialogue in a Wordsworth lyric or the musculature in a Gericault.
So, as with the
grocery store in the into to Food Inc.
or the photoshopped breakfast sandwich in Tim’s post above, we find that plating presents food as something it is not. Even the industrial concerns of uniformity
and homogenization seem to be at work behind the scenes: Strand
reports that “Chefs say tweezers let them assemble meticulous compositions
quickly, and with such consistency they look the same every time.” And we can't forget that chefs
share with agribusiness and fast food the same goal of selling you food
(though, of course, they have very different business models).
Despite these
similarities, plating—the visual presentation of individual meals—provides us
with a potential counterbalance to the visual exploitation of consumers by
glossy prints of food and farms that have little to do with the product they
purchase. The goal of marketing images
is moving the consumer to the point of sale, and they often accomplish this
goal by obscuring either the product or its origins. The grocery story is full
of bucolic images of ideal farms meant to keep us from thinking about the
factory our milk came from or the exploited migrant worker picking our winter
tomatoes. The fast food menu board is
not there as a point of reference—“your bacon cheeseburger will look like
this”—but as an incitement to forget what the order looked like last time and
order it again. In this system, food is a commodity, and companies want
consumers thinking about the consumption, not the production, of that
commodity.
Plating, on the
other hand—even semi-deceptive naturalistic tweezing—draws attention to the
food itself and invites us to contemplate the ingredients and the craft that
went into its production. Chefs spend time plating in fine dining kitchens
because they want their customers to appreciate the skill that went into
planning, prepping, cooking and serving the meal, especially since those
efforts can’t generally be seen from the dining room. A well arranged plate invites
contemplation. While it might not force us to ask if our tuna was sustainably
fished or whether our busboy is paid a living wage, it does move food out of
the realm of interchangeable commodities, and, in doing so, it asks for more
from us than thoughtless consumption.
Plating might be
most important at home. Most of us don’t eat the majority of our meals at Corton or Momofuku Ko, so tweezer-positioned microgreens are unlikely to have
much impact on our consciousness or our behavior. On the other hand, those of
us who cook at home (and cooking more at home is one of the best things you can do
for your health, your budget and your carbon footprint) might benefit from
being more intentional with our plating. An attractive plate invites us, even
as home diners, to pause momentarily and consider the food we are eating. By
drawing attention to the craft of cooking, it can earn home cooks some
well-earned respect (even from ourselves) and help open a space for us to be conscious
diners instead of mindless consumers.
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