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Discussion of Marsha's Industry Standard: Lily-gilding

by Robin Garr » Sun Dec 04, 2011 9:07 am

Industry Standard: Insider info for those who dine out

Lily-gilding

By Marsha Lynch

We’ve all been there: You’re out for dinner, hungrily anticipating your entrée. You watch as the kitchen door swings open. Is that your food? What in the world is sticking out of it? Indeed, that is your entrée — the server stops at your table and sets down what someone surely thought of as a masterpiece of presentation. What is sticking out of your mashed potatoes is a giant sprig of rosemary. It’s practically 9 inches tall. Whoever finished off the dish — and it could be the person who cooked it, an expeditor, or even your server — is guilty of over-garnishing.

With the rise of food blogs and food reality shows and all that they entail, there are millions of food images floating around on the Internet and in the media. Some people even make a whole career out of food styling. And while it’s true we “eat with our eyes” before we taste anything, we eventually eat with our mouths, as well. So a garnish has to make sense.

In culinary school, we teach that what you garnish with must, first and foremost, be edible. That giant sprig of rosemary stuck in the mashed potatoes does not qualify.

Secondly, we teach that the garnish should, as often as possible, be an element of the dish. If your sauce is tarragon beurre blanc, have at it — that cute little bunch of tarragon leaves in the curl of a prawn’s tail is more than eye-candy, it’s also harmonious with the dish.

What about a cinnamon stick leaned rakishly against the whipped cream on top of a slice of apple pie? There’s bound to be cinnamon in the pie, of course, but (aside from one misguided child I once watched, horrified, as she ate a cinnamon stick from a coffee topping bar across a crowded banquet room) you dare not eat it. A sprinkle of ground cinnamon would be a better garnish candidate.

Speaking of dessert, we come to the ubiquitous mint leaf. This is perhaps one of the most difficult garnish sins to resist, as many delicious desserts — I’m looking at you, chocolate — are deceptively subdued in color. Whipped cream, pumpkin pie, caramel, spice cake, crème brûlée — so many desserts and dessert components are in the pale-to-brown spectrum, it’s very tempting to spruce them up with a jaunty green mint leaf or two. To be fair, if one is to go by what you see on the covers of cooking magazines and cookbooks in the grocery checkout lane, it seems like the whole world is garnishing every dessert with mint. I’ll admit I’ve done it myself, rationalizing that the mint leaf is a sort of after-dinner digestif, or a breath freshener, as was the original intent of a parsley sprig, the other universally abused garnish.

I once worked at a restaurant where the owner insisted that each and every entrée get a sprinkling of both chopped parsley and paprika on the rim of the plate. That made every dish I handed over the pass seem like a soul-sucking, Christmas-tinted, thumbprint-magnetic mess. Keep garnishes off the edge of the plate; as a matter of fact, keep everything off the plate rim, please — it makes for a far cleaner and more dramatic presentation.

I hope I’m not coming off as anti-garnish; I’m not. I love a good garnish, but it has to be good, it has to make sense, and it has to bring something to the party. Instead of garnishing with something “extra,” use some element of the dish itself as garnish, or make your garnish a component of the dish. For instance: Use shards of ginger snaps on top of eggnog mousse, or sanding sugar and chocolate curls rather than a mint leaf on top of that French silk pie. Stay away from fresh raw herbs that are too sturdy to comfortably eat, such as sage leaves and lemongrass. And as tempting as it may be to call the server over and tell him your rosemary sprig is underdone, in the spirit of the holidays, do your best to resist.

One final note: That gorgeous holly bush with the fat red berries in your front yard? It’s toxic; keep it off your plates and platters this holiday season.

Marsha Lynch has worked at many Louisville independent restaurants including Limestone, Jack Fry’s, Jarfi’s, L&N Wine Bar and Bistro and Café Lou Lou. She now works for her alma mater, Sullivan University, as sous chef of Juleps Catering.

Read it on LouisvilleHotBytes:
http://www.louisvillehotbytes.com/to-your-every-whim
and in LEO Weekly:
http://leoweekly.com/dining/industry-st ... ine-out-34
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Re: Discussion of Marsha's Industry Standard: Lily-gilding

by RonnieD » Sun Dec 04, 2011 11:15 am

Ah yes, I remember well the mid to late 90's when every plate had to have a minimum of a dozen different flavors on it and an equal number of garnishes! The chopped parsley around the plate rim was the coup de grace! I worked at a restaurant where that was the standard garnish, anything you added to that just made it even better! You'd have to dig through the garnish to find your entree.

The most galling is when someone does this to a steak or another fine cut of meat. If the meat is so great, let it stand on its own, don't hide it under a blanket of garnish!

Fortunately, it seems like this trend is calming down a lot since the old days and quality chefs are respecting the food and using garnish like Marsha suggests, as an accent, not as a feature, or heaven forbid, a way to disguise bad food. (which I have seen done, don't peek under that basil leaf!).

Well done as always Marsha!
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Holly Hill

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Re: Discussion of Marsha's Industry Standard: Lily-gilding

by Holly Hill » Sun Dec 04, 2011 12:46 pm

Well, if the parsley is just on the plate rim, you can usually avoid eating it.
My pet peeve is chopped parsley scattered all over the entree. This seems to happen most often with pasta dishes. Now, I'm not overly fond of parsley, and I refuse to eat a dish that has had an ingredient added that is not usually part of the dish. I'm sure I've made myself unpopular at a few places by sending the dish back to the kitchen with the request for a non-parsleyed version. And trying to pick out the pieces won't work. I've had that happen. I feel bad for the server for having to deal with an upset diner and an upset kitchen staff.

So what's a diner supposed to do -- ask when you order that parsley not be put on your dish? That would get some server reactions, wouldn't it?
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Re: Discussion of Marsha's Industry Standard: Lily-gilding

by RonnieD » Sun Dec 04, 2011 9:03 pm

If you know a dish has a particular garnish you do not want, I don't think it is out line to request the omission. We get that occasionally because we garnish everything with a little bit of green onion. Not a big deal at all.
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Re: Discussion of Marsha's Industry Standard: Lily-gilding

by Stephen D » Sun Dec 04, 2011 9:18 pm

I really enjoyed this article- Marsha never seems to get stale in her work.

I also am not a fan of the full plate rim garnish- it gets all over the place, namely the cuffs of people's shirts. I'm cool with a little something-something on the rim away from the guest though, but it has to make sense. Not the ubiquitous Christmas tree.

I'm sure she probably had a bit in there about the current trend- that of hight (maybe had to take it out for space.) The concept behind making food pretty is that we eat with our eyes first. And we do see in 3 dimensions...

Nonetheless, a well-thought, inspiring article that should get people's clocks-a-ticking.
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Marsha L.

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Re: Discussion of Marsha's Industry Standard: Lily-gilding

by Marsha L. » Sun Dec 04, 2011 11:50 pm

Marsha Lynch
LEO columnist, free range cook/food writer/food stylist
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Steve Shade

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Re: Discussion of Marsha's Industry Standard: Lily-gilding

by Steve Shade » Mon Dec 05, 2011 12:00 am

Looking good. Great height and beautiful garnish. 8) 8)
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Re: Discussion of Marsha's Industry Standard: Lily-gilding

by Michelle R. » Mon Dec 05, 2011 4:48 am

I have to admit, the part about the holly berries made me crack up. You'd think it was just common sense to avoid putting sprigs of random trees/bushes on a guest's plate. :lol:
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