I can hardly believe it, but today is my 6th blogiversary.
My favorite part? All
the friends I’ve made along the way. It’s also great that I have a place to
praise what I like and denounce what I don’t about the Food Network
specifically, and other food related goings-on generally.
I was looking back to my first post ever, which was about
Giada. Aside from seeming to yell a bit (sorry, I was just being enthusiastic!),
there isn’t too much I would change (although I’m not saying I didn’t move around
a word or two…). It got me thinking about how the world of food has changed in
the last six years and how (or if) the Food Network has reflected those changes.
Both good things AND less hopeful trends are in evidence. Michael
Pollan’s 2008 book, In
Defense Of Food, sparked a huge dialogue about our modern diet. My favorite takeaway from his book – eat the
diet our grandparents ate and we’ll probably be okay.
I’m actually talking about MY generation’s grandparents. My
kids have to go back another generation. The 60’s and 70’s were the time of
Minute Rice, condensed soup and squeezable margarine. (I’m just remembering my
sainted mother’s refrigerator.)
Another great thing - the First Lady’s garden. The world of
organics and locally sourced food has become a huge part of our food world
today. But, at the same time, search the inside aisles of any supermarket and
you will find “food” as far from fresh as possible.
Just think about potatoes. Of course you can buy REAL
potatoes OR you can find them powdered, freeze-dried, already or partially
cooked, mashed and flavored, frozen, in a box, in a bag or in a plastic
container. Doesn’t that tell us something (really awful) about how we eat and
how we (don’t) cook?
Is it that people don’t think they have the time, the money
or the know-how to convert real potatoes into something to put on the dinner
table? Could the Food Network have a place in this conversation? Of course. They have a dinner under $10 show and a magazine packed with recipes requiring mostly basic skill levels; they sell pots and pans and they have a website with (surprisingly, only) 5384 potato
recipes. (But I guess that’s enough to get started.)
Some of those recipes use processed
potatoes. Ugh! Unfortunately, the Food Network is only demonstrating what’s
going on in society and I suppose we should be glad that the one thing we won't
find on that channel is violence…although seeing a recipe for maraschino
cherries covered in chocolate is enough to make me want to throw a few
punches.
Food is inspiring the same level of discussion as other hot
button topics in society. Should a well-meaning mayor limit the amount of
garbage that can be sold at one time in a soda cup? I don't think it's a bad idea, but sometimes I think just having
the conversation marks us as being part of the group that has the time, money and, most of all, leisure to worry about it all. Many people are just trying to feed themselves and their families as
cheaply and expeditiously as possible.
8 comments:
Hi Sue,
Congratulations on six years! And thanks for all of your extremely readable and entertaining posts, and of course the recipes too.
I have the feeling that FN decided to stop trying to stay ahead of things fairly soon after the network's debut. It's much easier to follow the trends (given that their shows don't take too long to produce there's little lead time). And better for ratings, too. It would be great if they could be part of the conversation on the future of cooking, but that's clearly not in the cards.
Thanks, Tom!
You made me think back to the early days of the Food Network. It’s a little scary to be able to remember back TWENTY YEARS ago(!!!) to one of its first hosts, David Rosengarten. (Although, I guess it would be scarier NOT to remember…)
I recall that his shows Taste, and the one he did with Donna Hanover, (the former Mrs. Rudy Giuliani), Food News, were pretty much on the ball with food information and trends. Of course, they got rid of him maybe because he was TOO erudite. But also the earliest hosts on Food Network shows were chefs, who were on the front lines of restaurant innovation. Perhaps they had no television skills, but they knew what they talking about food-wise.
It IS an entirely new world. I shouldn’t be surprised that with reality television taking over other networks’ and cable’s schedules, that the Food Network has included (entirely too) many competition shows on theirs. Those teach us nothing, except when we have great friends on them…and then they’re great! ;-) (Hi Em!)
I think that because the shows are rerun again and again it's easier not to have a show that's too topical. But I'd love to see some of the old shows again for fun.
Happy anniversary! You reminded me my own anniversary is coming up.
I think the Food Network really isn't about real cooking anymore. It's about contests and restaurants with occasional shortcut cooking shows. They tell me this is how "real" people cook. If that's how real people cook then I'm proud to be fake. The Cooking Channel has promise, but I think I got a bit burned out on cooking shows.
Thanks Rach,
Yeah, there's so much stuff on the Food Network that I'm not interested in that it gives me time to watch House Hunters nonstop.
I thought the Cooking Channel was so dreadful when it launched that I never went back.
To tell the truth, I can hardly stand to watch Food Network anymore - it's all competitions and reality shows now. ("Chopped" completely wastes Ted Allen and is "Iron Chef" with none of the flair or humor.) I basically stopped watching FN when "Good Eats" stopped making new episodes and was retired to the Cooking Channel (although I do enjoy an episode of "Restaurant" Impossible now and then. Save them, Robert!!!)
Congratulations on your six year run, and may you have many more!
Thanks James!
I hope you're well.
I hear you about The Food Network. And not just them. I don't even watch Top Chef anymore. Did they teach so many people how to cook, that we don't need them anymore? Dunno. I still love Ina mostly, I watch Paula for entertainment and Giada has some decent recipes. But the rest? It's just what you say - competitions and reality-type shows. Ugh!
Yay! Happy blogiversary! I'm so sorry I'm late wishing you one. I'm a bad blogger friend. For some reason I always think your blogiversary is in the summer. But I think that's when I started reading, maybe?
Would you believe I don't watch Food Network at all? I'm so sad to say I don't anymore. I don't want to watch Iron Chef or Diners, Drive ins and Dives, etc. I miss the good old days when they used to cook. Ina and Giada are still aweseome though.
Yeah, I saw your comment on Cooking Channel. Feeling the same way lately.
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