Chef Daniel Humm on Plant-Based Luxury

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2023
  • For far too long fine dining has been stuck in outdated ideas of luxury, with animal products defined by their expense and rarity. But now that anyone willing to shell out a few extra bucks at Whole Foods can throw a Kobe steak on the grill, or pick up a cheap tin of farmed caviar, these one-time-delicacies have become commonplace. Harder to replicate is the time, skill, and knowledge it requires to take a beet to the next level. “It’s time we rethought luxury,” says Chef Daniel Humm of New York’s Eleven Madison Park in an interview with TIME. “It’s not the cost of the ingredients someone is using, it’s the human thought, the work by hand…[the] experiences that you can only have in a few places in the world.” In the two years since his heavily laureled restaurant (three Michelin stars, voted 2017’s World’s Best Restaurant) went vegan, vegetables have never had it better, elevated to cult luxury status normally reserved for the foie gras, Kobe beef, caviar, and butter-poached lobster that he used to serve.
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Комментарии • 8

  • @jeanetteloiry8066
    @jeanetteloiry8066 5 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you for having the courage and the vision to create such extraordinary dishes while recreating the restaurant. This is so exciting and worth celebrating. Congratulations on your success. This is on the top of my list, and I can't wait to try this fabulous place! 🥰

  • @isabellapeens4187
    @isabellapeens4187 6 месяцев назад +1

    Whow Christian he’s amazing what he says is oh so true 🥲

  • @animal9370
    @animal9370 2 месяца назад

    Wow!

  • @passo5792
    @passo5792 10 месяцев назад +1

    映画みたいなシーン みたい 1人 アルコール無しで 5万円で 食べれる❓️😅
    frome TOYOTA nagoya city ,🇯🇵 Japan 🌸🍣🍤🍣🍤🍪🙏

  • @passo5792
    @passo5792 10 месяцев назад +1

    PS ランチです。😄

  • @AlexWindover
    @AlexWindover 4 месяца назад

    1)you cant say eating plant based is healthier for you (as in me or everyone), its way more complicated than that because "healthy" is EXTREMELY context specific even meal specific , 2)animals do die in harvesting vegetables ( just not the ones we tend to care about), why does everyone have to reduce all the animal proteins they consume? there are sustainable sources, even unsustainable sources can be turned into sustainable sources.

    • @JustReckles5
      @JustReckles5 Месяц назад +1

      Thank you for your perspective. Could you elaborate a bit more on the first 2 points?

    • @AlexWindover
      @AlexWindover Месяц назад

      ​@@JustReckles5 yes, specifying that plant based is so much healthier for "you" (as in the general public) would imply that we are all in the same situation in which switching to a plant based would improve. For some (probably most) this very rough generalization may be a good starting point in exploring the incorporation of more vegetables into a their diet. However, it is problematic because there many ways to partake in an extremely healthy diet and many that involve animal proteins. People are different and what is "healthier" for all is to find the solution that works best for them.....which MAY be plant based. PART2: saying "no life had to be given for this meal" isnt necessarily true. If any ingredient used at EMP went through a combine (soy, wheat, corn etc. for oils or starches) than it is quite possible that badgers, mice, racoons or rabbits were killed or injured in the process as it seems to be a common occurrence when harvesting with a combine tractor. Seems nitpicky to say but it is a non trivial reality in my opinion, but when badgers and mice are killed no one seems to mind. Hope this helps, I may be wrong but this is where im at.