It’s always a treat to sit down and watch shows like, My Kitchen Rules, Masterchef and Junior Masterchef where we see extraordinary dishes created from hard work and pure imagination. But I must admit, they have changed the way people throw a dinner party – and I’m not happy about it.
I remember the days when I’d cook a lamb roast and everyone would be impressed – there’d be oohing and ahhing with friends commenting on how fabulous the meal was – I’d smile and say, “oh, stop it,” while secretly enjoying the flattery….and the best thing was, it was almost effortless to make. Now I see an 11 year old on the TV making a Beetroot and Blue Cheese Salad on a Wonton Base with Caramelised Eschalots, and it makes me want to cry into my two minute noodles.
These shows have now set the bar extraordinarily high and put pressure on all of us regular cooks to be as good as Peter Gilmore or Kylie Kwong. On the last season of Junior Masterchef, the kids (8 to 12 year olds) as part of a challenge, made Donna Hay’s Four Layer Chocolate Cake. I thought, if these little ones can make Donna’s cake, how hard can it be? …Long story short: my version ended up as a two layered crumbly tower, with a hard lean to one side and extra icing to hold the whole sad looking thing together.
Recently, I went to a friend’s house for a dinner party. Every time I go there, it’s like eating at a 3 hat restaurant. This particular time, my friend, Todd, nonchalantly tells us that dinner will be casual, nothing too fancy… then wheels out a six course degustation menu with matching wines. By course six, I’m all like, “No really, I couldn’t have any Chocolate Chipotle Walnut Torte, not after all that Thai Cracked Crab Curry and Pheasant in Orange Sauce. I’m as full as a tic.”