Hi folks, Chef G. here and, by golly gosh, I sure am on a roll here on the Chef G. Cooking Channel. This will be the third consecutive month I've posted this year, which is a big improvement over my performance in 2023. I think I might have been spurred by seeing some of my celebrity chef competitors posting their crap on cooking shows almost every day. Sometimes they shuffle from burner to burner to oven to oven in order to cook several dishes at the same time. Those dorks might be onto something: When it comes to being a social media influencer, maybe quantity really is better than quality.
HAH! Incredibly, some of those "chefs" really seem to believe that. (Yeah, I'm talking about YOU, Guy Fieri, Gordon Ramsay, Bobby Flay, Rachel Ray, and all the other showoffs on PBS, CBS, FOX, the Food Network, the Cooking Channel, etc.) It's kind of sad to see them making a mockery of the profession I love so much. Cookery is a serious art--not a vehicle for attracting the highest number of "LIKES" and "VIEWS."
Yet, here I am today, vacillating between quantity and quality. Those celebrity chefs have gotten into my head, but their evil ways have not overtaken me. I'll stick to one high quality dish. A delicious dish. A dish for the common man like me. And a salad.
Let the festivities begin!
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Indeed, it is a festive occasion. This is the week leading up to St. Patrick's Day. Irish people all over the U.S. and many other countries--including Ireland--will be wearing green clothing, eating corned beef & cabbage, drinking green beer and/or Guinness and/or Irish Whiskey, and singing drinking songs and sea shanties well into the night.
I'm not Irish, but I've done all that festive stuff in the past. Well, not ALL of them. I've avoided the singing thing because my voice isn't all that great. But I've been practicing, and today I'm ready to flaunt my Irish tenor. I even recruited the Irish Rovers to accompany me in the video you'll be seeing below.
One or two years ago, I posted a St. Patrick's Day Reuben Sandwich recipe. It was, as always, SUPER DELICIOUS. I wasn't sure how to reproduce that excellence this year. A corned beef and cabbage dinner was my first thought, but that seemed too cliche. Instead, I came up with a Patty Melt. I thought it was named after St. Patty. Much too late, I realized my mistake. A hamburger patty with cheese and grilled onion between two pieces of bread has nothing to do with St. Patty.
I love an Irish jig with a Minnesota accent - it's a bit like Fargo meets The Pogues. Your burgers looked so yummy and you got that bread the perfect golden colour. Patty melts are very much a midwestern thing, I think.My mom quite likes them. I like them but prefer a reuben. And I do have Irish heritage mixed in. I certainly have the freckles. I am also glad to see winter released its grasp and you could get out to grill with no snow on the ground! Emily
ReplyDeleteI love your interpretation of a Fargo-Pogues mash-up. I've watched my video multiple times (every time I laugh), but I just don't hear the Fargo accent. Of course, none of us upper-Midwesterners hear it, even though everyone else from every other part of the country does.
DeleteIn regard to our winter releasing its grasp, this winter has been a laugher. I've only gotten to shovel my driveway, like, four times. Our snowfall has only been 1/10th of what we got last year, and whenever it DID snow, the stuff melted within days because our temperatures have been running 5-20 degrees above normal. Sure, Chef G. feels adventurous grilling in a snowstorm or 20-degrees below zero temperatures, but he secretly prefers doing it in this abnormally warm environment.