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Michelin-star chefs and restaurateurs break down fine dining scenes from movies and TV based on realism.

Paul Liebrandt, a Michelin-star chef and restaurateur, rates the portrayal of running a fine-dining restaurant in “Chef,” the pursuit of three Michelin stars in “Burnt,” and how social media has shaped the fine dining experience in “The Menu.”

Liebrandt also breaks down every fine dining scene from seasons one, two, and three of FX’s “The Bear,” starring Jeremy Allen White and Ayo Edebiri. He looks at the show’s depiction of opening and running a Michelin-star restaurant, including the process of staging and training the kitchen staff.

Ludo Lefebvre is a French Michelin-star chef and restaurateur. He breaks down cooking scenes from Disney’s “Ratatouille,” discussing the making of the titular French dish, the culture of haute cuisine, and French cooking, including the kitchen hierarchy and the role of food critics.

The third-generation sushi master Endo Kazutoshi looks at nine sushi scenes from popular TV shows and movies, such as “John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum,” “Gintama,” “Billions,” “East Side Sushi,” “Isle of Dogs,” “Dead Sushi,” and “Madagascar.”

Camari Mick, a Michelin-starred pastry chef and restaurateur, breaks down dessert scenes from movies and TV. She discusses the accuracy of fine dining dessert ingredients in FX’s “The Bear,” the baking techniques in “Chef,” and the pitfalls of processed foods from “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.” She also analyzes the emulsions from “The Menu,” the bread from “Kiki’s Delivery Service,” and the marmalade from “Paddington 2.”

Cesare Casella is an Italian Michelin-star chef and restaurateur. He looks at Italian cuisine scenes from movies and TV, discussing the accuracy of the meatballs from “The Godfather,” pasta sauce and thin garlic in “Goodfellas,” and capocollo in “The Sopranos.” He also analyzes the timpano from “Big Night,” the tiramisu in “Superbad,” and the carbonara from “Master of None.” He breaks down the pasta twirling technique from “Brooklyn” and the calzone from “Parks and Recreation.” Casella reviews the pizza-throwing technique from “Seinfeld,” lasagna-making in “Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties,” and trenette al pesto from “Luca.”

You can follow Paul Liebrandt here:
https://www.instagram.com/paulliebrandt/
You can follow Ludo Lefebvre here:
https://www.instagram.com/chefludo/
You can follow Endo Kazutoshi here:
https://www.endoatrotunda.com/
You can follow Carmari Mick here:
https://www.instagram.com/camari_mick/
You can follow Cesare Casella here:
https://www.instagram.com/chefcasella/

00:00:00 – Intro
00:00:43 – Fine Dining
00:20:58 – Desserts
00:59:51 – Ratatouille
01:21:04 – Italian Cuisine
01:59:12 – Sushi
02:17:00 – The Bear (Seasons 1-3)
02:43:03 – Credits
——————————————————
#michelinstarchef #finedining #howrealisit

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Michelin-Star Chefs Rate 79 Fine Dining Scenes In Movies and TV | How Real Is It? | Insider

15 Comments

  1. 😂These long videos are so bizarre like unless somebody's cooking or cleaning I don't know who on Earth would watch this stupidity you guys need to touch some grass😂

    And this is coming from someone who watches all food reality shows that are fine dining or high-end cooking competition related play Top Chef for traveling shows like Anthony Bourdain shows May he rest in peace the videos individually were cool so you should just clip them into YouTube shorts and then link them to the full video If you want to get more value out of your previous content but hey it's your channel do whatever the …. you want

  2. Just because the Egyptians made Foie Gras as well doesn’t make it right!!! That’s whataboutism! People were shitting in the streets in former times – doesn’t mean we have to do it today just because they also did…evolution means learning from our mistakes.

  3. For someone who has experience in the industry for decades the most realistic has been Kitchen Nightmares.

  4. 2:29 BULLCRAP, chef / cook are completely two different things in kitchen. I bet he's, the commentator, just a cook. And myself? I'm a chef. I'm gonna fast forward all his video.

  5. Citrus fruits (lemons, oranges, limes, etc.) are high in citric acid. That acid reacts with bare copper and forms copper salts (like copper citrate).

  6. My father refused to eat rabbit because he grew up on a farm in the 40's in Australian and he used to shoot rabbits to sell their skins so he ate rabbit nearly every day as he put it for breakfast lunch and tea. So he said if he never ate rabbit again it would be too soon.

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