Sometimes an Egg Just Needs to Be an Egg

A fried egg, sunny side up.
A chicken’s menstruation by any other name…

Food. Itโ€™s so basic and essentially simple; the nutritional components of it are why we need it and the fact it tastes relatively pleasant is why we enjoy it. So why then, do the chefs and marketing meddlers of this world need to complicate things so terribly with frilly words and superfluous descriptive piffle?

I know this may seem odd coming from one who says in a thousand words what another person might scribe on the back of a daisy petal, but Iโ€™m a fully qualified stage 4 hypocrite with a badge and certificate to prove it. Anyway, Iโ€™m crafting flouncy words for my own (and your, if youโ€™re lucky) entertainment, so Iโ€™m allowed to apply superlatives with wanton abandon. Those in charge of writing menus, however should try to exert a little restraint.

Unless youโ€™re the sort to eat exclusively at restaurants that ask if you want fries and a shake with your meal, you will have encountered what Iโ€™m talking about; ingredients such as โ€œvine ripened tomatoesโ€. Excuse me for being a little naรฏve here, but last time I checked, all tomatoes grew on a vine, which is where they turn from green to red. Is that not ripening? โ€œTopped with a henโ€™s eggโ€? Well, it was hardly going to be a cockerelโ€™s, was it?! Come to me with a dish topped with a snakeโ€™s egg and then you can start bragging. ย Itโ€™s a tomato, thereโ€™s nothing wrong with that, tomatoes do a perfectly adequate job of being red, juicy and full of annoying seeds; they donโ€™t need tarting up. As for eggs, well, itโ€™s fine to just call it an egg, it really wonโ€™t get offended.

The same goes for how itโ€™s been prepared. โ€œLovingly hand cutโ€ โ€“ personally I would use a knife as theyโ€™re much sharper, and Iโ€™m not even going to suggest what sort of mental state someone would have to be in to โ€œlovinglyโ€ chop anything, Lorena Bobbitt excluded of course. As for your โ€œoven bakedโ€ goods, save that for the 5 year olds. Thatโ€™s like me โ€œleg kickingโ€ you in the perineum for talking such poppycock, before I โ€œfist punchโ€ you in the chops.

Then we have the phenomenon where the regional accent of the farmer who wades through the cowโ€™s dung before itโ€™s sent to the giant mechanical slaughter house, is supposed to make it more delicious โ€“ โ€œHereford reared steak from the farm just round the corner from the Post Office on the road thatโ€™s a bit hilly. Owned by Farmer Bobโ€. Bob could be a horrible farmer for all we know. He could force the poor cattle to listen to The Cheeky Girls all day while he covers the floor of their cramped shed in loose Lego bricks and upturned plugs, but weโ€™re supposed to be convinced that the meat is somehow more wholesome and tasty because it has a regional accent. Remember, even the rat meat in a doner kebab had to come from somewhere.

I am perfectly happy for foreign dishes to retain their original name – thatโ€™s culturally sound and correct, but why would calling mashed potato โ€œpommes pureeโ€ make it taste any more comforting and buttery? Itโ€™s potato, mashed. Mashed. Potato. For centuries in the UK we have been pouring gravy over our sausage and mash, so why now are we being sold โ€œjusโ€ as an accompaniment to our West Yorkshire reared, acorn fed, had-a-penchant-for-scratching-on-the-gatepost-second-from-left,ย  100% premium pork select sausages and Roi Edwarde pommes puree? Sausage, mash, gravy. Simple.

It has reached a point where the mere act of ordering from a menu means you need the Rosetta Stone and a schizophrenic just to work out which are the starters and which is a desperate cry for help from a chef on the verge of a nervous breakdown. I was once presented with a menu that tried to convince me pollen was an actual ingredient and Iโ€™m pretty sure I heard the torrid weeping of a man in severe mental anguish from behind the kitchen door.

โ€œFor todayโ€™s specials we have the pan fried fillet of Cornish coast mermaidโ€™s nipple on a bed of delicately wilted expectations and a foam of bitter regret, followed by the tickled loin of wistful bonnet de douche garnished with a bricklayerโ€™s punctuation, and for dessert we have the poached pair of aces with breast ripened milk ice cream.โ€ All this will of course be served on a roof tile or a piece of driftwood, as that (and the smear of baby food across them) is what adds ยฃ60.00 and a maitreโ€™dโ€™s sneer to each dish. Makes beans on toast look a whole lot more appealing, doesnโ€™t it?

This level of pretension isnโ€™t just confined to the realms of the fine dining eatery, oh no, the supermarkets have got in on the act and even your basic ready meals now read like the literary works of Keats. Well, Keats if he had access to a microwave. What used to be a meat and two veg meal for one is now a โ€œrustic chunky lamb melange served with tumbled seasonal garden produce, seasoned with the sigh of a lonesome sparrow and a reduction of buxom wenchesโ€™s winksโ€. Itโ€™s a lamb stew, stop being a prat.

As much as I love words and the magical way in which they can transform basic communication into an artistic melody of thoughts, sometimes a melody of thoughts is just a brain fart. All this convoluted nonsense being used to try to sell you your lunch is bordering on the sublimely ridiculous. At worst itโ€™s misleading, at best, laughably redundant and tiresome, so why not just cut the claptrap and tell people what theyโ€™re eating without the use of a thesaurus and a poet laureate?! Sometimes an egg just needs to be an egg.

Comments

23 responses to “Sometimes an Egg Just Needs to Be an Egg”

  1. bernadetteyoungquist Avatar
    bernadetteyoungquist

    All those descriptive words do get a little out of hand at times!

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      They could be put to better use, on witty blogs. ๐Ÿ˜‰

  2. oneawkwardyear Avatar

    Just stumbled across your blog, you are hilarious and I agree with all of this 100%! I always like “hand cut” fries or chips – are they supposed to taste better if cut by hand than by machine? Who cares!

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      Hand cut, triple cooked, seasoned with the tears of a unicorn. Just give me the chips!

  3. lauriebest Avatar

    Yes, pretensions be damned! Hilarious blog…

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      Thanks ever so.

      Pretensions are best served on a bed of dancing carrots with a melancholy and calculators reduction, by the way.

  4. KT en Avatar

    You’ve made my evening! This is hilarious! You have one new stalker ๐Ÿ˜‰

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      Just the one? Oh…

  5. JB Maddawg Avatar

    I enjoyed your work with a nice portion of sun-bathed, ground sweetened, free range, seedless sans spray painted watermelon. Nicely done!

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      Ah yes, the very finest watermelons grown in the little farm just across from the large oak tree, owned by Gill, the slightly tubby farmer. Delicious.

  6. luminously Avatar
    luminously

    Fish and Chips โ€“ Fished off the waters of Iceland and air flown within 24 hours to our restaurant. Potatoes hand picked from Jamie Oliverโ€™s garden and seasoned with the finest herbal produce.

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      And a truffled foam with cubes if jellied retorts.

  7. morristownmemos by Ronnie Hammer Avatar

    We just skip the whole attitude and eat at foreign restaurants. If they feature flowery descriptions they’re lost on us since we don’t speak Thai, Japanese, Italian, Spanish or Urdu.

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      I like your thinking! Although several of the menu translations have grammatical errors that tend to put me off my duck tongue and fish lip soup.

  8. motniret Avatar

    i agree…i have encountered much of this first hand…it pisses you off, you read the name on the menu,you have no clue what it is, you then ask a waiter to explain what it is,and hes like ‘ah,its just a salad with so and so…’..why cant they they just call it that then…keep it simple,and everyone’s happy…dont think the elite could stand that though…

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      I bet if you placed a page of poetry in front of these elite so-and-so’s, they would order from it gleefully and applaud when you served them a cheese sandwich.

      1. motniret Avatar

        lol…true that…

  9. kenthinksaloud Avatar

    You’re so good I almost wish I could stalk you! Brilliant as always Miss PFPT ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      Only wish? Disappointing. Apparently you’ve only made it once you’ve got a stalker.

  10. wikiwikiwerewolf Avatar

    Oh I so agree… it’s called marketing… which means you must hire a writer to make even the most dreadful piece of cow-dung encrusted frozen dinner sound like a meal that would normally require rectally probing oneself in fancy dress. It litters the cardboard and aluminum cans of product everywhere…

    But just to be an ornery prat, I must make a small note on the tomatoes that you have previously mentioned a few hundred words ago. Many tomatoes these days, at least in the states, are not vine-ripened. They’re picked green and artificially ripened with gasses… mon dieu.

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      Mmm, cow dung encrusted frozen dinner. I know what I’m having tonight!

      Thanks for the info on the gas-ripened tomatoes. Makes them sound almost magical and now far more appealing.

  11. smcwrites Avatar

    Thank you! My best friend and I also can’t handle things that are hand cut. It sounds like they are cutting it with their hands and that is disturbing. I recently shared this in sight with my boyfriend’s parents and now they are a little disturbed by the concept too.

    And yes, beans on toast is probably the greatest thing ever.

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      Unless it’s some serious karate action, nothing should be hand cut.

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