Someone reminded me that 70% store bought - 30% fresh cooking maven Sandra Lee of The Food Network is Andrew Cuomo's girlfriend. Make that the new Governor of New York Andrew Cuomo. That means Simple Sandie is the first lady of The Empire State, my home state.
With the holidays down the pike, my thoughts hearken back to Sandra's famous Kwanzaa cake - the most ridiculous and insulting cake ever made. This lump of weird was made with the freshest canned apples and day old bargain sponge cake from Pathmark. And those yummo corn nuts (not "acorns"- not where I live) are so festive, forget they have no place anywhere near that unfortunate pile of ingredients. If you choke on one, just use one of those big ass candles to stick down your throat to dislodge the nut obstruction, or to induce vomiting. Your choice. It's a free country. Cooking is fun!
I wrote something about the yin and yang of The Food Network, featuring Sandra Lee and Ina Garten - two women on opposite ends of the earth when it comes to food preparation. Ina wins.
Showing posts with label Sandra Lee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sandra Lee. Show all posts
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
The Yin and Yang of Food Network

I love food. I love television. Give me a creamy polenta simmered with cheese, drenched with mushroom sauce, sprinkled with garlic mashed artichoke and drizzled in olive oil. Let me eat it in front of a television set, satisfyingly savoring each morsel as I watch The Food Network's Barefoot Contessa, hosted by Ina Garten, culinary proprietress of the now defunct Hamptons eatery of the same name. She's the grand doyenne of metropolitan simplicity and elegance who embraces the beauty of food, atmosphere, and the interaction of good friends. Then let me clean my plate in time for a DVR installment of Semi-Homemade with Sandra Lee before I lose my appetite and hate food forever. Sandra (aka - "Semi-Ho", "Simple Sandy" and "Sandy Ho") is the antithesis of Ina and her thought provoking, satisfying approach to cooking.
The Food Network, once a channel featuring professional chefs with straightforward non-sexy but fun-filled cooking instruction, has evolved into a platform for culinary competition and new found sex appeal. It is book ended by two polar opposites of the cooking spectrum - the Yin and the Yang, the good and the bad of the Foodie universe.
The Food Network, once a channel featuring professional chefs with straightforward non-sexy but fun-filled cooking instruction, has evolved into a platform for culinary competition and new found sex appeal. It is book ended by two polar opposites of the cooking spectrum - the Yin and the Yang, the good and the bad of the Foodie universe.

Also, I love her home and property. She has an orchard in her backyard. An orchard! That's like surreal heaven.
The Bad: Sandra Lee is like the evil not-at-all twin sister of Ina Garten. Seventy percent store bought, thirty percent fresh is her motto. Although the idea is admirable, the implementation is horrendous. This is a woman whose favorite trick is to add vanilla extract to Cool Whip to kill the chemical taste. Her food is a mixture of high sodium, chemical infested seasoning packets, pretend desert toppings all to be guzzled down by the sweetest alcoholic concoctions off her wet bar. She shows the viewer how to make food look high maintenance so you look good. You see, it's all about the host looking good, not the guests feeling comfortable as they munch on Frankenstein food harvested from the color coordinated chemistry lab she calls a kitchen. During a recent holiday show, she took a package of store bought chocolate muffins, cut the tops off, filled them with cherry pie filling, topped each one with fake whipped cream and placed it in crushed aluminum foil with a fruit strip for a bow. It looked unappetizing. It was wasteful. It would have been easier and less expensive to have gone to a bakery and bought something prettier and just left it alone. You can still lie and say you made it. Throw some flour on your face like the lady in that old Rice Crispies Treat commercial.
My favorite disaster is her Kwanza cake, a white woman's patronizing celebration of an African American holiday. Grey icing, big fat, waxy candles, a glop of canned apple pie filling and nuts.
What does she have against Africa?

Her aesthetic is overwrought and over the top. Sandra's wardrobe and her kitchen must always match. If Sandy is talking about a lemon recipe, she'll dress for the part: Yellow top, yellow hair band, yellow window curtains, yellow accents and her yellow Kitchen Aid Artisan mixer will be in view. An Asian dinner? She'll wear a Chinese red silk dress, change the window curtains to red, red Artisan mixer, red, red, red. And it goes on and on depending on her mood. So cute. So fun. So silly. Her "tablescapes" and room decorations must keep Michaels Arts and Crafts in business. She incorporates mind boggling, space cluttering scenery props into her table designs. It would make a television/film property master cry. Funky table clothes, bizarre glasses with dice (for poker night!), baskets and bushels of hay for that fun Autumn hoe down! How much money goes into being like Simple Sandy? You need to rent a storage unit for all the crap she shows you in the name of "party ideas".
How about a Harley Bike Party!

The photos above and recipes from Barefoot Contessa can be found at www.barefootcontessa.com. Information on broadcast of her show can be found at http://www.foodnetwork.com/barefoot-contessa/index.html.
To find out broadcast information on Sandra Lee's Semi-Homemade - check out http://www.foodnetwork.com/semi-homemade-cooking-with-sandra-lee/index.html. I swear, sometimes it's great to watch it for a good laugh. Maybe you can pick up a good point or two...or not.
So I am part of Team Contessa. Sandy, please take your MSG headache inducing recipes and insulin overload drinks and sit in the corner. Somewhere in cooking heaven Julia Child is pushing pins into a Sandra Lee doll.
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