The Quarantine Banquet
New Yorkers with a taste for great—and jaw-droppingly creative—food should take note that, next weekend, two quarantine-themed banquets will be held inside Storefront for Art and Architecture, adding a culinary dimension to the ongoing exhibition Landscapes of Quarantine.
[Image: From a previous a razor, a shiny knife meal; photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times. See more photos here].
As Nicola Twilley describes these nights over on Edible Geography, "on Saturday, April 10, and Sunday, April 11, the Brooklyn-based a razor, a shiny knife team will explore the culinary implications of quarantine, preparing and serving a quarantine-themed dinner inside the exhibition itself. Tickets are not cheap but then this will not be just dinner," she adds; it will "explore the outside limits of the science of cooking, as well as the theatrical, social, and experiential possibilities of a meal."
Michael Cirino himself explains that "these events are not only for professional chefs or foodies; they are for anyone who loves food, regardless of culinary knowledge or experience. We produce these evenings to effect a communal environment of social interaction, education and fun." As such, the quarantine dinners will also include live demonstrations of Cirino's techniques—including a lesson in "interesting applications for an iSi whipper."
[Image: From a previous a razor, a shiny knife meal; see more photos here].
I would highly recommend reading the detailed rundowns of the quarantine menu both at Edible Geography and at the event listing itself (where you can also buy tickets). Edible Geography points out, for instance, that "if the dinner guests are passengers on a journey through quarantine, then the first course plays with the idea of exposure to disease, and the second course mimics the first step taken on arrival at the lazaretto—disinfection."
[Images: Photos from previous a razor, a shiny knife meals; see many more photographs here].
The very idea of a quarantine menu is, I have to say, extraordinarily inspired, as it recontextualizes the spatial tactics of quarantine as unexpected new techniques for cooking, and it takes materials and foods that have themselves, at various points in history, been subject to quarantine and treats them as ingredients for a gourmet meal. Further, an elaborate dinner served and plated after-hours inside Storefront for Art and Architecture will be quite a thrill (for photos of what such a meal might look like, check out the dinner for the Storefront re-opening gala a few years back).
[Image: From a previous a razor, a shiny knife meal; see more photos here].
In any case, all proceeds go to a razor, a shiny knife, and the events sound brilliant; definitely consider supporting Cirino's culinary experiments, as you'll get a night of cooking demonstrations and a delicious, once-in-a-lifetime meal in the process.
[Image: From a previous a razor, a shiny knife meal; photo by Jennifer May for the New York Times. See more photos here].
As Nicola Twilley describes these nights over on Edible Geography, "on Saturday, April 10, and Sunday, April 11, the Brooklyn-based a razor, a shiny knife team will explore the culinary implications of quarantine, preparing and serving a quarantine-themed dinner inside the exhibition itself. Tickets are not cheap but then this will not be just dinner," she adds; it will "explore the outside limits of the science of cooking, as well as the theatrical, social, and experiential possibilities of a meal."
Michael Cirino himself explains that "these events are not only for professional chefs or foodies; they are for anyone who loves food, regardless of culinary knowledge or experience. We produce these evenings to effect a communal environment of social interaction, education and fun." As such, the quarantine dinners will also include live demonstrations of Cirino's techniques—including a lesson in "interesting applications for an iSi whipper."
[Image: From a previous a razor, a shiny knife meal; see more photos here].
I would highly recommend reading the detailed rundowns of the quarantine menu both at Edible Geography and at the event listing itself (where you can also buy tickets). Edible Geography points out, for instance, that "if the dinner guests are passengers on a journey through quarantine, then the first course plays with the idea of exposure to disease, and the second course mimics the first step taken on arrival at the lazaretto—disinfection."
- In our initial conversations, I had told Michael that during outbreaks of the Black Death in fifteenth-century Europe, port officials would “disinfect” suspect cargo and mail by dousing it in vinegar and/or subjecting it to cedar or sandalwood smoke: from that seed of an idea, combined with culinary technology, a new edible experience emerged.
[Images: Photos from previous a razor, a shiny knife meals; see many more photographs here].
The very idea of a quarantine menu is, I have to say, extraordinarily inspired, as it recontextualizes the spatial tactics of quarantine as unexpected new techniques for cooking, and it takes materials and foods that have themselves, at various points in history, been subject to quarantine and treats them as ingredients for a gourmet meal. Further, an elaborate dinner served and plated after-hours inside Storefront for Art and Architecture will be quite a thrill (for photos of what such a meal might look like, check out the dinner for the Storefront re-opening gala a few years back).
[Image: From a previous a razor, a shiny knife meal; see more photos here].
In any case, all proceeds go to a razor, a shiny knife, and the events sound brilliant; definitely consider supporting Cirino's culinary experiments, as you'll get a night of cooking demonstrations and a delicious, once-in-a-lifetime meal in the process.
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