Popular Culture Review Vol. 18, No. 1, Winter 2007 | Page 25

Chef Appeal 21 up in New England. I also think of Elay’s embrace of the Southwestern states of America, where this fair-skinned redhead of Irish descent from New York can’t cook outside on a grill without burning himself. Another significant chef persona: the bon vivant. Above all, chefs on television, whether in the kitchen or out, appear to be missionaries of “the good life.” The central ritual of this religion is consumption. The tagline for Wolfgang Puck’s Food Network program. Cooking Class, is “Live, Love, and Eat!” Lagasse knows that his live audiences will cheer more vociferously the heavier he lays on the portions and the more of every ingredient he throws into a pot, especially if that ingredient is “kicked up”—meaning, loaded with spice, fat, sugar, or booze. “Pork Fat Rules!” is one of his favorite on-air lines and he sells it, among other consumer-evangelistic sayings, on a variety of merchandise. Lagasse didn’t get cast for the living-well-is-the-best-revenge-themed movie Last Holiday at random. He’s the ultimate ve^-sayer, oozing the kind of permissiveness that could knock nearly anyone off a diet. Though he is the most broadly popular of these examples, he is not the only one to constantly communicate how much better life is lived with indulgence. Pork fat. Buttery pastry. Confit. 0-toro. Tniffle oil. They all push it. In the field, as in the kitchen, the key to selling what they’re pushing is the convention known as the tasting. This is the money shot of the food porn business. On occasion, but only on occasion, chefs are portrayed as diet conscious, like George Stella in his Low Carb and Lovin’ It or the Calorie Commando Juan-Carlos Cruz, both on the Food Network. But these shows are marginalized on the schedule and the chefs are continually straining themselves to come up with substitutional recipes and to convince us that they are just as delectable as their full-fat, full-sugar, and full-carb versions. Also, sometimes the chef comes across as a politically-correct consumer, supportive of organic products and small-scale independent purveyors using sustainable methods, but the message of “enlightened” consumption is not consistent across the chef-TV spectrum, and even foods made from environmentalist methods are presented as desirable at least as much for their supposedly richer flavors as for their planetary benefits. No wonder. All of the chef-consumer personae flatter by mirroring the values of their audiences. The chef as connoisseur, adventurer, and advocate of multiculturalism each exemplify their fans’ respect for education and appreciation of cultural diversity. Florida’s study of the ethos of the “creative class” identifies precisely these values. He is not alone in pointing out their significance among those who comprise the elites of post-1960s America. David Brooks in Bobos in Paradise and Joseph Epstein of Snobbeiy: The American Version would agree. Both trace the contemporary American elites’ tendency to subscribe to the ideals of a “meritocracy,” which means valuing the acquisition and display of education-based social capital as opposed to mainly displays of inherited class privilege, and being open to cultural difference rather than perpetuating what Epstein argues is the no-longer-relevant “WASPocracy.”