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Food Presentation Tips



Food Presentation Tips Here are a few food presentation tips to help you begin to understand this incredibly important aspect of gourmet cooking. How food is plated, or arranged on the plate and garnished, figures deeply in one's reaction to it. It even affects how we think the food tastes.

A plate of food is like a painting, and the rim of the plate is the frame. This does not mean that you have to spend as much time arranging the plate as Rembrandt did painting a portrait, but it does mean that you need to think a little like an artist and strive for a pleasing arrangement.

Food Presentation Tip #1: Don't get carried away. A plate that's too elaborate can be as bad as one that's too careless. Besides, you want that hot dinner to still be hot when it reaches the table, so you don't really have time to get too fancy. Following are a few more food presentaion tips . . .

Balance

Select foods and garnishes that offer variety and contrast, while at the same time avoiding combinations that are awkward or jarring.

Colors

My first few food presentation tips have to do with color:

Two or three colors on a plate are usually more interesting than just one. Visualize the combination: poached chicken breast with supreme sauce, mashed potatoes, and steamed cauliflower. Appetizing? Or how about fried chicken, french fries, and corn? Not quite so bad, but still a little monotonous. Now picture roasted red peppers, grilled stuffed chicken breasts on herb-flecked orzo, and a drizzle of green pesto. Dazzling!

Many hot foods, especially meats, poultry, and fish, have little color other than shades of brown, gold, or white. It helps to select vegetables or accompaniments that add color interest - one reason why green vegetables are so popular.

Garnish is often unnecessary, especially if the accompaniments have color, but it is very important in some cases. The classic American combination of broiled steak (brown) and baked potato (brown and white) looks a little livelier with even the simple addition of a healthy sprig of watercress or parsley.

Shapes

Another food presentation tip is to plan for variety of shapes and forms as well as of colors. For example, you probably do not want to serve brussels sprouts with meatballs and new potatoes. Green beans and whipped potatoes might be better choices for accompaniments.

Cutting vegetables into different shapes gives you great flexibility. Carrots, for example, which can be cut into dice, rounds, or sticks (batonnet, julienne, etc.), can be adapted to nearly any plate.

Textures

Though not usually included in food presentaion tip lists because they are not strictly visual considerations, textures are as important in plating as in menu planning.

Good balance requires a variety of textures on the plate. Perhaps the most common error is serving too many soft or pureed foods, such as baked salmon loaf with whipped potatoes and pureed squash.

Flavors

You can't see flavors, either, but this is one more factor you must consider when balancing colors, shapes, and textures on the plate.



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Portion Size

Portion sizes are another important food presentation tip, as well as being a prime consideration for costing.

  1. Match portion sizes and plates. Too small a plate makes an overcrowded, jumbled, messy appearance. Too large a plate may make the portions look skimpy.

  2. Balance the portion sizes of the various items on the plate.

One item, generally a meat, poultry, or fish preparation, is usually considered the main item on the plate. It is the center of attention and is larger than the accompaniments. Don't let the main item get lost amid excessive garnish and huge portions of vegetable and starch items.

Where there is no main item, as in some vegetable plates, strive for a logical balance of portions.

Temperature

Serve hot foods hot, on hot plates.

Serve cold foods cold, on cold plates.

Your arrangement of beautiful food will not make much of a final impression if you forget this important food presentation tip.

Sur La Table: Special Offers

The more anxious a diner is to dig into the food placed before her, the more likely she is to like it. I sincerely hope you now have a better understanding of the importance of plating food in a manner to delight, and that my food presentation tips (above) will get you off on the right foot.

How To Plate Like A Pro
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