Jim,
You make some good points. Especially #1 and #3.
I have often thought that two of these, carefully built-in next to each other or at least permanently installed at a comfortable height, would make an excellent, if small, dishwashing arrangement for someone who couldn't/shouldn't bend over as is required by a standard size dishwasher. Not, of course, that there's any rule against elevating one of those to a more reasonable height. You see that done in Europe all the time, just as with front loading washing machines, here in the US.
As to polenta, I'm so used to the screaming queens in our social circle being offended by my cooking 'shortcuts' and kitchen cleaning ways, I've become immune to it. Italian cuisine (the best on the planet) is all about making simple things taste wonderful. Italians haven't lost sight of that. All too frequently, others have. Heck, look at the best tasting French food one can buy from street vendors. Then compare it to the hysterical Martha Stewart versions.
Now, to be sure, I have a friend in Munich who learned in a Michelin One Star whose rissoti are among the best on the planet and he doesn't cut corners. Of course, his pasta tastes so damn good because he doesn't dump out the water, he just keeps lifting the cooked pasta out and putting new in. No olive oil in the water, just lots of salt.
You make some good points. Especially #1 and #3.
I have often thought that two of these, carefully built-in next to each other or at least permanently installed at a comfortable height, would make an excellent, if small, dishwashing arrangement for someone who couldn't/shouldn't bend over as is required by a standard size dishwasher. Not, of course, that there's any rule against elevating one of those to a more reasonable height. You see that done in Europe all the time, just as with front loading washing machines, here in the US.
As to polenta, I'm so used to the screaming queens in our social circle being offended by my cooking 'shortcuts' and kitchen cleaning ways, I've become immune to it. Italian cuisine (the best on the planet) is all about making simple things taste wonderful. Italians haven't lost sight of that. All too frequently, others have. Heck, look at the best tasting French food one can buy from street vendors. Then compare it to the hysterical Martha Stewart versions.
Now, to be sure, I have a friend in Munich who learned in a Michelin One Star whose rissoti are among the best on the planet and he doesn't cut corners. Of course, his pasta tastes so damn good because he doesn't dump out the water, he just keeps lifting the cooked pasta out and putting new in. No olive oil in the water, just lots of salt.