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tim rosso headshot1 380x317 Everyones a food blogger

Tim Ross

BY TIM ROSS

Have you noticed that food bloggers have suddenly become the new wine wankers? At your local restaurant they present as normal diners, happily chatting away like real people.  Then suddenly, as soon as their meal arrives, they whip out their iphone and artfully take snaps of their skate, parmesan and broad bean flavoured sorbet, all ready to be uploaded to their WordPress site as soon as they get home.  When they finally stop playing food stylist and actually eat their dish, they give a running commentary on the standard of the food, talking as loudly as possible so fellow dinners can marvel at what they’ve learnt from watching three seasons of Masterchef. When they finally shut up and split the bill with the aid of a calculator, they scurry off home to publish their illuminating restaurant review that will be read by at least four people.

It’s all part of this new cult of expertise, where we are suddenly driven to commentate on all manner of things with professional aplomb.

Blokes who used to talk about sport are miraculously having conversations about the relative culinary merits of Sydney’s hot new chefs, these young guns that specialise in trendy dishes like southern fried duck’s bum served with a fixed gear bike seat infused mayonnaise.

Now instead of smashing schooners they talk of matching craft beers or cider with some trendy dish that of course has been “twice cooked” (I think my mum used to call that reheating).

Sydney’s food revolution is also causing people copious amounts of anxiety. The prospect of having friends round for dinner is now fraught with danger given the judgemental taste buds that gather round tables on Saturday nights. Couples who were once simply happy to be invited have now turned into snarky critics.

One of my friends has been scared off cooking since his lamb shanks were pilloried by a pal for being a “safe choice” and “predictable” as soon as he plonked them on the table.  The final straw was when his carpenter mate proclaimed, “If you’re serious about going for a gelatinous feel with your slow cooked meat, you really should be using ox cheek.”

What happened to a bit of old fashioned respect for the chef? When did phrases like “This is a beautiful thanks David and yes I’d love another glass of Koonunga Hill,” suddenly become passé?

It wasn’t all that long ago that doing Jamie Oliver’s roast chicken or knocking up Bill Grangers ricotta hotcakes would have everyone raving.

These days, serve those up and you might as well have dished up Kantong or Hawaiian steaks. Mind you, I’m sure one of those hot young chefs is probably reinventing one of those right now using pork belly, organic grown pineapple and Himalayan Yak Mozzarella and somewhere a food blogger is ready and waiting to pounce.

This post was originally published in the Sun Herald and here, and has been republished with full permission.

Tim Ross is one of Australia’s best known comedians. He is currently a contributor to Men’s Style Australia, Rolling Stone and writes a monthly column Rosso’s  Sydney for The (Sydney) Magazine in the Sydney Morning Herald. You can find him on Twitter here.

Do you have trouble deciding what to serve for dinner? Do you take photos of your food? Attach a picture of your favourite meal  and we can add them to this gallery started by Lana at Mamamia who constantly takes photos of her food

 

Eggs at Brasserie Bread in Sydney - Lana



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128 Comments so far

  1. Michelle

    Same! I have been blogging for a few years now. My photos started out being pretty rubbishy, but over time they have improved. Admittedly they are not fancy pants, because I don’t cook fancy pants meals…I cook healthy, fast and family friendly food which is easy. Here is my blog: http://nellscookingblog.blogspot.com.au. I’ve also attached a photo of my healthy version of eggs benedict. Enjoy XD

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  2. fitnessfoodandstyle

    Yup!!! Guilty as charged!! Just started blogging a few months ago, and blog pics everywhere I can! Facebook, Instagram, Twitter YOU NAME IT! I’m in love with food!!! I’m also getting a bit ridiculous with our 4 kids bday cakes!! Here’s an example of Zali’s 1st birthday party…

    http://fitnessfoodandstyle.blogspot.com.au/2012/08/1st-birthday-party-celebrations.html#comment-form

    xxDani

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  3. Pingback: Food Blogging

  4. monkeyboyzmum

    hahaha I think Lana and I were separated at birth – I love to take food pics and instagram them – you can see them here https://twitter.com/#!/monkeyboyzmum

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  5. Betsy

    Loved the article, and had a great giggle.

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  6. Ibrahim

    Just talk about Haloe280a6 stop humble-bragging.This posdact has never been amazing but at least it was a few hours of just Halo stuff. Stop name-dropping. Stop talking about how important you are in the Halo community. Stop talking about how luck you are.New info on Halo 4 keeps coming out almost every day and yet it feels like maybe one of you reads the sources (and even then not very closely).

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  7. Emma M

    I agree to a certain extent but I think you’ll find that those ‘wanky’ people making brazen disrespectful comments about food, whether it be in a restaurant or at their mates place, are actually insufferable people in general. There’s nothing wrong with people developing new interests as long as people remain respectful of others, which should be applied to all areas of life, not just food reviews!! I think many amateur food critics forget that there are real people behind the meal they’ve just eaten, who have poured their heart and soul into making their dream of opening a cafe/restaurant a reality. Ok, you might not have liked certain aspects, in fact, it may have been extremely terrible, but just have some perspective, keep your feet on the ground, remember how well YOU cook that particular dish & REMAIN RESPECTFUL.

    Also, Hawaiian Steaks are the best :D

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  8. Sarah

    So the title of this article IS accurate … Everyone IS a food blogger!!

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  9. Jess C

    I have a friend who lives in Melbourne & spends all disposable income on fancy food. Her & hubby are regulars at Vue de Monde and I grimace every time I hear about the next $1000 they have spent on dinner.
    Last time they visited, I served up Kantong and pretended I had cooked it from scratch. Earned me some great comparisons to their finer Sydney Asian restaurants. Suck on that Tetsuya!

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    • EKougi

      Ahahahaha, that’s too funny

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  10. Carly Findlay

    I take photos of most meals I cook. I instagram them (syncing to twitter and FB) nd often blog about them – Listing the ingredients. Friends always comment how good my meals look.
    I find taking photos of my meals helps me to remember them so I can recreate, and is a bit of a food diary, to show myself what I’m eating.
    Since I have been taking photos of so many meals I think I have actually eaten better – i put thought into the cooking and presentation, and also am observant when I am at the markets shopping. When I am out with friends or family, I ask if they mind me taking photos of my meals. When I am with other bloggers, it’s a given we will have our phones on the table.
    I wet out with a friend the other night, to see a band at a pub. I ordered dessert which was quite elaborately presented and I immediately took a photo of it. It was dark and I was shining candles over my plate to create a better photo, and then he helped me by shining his phone over the plate too. I then realized what a wanker I looked!! But my friend just accepted I am a blogger, and will probably take photos of my food!

    My blog – not strictly a food blog is carlyfindlay.blogspot.com
    And instragram is carlyfindlay where I post all my food pics:)

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    • Liz

      Great idea!!!! Kinda like a food diary but fun, I like I like!

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  11. melbourne13

    yep i’m a food blooger……except i mainly blog about the food i make. i feel a bit douchey doing a restaurant review! but i do snap the food i eat when i go out and then do a post like ‘my foodie week in pics’.

    i really enjoy going out and taking photo’s of the food i eat. i love getting new ideas and being inspire to try something new!

    here is my favourite picture recently. this is bircher muesli from snow pony in melbourne

    and just for giggles this is my blog address: misstrixiedrinkstea.blogspot.com.au

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  12. Caitlin

    At the risk of sounding like a know-it-all wanker, I feel compelled to tell you that “twice cooked” is usually code for “deep fried”.

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    • Singleinoz

      Not so! Twice cooked can be steamed then baked!

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      • missamoo

        Or boiled and then fried. One place i worked boiled the fired twice after resting the first fry for an hour, they were THE most delicious potatoes in all the world

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  13. Crazy Foodie Photographer.

    I like photographing my food! There is actually an app for that called “Foodspotting”. It’s great actually. Good to see photographs of food as it is actually presented, rather than the flashy advertising photos on restaurants websites.

    Your Restaurants (yourrestaurants.com.au) is a site also dedicated to the amateur food critic. It is quite helpful actually.

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  14. Kathy W

    The one and only time I’ve ever taken a foodie photo was of the most magnificent breakfast I’ve ever seen, served to me in a humble backpacker’s cafe at Kings Cross, Sydney.
    Nothing flash about this – just the quantity would satisfy a truck driver and the cholesterol would have most people dialling the paramedics.
    But yes, I ate it all. And what a feast!

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  15. Cathy

    Not everyone is a food blogger, but some of us like to give it a go!

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  16. Cady

    Tim, we may be the last generation that gets to eat hot dinners. By the time the bloggers are happy with their shots, it has to be pretty tepid ….

    Besides, I try not to look too hard at anything I’ve just cooked and slopped on a plate. Focussing a camera on it would make me lose my appetite completely.

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  17. Guest

    I can’t cook beyond maggi noodles and mac n’ cheese. I even took a while to perfect the amount of milk you put into the mac n cheese so the sauce is not too runny. In short – hopeless.

    So when someone cooks me a decent meal I am thrilled to bits. I am like the Dad off the Castle ‘what do you call this darl’?’ ‘lamb chops’ ‘how about that!’.

    I can’t imagine someone could be so rude as to criticise a meal cooked for them! But then again, in my waitressing job I am shocked every day at the poor manners people have when it comes to eating out.

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  18. EatsFood

    Hello! I am the WORST food blogger/wanker you will find. Firstly, my blog is vegan…and sugar free. Secondly, I don’t update it regularly. Finally, I don’t drink alcohol so not even that is in my favour. Oh almost forgot, I vote Liberal too.

    Surely I should be the most hated Australian ever. If not that then certainly the most worthy of a collective eye-roll.

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  19. jb expat

    so hungry now….and love the spaghetti and meatball cake!

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  20. La Bella Figura

    I think anyone who writes about their obsession with architecture and furniture collectibles a wanker too. I say it because you can take it. Right on the money with foody wankers tim! You’re amazing I’ve been seeing your comedy shows for about 17 years and your articles are spot on. WTF happened with a lovingly created simple meal? I’m thankful I don’t have friends or go to places where people go who watch masterchef and those kinds of shows and think that’s what a good meal is about. Thank fuck for that!

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  21. Skye

    Can someone please explain to me what ‘honest food’ is?!?! I don’t get it… What kinds of foods are dishonest??

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    • Anon

      To me, honest food is usually quite basic, not complicated, made using what is around you (e.g. local and seasonal produce). I suppose the other thing I’d say about it is that it isn’t necessarily low-sugar, low-fat, low-anything by design…mayo and cream are full fat, it is butter instead of marg etc. – it’s just that these are all used (fairly!) moderately. Eggs, chicken and duck come from local farms, game comes from local hunters, mushrooms, snails and fruit often come from our garden or the woods. That’s my understanding of ‘honest’.

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    • Faybian

      Cheese in a can???

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      • Anon

        Or chicken in a can. Yuck!

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        • Kim

          I gagged just reading the those words.

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    • Suse

      Oh my gosh. I despise that term with a passion. Each time I look at Tobie Puttock I want to give him a good ‘honest’ slap across the face – for some reason I blame him for the over-use of such a stupid description!

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    • Liz

      Dishonest food is sneaky food, like anchovies or chilli, criminal little buggers that can hide in your food and attack innocent diners

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  22. Anon

    We live in a small village in France and we only eat out in restaurants when we’re travelling or on holidays. We do eat at friends’ and neighbours’ places 3-4 times per week and the food is incredible…which is mainly why we don’t bother with restaurants as we’re nearly always disappointed.

    I really like the food culture here, fresh, honest food, usually from the garden or local market. I find that the food culture in Australia, when we visit (like now), is getting really poncy, everything is getting overdone amd complicated.

    When we eat in France it is the ritual of eating which is more important – five or so courses over five or more hours, lots of alcohol but never getting drunk, and, most importantly, the company and conversation. It is so much more enjoyable than going to a restaurant with just one other person, having hit and miss service and having to decide whether it was really worth the time and money.

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    • La Bella Figura

      Lots of alcohol but never get drunk? It’s stuff like these cultural French comments which make me laugh. Every native frenchie I know drinks so much alcohol it would put me in hospital. And they walk everywhere too! And they all skinny! Blerg…

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      • Anon

        I suppose it is all relative. I wasn’t a massive drinker before we moved here but my tolerance has definitely increased. There might be a couple of glasses of something for an apero, another few glasses of wine with the meal, a glass of red with the cheese, then a coffee and then a very small glass of something stronger for a digestif. All in all probably between 6 (for me!) and 10 glasses. However, because it is spaced over 5 or more hrs it doesn’t tend to leave people so drunk. Having said that, weekends or special occasions are often a different matter! But if you ask me, six glasses in one night is quite a lot!

        Also there are plenty of women (and men) in my village who are not skinny, a few who are fairly overweight and one or two who would probably be classified as obese. Less than in Australia, for sure, but still enough to disprove the assertion that French women don’t get fat! As for walking…four months of the year it is far too cold and for the rest of the year people in my village use cars as we don’t have public transport. The exceptions are usually between long meals to stimulate the appetite for dessert but then only if we’re lucky enough to have decent weather.

        I think a lot of the stereotypes around the French (women don’t get fat etc) are perpetuated by expats living in the classier areas of Paris amongst the bobos. Step outside the cities and it is quite different. I definitely wasn’t commenting on the French in general, merely the people in, and my experiences of, my little village of less than 1,000 people.

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    • Anon

      Vive la France!

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  23. blondage

    *this little food blogger shuffles back to her corner*

    ;)

    Pffft – yeah, like that’d happen.

    As much as I run a food blog, it’s all about REAL meals for REAL families and REAL budgets. As much as I have guests for dinner 3-4 times a WEEK, the food on the blog is what they are served and they always come back for more so I must be doing something right. My guests get served meals like Lasagne, Beef Casserole, Chicken Casserole, etc.

    If I feel really special, I’ll put the casserole into a ramikin and stick some pastry on top for a pot-pie. At best, they might be lucky enough to wander in the day after Lucky’s been fishing – in which case, yeah, they get coral trout, red emporer or mackerel… but that’s only because it takes 2hrs to hit bag-limit and there’s no point in squandering fish when there’s a whole ocean at the end of our street…!

    Okay – I’ll admit… I’m the first one in line when a new restaurant opens in town but I am certainly not a critic… (hell, I’m the first in line for an ENVELOPE opening in this small dusty mining hole).

    I’ll judge food that I’ve paid for, but only according to my own personal tastes and preferences… I’d NEVER EVER pass judgement on a home-cooked meal if I was a guest.

    The one guest who dared to critisize the meal he was serve here was never invited back…

    His words were something along the lines of “oh I would have blah blah blah to make it taste better”.

    You could hear a pin drop amongst the guests here that night.

    So I told him: “If you know how to cook this better, then I won’t bother torturing your poor taste buds with my cooking again.”

    Oh – and I’ll proudly show my food blog too!
    http://thefridgedoorblog.com

    *mumble* Don’t tell me how to cook my Na’s bolognaise sauce *mumble*

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  24. Noelle

    If you can document your child’s first birthday party that no one cares about, why can’t you document that tasty, tasty burger that no one cares about? One and the same, I say!

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  25. RES

    I’m always taking photos of meals that I’ve had served to me in restaurants. Have a pic of every course of the degustation menu from Berowra Waters Inn plus pix from meals served on our cruises plus even pix from food bought at markets overseas. It makes for great memories of our holidays. I then use them as the screensaver on our PC so we can remember what we ate and which country it was in.

    Unfortunately can’t say the same about the food I make – chops with mashed potatoes and salad anyone??

    BTW – will be glad to have some bread/pasta on Saturday night – Lana, Mia…any suggestion on where to go?

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    • La Bella Figura

      Haberfield. Kick it old school Italian.

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    • Lana

      I am just going to go to the bread aisle at the supermarket, followed by Wellington Cake Shop for bagels. Oh and then I am going to eat cake ;-)

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      • RES

        Oh I love Wellington St cake shop!! Hmm what to choose – rye bagel followed by poppyseed or walnut slice or will it be one of their pretzels and then a jam donut?

        One more sleep to go!

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  26. Piggyeatalot

    Heehee I have a food blog also and I am proudly displaying it here: http://pigouttravels.wordpress.com/ and why not? I started a food blog because I love eating and remembering wheres yummy and what’s yummy. Then people started asking me should they go and eat and I use try blog as a reference. It’s a win win situation :)

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    • Piggyeatalot

      PS that being said I won’t criticize if I am going to someone’s home for dinner… They are cooking you food and you are not paying them. Criticizing would have been plain rude :p

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  27. Robyn (GirlonRaw)

    I am a kinda niche food blogger (more health/wellness than just food). On a recent trip home to Australia to visit our family, we couldn’t believe the obsession Australians have with cooking shows. We remembered when it was property and renovations shows, but perhaps the turn in the value of property (aka The Block’s property’s not making reserve last year!) has changed everyone onto food instead, hence the new interest in food blogging?

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  28. Karin

    I have a food blog but I won’t list the address here, seeing as that might offend Mr Ross ;-)

    Here’s a pic of one of my favourite meals – a salad of rocket, avocado, pears, mini tomatoes from our garden, crumbled Jindi Blue cheese, and toasted Australian pecans. Mmmmmm.

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    • Kathy W

      OMG that looks nice.
      Is there dressing on the salad – if so, what did you use?

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      • Karin

        Hi Kathy – no dressing! The ingredients are all so flavourful together I don’t think you need one. Enjoy …

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    • Helen

      Do you always eat on the carpet?

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      • Karin

        Nooooo …. but it makes a nice texture for the background of the photo, don’t you think? ;-)

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  29. MissT

    Let’s be honest here, when it comes to cooking I’m a little bit shit. So whenever I do make something that’s actually good I’m always so proud I want to share it with the world! This involves tweeting it and used to involve facebook photos until someone pointed out I only ever update my facebook when I managed to cook something.

    I know it’s not amazing to anyone else, but I am the girl who managed to set fire to the kitchen while making pasta, so dammit it’s pretty special to me!

    PS: When people come for dinner who expect something fancy, I make one dish that looks fancy and tastes great – mostly because it’s covered in copious amounts of butter and a fair bit of garlic. Can’t go wrong ;)

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  30. stretchyprincess

    TELL me about those toffee apples Lana!!! Is that chocolate? And white chocolate??

    (& I take photos of my food all the time. If I spent hours creating it, I’m going to have it immortalised! :)

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    • Lana

      How insane are those “toffee” apples? They were indeed covered in white chocolate – and they had them covered in every other piece of confectionery you can imagine.

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  31. Petal

    This is my favourite ‘food blog’

    http://www.cooksuck.com

    Makes my dinners look edible!

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    • Bradley

      Cooksuck ! For a second I thought that I’d read something else….and nearly fell off my chair. :)

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    • Nora

      Just checked it out, so funny!

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    • Dee

      so funny! just about sums up most of the the food pics you see on facebook etc!!! everybody thinks they are are food experts these days and frankly you are not and pretty sure most people aren’t interested in your crappy food blogs or seeing pics of what you had at a restaurant (maybe some people are but none that I know including my chef husband) or budget family meals….sorry if that offends but its true, if I want a recipe I’ll just google it.

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  32. Bradley

    Just prior to Good Friday, an aquaintance happened to catch sight of me in Woolies as I purchased some fish and marinara mix.

    “What did you get over there”, he asked. I explained that I had just bought the basic ingredents for my “world famous, spoken of in hushed and revered tones throughout the crown courts of Europe” fish pie. He advised that he hadn’t had a good fish pie for donkeys years.

    Yesterday I ran into this chap again. He enquired as to the success of my fish pie and requested that I give him a copy of the recipe when I assured him that it was a hit come Friday night dinner.

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  33. mmmbubbles

    My cooking is usually so rubbish it’s hardly worth eating, let alone taking a photo of….

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  34. Jo B

    I set up a blog for my husband and I of a year of evening meals. I don’t care if anyone looks at it, but it’s a way for us to track our evening meals that we cook for each other. Some are great, some are really ordinary, and yes many are take out! But it’s a fun little project for the two of us.

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  35. Holly

    Reminds me of this Youtube clip that was making it’s way around recently

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ukdoK3l4aM4&feature=youtu.be

    Eat it, don’t tweet it

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  36. Michelle

    To those people that post their food pics on Twitter, Instagram etc: Please don’t stop, I love your food porn!

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    • mimzeebee

      Do you follow nadyahutagalung on Instagam? She puts up lots of food pics.

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      • Michelle

        I do now, thanks :)

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  37. jingwen

    The last time I had people over for dinner, I served up baked potatoes, a garden salad, and chicken nuggets/tenders. Ms Fancy Cooking, that’s me!

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  38. Nora

    Haha Hawaiian Steaks! I hadn’t thought about those in years. I feel a classy dinner party coming on…

    What to serve for dessert though?

    Tinned fruit salad?

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  39. therecipebinder

    Not every food blogger is a wanker.

    Just saying……

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    • jennafelicity

      No, I think Tim Ross actually believes every person who has food blog is a wanker, every single one of them.
      ;)

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  40. Phoodie

    Clearly I LOVE food – http://www.phoodie.wordpress.com – ha look! He’s right! It’s even a WordPress blog! :)

    I love taking pics of it. Writing about it. Talking about it. And most of all shovelling it down my pie hole!

    All that said, I must admit that I find this article silly. PROOOOOOOOMISE its not cause I’m offended by it or angry etc etc (I’m much angrier at the moment at the gardener outside my house using some sort of CHAINSAW sounding tool that will for sure wake my kids!) I Just think its unfunny and a little generic ie could be applied to fashion bloggers, news bloggers, photo bloggers (instagram anyone???) etc etc etc

    Now that we’re all online, setting up blogs, writing posts, uploading pics etc is so easy hence lots of us are doing it! So what!? We’re not all professionals, most people don’t profess to be. Sure there are some “wine wanker” (hate that term) equivalents but I don’t feel that it’s the majority. I follow SOOOOO many AMAZING food blogs. Some people are just so talented and creative and I couldn’t give two hoots whether they studied for 10 years or did their apprenticeship in New York or were simply taught all the know about food from their awesome Chinese grandmother.

    I agree about disliking the concept of any man and his dog slamming restaurant after restaurant for no apparent reason eg they didn’t like the maitre’d so they upload food pics and say it all tasted crap but HONESTLY, I’ve been on the food blogging scene for a few years now and there really aren’t many peeps who do that type of stuff.

    Also, if you have a group of friends who tear you to shreds when you host them at home for a dinner party, I’d suggest you look at getting some new mates! :) and although I like cooking from scratch I’d also suggest that there is NOTHING wrong with the occasional Lattina packet pasta and sauce!

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    • Nat

      Well said Phoodie!
      Obviously Rosso didn’t take the time to look at your fab blog!!

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      • Phoodietweets

        Banahahaha! Thanks! :)

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      • therecipebinder

        He obviously didn’t look at mine either – I make my chicken satay with peanut butter. Yep – classy. ;p

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    • Jo B

      Am now salivating after looking at your blog…love it x

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      • Phoodie

        Thanks Jo!! What’s ur blog address!?

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    • rainbow

      i don’t know if i read it wrong but i thought he was more having a go at non-phoodies/foodies who started being them when they watched masterchef.

      i don’t think this includes people like yourself and others who actually cook and write recipes, and have some background knowledge, just people who think one ep of masterchef makes them an expert.

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      • Phoodietweets

        I think you may be right Rainbow although where is this mystery line drawn? Obv you’ve got Matt Moran ie one end oif the scale and then the person who has watched one ep of masterchef and is now food blogging away tearing shreads off top restaurants! My point is, I guess, that most food bloggers are somewhere in the middle and the kind if “expert” he’s referring to doesn’t really exist….or very few exist….

        In any case, I LOVE the fact that anyone can blog. Ok, not the fact that anyone can start a hate blog etc, but that little old anyone at home can take pride in cooking and snapping their meals and sharing family tips etc. I think that’s really nice :)

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        • rainbow

          i think the line is drawn between actual food bloggers and every other random that takes a photo of their dinner and posts it on facebook.

          i like that everyone can blog too, it isn’t for me, but i love that i can find information on pretty much anything, with detailed instructions on how to make it.

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    • addlepated

      Phoodie, so much awesomeness on your blog!! LOVE the Phreakish Witches Fingers.

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  41. Anon

    Blah! My boyfriend does this. I’m a huge fan of anything I can whip up in half an hour or less. My boyfriend doesn’t feel that food is worth eating unless it takes at least three hours to cook. Obviously on his nights to cook (excuse me, create!), he doesn’t start until 6pm…at 7.30pm he’s telling me off for snacking (I’m 7months pregnant – just freaking FEED me!) and at 9pm when he FINALLY serves the damn meal I’m not allowed to touch it til he’s faffs about creating the perfect setting in order to take a photo. By the time it’s ready to eat, I’m exhausted, not remotely interested in eating his pan fried caramelized whatever in a jus of bloody dingleberries and he sulks because his efforts have gone to waste. Dinner has rapidly become the bane of my existence!

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    • katherine anne

      BAHAHAHAHAHAHA.
      This made me laugh so hard!

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  42. Some random

    So very true, and so why I don’t watch Master Chef, My Kitchen Rules or any celebrity chef cooking show. I worked as a waitress for eight years, have a large collection of cook books and food magazines that I cook from regularly, and I still don’t know a tenth of what there is to know about food and wine.

    And literal ‘flavour of the month’ people piss me right off. Sure, a good classic recipe can be tweaked and altered, but you can’t reinvent the wheel.

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  43. odette

    I took photos of nearly every meal we ate in Paris because they were SO AWESOME. After living in a small town where your going-out-to-dinner choices are the Bowls Club or the Golf Club, proper restaurants are a revelation. And I like looking back at them and remembering the deliciousness.

    Photos of my own food? Sometimes. The first year my Anzac biscuits didn’t suck was photo worthy.

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    • Newbie

      You didn’t happen to live in Weipa, did you?? If so, you forgot the Alby Hotel.

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      • odette

        lol no! I think that most small towns are the same in that respect. Except I forgot to mention the Chinese restaurant!

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  44. Anonymous

    Hahahaha! We are a group that sit and loudly bag those taking out their Iphones and loudly exclaiming over their meal! I can cook, very well but the best part of dining out regardless of the standard is – I didnt have to spend hours over a hot stove for a 15 minute delight and NO dishes to clean!

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  45. BakingMyselfHappy

    Here is my latest food achievement from the weekend, a white chocolate buttercream macaron

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  46. Win

    I used to work in a fine-dining restaurant and after Masterchef appeared there would be several people an evening who, when presented with their lovely professionally prepared dishes would exclaim, “it looks just like on Masterchef!” worse was she this was with a tone of congratulation. People, Masterchef is designed to emulate the real world, not the other way around. Many of my friends, and my partner, are chefs or work in the industry, if Im cooking for them I cook home-style, comfort cooking that they wouldn’t normally bother with rather than something fancy and modern, and they are always appreciative. Its easy to get caught up in the modern flavour of the month, no pun intended, but everyone loves the classics. Lamb shanks included!

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  47. tigerlily

    At a restaurant, “fine dining” highly celebrated Sydney restaur. We had a meal that was beautifully presented, a work of art! There is my problem, I cannot cope with food that has been deliberately placed by someone who is creating a picture on my plate…DON’T TOUCH MY FOOD! I enjoyed the experience but the food was horrible – probably just me, I am sure it’s my fault because everyone raves about this restaurant… The combination of ducks feet and goats nipples with chicken breast, (I cannot remember exactly what it was but it may as well have been ducks feet goats nipples stuffed inside a chicken breast) was something that I had to will myself to swallow! The service was perfect,friendly staff, enough attention without hovering. After four courses with champagne and $430 for the experience, my husband was still hungry and made a snack when we arrived home. A cheese breville, took a pic added a fancy description priced it at $35 and emailed it to me! Love the article.

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    • Anon

      Why did you go there??

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      • tigerlily

        Why did we go there? Well, we go to many restaurants, many places, many movies, many shows etc etc., ocassionally we are a little disappointed but that’s just life isn’t it?

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  48. Nrm

    I LOVE cooking for friends…… but if one of them told me ‘how’ I should have done something I think I would headbutt them.

    I’m italian… simple fresh food is best :)

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  49. Anon

    Panfried galah scrollops on purée of budgerigar with a rat testie juss .. Or lasagna and garlic bread. Makes your guests grateful for plain fare – I hope!

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    • Dolly Levi

      Bahahaha !!! Hilarious :)

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  50. Nicky Champ

    So true, it’s like the only dinner companion you need these days is a digital SLR.

    I’m also guilty of an iphone food snap -at home, in restaurants and at friends parties. So far the only time I’ve shared one of the images was when I had almost replicated the look of a Donna Hay blueberry swirl cheesecake. Yep, I was pretty chuffed with myself after that.

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