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It’s fine for TV chefs or food creators on Instagram, TikTok or YouTube — the point there is to make it as good as a visual experience as possible. It’s not real food production for strangers or paying customer's, obviously, because there’s a camera there recording everything and they narrate as they go.
If in a restaurant, I see someone preparing food with their hair down — yes, gross. |
| I refuse to eat any food cooked on a TV show. |
The sleeves always drives me crazy. Not for hygiene, it just seems uncomfortable and like they would get dirty. I don't get why you so often see that on TV. |
| Personally, I would like to watch a cooking show from a biosafety level 3 containment facility. You know, something that the home cook could aspire to. |
| News flash OP--stuff on TV isn't real. |
+1 but imo in a restaurant or cooking at home. And yes, OP I notice it when it’s on TV but I also remember that it’s fake and for TV. I always put my hair up and roll my sleeves up when I’m cooking. |
At chef school, they taught that a good chef has clean sleeves but a messy front. If your sleeves are dirty it’s because you don’t know what you’re doing. |
🤭 |
Do you ask them to tie it up? Have the manager ask them? Stay quiet and inspect before eating? Other? |
Who's talking about eating that food?
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I was taught in home ec in middle school to always push up sleeves before cooking for hygiene reasons. It makes me wonder about the general cleanliness of a cook who has their sleeves down. |
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It's never occurred to me to worry about a TV chef's long hair.
-- excellent home cook. |
Since you don't often see into the kitchen at a restaurant, or if you do, they usually do have their hair back, I was thinking of one specific instance. I was at a restaurant and a woman was preparing Caesar salad tableside. She had long hair (past mid-back) and while it was tied in loose ponytails on each side of her head, the ponytails were arranged so that the hair fell in front of her - down her chest - rather than down her back. Since she was bending over to mix the salad, the ends of her ponytails were maybe 4 inches from the top of the bowl. Fortunately it was not MY food so I didn't have to say anything but we did comment to each other that we were glad we hadn't ordered the Caesar, and were surprised management allowed her to wear her hair that way. I am not sure how I would have handled it if it were my food. |
But my sleeves help keep my arm hair out of the food. |