Why do TV/YouTube chefs/cooks always pretend as if everything is "simple" and "easy" and "quick" when it actually isn't? [closed]
They have 18 different bowls with ingredients and a commercial-grade kitchen set up in advance. Then they spend a long time with lots of steps and manual labor to produce some food. And they call it "simple", "easy" and "quick". Anyone can do it. It's oh-so-basic.
Except it would be very difficult for me to even obtain those ingredients in the first place, and cost a fortune, and there would be lots of waste because only very little of each thing is needed for the specific meal, and it would take forever to set up like they have it on the show. And then I have to stand there and spend lots of time doing it all right before I can eat.
How is that simple/easy/quick? Why do they always claim this? It's absurd. They are a professional with lots of experience and don't have to buy/set up anything. I'm a hungry non-chef/cook with zero energy and money. It is objectively difficult, expensive, time-consuming and cumbersome.
Typical example: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b6Yqw6J8WHo
Best Answer
Mise en place is (one of ) the proper way of successfully doing a recipe;
You do all the prep work in advanced, so when you start the recipe, you are not distracted by chopping up more stuff and at the same time burn something something on the stove.
TV/Youtube chefs sometimes show the mise en place, especially if it's something different or needs special attention,
Cutting all the vegetables, measuring stuff into small bowls, but once you understand that, it does not need to be shown every time (watching someone cut onions is boring)
For example, in your example, the chef seems to have prepared some of the ingredients in avance and some
Also, TV/Youtube chefs have to create and show/episode that will captivate the viewer, it needs to be quick and concise.
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