Food & Drink


This just in from my friend Bronni.* The following email conversation then ensued:

On 26/10/2005, at 1:52 PM, Bronwyn wrote:

It’s pretty damn weird if you ask me….even if it isn’t made out of Linda McCartney, why anyone would buy health food recommended by a dead person is beyond me. Call me old fashioned.

On 26/10/05 1:56 PM, Peter wrote:

Colonel Sanders and Linda McCartney should get together and form a chain called ‘It Tastes Like Chicken’

On 26/10/2005, at 2:03 PM, Bronwyn wrote:

Or a band, “It Sounds Like Chicken” or a double act “It Sounds Like Chicken” with WINGS.

On 26/10/05 2:06 PM, Peter wrote:

Or just ‘Chicken Wings’ maybe.

It would certainly give new meaning to ‘Finger Lickin’ Good!’


*Who also gets credit for the headline. See, I just steal all my wit from other people who don’t have blogs.

And in another first for The Cow, we’re blogging in real time to report, as promised, on the Michelangelo’s Cafe experience, and whether they can really deliver ‘The Taste of Art’.

6:47pm: I phone in my order for a Chilli Prawns pizza from the ‘Gourmet’ section of the Michelangelo’s menu. I want to point out here that when it comes to pizzas my inclination would usually be to stick with the stock-standard ‘pizza’ type pizza. All this ‘gourmet’ stuff smacks a bit too much of gilding the lily to me. Nevertheless, we’re assessing ‘The Taste of Art’ here, so I’m pulling out all the stops. The guy who takes my order (I like to think it is Michelangelo himself even if he doesn’t have an Italian accent and doesn’t laugh at my joke regarding my ‘refined palette’) is polite and efficient. So far so good. He says my pizza will be delivered within the hour.

7:12pm: I pour myself a glass of Milkwood Shiraz from the vineyards of central Victoria.

7:16pm: I notice that the Michelangelo’s takeaway menu spells Caesar Salad as ‘Ceaser Salad’. This is not encouraging coming from Classical Italians.

7:17pm: Further scrutiny of the menu reveals that the Chicken Dinners @ $15 come in the variations ‘Medici’, ‘Isaiah’ and ‘David’. There are also pizzas of the ‘Eden’ and ‘Adam’ variety. This vague thematic thread would probably be tolerable if it were not for the fact that elsewhere in the menu we have the ‘Hot Mamma’, the ‘Barnyard’, the ‘Tandoori’, the ‘Mexican’ and the ‘Aussie’.

7:17:30pm: I feel slightly nervous.

7:17:32pm: And then slightly nauseous.

7:21pm: The Michalangelo pizza delivery guy arrives. I know this is definitely not Michelangelo because he is not wearing a smock nor spattered with paint. Nevertheless, he is speedy and has arrived well within the time promised. He doesn’t laugh at my ‘I’m a starving artist’ joke.

7:22pm: I photograph the pizza for The Cow.

7:23pm: I scoff a few slices of the Chilli Prawns pizza.

7:40pm: You know, I really wanted Michelangelo to prove me wrong. No, really. I wanted to be able to say to you “Well, Michelangelo promised the Pieta of pizzas, and, even though I was skeptical, dammit I have to take my beret off to him. I have to eat humble pizza. I have to give credit where it’s due”. I wanted to be able to say “When you’re next in Sydney, y’know, there’s a little place I must take you to, it’s not fancy but crikey, can they sculpt you up a pizza. Not just any pizza mind you, but a work of art!”

Sadly, I cannot say any of these things. The Michelangelo Chilli Prawns pizza is guilty of the most appalling crime any foodstuff, let alone work of art, can commit. It is dull. There is nothing remotely challenging or even interesting about it. If you want to talk art, this is the Ken Done of pizzas.

9:09pm: I fail to think of a witty quip for the end of this post, having been drained of all inspiration by the vacuum of creativity inflicted on me by Michelangelo and his cronies, and retire to my garret to put another layer of paint on the dead chickens. No-one understands me.



This flyer from my letterbox today.

Oh dear. Where does one start? The Ye Olde English font? (Oh, you know, it’s way back whenever, when writing was, like, all flowery an’ that…) The most unappealing image of a pizza you could possibly make (the onion still looks raw for crying out loud)? The fact that one of the most moving images in the history of human creation, the act of God and Adam poised reaching out to one another but not ever touching, is being used to sell pizza? (Maybe the idea is that God and Adam have just freshly tossed the salami and onions from on high?)

Or should we focus upon that little phrase, squeezed in almost as an afterthought: the taste of art?

Could it be that we are meant to infer that Michelangelo’s Café will create for you the Sistine Chapel Ceiling of pizzas? God help us all.

Perhaps I’m being unfair? Righty-ho, I will rise to the challenge and take it upon myself to personally assess the alleged magnificence of Michelangelo’s pizzas, with a dutiful and comprehensive report back here on The Cow in due course. That should keep everyone glued to my blog for a few days.

In the meantime, let us ponder the taste of art. I’m offering these suggestions for business opportunities for aspiring restaurateurs-cum-artists, along with tips for promotional material:

★Picasso’s (Tapas – flyer features ‘Guernica’ and a dish of paella)
★Pollock’s (Diner – flyer with ‘Blue Poles’ & plate of scrambled eggs)
★Degas’ (Creperie – flyer: ballet dancers & Crepes Suzette)
★Duchamp’s (Noodles – flyer: pic of a urinal & plate of sardines)
★Mondrian’s (Waffle House. No brainer…)
★Hirst’s (Steakhouse – cowhide flyer w. pic of jar of formaldehyde)
★Monet’s (Bagels – ‘Poppies’ + poppyseed bagel)
★Calder’s (Mobile Meal Delivery Service)
★Warhol’s Soup Kitchen…

Oh I tire. Over to you, dear readers…

It’s kinda de rigeur to make fun of the Japanese predilection for making up brand names that are odd or amusing to English eyes, but sometimes it can be poetically cute. My friend Annie bought me back this packet of gum from Tokyo.

If you have a hankering to try Watering Kiss Mint you can buy it from Giant Robot Store in four flavours: Lemon, Peach, Apple and ‘Clear’ (interesting).

Giant Robot Store – Link.

Well, I were curious weren’t I? How did salt water taffy get its name? Seems no-one knows. The National Candy Association puts forward this probably apocryphal story:

Many manufacturers claim a shopkeeper by the name of David Bradley was one of the first sellers of the candy. In 1883, a huge storm hit Atlantic City and flooded the boardwalk. Bradley’s store was flooded and the ocean water soaked his entire stock of taffy. In one account, a young girl asked if the store still had taffy for sale. Bradley jokingly told the girl to grab some ‘salt water taffy’. This is believed to be the first reference to salt water taffy.

Read more about it!

I looked in the tin 1 minute before and 1 minute after, but there was no observable change in the curry. Since then, a mild aura of suspicion has intruded upon my reality, as I wonder exactly what it is that happened at 12:45 on that otherwise unremarkable day of April 23, 2003.

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