The critical point: Tom Sellers vs Fay Maschler
When I
read Fay Maschler's 1 (out of 5) star review of restaurant Ours in
the Evening Standard last week, I asked myself a few questions. When
you say them out loud, actually how different are the words 'ours'
and 'arse'? Is it likely that a restaurant that features a 30 foot
catwalk as it's entrance ever going to be anything else other than a
magnet for reality TV stars, minor league footballers and low-rent
royals? And how the fuck can anyone justify charging 12 quid for one
scallop?
I might
have been a one man Question Time, but one thing I knew for absolute
certain was that Ours's consulting chef Tom Sellers of
Michelin-starred Restaurant Story wasn't going to be happy when he'd
finished reading the review. And I knew for sure that the one thing I
didn't need to see was a smugly passive aggressive 1000 word 'review
of the review' by Sellers. Call me a psychic mentalist mind reader
with mad telepathic skillz, but when you see phrases like 'weirdly
slithery', 'tasteless' and 'mouth-puckering saltiness' used about
food, you know the person responsible for cooking it won't be jumping
up and down with glee.
Nevertheless,
within hours of Maschler's 'Tricky sequel for Sellers' review came
Sellers's essay 'Faymous'. Unless Sellers was given a preview of the
review, it seems unfair to parse his writing style given that the
piece must have been bashed out in a matter of minutes. Whatever the issues with the
prose, Sellers's raw emotions come through loud and clear as he picks
over Maschler's review like food returned uneaten to a restaurant
kitchen.
He regrets
that a salmon dish, which he claims was tasted by the critic and
which the chef is obviously proud of, is not mentioned. He quibbles
over just exactly how a table was assigned to Maschler (she:' I have
been recognised. Suddenly there is a table ready'; he: 'the table
reserved for your pseudonym was always your table and the delay was
due to the staff re-laying it'). He complains that his CV is referred
to in the review, even though he has a version of ratatouille by
Thomas Keller (one of Sellers's famous mentors, along with Rene
Redzepi and, unmentioned by Maschler, Tom Aikens) on his menu, and at
a whopping £17 a portion.
On closer examination, there is little of substance in the piece, underlined by the fact that his
main bone of contention is that the critic has failed to
correctly identify some of the ingredients in an eschabeche of red
mullet. Maschler guesses beetroot and red cabbage, Sellers says
onion, fennel and purple carrot. Although I did wonder why Maschler
didn't check with the kitchen on the ingredients either on the day or
by phone later on, Sellers might be better off considering why the flavour of his food can't be detected by a
critic of more than 40 years standing and if he needs to do anything to make them more distinct, than pondering whether she had 'eaten out
too many times that week, or that day even, and become confused'.
By
concentrating on the apparent error, Sellers allows himself to brush
aside the actual criticism, that the ingredients, whatever they may
have been, were 'dissing what should be a delicate flavour' as
Maschler put it, and unbalancing the dish. And by letting a bad
review get under his skin, Sellers has also missed two crucial wider
points. He might have received plenty of support on Twitter for the
piece (just check out his feed at @tomsstory, he's re-tweeted most of
it) but 'Faymous' ultimately has brought a great deal more attention
to a bad review than it might otherwise have received and his
defensive tone has only served to lend weight to Maschler's carps.
The
greatest irony however is that Ours is the kind of restaurant that is
mostly immune to reviews. The sort of people likely to head to South
Kensington for an £8 kale salad or a £10 side order of asparagus
have probably never heard of Fay Maschler. Or Tom Sellers. Better
that the chef kept a dignified silence or at least appear to take the
review on board rather then dismissing it out of hand.
Although
Maschler's visits were both in the first week of trading, the
restaurant was charging full price and it would be unlikely that
Sellers would have refuted a positive review on the basis that they
had only be opened a few days. 'Give us time we are working extremely
hard to reach the level we desire' pleaded Sellers in response to a
tweet from a paying punter who agreed with Maschler's assessment. But
the only way new restaurants can buy time from reviewers and
customers alike is with free family and friends nights and reduced
price soft opening weeks. That's when mistakes can be legitimately
made and compensated for, otherwise chefs and restaurateurs have to
accept they are fair game as soon as they start charging full whack.
What is
most disturbing about Sellers's riposte is the implication that
critics are something the restaurant industry has to endure, like rat
infestations or immigration raids, that the award of just one star
was somehow invalid because Sellers chose not to accept it. If he's
unwilling to accept the judgement, based on two visits, of one of the
country's most experienced diners, it makes you wonder how seriously
he takes customer complaints. Sellers should be delighted to have
been given what is in effect free consultancy (Maschler has been know
to charge for the service through the now defunct Private View
company she set up in 2008), the pay off being that it was conducted
in the full glare of publicity of course.
Does
Sellers take no notice of reviews when he's deciding where to dine?
Does he never talk critically about meals he's eaten in other chef's
restaurants? The truth is that everyone who eats out on a regular
basis and cares about food is a critic, whether they are paid for it
or not, whether they have a column in a newspaper or just tweet.
Restaurant
critics (and critics of any stripe, be it opera, theatre or cinema
etc) are not parasites, living off the work of others, taking and not
giving anything back. They are part of an essential dialectical
relationship that improves the restaurant scene for everyone. You
only have to look at London compared to the rest of the UK to see how
important that relationship is. There are of course many other
factors at play, but I firmly believe that strong critical voices
have at the very least speeded up the evolution of the London scene,
and that their absence elsewhere in the country is sorely felt.
Although
Sellers accuses Maschler of being 'confused', infers that she's weak
on detail and lacks passion and quotes cartoon restaurant critic
Anton Ego saying that 'the work of critic is easy' (sic), he also
claims that his respect for Maschler 'goes beyond description' and
hopes to one day enjoy dinner with her. If he isn't being hugely
disingenuous and is simply suffering from a little cognitive
dissonance (he is, after all, 'just the guy that cooks the food' as it says on his website) , then a Sellers/Maschler summit might not be a bad thing.
Because there is a real risk that the growing lack of patience displayed by chefs in general with criticism received through sites like Tripadvisor is spilling over to reviews in general and that is a dangerously blinkered attitude to adopt. It's something recently recognised by James Lewis creative director at Gauthier Group who told a Caterer magazine summit that negative reviews provided 'incredible data' that operators should 'relish'.
Perhaps a meeting between Sellers and Maschler might begin to mend this apparently broken relationship. Maybe they can work out their differences over a dish of red mullet
served with beetroot and red cabbage. And onions, fennel and purple
carrot.
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