insideKENT Magazine Issue 50 - May 2016 | Page 87

Graham says: Use odd numbers There’s one basic rule… There is an art form to making food look natural. It needs to look as though it’s fallen where it’s fallen on the plate and still look good. Some people have an inbuilt talent for that kind of food art, and others find it difficult. The idea is to try and make it look as natural as possible, to invoke an idea of where the food has come from, to give it a story, so forget symmetry. Stop trying to make everything match up. Use odd numbers wherever possible. There are no tricks to plating up a delicious looking plate of food, but there is one basic rule that I stick to in my kitchen, and it’s how I always approach a dish: if you cannot eat it and it doesn’t actually contribute anything to the actual eating of the dish, then it shouldn’t be on the plate. Treat every dish differently Every dish will have its own flavours and accompanying garnishes that match it just right, and you can’t just plate everything in the same way as it just won’t work. Everyone should be dictated to by the seasons regarding the food they cook, assuming they want it to be fresh and seasonal. In the autumn the colours will be more woody and brown, so that needs to be enhanced with brighter pops of colour. Give it a bit more thought rather than just throwing on a sprig of herb. And don’t just throw a load of mixed cresses on the dish, or a bunch of micro herbs just because it’s the fashion. Do they enhance the flavour and really make it sparkle? Some will and some won’t, and it’s amazing what difference a little thought can make. the dish, so if you’ve got something that doesn’t look right try moving things about and you might be surprised. Make it easy to eat It’s all very well stacking ingredients up on a plate into a big tower, but how can people eat that? They have to take it apart, and as for the waiting staff, watching them try to move about with a big tower of food is awkward to say the least. People want to be able to eat their food without disassembling it first, so make it easy on them and try not to make stacks if you can help it. Plus if you can see what’s on the plate it’s easier for the chef to balance colour and texture, and make it look incredible rather than just quite good. It’s the small things Sometimes moving one element of a dish a tiny fraction on a plate can change the entire look of 87 Graham’s book, Sex, Drugs and Sausage Rolls is available now from all good bookshops priced £35.