February 11, 2009 7:15 PM
- Text
Upscale Comfort Food
CBS News Correspondent Richard Schlesinger takes a look at a new dining trend – upscale comfort food. Look for recipes at the end of this article.
There's always been something comforting about this kind of food: corndogs, burgers. Plain as a Midwestern accent, simple as a pair of jeans -- until now.
"Comfort food is absolutely moving upscale,'' says Danny Meyer, who made his name way up the scale with some of New York's best restaurants. Now he, like other restaurateurs, is discovering there's a big market for down market food.
Meyer owns a New York barbeque joint called Blue Smoke, where rich people eat the same food as anyone else -- except it's different.
Meyer asks, "Who ever wrote the rule that champagne isn't gonna be as delicious with ribs as beer would be?"
And who ever wrote that cheese fries can't be made with three different kinds of gourmet cheese.
"I'll bet you this cheese didn't come out of a can,'' observes Schlesinger.
Said Meyer: "Well I'll bet the stuff that came out of the can doesn't even qualify as cheese."
So how much of a market is there for this fancy, common food? Well, they're lining up for dolled up hamburgers and hotdogs at another snack bar run by Meyer in a nearby park. It's the only hamburger stand with a wine list.
Danny Meyer's hamburgers are almost as fancy as Chef Charlie Palmer's Corn Dogs.
"We put it on a stick, just like the corndogs in the fair, you know,'' said Palmer.
But it should be noted that the stick is about the only thing similar to a corn dog that Palmer does.
Chef Palmer makes his corn dogs without the dogs. He uses lobster meat, and a mousse, to make an "appare." When's the last time you made an "appare?"
"You're just going to fry them until they're golden brown,'' said Palmer.
They come out looking like corn dogs. But that's where the similarity ends.
Was there something wrong with regular corn dogs that made Palmer feel like he had to improve upon it?
"Well, yeah, they were made with hotdogs," he says.
But the lobster corn dogs are a hit.
"They ARE good," says one diner.
A new twist and a high price: $9 each. Compare that to the $3 an average real corn dog costs. It proves some comfort food … is only for the truly comfortable.
Next page: Lobster Corn Dog recipe
Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved. There's always been something comforting about this kind of food: corndogs, burgers. Plain as a Midwestern accent, simple as a pair of jeans -- until now.
"Comfort food is absolutely moving upscale,'' says Danny Meyer, who made his name way up the scale with some of New York's best restaurants. Now he, like other restaurateurs, is discovering there's a big market for down market food.
Meyer owns a New York barbeque joint called Blue Smoke, where rich people eat the same food as anyone else -- except it's different.
Meyer asks, "Who ever wrote the rule that champagne isn't gonna be as delicious with ribs as beer would be?"
And who ever wrote that cheese fries can't be made with three different kinds of gourmet cheese.
"I'll bet you this cheese didn't come out of a can,'' observes Schlesinger.
Said Meyer: "Well I'll bet the stuff that came out of the can doesn't even qualify as cheese."
So how much of a market is there for this fancy, common food? Well, they're lining up for dolled up hamburgers and hotdogs at another snack bar run by Meyer in a nearby park. It's the only hamburger stand with a wine list.
Danny Meyer's hamburgers are almost as fancy as Chef Charlie Palmer's Corn Dogs.
"We put it on a stick, just like the corndogs in the fair, you know,'' said Palmer.
But it should be noted that the stick is about the only thing similar to a corn dog that Palmer does.
Chef Palmer makes his corn dogs without the dogs. He uses lobster meat, and a mousse, to make an "appare." When's the last time you made an "appare?"
"You're just going to fry them until they're golden brown,'' said Palmer.
They come out looking like corn dogs. But that's where the similarity ends.
Was there something wrong with regular corn dogs that made Palmer feel like he had to improve upon it?
"Well, yeah, they were made with hotdogs," he says.
But the lobster corn dogs are a hit.
"They ARE good," says one diner.
A new twist and a high price: $9 each. Compare that to the $3 an average real corn dog costs. It proves some comfort food … is only for the truly comfortable.
Next page: Lobster Corn Dog recipe
- 1
- 2
- 3
- Next Page »
Add A Comment +
Popular Now in CBS Evening News
- "Super-agers": What it takes to live beyond 100
- 5/30: Stock market plummets, handling Syrian crisis
- U.S. Catholic nuns go about work after rebuke
- GOP critical of White House's Syria policy
- 5/29: World responds to Syria massacre, Romney to clinch GOP nomination
- Super-agers may hold the key to longer life
- 6-year-old tries out for National Spelling Bee
- European debt crisis sends Dow plummeting
- Toxic Japanese debris piles up on Alaska's shore
- Vatican scandal could further grow
- Ten years later, first responders haunted by 9/11
- Catholic nuns in America focus on God's work
- An early look at the general election
- Another mass execution uncovered in Syria
- 9/11 first responders: Just doing our jobs
- Despite massacre, U.S. won't arm Syria's rebels



