Mayor de Blasio eats Goodfellas Pizza with a knife and fork

de blasio pizza knife forkI work in the pizza “industry”,  I lived off of New York pizza for a week during the snowstorm of the century in Manhattan and I think this story has merit. Even though it’s published as a bit of a political joke.

The short version of “Forkgate” is that the Mayor of New York  Mr.de Blasio ate his  Goodfellas Pizza with a knife and fork. Eating pizza with a fork and knife is a pleasure for many reasons. No greasy fingers, no dropped toppings and even better is that if you actually can eat it with knife and fork then it is a heck of a deep dish pizza.

And “It’s the Italian way”.

Read the article yourself at NYDailyNews.com

Share

“Consider the Fork” – Did forks give us bad teeth?

consider the fork

The folks over at the TheAtlantic.com have a great interview with Bee Wilson about her new book “Consider the Fork: A History of How We Cook and Eat“.

They ask if somehow the introduction of eating utensils like proper flatware introduced problems rather than solutions to our teeth. A part of her response:

Until around 250 years ago in the West, archaeological evidence suggests that most human beings had an edge-to-edge bite, similar to apes. In other words, our teeth were aligned liked a guillotine, with the top layer clashing against the bottom layer. Then, quite suddenly, this alignment of the jaw changed: We developed an overbite, which is still normal today. The top layer of teeth fits over the bottom layer like a lid on a box.

What changed 250 years ago was the adoption of the knife and fork, which meant that we were cutting chewy food into small morsels before eating it. Previously, when eating something chewy such as meat, crusty bread or hard cheese, it would have been clamped between the jaws, then sliced with a knife or ripped with a hand — a style of eating Professor Brace has called “stuff-and-cut.

Read the full interview at the TheAtlantic.com or check out her book from Amazon.

Share

Bite Silverware – Awareness of starvation and obesity.

bite silverware

Mark A. Reigelman II has created this Bite silverware as part of a design competition. From what research I’ve done, it never went into public production. But it is a gorgeous design either way that has a strong message.

In the designer’s own words:
as a global culture, it is our duty to be concerned with worldwide epidemics such as starvation and obesity. each day millions of individuals lay in hunger while millions more
are wastefully overeating. this set of ‘bitten’ silverware highlights the daunting reality  of both worldly plagues
.’

Visit Mark’s portfolio here…

 

Share

Benefeat Tableware for people with nerve disorders

benefeatDesigners  I-Ting Chan & Ting-Yin Yeh have created a complete tableware setting for people with cerebral palsy or other nerve control disorders. A lot of work is done in this area that relies on technology and gadgets rather than good design (sadly I’ve noted this more than once) and this set has a lot of good design.
The Benefeat spoon can be adjusted to any angle and has an ergonomically shaped silicon handle. The rest of the setting considers the angle of the bowl or plate, non-slip pads, anti-spill designs and the intent to allow the user easier access to the food to feed themselves.
Benefeat is a 2013 red dot award: design concept winner and hopefully will be commercially produced.
Share