Before we get into all the grisly details of this particularly brutal episode of Top Chef, let's take a moment to step back and applaud the show's producers for so far displaying a real willingness to tread off the beaten path and dive headfirst into some of the more overlooked and less obvious aspects of New Orleans' rich and storied culture. I made a few jokes at the expense of the series when it started (there is, after all, a fleur de lis emblazoned on each of the chefs' uniforms), but devoting an entire episode to NOLA's Vietnamese population is certainly a welcome and unexpected detour from a show that could easily have taken all of its cues from Anne Rice novels. Even Treme, HBO and The Wire creator David Simon's New Orleans magnum opus, took until the third season to introduce Vietnamese immigrant characters, so color me doubly impressed that Top Chef went that route in just four episodes.
This week's challenge, like Vietnamese food itself, is deceptively simple. After being split into 3
teams (seemingly at random by Emeril, who just sort of lumps bodies together), each group is asked to make a Vietnamese meal for a Vietnamese crowd, with at least one dish highlighting shrimp. In lieu of a Quickfire Challenge, the chefs are instead taken on a crash course of the culture by Emeril and guest judge Eddie Huang to places like shrimp docks and Vietnamese bakeries. While Carlos confesses to never having eaten Vietnamese food before, a few of the other chefs are much more confident, including Sara's teammate, Travis.
I was already creeped out by Travis when he proudly declared his strict "Asian men only" dating policy back in week one, but he's comes off even worse this episode by announcing himself "Captain Vietnam" and repeatedly reminding everyone just how much of an expert he is on the subject because of his three previous trips to Asia. The whole thing smacks of quasi-colonialism, a quality no more evident than when he tries to school Eddie Huang in a talking head segment by saying, "Eddie's Taiwanese-Chinese. He only knows a little bit of what he knows. Sorry, Eddie, you're kind of a douchebag." Poor Sara.
Sara herself should have had an advantage in this challenge because of her background cooking Asian food during her time with Wolfgang Puck, but it was clear very early on in the hour that the
Green Team (also including Jeanine, Bene and Stephanie) would be self-destructing their way into the bottom, with each of Travis' "it tastes like home" comments gleefully thrown in the mix by the editors in order to score maximum hubris points.
Basically everything that can go wrong for Team Green does. The most egregious miscalculation comes from Travis, who insists that Bene and Jeanine make a dish with tomato sauce because he had tomato sauce in Vietnam a few times. What a weird thing to fixate on. There's also the matter of missing lemongrass. A quick shot makes it look as if it may have been Sara's fault why this key ingredient didn't make its way out of the grocery store and into the kitchen, but Travis only makes it worse when he spills the beans about its disappearance to Eddie Huang with a weird, kinda-icky "lost in translation" joke. Sara and her theater background extol the virtues of improvising, but Travis is on a warpath, and that means proving to Eddie that he's well aware of how important lemongrass is to Vietnamese cooking. He's been there three times, after all.
Sara is clearly annoyed, and it's hard to blame her. She attempts to take lead of her motley crew and even reads a page from the reality TV classics with that "I don't mean to be a bitch" line, but there are just one too many mistakes made by the entire team to salvage the challenge, despite almost uniformly disappointing results from the entire cast. On the bright side, Sara's oxtail rice