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THURSDAY DECEMBER 18, 2008

Slide Consommé

I recently read listened to The Making of a Chef by Michael Ruhlman, a fascinating and, ummmm… delicious journey into the world of the Culinary Institute of America. Ruhlman documented his experiences as a student at the Institute, and he brought those experiences to life with a richness I’ve rarely found in non-fiction.

I loved the book, and I’ve been looking for a reason to blog about it ever since (other than the food-as-presentation connection, which Michael Moon already captured well).

And I think I finally found my inspiration.

Ruhlman writes about cooking as the pursuit of perfection. Indeed, many of his own lessons at the Institute boiled down (sorry!) to the idea that not only is perfection possible, but is quite simply expected of you. Chefs don’t settle. Chefs get it done right.

And one of the highest expressions of perfection in the student chef’s arsenal is a clear consommé. (For the un-cheffed among us, that’s a sort of soup or broth that is so clear you can “read the date on a dime at the bottom of a gallon”. And when you see all the stuff that goes into making it, you can really appreciate the clarity in the final product.)

So I happened to catch an interesting post about this in Michael Ruhlman’s blog: basic recipe and instructions for making a consommé. Reactions to his post prompted his old CIA instructor, Chef Michael Pardus, to go one step further and make a video about making consommé.

And THAT is where I found something worthy of the slide:ology audience.

Because not only did he make a video, but he also made a nice photo essay, beginning with this slide:

I LOVE this slide! And it’s not even really a slide. He didn’t use PowerPoint at all. He just wrote out his recipe in black magic marker on some cardboard or parchment, surrounded it with the ingredients themselves, then framed it nicely with a camera. Beautiful!

And you can tell an entire presentation this way, without ever opening your presentation software. In fact, to beat our metaphor to death, doing your presentation this way will help you cut out the fat and get to the meat of your story, resulting in a more satisfying, delicious experience for your diners (audience).

It’s simple:

  1. Create your slides in reality (using objects, food, crayons, markers, etc.)
  2. Photograph them

I’ve noticed that our blog commenters are some of the smartest presentation people in the business, so let’s all share our favorite examples of this below…

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Topic: Book Reviews, Design
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  • COMMENTS (5)

Miguel.M

December 18th, 2008
10:20 am

Wow… Amazing…
You’ve just discovered what? The… wheel!!???
You’ve just discovered how presentations were made 20 years ago…
There was life in the presentations world long before computers or even PowerPoint, you know?
All those concepts everyone is propagating nowadays are nothing but the daily rules of presentations professionals 20 years ago.
Direct, simple, clear, almost minimal, visually appealing messages, were the basic concepts for prezos visual aids.
Why? Simply because working by hand took too long, required drawing skilled people or photographers, hence too expensive. Communication and marketing pros were more visually skilled, they were used to rely on rouhg drawings, lay-outs, story-boards etc.
I think it’s time for us all to take a look at the “Audiovisual History”…

Doug Neff

December 18th, 2008
11:15 am

Care to share your favorite example, Miguel? It’s always refreshing to explore new (or even old) ways of telling stories. I find it keeps my thinking from getting stale.

Miguel.M

December 18th, 2008
11:47 am

Ok Doug…
Just like a (pre-historic) recipe…
- Background Consomé (LOL)
Take a colored foil sheet, crumple it, stretch it on an oven tray, submerge with water, put a cardboard with your text (in black) close to the tray, project a light on the tray in a chosen angle, create waves in the water by shaking it with your finger (or something else), while capturing the reflection in the cardboard to 35mm slide film.
You could get a lot of different but similar backgrounds and a sense of motion during the presentation since every slide had a slightly different one. It also worked great with video – mixed with Commodore Amiga Slides… Active Motion Backgrounds, Live, LOL

Jan Schultink

December 18th, 2008
11:55 am

Maybe this one:

- Overhead projector screen
- Trapezium light beam (projector not positioned perfectly)
- Transparency
- 3 bullet points written with a red marker
- Piece of paper to cover up the last 2

And you’ve come full circle, back to the 80s :-)

Antonio No

December 18th, 2008
3:49 pm

Nice slide for a Chef. I’m sure he got a lot more attention with it than it would have got with ‘digital food’ or just the recipe.

In my case, I like to put some related macro photos in my presentations because they are easy to make (check this link [1] in lifehacker about making a macro photo studio) and they normally look very good.

Another question to the basket: How to do people’s photos for presentation?

[1]: http://lifehacker.com/software/photography/build-a-10-macro-photo-studio-186538.php

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