Top 7 Quotes & Sayings by Pete Wells

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American columnist Pete Wells.
Last updated on December 23, 2024.
Pete Wells

Pete Wells is the restaurant critic for The New York Times. He has held the position since November 2011, succeeding Sam Sifton.

Everybody used to say going to restaurants... is like theater, there's stage sets, there's drama, there's play acting and you watch the show. And now, boy, everything's just become so serious. And you sit at the counter and the chef comes out and tells you what he did to the Brussels sprouts leaves and no, there's not a lot of dancing.
I don't think I've ever met nachos that I didn't like before. It's almost inconceivable that nachos can be bad. It makes no sense.
My feeling is, if I can describe the way a steak looks on the plate, when it's just kind of juices are coming out, and it's almost alive, and just wants to be eaten, I hope that people will feel it, more than they will feel me describing the tangy minerality of the dry-aged beef between my teeth.
I just think that we show an awful lot of deference to chefs in our culture and maybe not enough deference to customers. — © Pete Wells
I just think that we show an awful lot of deference to chefs in our culture and maybe not enough deference to customers.
If you say, 'Oh, there was a little bit of acidity from the lime juice on the left side of my tongue, and then this beautiful, smooth pureed potato with some crunchy shallots on top, and it all came together,' you never will get out of that sentence alive.
There is often with restaurant reviews in particular, I think, this kind of impulse to be deferential and bow down to the greatness of the restaurant and the greatness of the chef, and then with great regret to say, "And yet, all is not as it should be in the kingdom," and I didn't want to do any of that.
I find that the dead-end route is to try to describe what's going on in your mouth.
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