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JULY 24, 2000 VOL. 156 NO. 3
If there
were such a thing as an airline chef's cookbook, it would read something
like this: take a succulent filet mignon, sear to perfection, then shove
into the refrigerator. Chill to 4C, reheat and garnish with wilted snow
peas. As a side, toss an iceberg lettuce salad with a chlorine vinaigrette.
Serve with winefamous vintner, dubious vintagein tiny plastic
cups. Now
for the good news: the choice between light or dark mystery meat in sauce
may soon go the way of the propeller plane. Many airlines are working
to make their food more palatable. Japan Airlines has installed rice cookers,
Cathay Pacific espresso machines and Air New Zealand a flexible meal schedule.
Qantas Airlines recently commissioned award-winning Sydney restaurateur
Neil Perry to re-create his brand of fine dining at 12,000 m. He started
by dropping one of the oldest tenets of airline catering: heating the
whole meal all at once. In first and business classes, meals are divided
into components, heated separately and assembled in the galley.
On Ansett
flights, the galley is manned by an experienced chef, hat and all, who
personally introduces the menu selection to all business-class passengers
(Ansett no longer offers first class) and then prepares each meal to order.
Salads are tossed chairside, and a dessert trolley allows passengers to
select from a range of delicacies, such as baked pink-lady apples in filo
or a macadamia nut tart. ASIANOW Travel Home Quick Scroll: More stories from TIME, Asiaweek and CNN
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