Love may be blind, but what about taste? Can a tongue do its job without help from the eyes? To test the raw talent of three professional palates and one rookie, TONY enlisted four panelists—a chef, a food blogger, a restaurant critic and an average eater—in a blindfolded battle royal to see who could identify the most ingredients in a given dish. The quartet spent a fall morning at the French Culinary Institute, sampling a menu from chef and vice president of culinary arts Nils Norén—a spice-heavy, three-course tasting gauntlet—on the clock. Giving them no more than eight minutes to taste and five minutes to take notes per course, we tested their gustatory mettle.
THE DISHES
Entrée: Braised short ribs with an apple-celery root puree and dill-pickled cucumbers
Eight ingredients: short ribs, star anise, apple, celery root, ginger, cucumber, vinegar, dill
“This course has distinct flavors that will be easy to pick up on,” remarked Norén, “but the dill is a little more subtle. It’ll be intriguing to see if people can identify the apple in the puree.”
Dessert: Apple sorbet atop white-chocolate-and-fennel cream
Four ingredients: apple sorbet, white chocolate, cream, fennel
“People don’t usually associate fennel with dessert,” Norén mused, “so this ingredient might be difficult to pick out.”
Average eater: Alita Edgar, Jane-of-all-trades
Curried Carrot Soup
Alita found the soup “velvety, fresh and unexpected,” but she mistook carrots for squash and coconut milk for cream. 2/6
Braised short ribs
Our amateur misidentified her “spongy and juicy meat” as pork, called the cucumber potato and was clueless concerning the puree. 0/8
Apple sorbet
Though Alita’s not “usually a dessert fan,” this was her favorite dish: “kiwi sorbet” atop “dulce de leche or hazelnut cream.” 0/4
Curried Carrot Soup
The critic nailed the orange juice and smoked salmon, but he called this “tomato soup” “silky,” and packed with chives and cream. 2/6
Braised short ribs
“The roasted lamb was very tender”: Jay improperly guessed the entrée and “carrot” puree, but picked up on the cucumber, dill, vinegar and ginger. 4/8
Apple sorbet
Jay missed the cream and fennel, but he still got the apple and chocolate—one more flavor than anyone else. 2/4
Curried Carrot Soup
The chef nearly named every component of this soup despite the “hard-to-tell main ingredient”: She assumed squash or pumpkin instead of carrot. 4/6
Braised short ribs
Anne thought the puree was potato, but she still nailed most components of this “Asian-inspired” meal, even identifying the subtle star anise. 5/8
Apple sorbet
“The creamy stuff under the apple sorbet was delicious,” Chef Burrell said, certain that it included brandy, caramel and condensed milk. 1/4
Curried Carrot Soup
Gawker’s food scribe rocked the carrots, orange juice and cilantro, liking the soup’s “light, citrus flavor,” though he called the salmon “raw tuna.” 3/6
Braised short ribs
The blogger pinpointed the ginger, cucumber and vinegar, before faltering on the puree: taro root or parsnip, he guessed, with “unicorn magic dust.” 3/8
Apple sorbet
“Even without a blindfold I’d be totally lost,” Joshua confessed, taking a stab at a “star-fruit granita” paired with “lime cream.” 0/4