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I don't have enough meat scraps and carcasses coming through to make proper demi-glace or stock in the quantity I use so I prefer a dehydrated powder used in restaurant service for home use. My scraps usually end up in a single soup recipe.
And yeah I love making French stews and all that, and I make components of French meals, but I'm talking like a full contemporary French menu from appetizer to dessert. To me that's a very simple menu, some basic ingredients of exceptional quality, each prepared in a way that makes them taste as good as they can using techniques it takes a lot of experience to get good at, with some experimental or playful element that isn't too pretentious, then plated and presented in a creative way. That type of meal I will gladly pay for because it's almost the fact someone else has imagined it and made it real that makes it worth it, like I wanna see what kind of tricks they're doing that I wouldn't have thought to do. Not only that but everything has to come together perfectly for it to work, and even if I know I can technically do it all, can I do it all at once by myself as a home cook? That's why I respect the restaurant process for this style of food.