Chirashi

Taco salad

Pork chops

and a Duck!

Assorted ramblings, rants and raves about Music, Food, and Fast Cars
I first stumbled upon Au Pied de Cochon aka PDC after watching Anthony Bourdain's mind blowing visit to chef Martin Picard's temple to all things duck and pig. The restaurant is one of Montreal's most famous restaurants and is my all time favorite place to eat. Here's the a clip from the episode of No Reservations that visited PDC:
The PDC menu is a veritable dream come true for carnivores and members of the international hoof and snout mafia. My favorites include the foie gras poutine, the duck in a can, the eponymous Pied de Cochon, and of course the dish that send me to ecstasy every time - pig's head.
Here are some pictures from a recent visit.
A small salad of multi-colored tomatoes to start
That's 24 carat gold on the snout of the pig's head - yup, if you eat this you are so money that you'll actually shit gold the next day
To sum up, if you're ever in Montreal, the one thing you must do is eat at PDC. There used to be an old joke amongst tour guides 'once you've seen Florence you can die', I'd actually change that to once you've eaten at PDC, you can die.
Now lets delve a little deeper into the social aspects of the same:
Which in turn brings us to the context of forming a band:
And next we move on the development of the eco-system, which ofcourse starts first with the audience. While a big name, mainstream Western band is almost guranteed a sellout show in India given the complete lack of access to them in the past and hence the consequent pent up demand, its quite another thing for home grown bands to think about the possibility of an audience for their original music. The fact that this belief seems to be growing is a direct
reflection of an evolution of tastes in the broader consumer segment for something disruptively different from the norm and the elements of acquired taste which I initially mentioned - almost exactly the same aspects which you would look for to define emerging consumerism. A whole industry is slowly starting to develop around it which includes the record labels, the rock clubs which host live acts, the musical equipment manufacturers, the merchandising industry etc.
Again all this is still at a very nascent stage but I will insert a quote here from the article I cited initially to sum up what am attempting to describe in this rambling text:
"Tambe remembers attending an OML-organized "unconference" in November. "One British music producer speaking there said that the vibe and energy in Indian rock right now is very similar to Britain in the late 1960s, around the time the pub bands became international superstars," he says. "Something's about to happen. The indie music scene is going to explode. We're just turning the corner."
Happy reading!