Airplane Food
Wednesday, January 18th, 2006I’m on a Jet Blue flight, coming home after two days of meetings with magazine food editors, previewing a new line of barbecue tools, fuels and accessories designed by barbecue guru Steven Raichlen for The Companion Group. Steven, star of the PBS show Barbecue University and the author of a number of barbecue books, including the best-selling Barbecue Bible, explained the genesis of the new cool tools to editors and demonstrated how they work. The meetings had been a resounding success.
Now I’m on my favorite airline with its door-to-door TV (contrary to expectations, I watchHGTV and the History Channel instead of the Food Network), blue Tera Chips and flight attendants who actually help you hoist your bags into the overhead compartment (mine aren’t heavy — I just need to grow a few more inches to reach the bin).
Unlike other airlines that purported to serve meals, Jet Blue never had that aspiration. The best thing that has happened to domestic coach class airline food is seeing it disappear. Did we really need disgustingly flabby, rubber chicken with artificial grill marks, swimming in salty tomato sauce, accompanied with mixed frozen veggies? [more…]



