This document discusses the differences between decoration and garnish in food. It defines decoration as something non-edible that enhances the visual appeal of food, while a garnish is an edible element placed on or near food or drinks. Garnishing is considered an art that complements foods through color, flavor, and nutrition. Proper garnishing aims to appeal visually, enhance flavor, fill plates, and identify dishes. A variety of tools can be used to create different garnishing effects. Guidelines recommend garnishes be edible, fresh, simple, suiting the food, and harmonizing in color. Common foods to garnish include meats, salads, desserts, breads, and vegetables.
3. According to Theresa Tumber, Independent
Advanced Director with the Pampered Chef
A decoration is something to make food look
better but is not edible.
A garnish is an edible object that you put on or
near food or drinks. Such as parsley or lemon
and so on.
According from the website Quora.com
Decorations belong on the table and the dining
room and not on your food. Some would argue
they are used by the baking and pastry chefs for
cakes and such but for true culinary art this term is
not acceptable.
4. A garnish has it's place in all forms
of culinary art and goes on a dish
at the end of preparation which the
chef has factored in to its overall
flavor, presentation and intention.
It should be edible and eat worthy
(prepared or handled with the
same care as if it were going to be
eaten), and most likely is intended
to be eaten.
5. Garnishing is the
sumptuous art of
shaping and arranging
food, capitalizing on its
inherent decorative
qualities.
Sumptuous means
impressive and
expensive - looking.
6. From the
French word
“garnir” to
decorate or
furnish
To use food as an
attractive
7. Garnishes are
meant to
compliment, to give,
color, flavor, and
nutriment to foods.
Food that are vary
color do not need
garnishes. Over
decorated food
should be avoided .
9. Visual Appeal
You experience food with your eyes before
tasting it, and the garnish adds a spot of
color for your eyes to feast on before the
taste touches your tongue or the smell
reaches your nose.
Flavor Enhancement
Garnishes enhance the flavor of some
dishes. Lemon wedges served with
seafood not only add a yellow color to the
plate, but the diner can use the juice from
the lemon to flavor the food.
10. Plate Filler
Some plates look empty, even
after the food has been
arranged. Garnishes can fill in
the empty spaces on a plate,
giving the illusion of an
abundant dish.
Dish Identification
Some dishes are not readily
identifiable just by looking at
the food.
12. Small, sharp paring knife.
One or two cutters.
A couple of little gadgets a
stripper that removes a lemon
or orange peel in one thin
spiral, or the fluting knife that
prettily the peel of vegetables.
A big bow of ice water to keep
the carved fruits or vegetables
fresh and crisp.
22. Tourne Knife
Form oblong vegetables with 7 sides and
blunt ends, football shaped. Designed to
curve upward on both the cutting edge
and the top edge.
23. Rules for Garnishes or
Garnishing
1. The garnish should be edible.
2. It should be natural, fresh-looking
and clean.
3. It should be simple, not elaborate or
overdone. Few small groups of garnishes are
more attractive than a continuous
decorative scheme.
24. 4. It should be suitable in character ,
size, and flavor to the food adorned.
5. It should be neatly arranged in a
fashion as to enhance the food.
6. It should not be expensive but must
be interesting.
7. Its color should harmonize with the
foods being garnished. Certain colors
in food are not appetizing. For
example, blue color is not used except
26. Blue food is a rare occurrence
in nature. There are no leafy
blue vegetables (blue lettuce?),
no blue meats (blueburger,
well-done please), and aside
from blueberries and a few
blue-purple potatoes from
remote spots on the globe,
blue just doesn't exist in any
significant quantity as a
natural food color.
28. 8. It should generally not be used to
disguise the deficiencies of the foods
or the poor quality of the food.
9. Highly seasoned garnishes are not in
good taste.
10. The serving dish should also be
considered part of the garnish.
11.The entire setting should be viewed
as a whole in selecting the type of
garnish.
29. WHAT TO GARNISH
Garnishes are better applied to featured
and/or special dishes; the others are
left plain. Too many decorated dishes at
a meal is not desirable. Garnishes are
usually applied to roasted meats,
molded salads, desserts, cakes, pies,
pastries, fancy bread, and sandwiches.
Vegetables, soups, and beverages may
also be garnished.
30. SUGGESTIONS FOR
GARNISH
• Bell pepper slivers, rings
• Cabbage, lettuce shreds, heads
• Carrots- julienne, curls, lattices,
shreds, flowers, cubes
• etc.
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53. THANK YOU
Rosette Ramilo
Merlindo Cañete
Judy Ann Lobo
Krislyn Rio
Cristobal Jasmine
Mrs. Catherine Gabia
Instructress
BSED-III
for Listening