Boston Herald

Fill your menu with satisfying new food shows

- By JENN HARRIS

Here are three new food shows to binge-watch:

“Somebody Feed Phil” on Netflix

Man who is most probably a chef travels to a faraway destinatio­n. Man arrives hungry. Man meets a local who takes him to eat something wonderful. Cue fun music. Cue food porn. This is the formula for most food travel shows. The same goes for “Somebody Feed Phil” on Netflix — only, not exactly. For one, the host isn’t a chef, nor has he ever been one.

Phil Rosenthal is best known for creating the show “Everybody Loves Raymond,” though he does have some cred in the food world. He was the host of the PBS food show “I’ll Have What Phil’s Having.” He is an investor in multiple Los Angeles restaurant­s, including Pizzeria Mozza. And his Instagram feed scrolls like a respected food blogger’s. This guy eats really, really well.

When he arrives in Israel, New Orleans or Saigon in “Somebody Feed Phil,” he does so with the wonder and excitement typically associated with a kid on Christmas morning. In Israel, he visits a shakshouka specialist. In New Orleans, he devours a basket of fried chicken at Willie Mae’s. There’s no attitude, no preconceiv­ed notions. And you’re not left feeling like you’re trying to catch up with an elitist host.

There is plenty of good food, insightful guests and as an added bonus, Rosenthal’s parents. He makes Skype calls to them from his different destinatio­ns — bad jokes, miscommuni­cation and hilarity ensue. This is a food show for foodies, travel junkies and people just looking to be entertaine­d.

All episodes of “Somebody Feed Phil” are now streaming on Netflix.

“Ugly Delicious” on Netflix

In the past decade, chef David Chang has become a household name, as the chef behind the Momofuku restaurant­s, the tooshort-lived food magazine Lucky Peach and as NBC’s official guide to Korean food at the recent Winter Olympics. He’s also the star of Netflix’s latest food series, “Ugly Delicious.” Because it’s a Netflix show, it’s beautifull­y shot and scored. And there’s a budget that allows Chang and his food writer cohost Peter Meehan (with whom he started Lucky Peach) to travel around the world in search of tacos.

The show breaks the mold of host-goes-hereand-eats-this, and instead, focuses on a single food (tacos, pizza, fried chicken), where it came from and who is making it. Chang is an enthusiast­ic host and has a propensity for finding Asian food parallels to just about everything. The tacos camarones at Marisco Jalisco? “It’s like har gow,” he says.

What’s impressive is the sheer amount of informatio­n and destinatio­ns packed into every segment. And how insanely jealous you’ll become by the time the closing credits roll. In the “tacos” episode, Chang travels to Copenhagen to eat tacos with former Noma pastry chef Rosio Sanchez. Meehan travels around Mexico eating more tacos. It’s enough to make you want to charge the screen. The show is fun and informativ­e in the way it zigzags between countries and cultures.

All episodes of “Ugly Delicious” are now streaming on Netflix.

“The Burger Show” on First We Feast

You could argue that chef Alvin Cailan is the obvious choice to host a web show about burgers. He’s best known as the chef who started Eggslut, the egg sandwich phenomenon at Grand Central Market that now has multiple locations in Los Angeles and one in Las Vegas. He fashioned burgers for a pop-up concept in Chinatown called Easy’s. And he just finished a residency at the Chefs Club Counter in New York City, where he made, you guessed it, burgers.

Rather than adhering to a strict formula, the show takes inspiratio­n from just about every Travel Channel and Food Network show, and a couple of internet memes as well. Cailan plays host and chef at times, re-creating Shake Shack and In-N-Out burgers before he discusses the merits of each; breaking down gourmet burgers with Adam Richman; and traveling to Jersey City to eat White Mana burgers with “Top Chef” host Padma Lakshmi.

Like we said, it’s all over the place. But at runtimes around 10 minutes, it’s more of a fun snack than a full show. And yes, you’ll be in the mood for a burger afterward.

View episodes of “The Burger Show” at firstwefea­st.com or on Youtube. com.

 ??  ?? A WORLD OF FLAVORS: Phil Rosenthal travels the world eating local cuisine on Netflix's 'Somebody Feed Phil.'
A WORLD OF FLAVORS: Phil Rosenthal travels the world eating local cuisine on Netflix's 'Somebody Feed Phil.'

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