Turkish chef Nusret Gokce had achieved overnight stardom after a meme of him sprinkling salt on meat went viral. The chef has used his fame to create a chain of restaurants called 'Nusr-Et' at exotic locations across the world. The latest addition to this chain is a new eatery inaugurated in London on 23rd September 2021. Twitter users were left shocked to see the high prices of food items at the restaurant, with a single steak costing 630 pounds. When food critic Jay Rayner was asked to try the food at Salt Bae's restaurant, he chose to do something different instead. Take a look at his tweet:
This week's column. I was never going to splash the @ObserverUK's money on one of Salt Bae's crass £800+ gold leafed steaks. Instead I got an £8.50 take away kebab, a really good one from Kebab Kid, and ate that outside while musing on the stupidity inside https://t.co/YYWDOTrq2b— Jay Rayner (@jayrayner1) October 17, 2021
(Also Read: Turkish Chef 'Salt Bae' Opens New Restaurant, Prices Shock Twitter)
The food critic Jay Rayner bought some takeaway kebabs and sat outside the Nusr-Et restaurant on a makeshift table to eat them. He shared his column and revealed the reason he chose to skip eating at Salt Bae's restaurant. "I was never going to splash the @ObserverUK's money on one of Salt Bae's crass £800+ gold-leafed steaks. Instead, I got an £8.50 take away kebab, a really good one from Kebab Kid, and ate that outside while musing on the stupidity inside," he wrote in his tweet.
He further elaborated in the article that gold-plated food literally "tastes of nothing". "Weird as it may sound, I like my food to taste of something. Which is why I decide to get mine from Kebab Kid," he said in the column. He went on to review the kebabs from the takeaway joint and what all he tried and recommended eating from there.
Jay Rayner's post has garnered over 28.4k likes and thousands of retweets since the time it was shared. Users could resonate with the decision and how dishes at Salt Bae's restaurant were extremely hyped-up and overpriced. A few argued otherwise, as they felt Salt Bae's stardom was not without reason.
Take a look at the reactions:
Absolutely brilliant article saying a great deal about true value and our ridiculous social media led society.— Omid Djalili (@omid9) October 17, 2021
I can't hate Salt Bae. He's capitalised on social media and meme culture, and made himself a very wealthy man by finessing people with more money than sense. More power to him.— Geronimo didn't kill himself (@KebabsAndTing) October 17, 2021
Why go for a night out at a Jamiroquai concert at Wembley for £150 when you can go to watch the Jay Rayner Quartet in a basement for £20 at Cafe Zedel, they both play music. Oh, because they're two completely different experiences of course.— Adam (@AdamJWebb_) October 17, 2021
A kebab £8.50..
OW MUCH!!!
The world's gone mad.— SIR FRED BOYCOTT (@SirFredBoycott) October 17, 2021
What did you think of the food critic's decision? Tell us in the comments below.
About Aditi AhujaAditi loves talking to and meeting like-minded foodies (especially the kind who like veg momos). Plus points if you get her bad jokes and sitcom references, or if you recommend a new place to eat at.