(05-01-2016, 04:21 PM)BadDad Wrote: Flopping frozen patties on a grill does not an artisan make. Im sorry it just doesnt work like that...
I agree. That is an unskilled worker. Artisans need to be "skilled", but artisan food is all over the place and to think cooks aren't artisans is off base. For example,
http://www.thekitchn.com/what-does-artis...you-174439
""Artisanal" is the Paris Hilton of food words – it went from obscurity to ubiquity in no time ... The first time I remember hearing it used frequently was in 2001, ... I liked the word because of its etymological roots in skilled craft – akin to "art" but with that special connotation of the practical arts, such as carpentry, iron-working, and making food. In recent years "artisanal" has become a synonym for small, smaller, smallest"
"Sadly the word "artisan" has been taken from its original meaning — a craftsman of skill, one who manufactures functional and decorated tangible goods – and now can be used to qualify something as "quality."
And this is true of cooks or shaving cream makers. The word has been perverted into something it was never intended to be. Artisanal was never meant to mean "quality" and marketing has about destroyed its original meaning.
So why does any of this matter, bringing this full circle to the beginning? I asked because I'm trying to figure out different soaps/creams and who makes what. I learned a GREAT deal from this thread.
An artist creates something new. It can be derived from another source, just as a Roman Artist painted a bowl of fruit and so did a modern Artist, they are still artists despite using the same props or inspiration.
An artisan is a skilled craftsman in a trade, using their hands, but does not create something new
A simple artisan does simple trade crafts
A mechanic is a skilled artisan in the mechanical arts.
Arts can be many things from culinary arts to fine arts.
Now relating this to this industry ....
GFT, T&H, DR Harris, etc, if they outsource their creams to Creighton, are not artisanal soap makers.
If Creighton uses a bunch of machines to produce cream, neither are they
However, the original creators of the scents of these creams are artists
MdC. I am not sure, From their own video, it looks half hand made and half machine made, some kind of hybrid. The day LPL outsources Le Pere Lucien production, then this artist will become a bookkeeper, just like those at GFT, etc.
And I know what artisan does NOT mean.
The word does NOT, necessarily, mean quality. Something can be made by hand and be garbage. If I made some furniture and tried to be a carpenter, rest assured, it would be garbage furniture although a simple artisan.
The word does NOT mean some guy in his basement slaving away stirring pots by hand to make soaps. Production can be massive. It depends upon how many "artisans" are working at it. If a company is making jewelry, and the gold charms are molded and punched out by a machine, that is NOT artisan. However, if the company produces many gold charms, made by hand, with 100 artisans, they are STILL artisans. In other words, production capacity is not related to the world Artisan.
I have no idea whose factory this is but it is using machines and the workers cannot be artisans
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1rsfZ_WGm4
OTH, this is Muhle, and this workers are artisans
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ATlXV37gsTc