It is easy to get lost in the absolute mishmash of content that is the Netflix Originals library. The streaming platform now churns out food-centric television, too, much of which garners praise - Nailed It! cheers us up with silly creations and host Nicole Byer's boisterous personality, while Ugly Delicious indulges our curiosity with David Chang's unpretentious exploration of different cuisines. Just the pilot of Chef's Table makes us want to hop on a plane to Modena, Italy.
Netflix's latest offering in this realm, however, falls incredibly short. The platform touts Cooking on High as the first-ever competitive cannabis cooking show, which seems odd considering how little this show cares about actual cannabis. Instead of learning much about the plant's properties or the culture surrounding its culinary use, viewers are force-fed roughly 15 minutes of mundane cooking and mindless commentary each episode.
But even the worst dishes are just the sum of their parts. Because this mid-June release is still getting so much buzz, here is a closer look at some of its questionable ingredients:
- 1 ripped-off premise
We can all agree that the Food Network struck gold with Chopped, one of the strongest cooking competitions on television. Weird ingredients paired with a ticking clock make for riveting television, as do the many doomed trips to the ice cream machine. Will Chef Bobby plate his pork sliders in time? How will Chef Lisa work turkey into her parfait? And so on.