Food Styling for Photographers

(Dana P.) #1

MAKING A SALAD FOR THE CAMERA


with a food stylist on a photo shoot that involves
produce, you are already aware of the careful shopping
that took place before the stylist arrived. As the stylist
unpacks the contents from grocery boxes and bags, you
are immediately aware that the beautiful, blemish-free
produce is treated like royalty: It’s pampered and care-
fully tended and nurtured.

For you to achieve success with your project, you’ll need
to adopt a stylist’s care with selection and treatment of
produce. Refer to Rule Seven in Chapter 1 for additional
information.

Handle everything gently, avoiding hard contact with
anything, especially the plastic or metal grid of a
shopping cart or basket. Avoid stuffi ng tender items
into plastic bags. And when you use plastic bags, place
only a small number of items in each bag. Tell grocery
checkers, before they start ringing up your selections,
that you are purchasing items for a photo shoot and
you would appreciate their care in handling the items.
You need to supervise the bagging process or, better
yet, do it yourself to make sure all items are safe. Use
separate boxes or paper bags for all greens, tender fruit
in one layer in boxes, etc. Once you select produce
from a store’s display, it is up to you to be its guardian
and protector.

Tips for Keeping Salad Greens Fresh


Salad greens will perk up, refresh, and stay fresh appearing
longer if they have a quick bath in cold tap water with
Fruit Fresh Produce Protector mixed into the water accord-
ing to directions on the packaging. Shortly before begin-
ning the salad build, place small bunches of greens into a
large bowl or a clean sink fi lled with cold tap water and
the produce protector. Th is process requires using small
batches of greens so they are not crowded or mashed into

TRICKS OF THE TRADE If your climate is too warm or too cold,
you will need to preplan to have insulated coolers available to protect
tender items such as greens during transport from market to studio.
They’ll wilt if too hot and freeze or bruise if too cold. Due to the
temperature sensitivity of salad greens and fragile produce, it helps
to keep the studio temperature a tad on the cool side the day of the
shoot. I would recommend a temperature in the mid to upper 60s.
If this isn’t possible or practical, you can rig a large, mesh-metal
strainer containing some dry ice pellets about 8 inches above the
hero salad as you build it. The cold from the ice fl ows downward.
Do not touch the dry ice with bare hands because dry ice will freeze
and burn skin on contact. Use tongs to maneuver the dry ice into
and out of the mesh strainer. Also, be sure to check the temperature
settings on the refrigerators in the studio to avoid freezing lettuce
and produce. I’ve experienced frozen produce a few times because I
forgot to check the setting on the refrigerators.
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