Post by TheBo on Aug 14, 2013 11:49:20 GMT -5
Rather than accidentally overhearing anything, it becomes plain that the Master saw Sherlock skulking about, opened the front window and asked Minyoung (M-Y) on a date on purpose for his rival to hear. After Sherlock sneaks away, the Master plays it off to M-Y as a joke. Later, however, it appears that he is considering her as a romantic possibility. This certainly is what his two minions believe, and unsurprisingly they turn out to have been the masked men spotted by Sherlock. They decide to help him with his romance, even though M-Y is clearly not his type. Later, when Sherlock tells the Master he saw two masked men, the latter does not believe him and mentions a “tomcat” he thought he heard that night, setting Sherlock’s teeth on edge (remember he’s allergic to cats).
To determine whether chef Mijin hates men in general or simply male chefs, Sherlock sends the dreamy Moojin to meet her in the park. She reacts “normally,” until she hears he wants to work in her kitchen. Then she tells him to shove off.
Arang investigates male chefs linked to Mijin’s past. He finds such a mystery man and discovers a secret room with a number lock in the guy’s restaurant. He records the chef entering the room and sends this to Moojin for Sherlock.
Sherlock decides Mijin desires a man she can trust under any circumstance. So, they send the two thugs (gussied up like racing toffs from Schenectady) to Darin’s bakery, where they pretend to be food bloggers who put foreign objects into the food and then demand money to cover it up. They nearly reduce the poor store clerk to tears, and Mijin angrily confronts them. When they threaten Mijin’s restaurant, Darin comes out and grandly mauls the shorter thug (I think he actually hurts the guy) so they run off “frightened.” Mijin is very impressed. Later, M-Y gets the brilliant idea to finesse Mijin into helping Darin with his new show and his new recipe.
However, Sherlock refuses to send one of the boys to help M-Y make the broth she promised Mijin she’d prepare. Since M-Y doesn’t actually know how to make a broth yet, she calls on the Master. Once Sherlock learns about this, he wants to watch both kitchens, but Moojin simply points out that the target and the client are in the same place (Darin’s kitchen) so why bother watching M-Y?
Mijin and Darin begin having a nice time. However, Darin remarks that they’re creating a recipe together, and Mijin gets upset and leaves. Sherlock assures Darin he didn’t do anything wrong. Moojin realizes the Master is in Mijin’s man-free kitchen, and Sherlock slams out of the truck to warn her. He startles M-Y as he comes into the restaurant, and she spills some broth. The Master leaps to pull her away from the stove, just as Sherlock walks into the kitchen and sees an apparent dance-floor dip taking place.
***
Moojin’s so funny. It’s just like him to test his pulse-rate by pushing into M-Y’s private space, and his observations about (a) when M-Y was clearly describing Sherlock to Mijin, (b) not needing to watch M-Y and the Master, and then later (c) noticing that Sherlock “could have just called M-Y” to tell her Mijin was coming--priceless. He’s acting as the voice of the viewer here, saying what we would all say if the writers just ignored these commonsense observations, like they usually do. It improves the show immensely. And I loved when Sherlock had to remind him to smile at a woman he’s trying to seduce (Mijin in the park). Hilarious.
To determine whether chef Mijin hates men in general or simply male chefs, Sherlock sends the dreamy Moojin to meet her in the park. She reacts “normally,” until she hears he wants to work in her kitchen. Then she tells him to shove off.
Arang investigates male chefs linked to Mijin’s past. He finds such a mystery man and discovers a secret room with a number lock in the guy’s restaurant. He records the chef entering the room and sends this to Moojin for Sherlock.
Sherlock decides Mijin desires a man she can trust under any circumstance. So, they send the two thugs (gussied up like racing toffs from Schenectady) to Darin’s bakery, where they pretend to be food bloggers who put foreign objects into the food and then demand money to cover it up. They nearly reduce the poor store clerk to tears, and Mijin angrily confronts them. When they threaten Mijin’s restaurant, Darin comes out and grandly mauls the shorter thug (I think he actually hurts the guy) so they run off “frightened.” Mijin is very impressed. Later, M-Y gets the brilliant idea to finesse Mijin into helping Darin with his new show and his new recipe.
However, Sherlock refuses to send one of the boys to help M-Y make the broth she promised Mijin she’d prepare. Since M-Y doesn’t actually know how to make a broth yet, she calls on the Master. Once Sherlock learns about this, he wants to watch both kitchens, but Moojin simply points out that the target and the client are in the same place (Darin’s kitchen) so why bother watching M-Y?
Mijin and Darin begin having a nice time. However, Darin remarks that they’re creating a recipe together, and Mijin gets upset and leaves. Sherlock assures Darin he didn’t do anything wrong. Moojin realizes the Master is in Mijin’s man-free kitchen, and Sherlock slams out of the truck to warn her. He startles M-Y as he comes into the restaurant, and she spills some broth. The Master leaps to pull her away from the stove, just as Sherlock walks into the kitchen and sees an apparent dance-floor dip taking place.
***
Moojin’s so funny. It’s just like him to test his pulse-rate by pushing into M-Y’s private space, and his observations about (a) when M-Y was clearly describing Sherlock to Mijin, (b) not needing to watch M-Y and the Master, and then later (c) noticing that Sherlock “could have just called M-Y” to tell her Mijin was coming--priceless. He’s acting as the voice of the viewer here, saying what we would all say if the writers just ignored these commonsense observations, like they usually do. It improves the show immensely. And I loved when Sherlock had to remind him to smile at a woman he’s trying to seduce (Mijin in the park). Hilarious.