





"PRISON FOOD" Print
"PRISON FOOD", from a memorable scene in Goodfellas (1990), where the mobsters, despite being imprisoned, live in relative luxury and cook gourmet meals. The scene famously shows Paulie (played by Paul Sorvino) slicing garlic with a razor blade so thin it would "liquefy in the pan with just a little oil."
“PRISON FOOD” captures not just the act of cooking, but the absurd contrast between prison life and mob privilege—how even incarceration couldn't strip these characters of their rituals, pride, or attention to detail.
"PRISON FOOD", from a memorable scene in Goodfellas (1990), where the mobsters, despite being imprisoned, live in relative luxury and cook gourmet meals. The scene famously shows Paulie (played by Paul Sorvino) slicing garlic with a razor blade so thin it would "liquefy in the pan with just a little oil."
“PRISON FOOD” captures not just the act of cooking, but the absurd contrast between prison life and mob privilege—how even incarceration couldn't strip these characters of their rituals, pride, or attention to detail.
"PRISON FOOD", from a memorable scene in Goodfellas (1990), where the mobsters, despite being imprisoned, live in relative luxury and cook gourmet meals. The scene famously shows Paulie (played by Paul Sorvino) slicing garlic with a razor blade so thin it would "liquefy in the pan with just a little oil."
“PRISON FOOD” captures not just the act of cooking, but the absurd contrast between prison life and mob privilege—how even incarceration couldn't strip these characters of their rituals, pride, or attention to detail.