Very interesting, Christina. Thanks for being so specific.
I actually considered using no veggies, then decided to include all of them in the photo plus two kinds of mushrooms and decided to eliminate the mushrooms. I wonder if I wouldn't prefer a photo of just the meat by itself.
All of the food is very crisp (if you're using that term to mean "fresh") except the cilantro. It's odd that it wilted just before I released the shutter. Ten minutes earlier it had been lively enough that much of it "stood up" enough to be back lit. The room was almost as cold as a refrigerator, so the problem probably had to do with buying it the previous day.
As for the veggies being perfect, I plead guilty to not having that requirement. Just the opposite, I like photographing things as they usually are, not as they can be ever so rarely. There are so few perfect vegetables that I prefer photographing them as we generally see them. That also explains why I didn't remove the threads of material from the bones and why I doubt that I would ever have in interest in making the style of prevalent portraiture that renders the skin of women fictitiously smooth. It's just my approach to photography.
Glad you saw the seal! I'm not sure whether it looks more like a seal, sea lion or a walrus.
It's my joke that the primary subject is meat, which also explains why the likeness of the animal is leaning against the meat.