A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament, a worldwide pheno
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n company that wanted hardbound pocket folders to hold documents , perhaps press releases . The production company was talking in terms of 650 folders , an orde r that did not faze Halpert . `` I can do this , '' he says . `` I 'm ready to w ork . I make things fast . I have good hands . '' Still , he gives the clear imp ression that he often would rather be back in Kiryas Joel , where there is no te levision , no radio , no newspaper except the one published in the community , n othing but the religion that has shaped him since birth . `` Now , '' he says , looking around his office with an uneasy smile , `` Now I want to go out from th is . '' PROVIDENCE , R.I. . You 're within earshot of the biggest bell ever cast at Pau l Revere 's workshop , not far from an Ivy League university , and in a seaport where the streets practically teem with history . Back in Colonial days , the ci ty hosted a tea party of sorts , destroying a shipment of leaves as a protest ag ainst the stiff tax imposed by the British government . It might sound like Bost on , but this is Providence , the biggest city in little Rhode Island . Surround ing the gleaming marble dome of the Rhode Island Statehouse , Providence packs p lenty of variety . Here you 'll find one of New England 's best zoos , a Little Italy atop Federal Hill , some picture-perfect parks , and what they say is the first shopping mall in the country the Arcade , built in 1828 . But the true ple asures of Providence lie on the city 's East Side , on the hillside settled more than 350 years ago by founder Roger Williams and his followers . Back in 1635 , Williams was banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for his dangerous ideas which included the radical concept that Indians had a right to the land on whic h they had lived for millennia . Williams left one jump ahead of a group of sold iers sent to arrest him , and eventually he made his way up the Providence River to a spring , where he established a community based on religious tolerance . H ere on the patch of Providence now known as College Hill , today 's visitor will find little evidence of Williams ' original community it was nearly destroyed i n 1676 during the Indian uprising called King Philip 's War . Now College Hill i s crowned by Brown University , and the surrounding streets are a treasury of ea rly American architecture . In addition to hundreds of historic homes , there 's the Cambridge-style stretch of Thayer Street , with its ethnic restaurants , bo okstores open late into the night , vintage clothing shops and a host of places to buy CDs , tapes or records . And there are the artsy , gallery-dotted environ s of the Rhode Island School of Design and the peaceful oasis of the Providence Athenaeum , one of the country 's oldest public libraries with a quintessential reading room that has yet to be discovered by a Hollywood location scout . Colle ge Hill is a walker 's domain , a part of Providence that seems more town than c ity . It 's built on a human scale , with few buildings topping off at more than four stories . Trees line the streets , and sidewalk gardens send flowery scent s into the air . Here and there , Colonial-era clapboard houses frame a distant vista of the Statehouse dome , the downtown high-rises , or the steeple of some stately church . Urban hikers on College Hill are rewarded with one discovery af ter another as the picture of Providence unreels along the city 's sidewalks . S tart on Benefit Street , along the so-called `` Mile of History , '' setting out from the First Baptist Church on North Main Street at the foot of College Hill . Head north on what was once an old Indian trail , a pathway along which the Pe quots or the Wampanoags may have portaged their canoes . Benefit Street is now o ne fine home after another , a long parade of well-restored houses from the 18th and 19th centuries . Along the city 's most famous historic thoroughfare are Fe deral-style houses and Greek Revival manses , Italianate-style homes and gambrel -roofed Colonials . It 's a riot of clapboards , pediments and pilasters in an E aster-egg assortment of pinks and pale yellows , mustards , grays , tans and bro wns one house is even painted the color of a pumpkin . Many homes are the legacy of Providence 's long association with the sea . Many residents were shipping m agnates , importing treasures from the Orient or engaged in the notorious triang le trade shuffling rum , molasses and slaves between Africa , the Caribbean and New England . The houses show how lucrative the trade was . Throughout Benefit S treet 's mile run , the architectural integrity borders on the hermetic . Almost nothing detracts from the sense of the past . Benefit Street 's historic homes were rescued from the depths of decline many of the old homes had become crumbli ng tenements beginning in the 1950s . The success of the neighborhood restoratio n effort kindled pride enough to encourage the Providence Preservation Society t o host , for the past 14 years , an annual Festival of Historic Houses . But Ben efit Street is not the city 's only historic highway . After walking to the corn er of Jenckes Street , where residents have barricaded their houses with stones against the danger of runaway trucks coasting down the San Francisco-style hills ide , you could turn uphill for a few blocks before turning right onto Prospect Street . The houses along this ledge-top patrician way represent the high point of Providence living . These stately houses , built by some of the city 's wealt hiest residents in the latter 19th century , boast landscapes decorated with per ennial gardens , clipped hedges , magnolia trees and rhododendrons . Along the w ay , take a one-block jaunt down Cushing Street and stop at Prospect Terrace . H ere are panoramic views of the city skyline and an oddly posed statue of founder Roger Williams , looking eternally ready to disco off toward the setting sun . ( Optional add end ) Back on Prospect , a few blocks bring you to the imposing d ome of the Christian Scientist Church and the greenswards of Brown University . Here you might head toward Thayer Street , the city 's four-block mecca for Gene ration X hipsters . Another locus of activity lies along the southern end of Col lege Hill , where cafes and restaurants line a stretch of Wickenden Street . Or head back downhill , toward Benefit Street and the mighty steeple of the First B aptist Church . Head south on Benefit , to the Providence Athenaeum , a library that traces its roots to 1753 . The library , now housed in a temple that appear s transplanted from Greece , offers peaceful respite among the antique desks and chairs , the marble busts , the paintings and the quiet alcoves where Edgar All an Poe courted Providence poetess Sarah Helen Whitman 150 years ago . With a lit tle luck , you might get a look at one of the library 's greatest treasures the seven volumes of the original double Elephant Folio edition of John James Audubo n 's `` Birds Of America . '' These eye-popping illustrations each almost 6 feet square are kept in a special climate-controlled locked vault along with other p recious works , such as the Athenaeum 's incredible selection of travel and expl oration books and its collection of works by Robert Burns . Many of these histor ic treasures can be traced to the library 's astute forebears the very patrons w ho left evidence of their discerning tastes and genteel manners all over College Hill . Distributed by the Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service . We were sitting around the other day talking about lard and I mentioned my favo rite duck `` chicharrones '' duck skin cooked until the bits of skin are crisp a nd brown in the rendered fat . That sounds great , someone said , but what do yo u do with the rest of the duck ? Well , you could have knocked me over with a ta il feather . There is so much you can do with a duck that I hardly knew where to start . If , as the old saying goes , you can use every part of the pig but the squeal , think of a duck as a pig built for two . To prove my point , I decided to stop at a local Asian market to get a nice fresh duck . The good thing about Asian markets is that the ducks are sold with the heads and feet still on . Tha t 's nice because the feet add a lot to the stock , and with the heads on , you get the full neck , which is loaded with good fat . The thing to check , though , is the cavity . Sometimes the butcher might happen to kind of accidentally for get to leave in the liver strictly an accident , you understand , but a near-cri minal offense in my book . If you 've ever tasted a terrine made from duck liver s or even duck livers just lightly sauteed in butter you 'll know why . They 're like Little League foie gras . Rinse the duck well , then strip away the skin a nd any fat and cut them into roughly two-inch squares or strips . Put these in a pan with about one-quarter cup of water and cook over medium heat . Pretty soon , the water will evaporate and all you 'll have left is rendered duck fat ( the liquid will start to sizzle when this happens ) . Cook it until the skin bits t urn dark-brown , then retrieve them with a slotted spoon and drain them on paper towels . Let the fat cool , then pour it through a strainer into a glass contai ner . The skin cracklings , or chicharrones , are terrific lightly salted kind o f like popcorn from cardiac hell . For the more cautious , they can be used as a garnish . They 're also wonderful folded into an omelet , but don't tell them y ou heard it here . The duck fat you 've just rendered is one of the best cooking mediums around , with a wonderful brown flavor . I love to fry potato pancakes in it . The next step is to remove the two duck breasts . Using just the point o f a very sharp knife , trace the line where the keel bone separates the breasts . Lift up gently and continue tracing the line where the breast meat meets the r ibs . When it is free , remove it to a plate , cover it with plastic wrap and re peat on the other side . The breasts are wonderful broiled , grilled or sauteed in a very hot skillet . And by serving them separate from the legs , you can coo k them to only medium-rare , thus keeping them juicy and flavorful . ( If you co oked the duck with the legs , of course , you would have to have rare-rare legs to get a medium-rare breast , and that would be very unpleasant . ) Remove the l egs from the frame and set them aside . Take off the feet and wings and put them in a roasting pan . Chop the remaining bones into four or five pieces and add t hem to the feet and wings . Toss in a peeled whole onion and a carrot and roast at 450 degrees 30 to 45 minutes or until everything starts to brown and smell re ally good . Using a slotted spoon to leave as much fat as possible behind , remo ve the browned bones and vegetables to a large saucepan . Cover well with water , add some parsley stems and whatever else you like in a poultry stock , and let it cook over medium-high heat for a couple of hours . Top off with water as nec essary . When the stock is deeply colored , ladle it off into a separate , clean saucepan . At this point you will have a delicious , intensely flavored stock . Either add a little more water to use it as a base for a duck soup ( nothing ea sier ) , or set it to cook over a low flame and reduce it to a demi-glace , or d uck jelly . The only thing left is the duck legs . These are tendon-y and a bit tough but very flavorful . Put them in a shallow pan with a little duck stock . Cook , covered , over medium heat for about 20 minutes . Test with a small sharp knife . It should slip into the meat fairly easily . Let the legs cool , then r emove the meat . Shred the meat into strips . ( If you 're still cooking the sto ck , throw in the leg bones . What can it hurt ? ) This meat is great in salads , as part of a filling for stuffed pastas or even for sandwiches . Do a couple o f ducks and you 'll have enough to make duck sausage , if you 're that ambitious . What 's the bottom line ? Out of one 5-pound duck , I got three cups of duck fat , two cups of duck cracklings , two duck breasts ( about pound each ) , fiv e cups of concentrated duck stock ( enough for two quarts of soup , or 2 cups of stiff duck demi-glace ) , and 1 cups cooked , shredded meat from the legs . And that 's what you can do with a duck . I had duck ; I had arugula . How to bring them together ? I wasn't sure what my dressing would be until I opened the plas tic bag of lettuce . The intensely nutty smell of the arugula reminded me of ses ame oil , so I put together this Asian-influenced dressing . DUCK SALAD 1 cups c ooked , minced duck leg meat from 5-pound duck Duck Dressing 4 cups arugula , co arsely chopped 1 cup duck chicharrones , coarsely chopped from of skin of 5-pou nd duck Toss together minced duck and Duck Dressing in medium work bowl until du ck is coated well . Add arugula and toss until lightly coated and well mixed wit h duck . Divide among 4 chilled plates and sprinkle chopped duck chicharrones ov er top . Makes 4 servings . Each serving contains about : 787 calories ; 608 mg sodium ; 160 mg cholesterol ; 73 grams fat ; 2 grams carbohydrates ; 28 grams pr otein ; 0.1 gram fiber . Duck Dressing cup lightly warmed duck demi-glace 1 tab lespoon hoisin sauce 2 teaspoons rice wine vinegar 1 teaspoon soy sauce 2 teaspo ons finely minced green onions , green part only Combine demi-glace , hoisin sau ce , vinegar , soy sauce and green onion in small work bowl and whisk until smoo th . It 's October and Sheila Lukins is feeling harassed . Her first solo book is su pposed to be published in April , and the galley proofs have just come back from the copy editors with a thousand questions still to be answered . What size tom ato ? What kind of apple ? How much does that fennel bulb weigh ? Now she has to go to a market , buy a bulb of fennel and weigh it . Her physical therapist is coming by four times a week to work on the muscles she screwed up by not walking correctly after a stroke . And she still has to find the time to pack for a qui ck trip to Paris to visit her daughter . On top of that , she 's worried about h ow the book will be received . Just last spring her one-time business partner an d former co-author Julee Rosso put out a solo book , `` Great Good Food , '' and got trashed in the press . Rosso , who pocketed an advance reported to be $ 625 ,000 , insisted that she and four assistants tested 1,500 recipes in 10 months t o select the 800 used in the book . Her detractors said that was impossible . No matter , Crown Publishing willn't talk specifics but reveals that the thick pap erback of low-fat recipes has been a fast seller : Since last April the book has sold about 500,000 copies . So was the book really that bad , or was it a matte r of the food establishment the `` Food Mafia , '' as many call it taking sides in the professional divorce of a couple that helped change the way America eats ? In 1977 , the dynamic duo Lukins the caterer and Rosso the marketer co-founded the Silver Palate in Manhattan , one of the first gourmet take-out shops in the country . The highfalutin home cooking they pioneered contributed to a radical change in baby boomer eating habits . Sauteed chicken livers with blueberry vine gar , caviar eclairs , pizza pot pie and pesto by the quart were suddenly the ra ge from Boca Raton , Fla. , to Bellingham , Wash. . To date , their three Silver Palate cookbooks have sold more than 5 million copies . By the time the partner ship ended , shortly after the sale of their shop in 1988 , the pair were barely speaking . `` We were great friends , '' says Lukins , `` It 's over now . '' A fter the breakup , Rosso moved to Michigan and discovered yogurt cheese , while Lukins began traveling and researching her `` All Around the World Cookbook '' f or Workman , the publishers of the original Silver Palate books . `` I wish with all my heart that Julee 's book had been nicely received because everyone is go ing to want to see how the other one did , '' Lukins says . `` I 'm sure I 'll b e scrutinized plenty. .. . And I did not get a huge advance ! '' But make a few calls to key people in the food world and you 'll find no one filing their nails in anticipation of the Lukins release , as they did with Rosso 's book . Lukins , who is 51 , suffered a massive cerebral hemorrhage in 1991 and , according to Pat Adrian , who buys books for the Book of the Month Club , the `` Food Mafia '' rushed to be loyal to her . It took two operations and weeks of therapy befor e Lukins was able to leave a wheelchair . `` I 'm happy not to be dead , '' she says . `` A lot of people were jealous of both women for a long time , '' says A drian . `` ( Blasting Rosso 's book ) should have been a great chatty lunch at L a Cirque rather than ( the media event ) it ended up being . After all , it 's j ust a cookbook . It 's not going to change the world . '' Lukins is hoping the w orld is ready for Peloponnesian lamb shanks and Moroccan marmalade , but she 's not sure . Her publisher thinks so it has announced a first printing of 350,000 , believed to be a record for a cookbook . `` A huge amount of my pride is invol ved in this book , '' says Lukins . `` I just didn't want this book to be anothe r clone ( of the others ) . Those books are great , fun , and fine but they are what they are . I wanted to do something different . '' Yet , the book is unmist akably in the Silver Palate format , down to the little drawings ( although Luki ns wasn't the illustrator on this book , as she was on the others ) and boxed si debars . Even the ethnic-inspired recipes are reinterpreted for the American kit chen , in Silver Palate fashion . There are very few ingredients called for in t he book that aren't readily available in Omaha , Neb . But then Lukins did not i ntend to go around the world and bring back the strictly authentic recipes of ea ch country . Instead , she took the best of what she found and created food . Lu kins developed her cooking ability when her husband , Richard , who ran a securi ty business , was transferred to England . A bored housewife , Lukins enrolled i n cooking classes at Le Cordon Bleu to occupy her time . The following year , Ri chard was transferred to Paris , and Lukins signed up for more classes . `` That 's the way to learn , '' she says . `` In Paris I took cooking lessons and Fren ch lessons during the day and then cooked for my darling husband at night . '' B ack in New York and raising two daughters in the Dakota Apartments , a bachelor in the building called one night in a panic . He had invited a group over for di nner and the superintendent 's wife , who usually cooked for him when he had gue sts , was on vacation . `` I said , ` Don't worry , I 'll cook you dinner , '' ' Lukins remembers . `` So as was the fashion in the mid- '60s , I cooked moussak a , a Greek salad , some stuffed grape leaves and sent it over . I charged him $ 50 plus the cost of the food . He ended up with a great dinner and I wound up w ith $ 50 . '' She also wound up with a new career . One of the guests at the bac helor 's dinner party was Gael Greene , restaurant critic for New York magazine . Greene loved the party food and mentioned it to her friend , Joan Kron , who i mmediately called Ellen Stern , who at the time wrote the `` Best Bets '' column for the magazine . `` It was New York telephone at its best , '' says Lukins no w . `` Ellen Stern ran a half-page picture of me and my kitchen with a headline : ` Eat , Drink and Be Murray . '' ' The article portrayed Lukins as a bachelor 's best cook . `` I got 200 calls from single men , '' she says . Six months lat er , the Other Woman Catering Co. was born . A year later , Lukins teamed up wit h Julee Rosso to open the Silver Palate . The two met when Rosso , an advertisin g executive for Burlington , hired Lukins to cater a press breakfast introducing Oleg Cassini sheets . In April , when `` Sheila Lukins Around the World Cookboo k '' is about to hit the stores , Lukins ' mood has lifted considerably . She 's almost giddy . Vanity Fair has just printed a flattering article on her . A wee k later , when Lukins ' book comes out , it 's already received its first review . Cook 's Illustrated tested 30 recipes from the 450 in the book . Its verdict : `` We were underwhelmed . '' Plus , the reviewer brought up the Rosso book in the first paragraph . Afterward Lukins is subdued and never mentions the story . But she wonders aloud if her name will be linked with Rosso 's forever . `` Wil l anyone ever write a story about me without mentioning her ? '' she asks . `` I know everyone will compare the two books , '' says Nach Waxman , owner of Kitch en Arts and Letters bookstore , gossip central to the New York food world . `` T he Julee business will do no good for Sheila 's book . '' Lukins has been around a long time , though , and she 's philosophical about the world of cookbook pub lishing . `` When you put yourself before the public and say , ` this is my work , here it is , '' ' she says , `` I think they look hard . '' With her book in the stores and more reviews to come , Lukins can only wait and see what the cons ensus on her solo project will be . And maybe , a few books from now , her work will be reviewed without the mentions of her past life as half of a famous `` fo odie couple . '' For now , she is content in the knowledge that she has done the best book she could .. . on her own . Getting there Stay on I-195 until you see the sign for downtown Providence . Ta ke a right off the exit , continue through a traffic light and bear left . Pass the Biltmore Hotel . At City Hall , take a left and cross Kennedy Plaza to the f oot of College Hill . Park near the First Baptist Church , the huge , high-steep Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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