Shopsin's (120 Essex Street) is a New York institution, a restaurant that began as a grocery store; its owner, Kenny Shopsin, is colorful, irascible, and talented. Shopsin's is famous for breakfast but also for its vast, unusual, common-sense menu. Shopsin has just written a book that is half cookbook and half memoir, entirely fascinating. I had never sat down and read a cookbook from cover to cover but that is what happened with Shopsin's book (co-written with Carolynn Carreno). It is called Eat Me. The introduction is a reprint of a New Yorker article by Calvin (Bud) Trillin, a Shopsin's regular. If you do go to the restaurant, do pay attention to Shopsin's idiosyncrasies, because he allegedly has a Soup-Nazi-like intolerance that may earn you permanent exile from his restaurant. (SJD)
I recently took the kids to see a performance by Jim Dale, the longtime British stage actor (he won a Tony for Barnum) who is best known these days as the wildly entertaining reader of the Harry Potter books on tape. He was reading an adaptation of a Eudora Welty story called “The Shoe Bird,” which he recently recorded with the Seattle Symphony. (It was wonderful, and I encourage you to give it a listen.) Afterward, Dale took questions from the audience -- which, predictably, were about the Harry Potter series. Items of interest that emerged: Dale was given only 100 pages of manuscript at a time to read and then record, so he never knew what was coming; and in order to keep track of the 146 voices he’d created for all the characters, he often pre-recorded a bit of the characters’ voices and then held a tape recorder up to his ear in the studio to remind himself. (SJD)
If you live in or are visiting New York and have children, do everything you can to take in one of the Young People's Concerts at the New York Philharmonic. Even if you don’t love the music on that day’s program -- we recently attended “Ravel’s Paris,” not my favorite by a long shot -- all the extras in the program are terrific: the dancers, composers, instrumentalists, and explainers who are paraded out by conductor Delta David Gier to put the music in context for the kids. (SJD)
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“New Jersey governor Jon Corzine, unhappy with an official probe into the e-mails he sent to a former girlfriend who was also the state union president, has decided to swear off e-mail entirely. ”
Perhaps speeding cars would have been a better idea.
— bgriffsThis is totally unrelated, but Levitt and Dubner, what’s the latest news on the signed bookplates? I’m pretty sure I have filled out the form twice now. I just think it would really be cool to have one…
— zoliver…and can you send randyfromcanada a t-shirt so that he’ll come back to the blog?
— egretman@ zoliver
the turnover time for the bookplates is really long. it took at least several months for me to get mine… but it did arrive eventually.
despite the long wait, i think it’s a great idea and i was really happy when i finally got it.
— danthemanIs this the same Corzine who as a Senator railed against the abuses in the stock market where he made his fortune?
— rayDubner is the dumbner choice in ecomonic related blogging. I find the engaging writing of the New Economist blog far more exciting. In fact, just looking at the tired style sheet of freakonomics.com has made me yawn while typing.
New Economist rules, just ask my son Henry Dagticks.
— gradys_kitchenMostly unrelated, but this article in Treehugger talked about the lead-crime link one of you posted about a few days ago.
— brynLet’s hope the SEC is investigating the stock manipulation attempts of Whole Foods.
— freakyreader123