Thursday, November 30, 2006

Heartbreak House

George Bernard Shaw's 'Heartbreak House' is thought-provoking, amusing and touching, with compassion for the foibles of mere mortals. The play is an exhilarating comic masterpiece.

Comments
It's amazing how relevant and current Shaw's description of a civilization in decline remains almost a century after it was written. His descriptions of different personality archetypes and how they interact is still right on. The cast is wonderful. Phillip Boscoe as the Captain and Swoosie Kurtz and Laila Robbins as the two daughters are especially good. Roundabout Theater is now two for two. An auspicious beginning!

Roundabout Theater Company
American Airlines Theatre
227 W 42nd Street
New York, NY 10036

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

The Apple Tree

We saw the Roundabout Theater production of 'The Apple Tree' last night. It is a unique show featuring three one-act musicals about men, women and a little thing called temptation. The Apple Tree is based on "The Diary of Adam and Eve" (detailing the goings-on in Eden) by Mark Twain; "The Lady or the Tiger?" by Frank R. Stockton; and "Passionella" by Jules Feiffer, with additional book material by Jerome Coopersmith.

It was very entertaining, not heavy or serious, but good fun. Just right for the season. We've been subscribers to Roundabout Theater for a number of years and have found their productions uneven. This is the first of this season and hopefully indicative of the remaining ones. We're seeing the next one, Heartbreak House tonight so we'll know.

Studio 54
254 W 54th St
New York, NY 10019

Monday, November 20, 2006

Blue Note New York


We went to the (world famous) Blue Note for the Jazz Brunch on Sunday. The room and tables are tight but not overcrowded at Brunch.
Appearing were:
Jay Leonhart, bass and vocals
Wycliffe Gordon, trombone and vocals
Ted Rosenthal, piano
We enjoyed the show. The three had a nice, relaxed, stage presence and played a smooth Jazz.
On the other hand, the food was what you might expect at a Night Club - pretty bad. The eggs and hamburger were OK, but the fries were inedible!






131 West 3rd St.


New York, NY 10012


212-475-8592

Sunday, November 19, 2006

We go back to school!?

Any topics that interest us. There's a lot to choose from. We've taken courses at NYU, museums, and the 92nd St Y. We even joined a private library, the Mercantile because they have discussion groups about books. Sometimes joined by friends, most often Ellen and Al Sharfstein (he's also on an extended sabbatical). One of the more interesting things we discovered was a group called One Day University. They had the idea to run a one day series of lectures featuring world class professors from Ivy League schools. The target audience was Baby-Boomers like ourselves who might be interested in topics they couldn't get out of the daily papers. It was inspired by the orientations that schools do for parents telling them a bit about what their kids will be studying.

This is the second "semester" for the program, the first having taken place in the spring. This time around there were 300 people at the session and they've added sites in New Jersey, Connecticut and Florida.

The day is just right with a total of 5 sessions of varied topics interspersed with refreshment and lunch breaks. Lectures complete with audio visuals and sometimes handouts are always concluded with a question period. My own personal favourites are the more obsure topics. Like the discussion of "Resilience" and how it impacts peoples ability to succeed. Or the discussion of the Imperial Presidency which included a good discussion of the Constitution and the Founding Fathers views of "Separation of Powers". In short, let's make sure they're at each others throats and can't do too much. Kind of like our own view that a divided government between the two parties is the best antidote to over-reach.

There was one 'miss' this time, but on the whole, topics were informative and stimulating and both felt it was a day well spent.

COURSE SCHEDULE AND PROFESSORS

9:00am - 10:00am
Psychology: The Science of Human Resilience
Andrew Shatté, University of Pennsylvania Most Popular Teacher Award

10:15am - 11:15am
American Studies: The Dawn of Cinema and the Transformation of America
Charles Musser, Yale University Film Department Co-Chair and Director
As part of our "extended sabbatical" we are always looking for speakers, programs, courses.

11:30am - 12:30am
Literature: Fairy Tale Culture in Modern Life
Marie Tatar, Harvard University Dean for the Humanities

12:30 - 1:30
Lunch Break

1:30 - 2:30
Sociology: Crime and Punishment 2006
Devah Pager, Princeton University Professor and Fulbright Grant Winner

2:45 - 3:45
Political Science: George W. Bush, the Imperial President?
Richard Pious. Department of Political Science, Barnard College, Columbia University, author of The American Presidency

4:00 - 4:30
Reception



One Day University

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

We go Mexican!


We went to this exceptionally good Mexican restaurant on our first venture back into the world of New York eating. It seemed like the perfect "we're home!" kind of place. It shares a chef (Sandoval) and ownership with Maya, another fine Mexican restaurant on First Avenue and 64th Street where we've enjoyed some fine meals.

The upstairs dining room feels like an exclusive beachside hacienda. Palm trees sculpted onto the walls, straw paddles roatating along the tall, angled off-white ceiling.

I started with "Ostiones Pampano" - cornmeal crusted oysters with black bean~mango tomato~chile and chipotle vinaigrette. Chris had "Ensalada Mixta ~ mixed greens, and avocado with a cilantro~lime vinaigrette (we've been salad-deprived for the last six weeks in Paris). The vegetables and citrus dressing were exquisitely fresh.

For the main course I had "Huachinango" ~ a whole baby red snapper with cactus~tomato salad and tomato-chile. It had been de-boned, rounded out, and stuffed with the cactus salad. I loved it. Chris had the swordfish special which this night was a piece of perfectly grilled fillet cut round and placed on a bed of julienned veggies surrounded by fresh diced mango. A bowl of fried plantain was the perfect accompanyment for both our dishes.

We shared an "Arroz con Leche", rice pudding that was undistinguished. The Margaritas on the otherhand were so good we had TWO!

Our only complaint was the service felt a little rushed. They didn't ruch the service, as soon as you finished a plate there was a server to whisk it away. Maybe a little too efficient!

Pampano
209 E. 49th St.(bet. 2nd & 3rd Aves.)
Manhattan, NY 10017
212-751-4545

Zagats says..
Co-owned by Placido Domingo and chef Richard Sandoval, this “classy” Midtown Mexican “hits the high notes” with an “exceptional” “coastal” menu displaying a “mastery” of “creative seafood”; with a “chic”, “airy” space and “(maybe too) attentive” service, it elicits many a “gracias” as a “distinctive” “change of pace.”

Sunday, November 05, 2006

Jazz at the Club Lionel Hampton in Paris

Last night we went to the Jazz club at the Meridien Hotel in the Port Maillot area near l'Etoile at l'Arc de Triomphe. I had first gone to this club with my friend Robert Crief from my days at Otis (the company, not the house). It is a medium-sized night club that has live music every night beginning at 10:30.


Last night there was a four piece band and singer (called Air Swing and Fire????) featuring Cole Porter tunes. It was Sunday night and they were about half full. We were in the second row of tables. It couldn't have been more perfect -in Paris - Cole Porter - songs in English; I could understand! We were in heaven.


The club has a 25 E minimum (generally, the price of the first drink). That's for the evening, not the set. After that the prices drop to a more reasonable level. We stayed for about 2 hours. I can never understand why NY has no places like this.




Le Jazz Club Lionel Hampton
Hotel Meridien Etoile
81 Blvd. Gouvion Saint Cyr,

75015 Paris.

Tel: 01 40 68 30 42

.

Saturday, November 04, 2006

Stella Maris - our best meal of the trip

This year it seems that Christina and I are eating out less, especially in 'Michelin-starred' restaurants. I think that we've been through the frenzy of having to try all the great restaurants and now look to discover the perfect place for a good evening meal. More often we decide to stay in and enjoy a bottle of wine, some cheese and a simple terrine. It's not that we don't like going out. We really enjoy a great restaurant and meal. Its just that we've decided we can do without the really mediocre places. We'd rather spend a little more (or a lot) for a memorable evening.

Last night we ate at Stella Maris a 'one-star' Michelin rated spot. We'd been there before about 3 years ago and remembered thinking that from the outside it was pretty undistinguished. Well, let me just say, the decore may be simple, but the food is fabulous. From start to finish we didn't have a single complaint (well maybe there was the unpleasantness of the American 'salesperson' at the next table talking so loudly we wished we could have stuffed a sock in his mouth). We tried not to let this dampen our spirits because he wasn't a bad guy, just loud and a little full of himself. Our food on the other hand was mouthwatering. Christina started with a terrine of ris de veau (pancreas), and mushrooms served with, truffled mashed potato (just a spoonful) and cepes (mushrooms). Paul enjoyed the house specialty of Millefeuille de Thon Rouge (layers of raw tuna with eggplant). We followed this with a Tourte de Gibier (really a sort of Beefwellington) but instead of beef, made with a variety of game meats including hare and pheasant. This was served with a rich brown sauce, beets, mashed potato and a green salad. Christina's Pomarde (female pigeon!) was perfectly done atop a choucroute (wrapped cabbage leaves), a rosti potato and some green beans topped with a slice of fresh foie gras (her favorite). It was a perfect 10 all round leaving us not wanting dessert else we spoil the memory of the meal we'd just eaten. Coffee was perfectly served with chocolate madeleines, crystalized orange peels and other little sweets. We'll definitely return!

ZAGATS says...
Tateru Yoshino – a remarkable chef who trained with the likes of Robuchon and Gagnaire – brings creativity and a Japanese mastery of technique to Classic French cuisine in his small place in the 8th; gourmets grin his interpretation of such national treasures as tête de veau (veal head, a French traditional dish we will never have it again anywhere) and lièvre (wild hare) à la royale is irreproachable, the service exceptional and a successful recent face-lift has warmed the formerly cold decor; given all this, prices aren’t so bad.

Stella Maris
4, rue Arsène Houssaye
Paris, France 75008
01 42 89 16 22

The French Resistance and German Occupation

The order from de Gaulle establishing the Free French and the resistance in 1940.

Three galleries and six rooms present the adventure of Free France, the manuscripts of the General de Gaulle, the action of the resistance, the tragic world of the concentration camps. Showcases contain authentic souvenirs of fighters, uniforms, weapons, clandestine press, transmitters and relics from the camps.


Hotel Les Invalides

Musée de l'Ordre de la Liberation
51 bis, boulevard de Latour-Maubourg ,

75007 Paris

47 05 04 10

Parking in Paris

Friday, November 03, 2006

We found this new restaurant that really does a real BBQ.

Some Better Experiences in Paris

Some better experiences in Paris

After our early disappointments (see http://restchallenge.blogspot.com/) we buckled down and seriously considered where we would be eating. In general, we avoid Michelin 2 and 3 star restaurants as painfully expensive and overly formal (both a result of the Michelin grading standards). A recent development has been the opening of more informal bistros by famous chefs that do not try to meet the Michelin standards. L'Atelier Maitre Albert, that disappointed us last week, is from Guy Savoy. We will be trying several more over the next few weeks.


Le Florimond is a thoroughly enjoyable restaurant in the 7th, near the Invalides. This is not an area we go to frequently because I don't like the ambiance as it's the HQ for many government offices. However, the review of this restaurant was good in both Michelin and Zagats. The restaurant is small and the staff was just delightful, a good sense of humor and repartee.


Overall this has been our best dining experience thus far. I started with a excellent foie gras and chicken giblets with salad. It was delicious and the salad was fresh (not always true in Paris, the French are not lovers of green vegetables). Chris had a mushroom and escargot terrine topped with cepes in a cream sauce. Delicious!


For the main course, Chris had "Chou Farci" (stuffed cabbage, there's no accounting for taste). It was quite good, and just like her grandma's. I had a much more traditional Perdreau (partridge) in a delicious stew. The bread was great and we had a very nice Burgundy (Beaune). The person beside us had an "assiette du chocolate" which looked like heaven for the chocolate lovers out there. The menu can be had for 35E.


An added bit of fun was a splendid view of the twinkling Eiffel tower viewed down the rue St. Dominique. The buildings on either side framed the tower perfectly.


Le Florimond

19, av de la Motte-Picquet
Paris 7, France
01 45 55 40 38




Le Christine is a delightful small bistro in an old Parisian house near the Odeon. Service is good and friendly in the packed small rooms. The buzz is definitely ���tourist���. The kitchen is open behind glass and it���s amazing that they can deliver beautifully prepared dishes to such a large crowd. If you go, ask to be seated in the back room, hopefully next to the window by the courtyard.


My starter, a vegetable tart, was excellent. Chris had a warm goat cheese on toast (she���s a sucker for warm goat cheese). Mine was better! (Only in his opinion!)

We shared a beautifully prepared whole bass in a salt crust served with a side of mashed potatoes (a Chris favorite). Unusually, we shared dessert (an orange souffl��) that was outstanding. I only wished we had ordered two. Our meal was complimentd by a bottle of Sancerre.


Christine (Le)

Zagat Review

Off the beaten path and oozing charm. Near the Odeon.

1, rue Christine
Paris 6 , France
01 40 51 71 64




Le Petit Pontoise is a wonderful Parisian bistro in the Latin Quarter, about a ten minute walk from our apartment. They specialize in French 'comfort food' if you can believe that. It's a small room and always crowded but the staff is friendly and helpful (everything is listed on blackboards around the room).


Christina started with a warm fig stuffed with roquefort cheese on a bed of greens (not all that fresh) and I had sauteed mushrooms (girolles) and garlic (lots of garlic!). We followed with scallops sauteed on a medley of vegetables. My Magret de Canard (duck breast) with roasted potatoes came in it's own casserole. Both were excellent. Our wine this evening was a Beaujolais (Morgon 2005).


The people at the next table were visiting from Minnesota (!) and we had nothing in common with them except the language and a love of Paris. They were both consultants working for the non-profit sector. He takes 100 mile bike rides, hikes, marathons and mountain climbs. Fortunately, they also eat! It was a fun evening, sharing good food, favourite places to wander and shops we have each enjoyed.


Petit Pontoise (Le)

Zagat Review

Wow. exclaim enthusiasts of this wonderful, unspoiled Parisian bistro in the Latin Quarter

9, rue de Pontoise
Paris , France
01 43 29 25 20


A Parisian feast!

Thursday, November 02, 2006

A visit to the Musee Picasso


The Musée Picasso is situated in the Marais in the heart of Paris. It is the largest Picasso collection in the world, including several thousand paintings, sculptures, drawings, ceramics, engraving, and even poetry. After his death in 1973, many of Picasso's works went to the French state in settlement of taxes. These are "Picasso's Picassos," not necessarily his most famous works, but rather the paintings and sculptures he kept and valued most. It also covers the artists personal collection of work by friends and influences such as Matisse, Braque, Cézanne, and Rousseau.



It is a relatively small and manageable museum and we go every time we are in Paris. The only drawback are the crowds. We were there on a Thursday afternoon in November and it was crowded! On the other hand, I am always fascinated by how much we learn each time we go about the various periods and genres of his life. I started by "knowing" that I liked his more classical work and drawings and did not like the Cubist or Surrealist works. However, each time I see them and listen carefully to the Audio-Guide, I grow to really like specific works - although mostly the later Surrealist works.




This special exhibit, from the collection of a German-American dealer/collector named HEINZ BERGGRUEN included several hundred new works that we had never seen before (mostly from the Berlin Museum). The painting at right, The Yellow Pullover, is a good example. It is a painting of the photographer/activist/lover Dora Maar. You can really see (after listening to ten minutes of explanation) what she "looked" like and how he saw her. The almost armor-like sweater, the searching eyes, the tense hands, the beautiful hair. But most importantly, you grow to like her and feel you know her.



By the way, this makes the third exhibit we've seen this year of the collected works of a dealer. I wonder if that's a coincidence? It also makes you wonder how the dealers do business that they are able to accumulate such enormous, and valuable, collections. Maybe the artists are right not to trust them.


5 r. de Thorigny </DIV>


Paris- 75003
Telephone: 01 42 71 25 21

Why we go to Paris - for our health!

Red wine holds key to health

November 2, 2006
Yes, Red Wine Holds Answer. Check Dosage.
By NICHOLAS WADE
Can you have your cake and eat it? Is there a free lunch after all, red wine included? Researchers at the Harvard Medical School and the National Institute on Aging report that a natural substance found in red wine, known as resveratrol, offsets the bad effects of a high-calorie diet in mice and significantly extends their lifespan.
Their report, published electronically yesterday in Nature, implies that very large daily doses of resveratrol could offset the unhealthy, high-calorie diet thought to underlie the rising toll of obesity in the United States and elsewhere, if people respond to the drug as mice do.
Resveratrol is found in the skin of grapes and in red wine and is conjectured to be a partial explanation for the French paradox, the puzzling fact that people in France enjoy a high-fat diet yet suffer less heart disease than Americans.
The researchers fed one group of mice a diet in which 60 percent of calories came from fat. The diet started when the mice, all males, were a year old, which is middle-aged in mouse terms. As expected, the mice soon developed signs of impending diabetes, with grossly enlarged livers, and started to die much sooner than mice fed a standard diet.
Another group of mice was fed the identical high-fat diet but with a large daily dose of resveratrol (far larger than a human could get from drinking wine). The resveratrol did not stop them from putting on weight and growing as tubby as the other fat-eating mice. But it averted the high levels of glucose and insulin in the bloodstream, which are warning signs of diabetes, and it kept the mice’s livers at normal size.
Even more striking, the substance sharply extended the mice’s lifetimes. Those fed resveratrol along with the high- fat diet died many months later than the mice on high fat alone, and at the same rate as mice on a standard healthy diet. They had all the pleasures of gluttony but paid none of the price.
Scientists have long known that a moderate intake of alcohol, and red wine in particular, is associated with a lowered risk of heart disease and other benefits. More recently, scientists began to suspect resveratrol had particularly powerful effects and began investigating its role in lifespan.
The researchers, led by David Sinclair and Joseph Baur at the Harvard Medical School and by Rafael de Cabo at the National Institute on Aging, also tried to estimate the effect of resveratrol on the mice’s physical quality of life. They gauged how well the mice could walk along a rotating rod before falling off, a test of their motor skills. The mice on resveratrol did better as they grew older, ending up with much the same staying power on the rod as mice fed a normal diet.
The researchers hope their findings will have relevance to people too. Their study shows, they conclude, that orally taken drugs “at doses achievable in humans can safely reduce many of the negative consequences of excess caloric intake, with an overall improvement in health and survival.”
Several experts said that people wondering if they should take resveratrol should wait until more results were in, particularly from safety tests in humans. Another caution is that the theory about why resveratrol works is still unproved.
“It’s a pretty exciting area, but these are early days,” said Dr. Ronald Kahn, president of the Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston.
Information about resveratrol’s effects on human metabolism should be available a year or so, Dr. Kahn said, adding, “Have another glass of pinot noir — that’s as far as I’d take it right now.”
The mice were fed a hefty dose of resveratrol, 24 milligrams per kilogram of body weight. Red wine has about 1.5 to 3 milligrams of resveratrol per liter, so a 150-lb person would need to drink 750 to 1,500 bottles of red wine a day to get such a dose.
Dr. Richard Hodes, director of the National Institute on Aging, which helped support the study, also said that people should wait for the results of safety testing. Substances that are safe and beneficial in small doses, like vitamins, sometimes prove to be harmful when taken in high doses, Dr. Hodes said.
One person who is not following this prudent advice, however, is Dr. Sinclair, the chief author of the study. He has long been taking resveratrol, though at a dose of only five milligrams per kilogram. Mice given that amount in a second feeding trial have shown similar, but less pronounced, results as those on the 24-milligram-a-day dose, he said.
Dr. Sinclair has had a physician check his metabolism, because many resveratrol preparations contain possibly hazardous impurities, but so far no ill effects have come to light. His wife, his parents, and “half my lab” are also taking resveratrol, he said.
Dr. Sinclair declined to name his source of resveratrol. Many companies sell the substance, along with claims that rivals’ preparations are inactive. One such company, Longevinex, sells an extract of red wine and knotweed that contains an unspecified amount of resveratrol. But each capsule is equivalent to “5 to 15 5-ounce glasses of the best red wine,” the company’s Web site asserts.
Dr. Sinclair is the founder of a company, Sirtris Pharmaceuticals, that has developed several chemicals intended to mimic the role of resveratrol but at much lower doses. Sirtris has begun clinical trials of one of these compounds, an improved version of resveratrol, with the aim of seeing if it helps control glucose levels in people with diabetes.
“We believe you cannot reach therapeutic levels in man with ordinary resveratrol,” said Dr. Christoph Westphal, the company’s chief executive.
Behind the resveratrol test is a considerable degree of scientific theory, some of it well established and some yet to be proved. Dr. Sinclair’s initial interest in resveratrol had nothing to do with red wine. It derived from work by Leonard Guarente of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who in 1995 found a gene that controlled the longevity of yeast, a single-celled fungus.
Dr. Guarente and Dr. Sinclair, who had come from Australia to work as a postdoctoral student in Dr. Guarente’s laboratory, discovered the mechanism by which the gene makes yeast cells live longer. The gene is known as Sir-2 in yeast, sir standing for silent information regulator, and its equivalent in mice and humans is called SIRT-1.
Dr. Guarente then found that the gene’s protein needed a common metabolite to activate it, and he developed the theory that the gene, by sensing the level of metabolic activity, mediates a phenomenon of great interest to researchers in aging, the greater life span caused by caloric restriction.
Researchers have known since 1935 that mice fed a calorically restricted diet — one with all necessary vitamins and nutrients but 40 percent fewer calories — live up to 50 percent longer than mice on ordinary diets.
This low-calorie-provoked increase in longevity occurs in many organisms and seems to be an ancient survival strategy. When food is plentiful, live in the fast lane and breed prolifically. When famine strikes, switch resources to body maintenance and live longer so as to ride out the famine.
Most people find it impossible to keep to a diet with 40 percent fewer calories than usual. So if caloric restriction really does make people as well as mice live longer — which is plausible but not yet proved — it would be desirable to have some drug that activated the SIRT-1 gene’s protein, tricking it into thinking that days of famine lay ahead.
In 2003 Dr. Sinclair, by then in his own laboratory, devised a way to test a large number of chemicals for their ability to mimic caloric restriction in people by activating SIRT-1. The champion was resveratrol, already well known for its possible health benefits.
Critics point out that resveratrol is a powerful chemical that acts in many different ways in cells. The new experiment, they say, does not prove that resveratrol negated the effects of a high-calorie diet by activating SIRT-1. Indeed, they are not convinced that resveratrol activates SIRT-1 at all.
“It hasn’t really been clearly shown, the way a biochemist would want to see it, that resveratrol can activate sirtuin,” said Matt Kaeberlein, a former student of Dr. Guarente’s who does research at the University of Washington in Seattle. Sirtuin is the protein produced by the SIRT-1 gene.
Dr. Sinclair said experiments at Sirtris had essentially wrapped up this point. But they have not yet been published, so under the rules of scientific debate he cannot use them to support his position. In his Nature article he therefore has to concede that “Whether resveratrol acts directly or indirectly through Sir-2 in vivo is currently a subject of debate.”
Given that caloric restriction forces a trade-off between fertility and lifespan, resveratrol might be expected to reduce fertility in mice. Dr. Sinclair said he saw no such infertility in his experiment, but he said that might be because the mice were not on a low-calorie diet.
If resveratrol does act by prodding the sirtuins into action, then there will be much interest in the new class of sirtuin activators now being tested by Sirtris. Dr. Westphal, the company’s chief executive, has no practical interest in the longevity-promoting effects of sirtuins and caloric restriction.
For the Food and Drug Administration, if for no one else, aging is not a disease and death is not an end-point. The F.D.A. will approve only drugs that treat diseases in measurable ways, so Dr. Westphal hopes to show that his sirtuin activators will improve the indicators of specific diseases, starting with diabetes.
“We think that if we can harness the benefits of caloric restriction, we wouldn’t simply have ways of making people live longer, but an entirely new therapeutic strategy to address the diseases of aging,” Dr. Guarente said.