Author Archives: Sarah


Sweet Memories

Image credit: By Pink Sherbet Photography

Psychologist explores the impact of sniffing a fairy cake.

However, since attending my friends’ fabulous royal wedding party on Friday night I feel I need to make an important amendment to my earlier statement: I now realize that the most important thing about the whole business was the opportunity to indulge in a glorious nationwide orgy of Party Food Nostalgia. We all have foods that take us back to happy times and places. Personally, if I so much as sniff a party ring, a fairy cake, or a cheesy wotsit, I am immediately at my 7th birthday party, sitting cross-legged on our dining room floor, watching wide-eyed as my dad’s magician friend Graham crafted giraffes and sausage dogs from colored balloons, and made 50 pence pieces vanish in thin air, then mysteriously re-emerge.

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Tramp Feeding Frenzy

OnTheRedCarpet.com

Li-lo serves us another portion of crazy pie.

Serving food to homeless women at a Los Angeles shelter is one of many tasks Lindsay Lohan may be required to perform as part of her court-ordered community service, OnTheRedCarpet.com has learned. The 24-year-old actress has until the end of the week to register for her duties at the Downtown Women’s Center in the Skid Row area of Los Angeles, where she must complete the bulk of the 480 hours of community service that were handed down as part of a sentence for violating her probation.

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Share and Share a Lot

Image credit: Bon Appetit

If Americans and Brits liked to share small portions of food this pesky trend for little plates wouldn't be a problem. But we don't and so it is.

There's no better word to describe a passing fascination than "fad."  It sounds exactly like what it is: short and kind of lame. Like pet rocks, slap bracelets, and troll dolls, fads in restaurants come and go quickly and, more often than not, there's a "What where we thinking?" vibe once they're gone. In the mid-to-late 90s, every restaurant I went to seemed to have wasabi mashed potatoes on the menu–whether or not it fit in with the food they were serving  (The Foodist noticed too).  "Would the gentleman like a side of wasabi mashed potatoes with his paella?"  "No.  No I would not.  Also, I'm 12.  Why are you calling me 'the gentleman?" These days, food trends are fast and furious. Fusion tacos are huge. Mixology had its moment. But small plates are still everywhere, and that's one trend I'd like to stop right in its tiny-portioned tracks.

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Spring Has Stung: Lasagna with Asparagus, Peas and Stinging Nettles

The Bitten Word

Life feeling too nauseatingly sweet? Put the sting back into spring.

Our regular farmers market, Sunday mornings in Dupont Circle, is back to bursting. The flower stands are overflowing with beautiful tulips and irises; fresh spring vegetables are everywhere, and there’s an overall excited energy about the place again. We were giddy – maybe inappropriately so – to learn a few weeks ago that the market not only opens a half hour earlier this season, but has also expanded by a block!

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Toying with the Fat Kids

The Atlantic

You can take away their happy meals, but McFat kids will keep coming back bigger than ever.

New York City Councilman Leroy G. Comrie Jr. of Queens has attacked a piece of Americana by proposing to ban “Happy Meal” toys in fast food restaurants.  And while legislators and public health advocates are correct in looking for ways to reverse skyrocketing childhood obesity rates, toys and kids’ foods have been synonymous for almost a century, ever since Cracker Jacks began adding surprises to each package in 1912.

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Would Sir Care to Sift Through 10,000 Menus?

New York Public Library

What was the price of a cup of coffee in 1907? NY librarian supersizers transcribing 10,000 menus cos they just can’t bear not knowing

With approximately 40,000 menus dating from the 1840s to the present, The New York Public Library’s restaurant menu collection is one of the largest in the world, used by historians, chefs, novelists and everyday food enthusiasts. Trouble is, the menus are very difficult to search for the greatest treasures they contain: specific information about dishes, prices, the organization of meals, and all the stories these things tell us about the history of food and culture.

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Atherton no longer A-mazeing

Image credit: Pollen Street Social

With a Royal Wedding in the air, the stench of unemployment wafting through the bunting and a London trend for overpriced, small plates of food, 2011 is starting to smell a little like 1981. So said @richmajor slightly euphorically about the state of things, as we enjoyed our first meal at Pollen Street Social.

Perhaps he was hallucinating in the Athens-like heat. Head chef Jason Atherton, formally of Ramsay’s maze, had managed to find the only golden statue of a leg of lamb in London, displayed proudly in the window. The effort would have been better spent securing the services of an electrician to fix the air-conditioning. But, I tried to stay positive as my legs glued themselves to the black leather, Manhattan-style banquette at which we were sat. Continue reading »

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Gordon Ramsay Wins Order to Search Father-in-Law’s Computer

bloomberg.com

Next time I have a row with my husband's father, I will definitely sequester his PC.

Gordon Ramsay, the Michelin-starred British chef, won a court order allowing him to search the computers of his father-in-law Chris Hutcheson. The order was needed because e-mails relating to an employment case may have been intercepted, Ramsay’s lawyer, Thomas Croxford, told a hearing today. Hutcheson, who was fired as chief executive of Gordon Ramsay Holdings in October, and Sara Stewart, the company’s former accountant, are suing the chef.

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Cocktail calories don’t count

Image credit:

If they put calorie counts on drinks, there's a good chance I'd start avoiding food.

Wine, beer and spirits — and drinks made from them — are exempt from the FDA’s menu labeling proposal, even though a mud slide or margarita could easily send a meal’s calorie count off the rails. When I first inquire about the Gorilla, she tells me I won’t even taste the small shots of banana liqueur and creme de cacao in the drink. She’s so giddy about the creamy cocktail, she almost makes me excited to be sucking down an alcoholic shake at an Egyptian-theme chain restaurant inside a Rockville mall just steps from a nearly depleted Borders outlet where practically everything’s for sale short of the employees’ personal footwear. I try to mirror the bartender’s enthusiasm and ask about the other ingredients in the Flying Gorilla.

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English Candy Named and Shamed

Fork In The Road

The English just can’t name their candy bars, says writer from the country which gave us ‘Oh Henry!’.

Last weekend I reported on my visit to the London Candy Co., and described in superficial detail its confectionary offerings. You didn’t think I’d leave empty handed, did you? Rather, I picked out five candy bars with the stupidest names, intent on trying them and rendering a critical opinion. The store demonstrates how much more vital and competitive the English candy bar industry is, with chocolate companies constantly inventing new products, and giving them extreme names. Here are my tasting notes.

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