Sep. 19th, 2007

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Dear Home Delivery Subscriber,

We are ending TimesSelect, effective today. This will not affect any services you are already receiving as a home delivery customer.

The Times's Op-Ed and news columns are now available to everyone free of charge, along with Times File and News Tracker. In addition, The New York Times online Archive is now free back to 1987 for all of our readers.

Why the change?

Since we launched TimesSelect, the Web has evolved into an increasingly open environment. Readers find more news in a greater number of places and interact with it in more meaningful ways. This decision enhances the free flow of New York Times reporting and analysis around the world. It will enable everyone, everywhere to read our news and opinion - as well as to share it, link to it and comment on it.

All other benefits of home delivery remain the same. You will continue to have complimentary access (100 articles every month) to the complete online Archive back to 1851. For additional benefits, including our All Access suite of digital products, click here: http://www.nytimes.com/allaccess.

We thank you for your support of TimesSelect, and hope you continue to enjoy The New York Times in all its electronic and print forms.

For more information, including answers to frequently asked questions, click here:

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Sincerely,

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NYTimes.com
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Lunch With Alice Waters, Food Revolutionary
By KIM SEVERSON

WHEN Alice Waters is coming over to cook lunch, the first thing you do is look around your house and think, I live in a dump.

Then you take an inventory of the pantry. The bottles of Greek and Portuguese olive oil, once a point of pride, suddenly seem inadequate. And should you hide the box of Kellogg’s Raisin Bran and jettison those two cans of Diet Pepsi?

At the end of the afternoon, when the last peach was peeled and my kitchen was stacked with dirty pots, it didn’t really matter. Ms. Waters was either too polite or too distracted to mention what was in my cupboard. It turns out she travels with her own olive oil, anyway. And homemade vinegar. And salt-packed capers.

Ms. Waters had agreed to spend a hot September day shopping with me at the Union Square Greenmarket and schlepping back to my first-floor apartment in brownstone Brooklyn to make lunch.

The menu was dictated by two things: the market’s offerings and the recipes in her forthcoming book, “The Art of Simple Food: Notes, Lessons and Recipes From a Delicious Revolution” (Clarkson Potter, October). More

Recipe: Warm Olives
Recipe: Raspberry Syrup
Recipe: Aioli


WINES OF THE TIMES
Happiness for $10 or Less
By ERIC ASIMOV

HOW much do you want to spend on a bottle of wine? The intuitive answer, of course, is as little as possible. That stands to reason, except that the way people buy wine is anything but reasonable.

For most consumers, wine-buying is an emotional issue. The restaurant industry has a longstanding belief that the lowest-priced wine on the list will never sell. Nobody wants to be seen as cheap. But the second-lowest-priced wine, that’s the one people will gobble up. More


Lessons From the Professors of Tea
By NINA SIMONDS

Northampton, Mass.

MARY LOU and Bob Heiss can talk about the subtle differences among the fine chocolates, olive oils, vinegars and spices, they carry at Cooks Shop Here, their specialty food shop in this small town in Western Massachusetts.

But once you ask about their 125 varieties of tea and look over shelves packed with every conceivable accessory necessary for brewing, storing and drinking tea, you realize where their passions lie.

“About 15 years ago, when some of the more unusual varieties of tea began being allowed into the country, we started getting very interested,” Ms. Heiss said, referring to the easing of import and export restrictions. The more they learned about tea, the more they wanted to know, she said, while standing by an old-fashioned apothecary counter packed with tea leaves, tea bags and molded tea cakes. More

A Good Appetite
Plums, Enveloped in a Silken Cloud
By MELISSA CLARK

FOR a person with so emphatic a sweet tooth, I’m awfully blasé when it comes to dessert. A few buttery homemade shortbread cookies are all I require, especially when I am doing the cooking.

But every once in a while, an occasion demands a snazzier sweet, something show-stopping for friends who have grown tired of shortbread.

I found myself in such a situation recently, with a discerning lot who had been there and seen that at every restaurant in town, and had eaten through my entire repertory of desserts.

But my party was on a Friday night, and who has time to make a fancy dessert and dinner after work? More

Recipe: Lemon Verbena-Poached Plums With Prosecco Sabayon

Piratical?

Sep. 19th, 2007 07:29 am
lsanderson: (Default)
Isn't it something about pirates day?

Argh!

Sep. 19th, 2007 10:04 am
lsanderson: (Default)
Argh! (Since I can't spell "Ahoy Mates") ... And I've been reading from that sekrit mailing list again...
via TREO
Larry
lsanderson: (Default)
My car has a trunk big enough for a gentleman's overnight bag. Yesterday, I picked up Wilson at the airport. His suitcase would not fit. His accordian, however, did. Because it wuz raining cats and dogs, I had the top up. He got to carry his suitcase all the way to the house on his lap. Because it wuz raining, and I didn't turn off on 55, I bailed off 62 at the next exit and wandered across South Mpls to home.

We ran out to Pho Tau Bay to eat and Amy came & joined us. They went to the Leaning Tower of Pizza, where I joined 'em for some hard, hard, hard Trivia -- after dropping off some shrimp fried rice for Thong who is time shifting outta Asia.
via TREO
Larry
lsanderson: (Default)
Call for Entries
Cyberbullying is a growing problem among children and teenagers on the Internet. The anonymity and ease of communication the Internet provides can create a vehicle for bullying, harassment and defamation, making the Internet a hostile and dangerous place. Cyberbullying is a problem that you, as a filmmaker, can help address and solve.

Help end cyberbullying by creating a Public Service Announcement on the issue. Sony Creative Software, the National Crime Prevention Council and the Ad Council are seeking entries from independent producers and academic institutions (K - 12). The top submissions may be eligible for national broadcast, and their producer or sponsoring academic institution will receive a complete multimedia editing suite for their facility or school valued at over $18,000. Prize sponsors include Sony Creative Software, Sony Electronics, and Sony VAIO.

Judges to include: Barry Sonnenfeld, director/producer (Men in Black, Addams Family, and others); Steve Oedekerk, producer/writer (Bruce Almighty, Barnyard, and others); Justin W. Patchin, Ph.D., noted authority on social networking and cyberbullying; and members of the Ad Council's Campaign Review Committee.

The call for entries period opened September 11, 2007, and closes January 11, 2008. All entries must be received by January 11, 2008 to be eligible.


Click here for more information, prizes, rules and submission guidelines

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