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Anthony Bourdain doesn't get to eat anything fun at home. "My wife is the most unimaginative eater ever. She doesn't even like tomatoes," he says. So Bourdain, 45, the chef who wrote 2000's restaurant tell-all, Kitchen Confidential, got himself a TV deal and book contract to travel around the world eating lamb testicles, duck embryo and a still-beating cobra heart ("like an aggressive oyster," he says). For this interview, he escapes from his Upper West Side apartment to a signless Japanese restaurant in the basement of a midtown Manhattan office building. He orders sea urchin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Renegade Gourmet | 12/24/2001 | See Source »

DIED. JEAN-LOUIS PALLADIN, 55, venturesome chef who took the fustiness out of French food and opened the fashionable Jean-Louis restaurant in Washington's Watergate Hotel; of lung cancer; in McLean, Va. Palladin mentored a generation of celebrated New York City chefs, such as Daniel Boulud, Christian Delouvrier and Drew Nieporent, but never struck it rich. When his cancer was diagnosed last year, chefs and diners across the country chipped in to offset his medical bills...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones Dec. 10, 2001 | 12/10/2001 | See Source »

Gourmet Guy, HUDS Chef...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: Alternate Names for Gossip Guy | 12/6/2001 | See Source »

...Laos. That will all be over by now of course. He had taken a few nice pictures, but Christina needed an artist. She found what she needed in Jean-Claude, a devastatingly handsome man she met in a cafe in Paris during a trip to visit her former chef. They did not even exchange words; they just gazed into each other’s eyes. The two eloped in Monte Carlo and honeymooned in Marrakesh, much to the chagrin of Christina’s mom, who had been hoping for a lavish celebration in the Hamptons. They humored her however...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: Christina S.N. Lewis | 12/6/2001 | See Source »

...more insidious problem—a service-oriented attitude. We expect that our dishes will be clean, that the puddle of vomit that appeared on the stairwell Saturday night will be gone by Monday morning, that getting five glasses of water is more efficient than refilling one. The dishwasher, chef and janitor may be getting a few dollars more on their checks, but has our community become more inclusive, its membership more complete...

Author: By Sue Meng, | Title: The Cost of a Living Wage | 12/6/2001 | See Source »

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