Word: kitchener
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Boston Bureau Chief Ruth Mehrtens spent five days in the Childs' sunny kitchen interviewing Julia and occasionally lent a helping hand when there were peas to be shelled or a chicken to be stuffed. Ruth modestly admits that she is considered an excellent cook by her good friends ("and anyone who thinks I'm an excellent cook is a good friend"). Writer Marshall Burchard grew up in a food-conscious home in Boston; his father liked to re-create for his family meals he had eaten in European restaurants. While working on the cover, Burchard and his wife...
...mother, who ran a tearoom in Blackwell, Okla. For the cover, Sue spent 19 days interviewing food experts in Manhattan, sampling all the while. One day she was forced to eat three chefs-delight lunches within five hours. Editor Cranston Jones-ate and edited-but stayed out of the kitchen. He was content in the knowledge that his wife has had lessons at Paris' Cordon Bleu...
...wife of an unnamed neighbor who either was, or attempted to be, her lover. Another man presumably struck Sheppard. Bailey produced a new witness, Jack Kraken, a bakery deliveryman, who said he once saw Marilyn giving a key to a man with whom she was having coffee in her kitchen. Who was the man? The jury was not allowed to hear; nor did even-handed Judge Tally admit Sheppard's post-murder statement to police naming Marilyn's three "spurned lovers," one of them a neighbor...
...verve and insouciance will see her through. Even her failures and faux pas are classic. When a potato pancake falls on the worktable, she scoops it back into the pan, bats her big blue eyes at the cameras, and advises: "Remember, you're all alone in the kitchen...
...society has ever solved the problem of waste-as archaeologists from Iraq to Denmark can testify, as they rummage through ziggurats and kitchen middens. The crucial thing is to keep alive a sense of freedom, possibility and enterprise-and in that sense the U.S. is the least-wasteful society in history. Essentially, nothing is wasted that helps fulfill a legitimate purpose. With their wild-wheeling economy, a phenomenon so extraordinary that they cannot quite believe it themselves, Americans can do anything they choose. All they have to do is make their choices...