Word: steeles
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...discreet driveway between Eliot and Kirkland, partially obscured by a bevy of hospital-white delivery trucks, lie two stainless steel doors. Any student awake at 9 a.m. would have to be fully caffeinated to notice the unobtrusive loading bay, but FM photographer Laura C. Settlemyer ’05 and I are in possession of directions and know where to go. Not quite caffeinated ourselves, we stand among the idling vehicles, waiting for what promised to be a no-holds-barred tour of the Harvard University Dining Services’ (HUDS) central kitchen facility...
...from the steel doors pops Andy Allen, the executive chef of the HUDS Culinary Support Group (CSG), who leads us through the loading dock and down the stairs into a place that could be mistaken for a modest industrial facility...
...escorts us past miniature forklifts, speaking over the bustling noise of the kitchen. We get amicable waves as we work our way past folks preparing gallons of tuna salad and corn salad in vats that look like enormous Tupperware. Yards of vegetables are lined up neatly on twenty-feet steel counters, ready to become salad fixings. King-Kong-sized industrial mixers and pumping devices churn away in the background. This ain’t your house kitchen—it’s the meat and bones of HUDS...
...only arena in which funky new machines have come into play. “Instead of having a chicken marinate for two days,” Allen says, “we can marinate 500 pounds of chicken in 15 minutes” in what resembles a stainless steel bingo hopper. Allen kindly asks us not to photograph the remnants of raw chicken inside. We oblige...
Samuel Bush was president of the Buckeye Steel company, which was partially owned by Standard Oil, and John Foster Dulles, the lawyer for Walker’s company, Harriman, eventually became director of the CIA, Phillips said...