As the year closes with a five Saturday month, we remember the late Angela Lansbury in this classic number from "Mame."
Dinner last night: Steak and sauteed mushrooms.
Musings from a Bi-coastal Existence
As the year closes with a five Saturday month, we remember the late Angela Lansbury in this classic number from "Mame."
Dinner last night: Steak and sauteed mushrooms.
And, on the next to last day of the year, you expected what?
When I first started coming out to Los Angeles as a tourist, each trip had to include a visit to the wonderful Old Spaghetti Factory on Sunset. It was part of a chain, but the food and the vibe was so good.
How inviting does it look?And in the last several years?
This is what it looked like in the process of being redone or torn down. I don't really know. Except that it's another example of why we can't have nice things.Dinner last night: Leftover beef tenderloin.
This is what you call a Christmas leftover. My meal from two days ago. And it is as elegant as it looks. As long as you have two hundred or so dollars for the beef tenderloin, it's worth it.
Yes, two hundred dollars for this cut which is involved in a recipe I got from America's Test Kitchen. Officially called "Beef Tenderloin and Smoky Potatoes." Another perk for this meal is you get throw it all in a single roaster.
Start with a 3-4 pound center cut beef tenderloin, preferably from a butcher who will tie it for you so as to guarantee even cooking. Yes, it will cost around 200 bucks.
Several hours before cooking, liberally season the meat with a rub of Kosher salt, pepper, and....yes...baking soda. The latter will help create a crust so you don't have to sear the meat.
Let it stand at room temperature for at least one hour or preferably more.
While the salt is doing its thing to infiltrate the beef, scrub about 2 to 3 pounds of small red potatoes. Put a roasting pan on a gas burner and add it to some EVO, five minced scallions, a few cloves of minced garlic and a tablespoon of smoked paprika. Heat the pan and let the seasoning bloom.
Put your oven at 425 degrees. Add the potatoes to the roaster and add 1/2 cup of water. Let it get a head start in the oven by 15 to 20 minutes.
Remove the roaster. Liberally brush some EVO over the beef and let the potatoes act as a rack for it in the pan. Lower the oven temp to 300 degrees.
Let it cook for 45 to 55 minutes or until the internal meat temperature is 125. Remove and tent it for 20 minutes.
You really don't need to add anything to the meat, but horseradish cream is good. Also I made a Parsillade sauce which I will share the recipe for at another time. As for now...guess what I had for dinner last night...
Dinner last night: Leftover beef tenderloin and potatoes.
Let's watch my favorite, Oliver the Beagle, open Christmas presents last year.
No other words needed today other than...
Remember what Christmas truly is.
Dinner last night: Had a church service so just a small sandwich.
I must watch this wonderful movie every year. And so should you. Perfect for Christmas Eve.
Christmas time used to be the best time to flock to the movies. Whether it be Radio City Music Hall for the Rockettes and the Nativity or perhaps just your neighborhood flicker house. There is no better way to enjoy the season.
Well, it used to be. Now theaters have closed. Films are premiering on your TV. Oh, yeah, and people are still getting COVID. Well, I plan to venture out regardless and I hope you do as well. You know the drill, sports fans. I'll cruise through the movie pages of the local news rag and give you my knee jerk reaction to what's playing.
Here's hoping there is something. Anything.
Babylon: Some Oscar buzz around this one from the LaLa Land folks. Planned sequels are Bay Shore and Islip. Warning: it clocks in at 3 hours.
Avatar - Way of Water: Hated the first one, so what do you think?
Wakanda Forever: Proud to say I am still COVID and Wakanda-free.
Violent Night: Christmas Eve in a very rough neighborhood.
Strange World: Disney tries their hand with a gay character. Mickey now identifying as a ferret.
Devotion: A Black Top Gun during the Korean War. And a true story. Aren't they all?
Black Adam: And Hispanic Eve?
The Fabelmans: And Steven Spielberg is the Beaver.
Spoiler Alert: Decent enough but the whole movie is in the three minute trailer.
The Whale: If you have seen current photos of Brendan Frasier, you know he plays the title role.
Empire of Light: Starring Olivia Colman and I hate her.
Bones and All: Cannibalism on steroids. Eat before you go.
Puss N Boots - Last Wish: My first wish would be...no more Puss N Boots.
Whitney Houston - I Wanna Dance With Somebody: Will it include the bathtub drowning? I hope so.
Women Talking: What else is new?
The Menu: I wonder if you need a QR code to see it.
Dinner last night: Sandwich.
I never was a big fan of Robert Downey Jr.. Oh, sure, he was great in "Chaplin," but his main claim to fame (other than some recent work as Iron Man) was showing up on TMZ. Spotted in a drug-hazed stupor in his underwear on a street in Culver City.
But I became a true fan very recently when I binged on "Ally McBeal," a show I never watched during its first run. Robert Jr. played Ally's love interest in Season 4 and was terrific. Indeed, he and Ally were supposed to get married in the storyline but writers had to regroup when he again was fired for drug use.
Almost twenty years later, I marvel at another piece of his work. A new Netflix documentary called "Sr." And pretty much dedicated to his dad Robert Downey Sr., who had a career as an actor and director in some very avant garde movies like "Putney Swope" and "Pound."
In this film, Father is trying to make one last documentary film on the streets of New York. This is a difficult task as he suffers from a progressive strain of Parkinson's. Son films at the same a documentary about his dad making his documentary. This set-up allows them to speak frequently and, given Dad's dire diagnosis, work up some closure between the two. The conversations between the two are loving and compelling and necessary. At some points, Jr's young son is included and you wind up with three generations of symbiotic connections.
Both Sr. and Jr. clearly had their issues over time but they found a way to get ahead of them. More importantly, Jr. is now with wife and children and a sober lifestyle that he has enjoyed for some time. Good for him.
The final scenes between Sr. and Jr., before the former's death in 2021, are as tender and poignant as you would want and hope. The circle is closed. Both of them had bumpy lives but, at the end, there is a special relationship that is to be envied.
Adding to the beauty of the story is black and white cinematography that fits the dialogue to a tee. There are some intrusions of color when clips of movies are shown. But, for the most part, it is cinema verite in all its film noir glory.
Kudos to Robert Downey Jr. for his work in this film. And mastering life.
LEN'S RATING: Three-and-a-half stars.
Dinner last night: Leftover spicy chicken.
Our Christmas tradition.
The classic use of a hit show for a TV theme. Plus they used the originator one season.