L.A.'s Legendary Restaurants. George Geary
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Название: L.A.'s Legendary Restaurants

Автор: George Geary

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Кулинария

Серия:

isbn: 9781595808011

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ ground black pepper

      fresh rosemary

      1 cup diced celery

      1 cup diced carrot

      ½ cup red wine

      Brown Gravy (recipe follows)

      1. Preheat the oven to 350°F.

      2. Place the ribs in a shallow baking pan, sprinkle with salt, pepper, and rosemary, and place the celery and carrot pieces around them. Roast for 1 hour.

      3. Add the red wine and Brown Gravy to the pan, cover with foil, and roast for an additional 1½ hours, or until the meat is tender when a fork is inserted.

       Brown Gravy

       Makes about 3 cups

      6 tbsp. unsalted butter, softened

      6 tbsp. all-purpose flour

      14 oz. chicken broth

      14 oz. beef broth

      1 tbsp. beef concentrate (or one bullion cube)

      sea salt

      freshly ground black pepper

      1. In a saucepan over medium heat, melt the butter and stir in the flour until smooth and pale golden.

      2. Whisk in the chicken broth, beef broth, and beef concentrate until blended. Bring to a boil and simmer for 10 minutes. Season to taste with salt and pepper as needed.

       Bread Pudding

      When the Cocoanut Grove hosted large banquets, this bread pudding was a mainstay of the menu. It was also a very popular late night snack at the Palm Bar & Coffee Shop.

       Serves 8

      6 large eggs

      4 cups whole milk

      1 tsp. pure vanilla extract

      ¾ cup granulated sugar

      ½ tsp. ground nutmeg

      1 lb. white bread, cubed

      ½ tsp. ground cinnamon

      ¼ cup sweetened coconut flakes

      1. Preheat the oven to 325°F. Butter a 2-quart baking dish and set aside.

      2. In a bowl, whisk together the eggs, milk, vanilla, sugar, and nutmeg. Mix in the bread cubes. Place in the prepared pan and sprinkle the top with the cinnamon and coconut.

      3. Bake until set, 40 to 45 minutes. Serve warm.

A tartan-clad server at ...

      A tartan-clad server at the Tam O’Shanter, 1930s.

       Tam O’Shanter Inn

      OPEN: 1922–present

      LOCATION: 2980 Los Feliz Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90039

      ORIGINAL PHONE: OL-0228

      CURRENT PHONE: (323) 664-0228

      CUISINE: British Pub Fare

      DESIGN: Harry Oliver

      BUILDING STYLE: Storybook

      THE TAM O’SHANTER IS SAID TO BE THE LONGEST-RUNNING SAME-LOCATION, SAME-FAMILY-OWNED RESTAURANT IN LOS ANGELES. Two families, the Van de Kamps and the Franks (of the now-famous Van de Kamp’s Holland Dutch Bakeries and Lawry’s Restaurants, Inc.), opened the Scottish pub-themed Tam O’Shanter in 1922. The restaurant has been rechristened several times—first named the Tam O’Shanter, then the Montgomery Inn, then the Tam O’Shanter again, then the Great Scot, and then finally the Tam O’Shanter again in 1968.

      Motion picture art director Harry Oliver, who worked on such films as Ben-Hur and Scarface, was commissioned to build the Tam O’Shanter. Oliver, who also designed the famous Witch’s House in Beverly Hills, hired carpenters from a nearby studio to char the inn’s wooden planks to create a weather-beaten effect. Thanks to this technique, the planks have never had to be painted and only look better with age.

      The Tam was built on a dirt road named Tropico Avenue (now Los Feliz Boulevard), in an area that was originally on the outskirts of Los Angeles. The neighborhood around the restaurant soon grew into what the motion picture studios nicknamed “On Location”—off of studio property, but still close by.

      Having lunch at the Tam was like being in a backlot commissary. It was not uncommon to spot Mary Pickford, the Keystone Kops, Tom Mix in his leather chaps and ten-gallon hat, or Fatty Arbuckle in his suit and tie. John Wayne was a frequent diner in his later years; his table was number 15 in the Tartan Room.

      With the original Walt Disney Studios about half a mile away, Walt Disney himself also had a regular table at the Tam: number 31, which now displays a plaque that reads, “This was a favorite spot of Walt Disney and his Imagineers.” Disney was such a frequent visitor that some called the restaurant “the Walt Disney Studios commissary.” Today, two of Disney’s autographed sketches hang in the lobby: one of Lawrence Frank with Mickey, Minnie, Goofy, Donald, and Tinkerbell, and another of Richard Frank and his son, Richard Jr., sitting at a table with half a dozen Mickeys (one for each decade that both the Tam and Disney had been around). Upstairs, near the employee changing area, are framed photographs of some of Disney’s “Nine Old Men” (the Walt Disney Company’s famed animators) hamming it up for the camera. These are some of the last pictures taken of them together.

Walt Disney’s sketch of ...

      Walt Disney’s sketch of Lawrence Frank with Disney characters, 1958.

      Considered one of the first themed restaurants in the country, the Tam O’Shanter hasn’t wavered from its original 1922 vision, featuring medieval weapons, coats of arms, and family crests. Three roaring fireplaces and a large pub welcome you in the lobby. The restaurant’s “snug” displays awards won by the eatery, Scottish tartans, and lively decor. A large red display case houses old menus, photos, napkins, and other memorabilia. Because of its historical look and feel, the Tam has been used in many film and television productions—most recently for one of the final episodes of AMC’s Mad Men, СКАЧАТЬ