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by Alan Zweibel
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Three years ago, I moved my family back to the east coast. No, that’s not totally accurate. Truth is, three years ago my family moved me back to the east coast.
When a play I’d co-written was scheduled to open on Broadway, Robin and the kids seized upon that as an excuse to return to the side of the country they longed to live on since we’d relocated to Los Angeles more than a decade earlier. I was dubious. The majority of my work and my friends were located out there and I’m now at an age where even the slightest deviation in routine is regarded as an upheaval. But my family’s happiness has always come first (plus they mounted a campaign that included not talking to me until I caved) so, the minute I caved, Robin got on a plane that landed in New Jersey, found a house she thought we’d be happy living in and, not unlike the European immigrants of my grandparents’ generation, sent for the rest of us when the time was right.
The town she chose was the bucolic enclave of Short Hills. Ancient trees, spacious homes set far back from roads with no sidewalks, a local movie house, quaint mom and pop stores on both sides of a sleepy Main Street – a Rockwellian wet dream just forty minutes from Manhattan.
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by Laraine Newman
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My idea of a good time is dragging my sorry ass up the stairs after a long day, plopping down on the bed, snuggling with my husband and watching re-runs of Law and Order or, if God REALLY loves me, a NEW episode of Real Time With Bill Maher. This 4 star vacation is earned after a day of schlepping kids, policing homework and of course the dance of death known as feeding everyone.
I’ve lost the will to live at that point, so preparing food for myself is out of the question. I hastily eat something over the sink or bring things up to the bed that can be dipped or combined such as pesto with bread and diet coke, or Cheezits and Cranberry Juice. Oy.
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by Steve Zaillian
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 My Mother Vina circa 1957 Instead of turkey, mashed potatoes, etc., stuffed grape leaves (along
with shish-kabob and pilaf) is the traditional centerpiece of our
Christmas dinner.
Disclaimer: Every script I’ve ever written is overly descriptive and
too long, so no doubt this recipe will be, too. Apologies in advance.
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by Michael Elias
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The good thing about having a sister who owns a restaurant – and The
River Café is a great one in my opinion – is that when she’s cooking my
son is allowed to order ‘off the menu’. In his case it’s a plate of the
most wonderful creamy pasta carbonara. Made special for him with egg
yolks the color of oranges, peppered pancetta and the parmesan cheese
hand carried from Parma, I suppose. The bad thing is that my sister
won’t let me have any. “You don’t need it”, she says looking at my
waist. So it’s the regular menu for me.
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by Don Lindgren
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The large, white-framed windows of our shop face the sidewalk, which
sits alongside a fairly nondescript street, which for much of the day
serves as a conduit for people going elsewhere; office workers shuffle
downtown in the mornings; restaurant goers eagerly head for the many
choices for lunch or dinner. In between, the sidewalk can be quiet.
It’s during the “in between” time that a world previously invisible to
me has made itself known.
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