Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Understanding Over-Rice Dishes: Guest post by Ed Lin

Ed Lin is a journalist by training and an all-around stand-up kinda guy. He’s the author of several books: Ghost Month; Waylaid, his literary debut; and his Robert Chow crime series, set in 1970s Manhattan Chinatown: This Is a Bust, Snakes Can’t Run, and One Red Bastard. Lin, who is of Taiwanese and Chinese descent, is the first author to win three Asian American Literary Awards. Lin lives in New York with his wife, actress Cindy Cheung, and their son.

“Come for the exotic food and fascinating setting; stay for the characters.”
—The Boston Globe

Ed Lin:
Understanding Over-Rice Dishes

If you’re dining solo and looking for cheap eats in Chinatown, it’s a buyer’s market.

The sub-$6 meal in Manhattan’s enclave is ubiquitous, though one should be picky even at that price point.
Roast Pork, the Chinatown Happy Meal, $5.50

The bottom of the rung is the carton of streetcart noodles at $2 a pop. They are never really that good (noodles strewn across a hot grill tend to harden into plastic-sheathed wire) and are meant to satisfy a craving rather than hunger.

Instead, one should pay up the $5.95 or so for an over-rice dish, which many restaurants list on a separate section on the menu. For one thing, it allows one to have a meal while seated and for another thing, an over-rice dish is a solid meal.

The bonus is that there’s an endless variety, sometimes even more so than the offered entrees, and they accommodate all diets and allergies. Gluten-free, vegetarian, vegan, seafood only, no seafood, no problem. Every taste is accounted for except for those of people who don’t like white or brown rice. And if you don’t like rice, then get the hell out of Chinatown—now.

Also, never confuse over-rice dishes with fried rice. Fried rice is essentially leftovers thrown together in a wok and has its own charms, especially to those nursing hangovers. Over-rice dishes are single-portion meals.

I’ll tell you two of my favorites.

In the early 90s, my favorite bachelor meal was lemongrass chicken over broken rice at a Vietnamese restaurant that was run by ethnic Chinese. That sauce alone had a distinctive flavorpoint and yet hit several notes simultaneously like a two-handed piano chord: lemon, lime, mint, salt, chili, and scallion so fresh it nipped my tongue like a raw onion. The broken rice was a perfect vehicle to deliver the sauce since a rice grain broken in half has more surface area (and a larger interface through which to soak up sauce) than a single whole grain.

The chicken itself? I like to think of chicken as a good rhythm guitarist. Show up, play on the beat, have a meaty texture, never be cut and dried, and let the sauce/seasoning play lead.

I think fish sauce was in there, as well, and even though I’m allergic to all seafood (I break out), I still scraped it all up with the flat side of my fork.

Wait, you say, a fork? Yes, a fork! Chopsticks are for eating out of a bowl. Over-rice dishes are served on plates, so don’t reach for the chopsticks—grab a fork.

My other favorite over-rice dish is that Cantonese soul food, roast pork. Your typical Cantonese place has a number of meats hanging in the window. Make sure you get roast “pork” and not roast “pig.” The former is roasted with barbeque sauce and the latter is an entire pig roasted plain until the skin is crisp, similar to lechón. For the purposes of an over-rice dish (simple, tasty and filling), you will want the barbequed pork. The roast pig is best as an entree as it needs to have its profile filled out with added sauces and stewed vegetables. You start futzing with what needs to be added, it reminds me of the mid-80s, when people began walking around with portable equalizers to supposedly get better sound from their Walkmen. You want the best sound possible from your music? Stay at home and fire up your stereo system. You want to eat your roast pig properly? Bring out your friends and have a full meal with it.

I digress.

Roast pork, also known as char siu, with its sweet and tangy glaze, only needs the plainest of rice to complement it. The pleasant patches of fat in the meat nearly serve as the vegetable component to the dish by providing a contrast in texture.

In the late 90s, when I was working at a wire service on the 5pm-to-midnight shift, I would pick up a carton of roast pork over rice for $1.85 and head to the much-missed Music Palace movie theater for a double feature before work. They didn’t care if you brought in outside food, even though they certainly were no slouches with their own offerings, which included several different herbal iced teas, almond cookies and packages of dried squid.

I would chow away while watching Stephen Chow with the other working stiffs in the theater, which really brought home the original support base of over-rice dishes. They are inseparably a food of the working class, the people who didn’t have the time or money for otherwise eating out and worked odd-enough hours so they’d likely be eating alone.

While rice itself is a staple of the Chinese diet, one must also consider that when Chinese people try to go upscale, they eliminate it. The hoity-toitiest meals at weddings and other festivities are all meat and seafood dishes to show how prosperous the hosts are. Whenever I find myself at such functions, I always miss the rice. And my fork.

Monday, July 25, 2016

New York -- It's a Wonderful Town: Guest post by Katherine Hall Page

To date, award-winning Katherine Hall Page has published thirty books: twenty-three in the Faith Fairchild series with The Body in the Wardrobe (April 2016), five juvenile/YAs, a cookbook, Have Faith in Your Kitchen, and Small Plates, a Collection of Short Fiction. She is Malice Domestic 28’s Lifetime Achievement Award recipient. This essay missed being included in the New York issues of Mystery Readers Journal, but so glad it found a place here. Thanks, Katherine!

Katherine Hall Page: 
It’s a Wonderful Town

The Big Apple. Jazz musicians coined the city's familiar moniker in the Twenties. There were plenty of apples to pick from the tree, but only one "Big Apple", only one New York. If you had a gig there, you had it made. The ultimate destination. And as the title of this piece indicates, it’s impossible not to hum, or sing out loud, about it. Tony Bennett may have left his heart in San Francisco, but if he wanted to make it anywhere, he had to head East.

I set two books—The Body in the Big Apple and The Body in the Boudoir— in New York City, both of them prequels covering the time in my series character, Faith Sibley Fairchild’s life before she was married and transplanted to the more bucolic orchards of New England.

Growing up in Northern New Jersey, as teenagers my friends and I used to say we lived "just outside the city", omitting the fact that we had to cross a state line to get there—the coolest place on earth. At twelve, we had been deemed old enough to take the DeCamp bus together to Port Authority —in the day time. Armed with the small penciled maps my artist mother would draw, we'd head for Manhattan. One Saturday it would be museums. My cousin John convinced me to stand in line with him for several hours outside the Metropolitan Museum of Art to catch a sixty second glimpse of the Mona Lisa, on loan from the Louvre. It's the wait I remember best now, the mix of New Yorkers and out-of-towners, the jokes, the stories—holding places while people dashed off for a dog from the Sabrett's All Beef Kosher Franks stand with its bright yellow and blue umbrella. Another Saturday, we'd go from box office to box office on Broadway until we got tickets to a matinee (prices were much lower in the early Sixties). We saw everything from Richard Burton in Hamlet to Robert Preston in The Music Man. Sometimes we'd just wander, walking miles, entranced by the dramatic changes in the neighborhoods from one block to the next. Bialys and bagels gave way to egg rolls followed swiftly by cannolis as we moved Uptown.

No time of year was more magical than December and from the time I was a small child, there was always a special trip during the season to look at the Rockefeller Center tree and the department store windows. Other times of the year, my parents took us to the ballet, opera—the old Met with the cloth of gold curtain—, concerts, and special exhibits at the museums—the Calder mobiles like nothing anyone had seen before spiraling in the enormous spiral of the Guggenheim.

Then there were the restaurants—or rather one restaurant: Horn and Hardart's Automat. My 1964 Frommer's Guide advises: "Inquire of any passer-by, and you'll be directed to one that's usually no more than a block-or-two away." Sadly, they have all disappeared and trying to explain the concept to my son—you put nickels in the slot next to the food you wanted, lifted the little glass door, snatched it out and watched the empty space revolve, instantly producing another dish —is well nigh impossible. Fortunately there are old movies. Just as difficult is describing the food—the superb , crusty macaroni and cheese with tiny bits of tomato, the warm deep dish apple pie with vanilla sauce, the baked beans in their own little pot. Most New Yorkers of a certain age wax nostalgic about automat food—the meat loaf! And a whole meal for $1.00.

My husband is the genuine article. A native New Yorker, born and bred in the Bronx. "The Beautiful Bronx" when he was growing up and we have a book of the same name to prove it. When he meets someone else from the borough, talk immediately turns to the Grand Concourse, the "nabe", and egg creams. Where he lived is now part of the Cross Bronx Expressway, but he can still point out his elementary school as we whiz past. New Yorkers are very sentimental.

And to continue in the manner of Faith Fairchild's sweeping generalizations, New Yorkers are also very rude, very generous, very funny, very stylish, very quirky, and very fast. Genetically, they have more molecules than most other Americans. The moment I step off the train or plane from Boston, in imitation my pace quickens, gaze narrows, and senses sharpen. Forget all those New York designer fragrances. The essence is adrenaline, pure and simple.

These two books are paeans to New York City past, present, and future—always keeping in mind what the comedian, Harry Hershfield said, "New York: Where everyone mutinies but no one deserts." No matter the time—some things never change. It's a wonderful town.

Saturday, July 2, 2016

New York City Mysteries II: Mystery Readers Journal

Mystery Readers Journal: New York City Mysteries II (Volume 32:2) is now available. Thanks to everyone who contributed to this great issue! If you're a  subscriber to Mystery Readers Journal for '16, you should have received your hardcopy or your download PDF instructions. If you are a contributor, you will receive a PDF copy early next week.

To order New York City Mysteries II, go HERE.

New York City Mysteries I (32:1) is still available. Order HERE.

To subscribe to Mystery Readers Journal for '16, go HERE.

NEW YORK CITY MYSTERIES II (Volume 32:2)

TABLE OF CONTENTS
  • Nero Wolfe’s New York by Larry Light
  • Just the Facts: The Shoofly by Jim Doherty
AUTHOR! AUTHOR!
  • Brooklyn Ease by J.L. Abramo
  • You See, and You Don’t Forget by Marc Bilgrey
  • Once There Was a Spot: Camelot in New York by Michael Bowen
  • Moving (Fictionally) to New York by Jeff Cohen
  • Deep in the Heart of the Big Apple by Ali Brandon
  • Always Changing, Always New York by Suzanne Chazin
  • Boogie Down to the Battle Ground by Marco Conelli
  • The Trouble with New York City by Camilla Crespi
  • Take Me to a Bar, Any Bar by Anne Emery
  • Eight Million Stories and Still Counting by Linda Fairstein
  • New York City, Just Like I Pictured It… by Bill Fitzhugh
  • One Manhattan Life to Live by Marni Graff
  • The City of Infinite Possibilities by Kathryn Miller Haines
  • The Amish in NYC? by Karen Harper
  • The City That Never Sleeps—My Partner in Crime by Andrea Kane
  • Neighborly New York by Con Lehane
  • The Oddest Job in Maspeth, Queens by Ben Lieberman
  • Right Now… by Randye Lordon
  • Memento, Greenwich Village, 1954 by Annette Meyers
  • Take the “A” Train by Paul D. Marks
  • I Could Write a Sonnet by Camille Minichino
  • Being Part of Each Other by S.J. Rozan
  • One in Eight Million by Charles Salzberg
  • Titanic in New York by Sarah Smith
  • The Jaded Kiwi by Nick Spill
  • From Cupcakes to Books, or How I Came to Love New York by Rosemary Stevens
  • The Details That Make a City by Radha Vatsal
  • Babylon on the Hudson by Kenneth Wishnia
  • It’s the Bronx in Me by Joyce Yarrow
COLUMNS
  • Mystery in Retrospect: Reviews by Lesa Holstine, Sandie Herron, Kate Derie, L.J. Roberts
  • The Children’s Hour: New York Mysteries by Gay Toltl Kinman
  • Stranger than Fiction: Real New York Mysteries by Cathy Pickens
  • Crime Seen: Still Naked After All These Years by Kate Derie
  • New York’s Finest: The Top Ten Series Characters by Jim Doherty
  • From the Editor by Janet Rudolph
Subscribe or renew Mystery Readers Journal for 2016 and receive all four issues for '16: New York 1; New York 2: Small Town Cops; Mid-Atlantic Crime Fiction.

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

New York City Mysteries: Mystery Readers Journal

Mystery Readers Journal: New York City I (Volume 32:1) is now available. Thanks to everyone who contributed to this great issue! If you're a PDF subscriber to Mystery Readers Journal for '16, you should have received download instructions. If you're a hardcopy subscriber, your issue will arrive shortly.

There were so many articles and reviews that we split New York Mysteries into two issues.  New York City Mysteries II (Volume 32:2) will be out in June..

This issue is available in Hardcopy and PDF download. To order this issue, go HERE.
To subscribe to Mystery Readers Journal for '16, go HERE.

NEW YORK CITY MYSTERIES I

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Don’t Care if It’s Chinatown or on Riverside by Margo Kinberg

AUTHOR! AUTHOR!
How the New York Tabloids Helped Me Become a Mystery Author by R.G. Belsky
What Do You Want to Be When You Grow Up? by Maggie Barbieri
So Many Places… by Carol Lea Benjamin
All Around the Town by Lawrence Block
Revisiting Molly Murphy’s New York by Rhys Bowen
A Borough with Noir in Its Soul by Philip Cioffari
My New York Story (and Stories) by Alafair Burke
Strange, and True, in NYC by Gabriel Cohen
A Thousand New Yorks by Reed Farrel Coleman
Writing the Cozy Noir by Cleo Coyle
Full-Contact Living in NYC by Julia Dahl
The Year of Living New Yorkishly by Dan Fesperman
Achieving New York by Jim Fusilli
New York Means Neighborhoods by Alison Gaylin
New York, New York: A Promised Land by Kathleen Gerard
Escape to New York by Patricia Gulley
Dark City by David Hansard
A Tough Lady Sleuth in 1940s Manhattan by Heather Haven
A Wide Canvas by Larry Karp
Midtown West by Charles Kipps
In Search of Old New York City by Allan Levine
The Stuff They Skipped in History Class by Lawrence H. Levy
Accidental New York by Katia Lief
From NYPD Street Cop to Author by John Mackie
Dancing and Death with the Rockettes by Mary McHugh
Maan Meyers and New York by Maan Meyers
My New York Office by Chris Pavone
Why I Love New York: It’s So Easy to Research by Roberta Rogow
From the Perspective of a Native New Yorker by M. Glenda Rosen
The New Jerusalem by Carrie Smith
Très Brooklyn by Triss Stein
New York 1950s Noir by David Taylor
My Harlem Renaissance by Persia Walker
Turning New York Life into Fiction by Reba White Williams
The Calculus of a New York Setting by Brian Wiprud
Six Hundred Dollars to Spare by Erica Wright
New York: A Shapeshifter You Can’t Keep Up With by Elizabeth Zelvin

COLUMNS
Mystery in Retrospect: Reviews by Lesa Holstine, L.J. Roberts and Jasmine Simeone
Children’s Hour: New York City by Gay Toltl Kinman
In Short: A Hell of a Mystery Town by Marvin Lachman
Crime Seen: The Naked City by Kate Derie
New York’s Finest: the Top Ten Series Characters by Jim Doherty
From the Editor’s Desk by Janet Rudolph

Subscribe or renew Mystery Readers Journal for 2016 and receive all four issues for '16: New York 1; New York 2: Small Town Cops; Mid-Atlantic Crime Fiction.

Sunday, January 31, 2016

Call for Articles: New York Crime Fiction


CALL FOR ARTICLES: New York Mysteries!
 

The next issue of Mystery Readers Journal (Volume 32:1) will focus on crime fiction set in New York, New York. Looking for reviews, articles, and Author! Author! essays.

Reviews: 50-250 words

Articles: 250-1000 words

Author! Author essays: 500-1500 words. Author essays should be first person, about yourself, your books, and the 'New York connection'. Think of it as chatting with friends and other writers in the bar or cafe about your work and the New York connection. Add title and 2-3 sentence bio/tagline.

Deadline: February 20. 

Send to: Janet Rudolph, Editor janet@mysteryreaders.org 

Please forward this request to anyone you think should be included.

Subscribe or renew Mystery Readers Journal for 2016 and receive all four issues for '16 -- New York, New York!, Small Town Cops; Mid-Atlantic Crime Fiction; Big Law Enforcement Agencies.

Many back issues of Mystery Readers Journal are available as single copies in hardcopy or PDF.

Call for Articles for 2016 (Volume 32): 
New York, New York (1)
Small Town Cops (2)
Mid-Atlantic (3)
Large Law Enforcement Agencies (4)

Have titles, articles or suggestions for these upcoming issues?
Want to write an Author! Author! essay?
Email Janet Rudolph.

Friday, December 28, 2012

Sightseeing is Murder: A Killer New York Tour by Cleo Coyle

Rockefeller Center. Photo: James G. Howes
Planning on spending time in New York during the holidays? Don't mis this Killer New York Tour by Cleo Coyle. 

Sightseeing is Murder: A Killer New York Tour by Cleo Coyle 

Fans of crime stories know that New York means murder, whether you’re inside the grim, blighted city from the novels of Lawrence Block or chasing down the perps and skells of TV shows like The Naked City, NYPD Blue, and Law & Order.

At the theater, we’ve gotten cozy with the Big Apple’s criminal element in films like The French Connection, Dog Day Afternoon, Taxi Driver, and American Gangster. Theirs is a nasty, brutish world with a drug dealer on every corner, shootout at the neighborhood bank, and the corpse of a cheating husband, ex-wife, or conniving mistress cluttering up most luxury suites.

Reality check: These days, the NYPD will tell you that our fair city is one of the safest in the country. Then again, that’s a per capita view. With eight million inhabitants there’s still plenty of by-the-numbers crime, which means New York will clock up more homicides, burglaries, robberies and muggings than most urban areas in the USA.

Of course, every crime has a scene, some more interesting than others, so whether you live here or are planning to join one of the fifty million who come here annually, we invite you to visit a few of our favorites…

BRYANT PARK 
Bryant Park Carousel. Phoeo: Jim Henderson

Back in the 1970s, this midtown green space was nicknamed Needle Park because it had been taken over by heroin addicts, smack dealers, prostitutes, and the homeless. As part of the revitalization of nearby Times Square, this park has been transformed into an urban oasis complete with London plane trees, a restored fountain, Wi-Fi, and a lovely hand-painted carousel just right for a not-so-merry-go-round of murder. It’s precisely where our amateur sleuth finds her first corpse in Holiday Buzz—our latest Coffeehouse Mystery.

ROCKEFELLER CENTER 

Has a body ever been found under the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree? J D Robb came close with her own “holiday” mystery, Holiday in Death, when she executed a character on the adjacent ice rink. In Murder by Mocha, our tenth Coffeehouse Mystery, we introduced readers to the Loft and Garden at Rockefeller Center, an open space high above Fifth Avenue, with a spectacular view of the spires of St. Patrick’s Cathedral—“available for weddings, birthday parties, and…”( we can just hear Hitch saying…) “that special murder.”

FAO SCHWARZ 

Although Tiffany & Company is just down the block (and who doesn’t associate jewels with the holidays—or heists?) our criminal inspiration came from the most extravagant toy store in America. In the movie Big, actor Tom Hanks danced across the giant floor piano. In Holiday Buzz those keys get a workout again—from a forensics team looking for DNA evidence. Before the murder, we used the store as a staging area for lesser crimes, as well: an assault by a masher and an attack by a remote control toy car (neither of which is recommended for children twelve and under).

CENTRAL PARK 

Muggings, robberies, and assorted nastiness are all associated with Central Park (not to mention Charles Bronson’s famous shootout in Death Wish). In A Brew to a Kill, we added our own crime scene to the list with a hit-and-run murder on one of the park’s winding, tree-lined roads—and, no, the hurtling delivery system for a vehicular homicide was not a horse and carriage.

THE STATUE OF LIBERTY 
Photo: Alice Alfonsi

Lady Liberty is a spectacular location for murder. In fact, filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock beat us to it by dropping a villain off the Statue’s torch in Saboteur. (We didn’t have that kind of budget.) In our first holiday mystery, Holiday Grind, we had to settle for tossing someone off the Staten Island Ferry into the waters beneath Lady Liberty.

FUTURE HOT SPOTS… 

We hope you enjoyed our mini crime scene tour of the Big Apple. We actually have twelve books worth with a thirteenth set for publication later this year. If you take our complete tour, you’ll see that in the Coffeehouse Mysteries, location matters—and, like any dedicated developer, we’ll continue to search for hot new spots to make a killing.

Alice Alfonsi & Marc Cerasini, who write as Cleo Coyle

CLEO COYLE is the pen name for Alice Alfonsi and Marc Cerasini. When not haunting coffeehouses, hunting ghosts, or rescuing stray cats, Alice and Marc are New York Times bestselling media tie-in writers who have penned properties for NBC, Lucasfilm, Disney, Fox, Imagine, Marvel, and MGM. They live and work in New York City, where they also write the bestselling Coffeehouse Mysteries and Haunted Bookshop Mysteries for Penguin. To learn more, visit their website: http://www.coffeehousemysteries.com/about_coffeehouse_mystery_books.cfm