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Today's Inspiration

December 16, 2009
You guys, let’s be honest: in our heart of hearts, don’t we all just want the Don Drapers of our lives to take us out to LUTECE?
Lutece opened in 1961 to great acclaim, so it’s no wonder Don and Roger try to go there so often. It was founded by early celeb chef Andre Soltner who remained head chef and owner until closing. From their now defunct website: “The restaurant offers a variety of settings including Le Jardin, which is the main dining room, and two unique private rooms on the second floor of a townhouse appointed with hand-gilded suede walls and crystal chandeliers to create the perfect intimate setting for guest’s enjoyment.”

Sample Menu (so delish):AppetizersPheasant Soup & Poached Quenellewith green lentils, endive & arugulaCaviar Soupwith Madeleine Island bay scallops, cauliflower mousseline & poached quail eggChestnuts & Porcini Mushroomscooked en cocotte with grilled pancetta & roasted chicken jusArtichoke Saladwith ruby red grapefruit vinaigrette, thai basilBrittany Langoustineswatercress civet, gold beets & shaved winter black truffleYukon Gold Potato & Winter Black Truffle PiesabayonEntreesPan Seared Lacquered Monkfishwith nicoise olive sauce, baby bok choy, chick pea puree & lemon confitRoasted Turbot on the Bonewith ginger & parmesan, tarbais beans with fresh tomato concasse & arugulaSauteed Black Sea Basswith baby spinach, vanilla jusSauteed Lobsterwith sauteed foie gras wrapped in a chard leaf,braised savoy cabbage, grapes & fennelSauteed Partridgepoached foie gras wrapped in a chard leaf,braised savoy cabbage, grapes & fennelRoasted Farm Raised Chickenpommes macaires, black truffle jus
It had three main dining rooms, called Le Jardin, Le Petit Salon, and Le Grand Salon. The Drapers and such did not eat in Le Jardin, because there didn’t seem to be any green and yellow accents.
In the 60s, Julia Child called Lutece the greatest restaurant in the United States.
Here’s the NY Times article on its closing which discusses how Lutece always got most of its business from business lunches and dinners.
• footnote - by Natasha Simons

You guys, let’s be honest: in our heart of hearts, don’t we all just want the Don Drapers of our lives to take us out to LUTECE?

Lutece opened in 1961 to great acclaim, so it’s no wonder Don and Roger try to go there so often. It was founded by early celeb chef Andre Soltner who remained head chef and owner until closing. From their now defunct website: “The restaurant offers a variety of settings including Le Jardin, which is the main dining room, and two unique private rooms on the second floor of a townhouse appointed with hand-gilded suede walls and crystal chandeliers to create the perfect intimate setting for guest’s enjoyment.”


Sample Menu (so delish):

Appetizers
Pheasant Soup & Poached Quenelle
with green lentils, endive & arugula

Caviar Soup
with Madeleine Island bay scallops, cauliflower mousseline & poached quail egg

Chestnuts & Porcini Mushrooms
cooked en cocotte with grilled pancetta & roasted chicken jus

Artichoke Salad
with ruby red grapefruit vinaigrette, thai basil

Brittany Langoustines
watercress civet, gold beets & shaved winter black truffle

Yukon Gold Potato & Winter Black Truffle Pie
sabayon

Entrees
Pan Seared Lacquered Monkfish
with nicoise olive sauce, baby bok choy, chick pea puree & lemon confit

Roasted Turbot on the Bone
with ginger & parmesan, tarbais beans with fresh tomato concasse & arugula

Sauteed Black Sea Bass
with baby spinach, vanilla jus

Sauteed Lobster
with sauteed foie gras wrapped in a chard leaf,
braised savoy cabbage, grapes & fennel

Sauteed Partridge
poached foie gras wrapped in a chard leaf,
braised savoy cabbage, grapes & fennel

Roasted Farm Raised Chicken
pommes macaires, black truffle jus



It had three main dining rooms, called Le Jardin, Le Petit Salon, and Le Grand Salon. The Drapers and such did not eat in Le Jardin, because there didn’t seem to be any green and yellow accents.

In the 60s, Julia Child called Lutece the greatest restaurant in the United States.

Here’s the NY Times article on its closing which discusses how Lutece always got most of its business from business lunches and dinners.

• footnote - by Natasha Simons

9:43pm  |  26 notes   |  lutece |  mad men |  season 1 |  decor 
November 26, 2009
Don is not interested in your dime-store critique of the capitalist ‘system.’

Don is not interested in your dime-store critique of the capitalist ‘system.’

2:46am  |   |  Midge Daniels |  Season 1 |  babylon |  Don Draper 
Let us all be thankful for restorative weekends in Palm Springs.

Let us all be thankful for restorative weekends in Palm Springs.

2:42am  |  32 notes   |  Don Draper |  Palm Springs |  The Jet Set |  Season 1 
November 17, 2009
Old Gold knows about your death wish. 
• footnote - by Natasha Simons

Old Gold knows about your death wish.

• footnote - by Natasha Simons

1:37pm  |  20 notes   |  death wish |  advertising |  season 1 |  smoking |  old golds 
November 16, 2009
Can you guess what Boho lover lady put on for her afternoon romp with Don?
Of course you can.
It is the crowning jewel of a masterpiece: Blue in Green.  It’s the third track on Miles Davis’ 1959 Kind of Blue. The composition was co-written by Bill Evans who played piano on the album. Evans was to the piano, what Davis was to the trumpet. Both men begun with a bop beat and then slinked into a cooler, looser, slow-like-honey mode with the rising influence of West Coast jazz at the the beginning of the 1960’s. Davis, of course, went on to wilder orchestrations and built a discography defined by musical innovation.
Evans found his steady rhythm in cool jazz. In the mid-sixties he was a part of the breezey California sound along with tenor sax titan Stan Getz. The two did album together which is also very good to listen to when committing adultery in the Village. Or anywhere.

Can you guess what Boho lover lady put on for her afternoon romp with Don?

Of course you can.

It is the crowning jewel of a masterpiece: Blue in Green.  It’s the third track on Miles Davis’ 1959 Kind of Blue. The composition was co-written by Bill Evans who played piano on the album. Evans was to the piano, what Davis was to the trumpet. Both men begun with a bop beat and then slinked into a cooler, looser, slow-like-honey mode with the rising influence of West Coast jazz at the the beginning of the 1960’s. Davis, of course, went on to wilder orchestrations and built a discography defined by musical innovation.

Evans found his steady rhythm in cool jazz. In the mid-sixties he was a part of the breezey California sound along with tenor sax titan Stan Getz. The two did album together which is also very good to listen to when committing adultery in the Village. Or anywhere.

8:48pm  |  24 notes   |  Midge Daniels |  Don Draper |  Season 1 |  Miles Davis 
November 11, 2009
1961 Sex Science journal: How much sex freedom in marriage? 
Well, thank heavens we figured out the answer to that one.

1961 Sex Science journal: How much sex freedom in marriage?

Well, thank heavens we figured out the answer to that one.

3:56pm  |  6 notes   |  Smoke gets in your eyes |  Season 1 |  sex pamphlet |  peggy 
1944 sex pamphlet (includes puppies).

1944 sex pamphlet (includes puppies).

3:47pm  |  17 notes   |  Season 1 |  smoke gets in your eyes |  Peggy |  Sex Pamphlet 
In the pilot of our beloved show, Peggy Olson goes to the wink-wink-nudge doctor to get herself on the pill. (The man’s lack of instruction re: pill usage may have contributed to Peggy’s unfortch situation in this season, methinks.) As she waits for him to show up, she peruses a small pamplet, seen above.
“Your Wedding Night” stems from a tradition of sex-education pamphlets dating back to 1900; a woman named Ida Craddock published a series of religious-themed informational pamphlets for young women. One of them, entitled “The Wedding Night”, begins with verse: “Oh, crowning time of lovers’ raptures veiled in mystic splendor, sanctified by priestly blessing and by the benediction of all who love the lovers! How shall we chant thy praise?” (Peggy chooses to chant it with Pete Campbell.)
Other fun tips from the pamphlet:
* Do you wish to be truly a man upon the wedding night? Then forego both tobacco and alcohol upon that occasion and for a long time previously
* Do not, upon any account, use the hand for the purpose of sexual excitation at the bride’s genitals. There is but one lawful finger of love with which to approach her genitals, and this is the male organ. (No fingerbanging on the honeymoon!)
* ‘But she might never want it?’ My dear sir, you must be indeed lacking in manhood to be unable to arouse sex desire in a bride who loves you with even a halfway sort of affection.
Clearly, 1900 and 1960 are not the same thing, and though possibly Craddock’s information may have carried over, the tone of Peggy’s pamphlet is probably a little more the Medical Journal of Urology  and a little less Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.
• footnote - by Natasha Simons

In the pilot of our beloved show, Peggy Olson goes to the wink-wink-nudge doctor to get herself on the pill. (The man’s lack of instruction re: pill usage may have contributed to Peggy’s unfortch situation in this season, methinks.) As she waits for him to show up, she peruses a small pamplet, seen above.

“Your Wedding Night” stems from a tradition of sex-education pamphlets dating back to 1900; a woman named Ida Craddock published a series of religious-themed informational pamphlets for young women. One of them, entitled “The Wedding Night”, begins with verse: “Oh, crowning time of lovers’ raptures veiled in mystic splendor, sanctified by priestly blessing and by the benediction of all who love the lovers! How shall we chant thy praise?” (Peggy chooses to chant it with Pete Campbell.)

Other fun tips from the pamphlet:

* Do you wish to be truly a man upon the wedding night? Then forego both tobacco and alcohol upon that occasion and for a long time previously

* Do not, upon any account, use the hand for the purpose of sexual excitation at the bride’s genitals. There is but one lawful finger of love with which to approach her genitals, and this is the male organ. (No fingerbanging on the honeymoon!)

* But she might never want it?’ My dear sir, you must be indeed lacking in manhood to be unable to arouse sex desire in a bride who loves you with even a halfway sort of affection.

Clearly, 1900 and 1960 are not the same thing, and though possibly Craddock’s information may have carried over, the tone of Peggy’s pamphlet is probably a little more the Medical Journal of Urology  and a little less Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.

• footnote - by Natasha Simons

3:34pm  |  34 notes   |  season 1 |  Peggy |  smoke gets in your eyes |  sex pamphlet 
Other popular — coupon friendly — department store slogans:
*We Keep Busy Being Brooklyn’s Store (Abraham & Straus)*Nobody But Nobody Undersells Gimbels*The Thrifty Store for Thrifty People (Snellenburg’s)
Nobody but nobody gets ‘discount-y’ on Menken!

Other popular — coupon friendly — department store slogans:

*We Keep Busy Being Brooklyn’s Store (Abraham & Straus)

*Nobody But Nobody Undersells Gimbels

*The Thrifty Store for Thrifty People (Snellenburg’s)

Nobody but nobody gets ‘discount-y’ on Menken!

Finally!
A reason discuss Rachel Menken.
You’d figure with names like Neiman-Marcus or  Saks the idea of a Jewish department might lend itself to upscale associations — not if you’re from Brooklyn!
Mencken and her retail dynasty’s branding crisis (“Not wanting to be another Jewish deparment store”) closely resembles that of Kleinfeld’s department store. Based in Bay Ridge since 1941, Kleinfeld’s became the epicenter for discount bridal wear in the borough. It was run by  a father and daughter team named Jack and Hedda (Chosen People, naturally.).
Hedda, a Viennese Immigrant and eventual owner of Klienfield’s, said this about their out-of-Manhattan location:
“People would say, ‘Why did you stay in Bay Ridge?’” she recalled. “It is because we had the best working staff. It was a classy labor market. The seamstresses and the sales people had very high standards but didn’t like the idea of traveling to the city everyday, so they came here and they had an outlet for their talents, and it was very good for the reputation of the store.
But then in 2005 Klienfield’s abandoned Brooklyn for the city. Hedda’s description of the store could have come right of Menken’s (incredulous) pitch to Don.
The new Kleinfeld location will be dramatically more spacious and elegant, but one thing that will not change is our focus on our customer, which is the magic behind Kleinfeld.”

Finally!

A reason discuss Rachel Menken.

You’d figure with names like Neiman-Marcus or  Saks the idea of a Jewish department might lend itself to upscale associations — not if you’re from Brooklyn!

Mencken and her retail dynasty’s branding crisis (“Not wanting to be another Jewish deparment store”) closely resembles that of Kleinfeld’s department store. Based in Bay Ridge since 1941, Kleinfeld’s became the epicenter for discount bridal wear in the borough. It was run by  a father and daughter team named Jack and Hedda (Chosen People, naturally.).

Hedda, a Viennese Immigrant and eventual owner of Klienfield’s, said this about their out-of-Manhattan location:

“People would say, ‘Why did you stay in Bay Ridge?’” she recalled. “It is because we had the best working staff. It was a classy labor market. The seamstresses and the sales people had very high standards but didn’t like the idea of traveling to the city everyday, so they came here and they had an outlet for their talents, and it was very good for the reputation of the store.

But then in 2005 Klienfield’s abandoned Brooklyn for the city. Hedda’s description of the store could have come right of Menken’s (incredulous) pitch to Don.

The new Kleinfeld location will be dramatically more spacious and elegant, but one thing that will not change is our focus on our customer, which is the magic behind Kleinfeld.”