Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Brooklyn Gets Gobbles from Markowitz

Borough President Marty Markowitz gave out 1,000 turkeys and about six tons of Thanksgiving trimmings to Brooklynites yesterday at Borough Hall Plaza yesterday, the NY Post reported. Markowitz and Deputy Borough President Yvonne Graham distributed the goods to senior centers, soup kitchens and social service groups. The Bedford Stuyvesant and Red Hook Lions Clubs helped give out the food in Downtown Brooklyn.

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News Corp Takes Control of Brooklyn Company

Wireless Generation, a privately held Brooklyn-based education technology company, became a unit of News Corp yesterday. According to Reuters, News Corp acquired 90 percent of the firm for $360 million. Wireless Generation, a 10-year-old company which offers mobile and web software to teachers to access student programs, will be managed by News Corp.

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Kruger Fights for the Boardwalk

Coney Island’s boardwalk still has hope for survival. State senator Carl Kruger said he is hoping to work with Mayor Michael Bloomberg in order to keep the businesses from being evicted, the New York Post reported. Kruger wants to create a deal with amusement park landlord Zamperla to keep establishments such as Shoot the Freak open. Zamperla ordered a majority of the Coney Island boardwalk businesses to close down over a month ago.

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Sunday, November 21, 2010

Quaker School to host 31st Annual Holiday Extravaganza

A school will host their 31st Annual Holiday Extravaganza in two weeks, according to Brooklyn Heights Blog.? Brooklyn Friends School, an independent Quaker school in downtown Brooklyn, will host its winter festival on Saturday, Dec. 4 from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.?

The festival will include?a holiday plant and wreath sale,?crafts activities by local artisans, a book fair, and a children’s carnival with rides and games.? Local children’s book authors will also be present to read to children.? Proceeds will benefit the Horizons at Brooklyn Friends School summer enrichment program, which serves public school children in downtown Brooklyn.

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BB Recipe: Grandma Liz’s Candied Sweet Potatoes

Grandma Liz’s Candied Sweet Potatoes
Emily and Melissa Elsen of Four and Twenty Blackbirds
439 Third Avenue, Gowanus, 718-499-2917

“These are so rich and sweet they could almost pass for a dessert,” say the Elsen sisters.

3-4 medium sized sweet potatoes

A couple pinches of salt

1 cup of maple syrup

1/2 cup brown sugar

2-3 Tbsp. butter

Boil the sweet potatoes until they are just tender, but not mushy. Let cool, then peel, and slice into thick slices, about 1/2 inch or more. Sprinkle with salt.

In a large cast iron skillet (Grandma always used an electric skillet, but that might be hard to come by) bring the butter, maple syrup and brown sugar to a low simmer.

Once the butter and syrup mixture is hot, maintain a medium heat and add the sweet potato slices. Simmer until golden brown and beginning to caramelize. Flip and do the same on the other side. Remove from heat and plate with a little of the extra maple sauce from the pan. These are good warm or just at room temperature.

Published on 11.19.10. Recipe by Emily and Melissa Elsen

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9/11 Workers Approve Settlement of Claims after Years-Long Battle

More than 10,000 workers?who sued New York City because of health damages suffered while working in the 9/11 rescue approved a settlement today, according to The New York Times.? The settlement amounts?to $625 million and was approved by more than 95 percent of the workers.? The deadline for accepting or rejecting the settlement was this past Tuesday night.

In a statement, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the settlement was fair and protected those who came to the aid of the city when it needed it most.

Those who sued the city included police officers, firefighters and other workers.? They claimed that the city failed to?provide them with?adequate protective equipment?during the aftermath of?the 9/11 attacks, which led to?respiratory and other illnesses that they suffered from later on.? Lawyers estimate that the payments to individuals will range from $3,250 to $1.8 million or more for the most severe injuries.

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Venue by Venue: The Rock Shop

Have a long enough conversation about the Brooklyn live music scene and you’ll probably encounter the name Skippy. Over the past few years Jack McFadden, aka “Skippy,” put South Brooklyn venues Union Hall and The Bell House on the map, roping in acts like The New Pornographers, The National and Fleet Foxes.

This summer he left that gig and almost immediately turned up at The Rock Shop, the new Park Slope venue on 4th Avenue (formerly lesbian dance club CattyShack). He’s brought acts like The Posies, The Wrens and Beach Fossils to the intimate stage since its opening in August, while booking other rooms like?Littlefield on the side. But yesterday, he formally announced that he and former Knitting Factory talent buyer Chris White, have formed a?new talent buying company, Tiger Mountain Presents. In addition to booking The Rock Shop, Tiger Mountain is now?the head booker at?Santos Party House in downtown Manhattan, and is booking shows at Littlefield with in-house talent buyer Mads Black Just-Olesen. (They also recently booked Jens Lenkman at The Green Building at 450 Union, but both shows, Dec. 9 and Dec. 10, are sadly sold out!)

With a capacity of 125, The Rock Shop is significantly smaller than Bell House (around 500) and only slightly larger than Union Hall (around 100). So it makes sense that McFadden would need an outlet for some of the bigger acts he’s used to booking.?Littlefield, which opened its Gowanus doors last spring, has a 300-person capacity. Santos can fit 470 sweaty bodies upstairs and 250 downstairs.

But back to The Rock Shop. Last week I caught a performance there from Thurston Moore’s noisey three-piece, Northampton Wools. When you walk in, the first thing you notice about the place is the sound. You can’t not notice it. It is loud in there. Not scary-crackling-deafening loud, but heart-beating-to-the-bassline loud. Armhair-wavering loud. Am-I-inside-the-speaker loud. LOUD loud.

But in a very, very good way.

So good, that seeing Northampton Wools in any other setting probably wouldn’t have worked for me. It was, after all, two dudes tooling around on bass and guitar with knives while a highly caffeinated drummer used everything from a rubber funnel to scrap metal to beat his instrument (all while holding a triangle in his teeth). This went on for around 40 minutes. That kinda music requires a little more than your run-of-the-mill PA.

The room helped–it’s easy to fall into a noise-induced trance when you’re crammed into a black box so dark that the only option, scenery-wise, is the stage. Between the sound and the room, I’m not sure a single person blinked or moved, myself included, for the entire 40 minutes. We just stared in mouth-open awe.

So The Rock Shop: small, dark and excellent. There are decent beers on tap (nothing compared to beer garden Mission Delores next door of, course). Upstairs there’s bar food, flat screen TVs rocking sports, a pool table and a patio.

The Rock Shop
249 4th Avenue (between Union and Carrol)
(718) 230-5740

Erin Griffith is a freelance writer in Boerum Hill. Photo by Nplanet via Flickr.

Published on 11.19.10.

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