What Brown’s Win Over Coakley in Massachusetts Means for Politics in New York
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The immediate political beneficiaries in New York of the Scott Brown romp over Martha Coakley are Rick Lazio and Harold Ford, Jr.
Last fall we in New York saw precursors to the Brown win over Coakley in Massachusetts: incumbent Democratic county executives (arguably doing a decent job) were ousted in Westchester (Andy Spano) and in Nassau (Tom Suozzi). In neighboring New Jersey Chris Christie defeated Rob Corzine for governor. What are the implications of the Brown win over Coakley for the statewide races coming up in New York for 2010?
Governor: While Governor David Paterson's poll numbers have risen slightly -- almost no one believes today that his aspiration for winning a full term in his own right will be realized. The probable scenario -- likely to accelerate now with the Brown win in Massachusetts, will be for Governor Paterson to announce in February or early March that in lieu of spending time fundraising and running that he will instead opt out and spend the next year focusing on the cataclysmic state budget and economy. This will pave the way for Attorney General Andrew Cuomo to ascend to the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. Cuomo will likely attempt to re-run the Eliot Spitzer campaign of 2006 -- relying on his AG bona fides, name recognition, and nostalgia for his father, Mario. The leading GOP candidate right now is former Congressman Rick Lazio, who will endeavor to copy the Scott Brown playbook -- and attempt to separate the man from the myth. Lazio will have things to say about Cuomo's reign as HUD secretary during the Clinton administration. Lazio sat on the House Banking Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity -- which oversaw some of the programs run by Cuomo at the time. Moreover, Andrew Cuomo is not Eliot Spitzer (and I mean the 2006 pre-scandal version), and Rick Lazio will have much broader appeal statewide than the 2006 GOP candidate, John Faso. Lazio is a fiscal conservative and a social moderate -- the right (and only) recipe for a successful GOP stateside candidate in New York (ala George Pataki). And Lazio has substantially better name recognition in New York today than Scott Brown did in Massachusetts two weeks ago (and George Pataki in January 2006). Lazio is personable and affable (like Scott Brown). Lazio has been racking up local endorsements -- most recently from the Nassau County GOP. And I love Lazio's proposal to convene a state constitutional convention to dissolve the two houses of the state legislature and replace them with a unicameral legislative body. If Lazio is the GOP candidate and could inflict some doubt and damage onto the Cuomo inevitability machine -- he could conceivably be the next governor.
US Senator: while Chuck Schumer and the Obama administration cleared the decks of most of the stronger primary opponent possibilities against Senator Kirstin Gillibrand, doubts about her viability still exist - and it's looking more and more like former Tennessee Congressman Harold Ford, Jr., may actually take on the mission of a primary challenge. Conventional wisdom says that the only viable primary challenge to Gillibrand would be from the left -- given her prior, pro-gun, blue dog record representing a congressional district in rural upstate New York. While fringe candidate John Tasini is mounting a primary challenge from the far left, recent New York transplant Harold Ford, Jr., has taken a leave from his Merrill Lynch gig and is strongly considering a run. Gillibrand is already branding Ford as an extreme conservative -- but her criticism of Ford rings hollow coming from the former Blue Dog. Ford’s pro-choice credentials will probably be his toughest sell in New York – he has been for parent notification and opposed to partial birth abortions. Both Gillibrand and Ford had to modulate their positions on issues to satisfy their more parochial constituencies in upstate New York and Tennessee respectively. While Ford's introduction to the New York chattering class was a somewhat inartful interview in the New York Times, Ford is no Caroline Kennedy. He's an experienced, articulate, smart pol with the potential to go toe to toe with Gillibrand in the fundraising department. If the political climate continues to sour for Democrats nationally -- and in New York specifically -- Ford would be the stronger Democratic candidate against a Republican such as Bruce Blakeman or George Pataki in that Ford could more plausibly run as an outside, anti-establishment candidate.
Speaking of Republicans, the lack of a marquis GOP candidate for the Gillibrand seat at this point in the cycle is puzzling. The decliners so far include Rudy Giuliani, Long Island Congressman Peter King, and Larchmont Mayor Liz Feld. Former Governor George Pataki has not officially declined but all indications point to him opting out and making a full time run for the White House in 2012. So far that leaves as the only announced GOP candidate, Bruce Blakeman, a former Nassau County legislator, Port Authority board member, former candidate for State Comptroller and brief candidate for New York City Mayor. He's recently been noted because his ex, Nancy Shevell is dating Paul McCartney. If the Democrats stay with Kirstin Gillibrand, and runs as the establishment/favorite/incumbent -- Blakeman could gain traction.
Senator Schumer's seat is up in 2010 as well -- but no one seriously sees him at risk.
David A. Singer is a former political consultant/campaign professional and political junkie currently toiling as a lawyer in Westchester and managing real estate and media investments.
Cookbook Author and Teacher Susie Fishbein at WRT
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Susie Fishbein, author of the popular “Kosher by Design” series of cookbooks, returned for a second annual visit to Westchester Reform Temple in Scarsdale on January 13 for an evening of teaching, cooking and, of course, eating.
As part of her cooking demonstration, Fishbein prepared a three-course dinner for the attendees based on recipes found in her various books.
A light but satisfying Zucchini and Lentil Soup was the first course she prepared and served, enhancing the soup with an herb-seasoned cracker made from baked egg roll wrappers. The soup was delicious, with a unique texture provided by the red lentils, which were added to the soup towards the end of the cooking time. From her book “Kosher by Design Lightens Up,” the recipe is a healthy version of a hearty soup.
Next came a family-friendly recipe that was a twist on traditional lasagna. Called Mexican Lasagna, the dish replaced noodles with flour tortillas. Layers of tortillas alternated with layers of ground beef (ground turkey is another option) flavored with onion, green pepper and a packet of taco seasoning; crushed tomatoes; canned refried beans; and non-dairy cream cheese. Easy enough for a weeknight meal, the lasagna was perfect for hungry children and adults alike.
Dessert, which also came from the “Lightens Up” cookbook, was Baklava Bites, where Fishbein re-imagined traditional Greek baklava in a lighter, less-sweet format. Healthy walnuts replace pistachios in this recipe, and non-stick cooking spray replaces the butter typically slathered on the layers of dough. In her version, the defrosted phyllo sheets are folded with the nuts and honey and then cut into individual portions that are placed in muffin tins for baking. Pretty enough to serve to company, the bites were small enough that they would appeal to the calorie-conscious.
Throughout her demonstration, Fishbein provided interesting tips about food products, cooking utensils and cooking equipment. Knife skills, essential to anyone who cooks, were also demonstrated, as well as other useful techniques. Copies of her various books were on hand, which she signed for those interested.
Sponsored by the temple’s Women of Reform Judaism, the evening was well attended by both members of WRT and by the outside community.
Ms. Fishbein has generously shared the recipes with us – so try them at home and send in comments to let us know what you thought:
Zucchini Lentil Soup – Meat or Parve – Makes Six Servings
Red lentils add an earthy tone to this soup and are one of the fastest cooking legumes. Lentils are even mentioned in the Bible, as Esau traded his birthright to Jacob for “a potage of lentils”! This historic legume is rich in fiber, niacin, potassium, and zinc. Don’t overcook the lentils or they will start to come apart.
The spiced egg roll wrappers are a crisp garnish and sub in nicely for crusty bread or soup nuts.
Ingredients:
3 egg roll wrappers, such as the Nasoya® brand
1 egg white (from large egg)
1 tablespoon water
1⁄4 teaspoon dried dill
1⁄4 teaspoon dried basil
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 large sweet onion, such as Vidalia, cut into 1⁄4-inch pieces
4 cloves fresh garlic, coarsely chopped
1⁄2 teaspoon dried sage
1⁄4 teaspoon dried thyme
2 large or 3 medium zucchini, with skin, cut into 1⁄4-inch pieces
1⁄4 cup fresh dill, stems trimmed, loosely packed
6 cups chicken or vegetable stock
1 cup dried red lentils
Instructions:
Preheat oven to 425°F.
Cover a cookie sheet with parchment paper.
Lay the egg roll wrappers on the prepared cookie sheet. In a small bowl, whisk the egg white and water. Brush each egg roll wrapper very lightly with the egg white mixture. Sprinkle with dried dill and dried basil. Place into the oven and bake for 5 minutes or until just golden brown. Set aside.
Meanwhile, heat the olive oil in a large soup pot over medium-low heat. Add the onion, garlic, sage, and thyme. Cook until the onion is translucent; do not allow it to brown.
Add the zucchini and dill. Sauté for 4–5 minutes, until zucchini is a little shiny.
Add the stock. Simmer for 15–20 minutes, or until the zucchini is soft.
Using an immersion blender, right in the pot, purée the soup until creamy. This can also be done in batches in a blender.
Add the lentils. Simmer, stirring occasionally, for 8 minutes.
Ladle the soup into bowls. Holding a spiced egg roll crisp over the pot to catch the spices that may fall off, break each into uneven shards and stand a few in the center of each bowl.
Mexican Lasagne - Status: Meat
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cooking Time: 30 minutes
Yield: 12 servings
Ingredients:
1⁄4 cup canola or olive oil
1 Spanish onion, cut into 1⁄4-inch dice
1 green bell pepper, seeded and cut into 1⁄4-inch dice
2 1⁄2 pounds ground beef
1 (1.25-ounce) packet taco seasoning
6 (10-inch) flour tortillas or more if you are using smaller flour tortillas
1 (15-ounce) can refried pinto or kidney beans
2 (28-ounce) cans crushed tomatoes
1 (8-ounce) container nondairy cream cheese, such as Tofutti brand
5-6 scallions, chopped
3 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro
Instructions:
Preheat oven to 350˚F. Spray a large (9- by 13-inch) rectangular oven-to-table baking dish with nonstick cooking spray.
Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the onion and green bell pepper. Sauté for 6 minutes or until vegetables are softened.
Add the ground beef and use a wooden spoon to break up the chunks of beef. Mix in the taco seasoning. Sauté until the meat is no longer pink. Remove from heat.
Spread 3–4 heaping tablespoons of the refried beans into a thin layer on one side of each tortilla. Cut each tortilla in half.
Place 4 tortilla halves, plain-side-down, into the prepared pan. Place the straight edges against the short edges of the baking pan so that they fill the bottom of the pan better. Overlap the two center tortillas as necessary in the middle.
Spread one-third of the meat mixture evenly over the refried beans.
Spread 11⁄2 cups crushed tomatoes over the meat.
Measure 3 tablespoons of the nondairy cream cheese and break into small pieces. Scatter the pieces of cream cheese over the tomatoes.
Sprinkle with one-third of the chopped scallions and a sprinkle of cilantro.
Repeat layering in this order 2 more times
Bake, uncovered, for 15 minutes. Serve hot.
Baklava Bites- Parve- Makes 10 servings
Baklava is a type of Greek pastry. In its original form, it is phyllo dough sheets coated in melted butter, with chopped pistachios between the layers. Immediately after baking, a sweet syrup is poured over the pastry and soaks through the layers.
In my re-made version, the sheets are sprayed with nonstick cooking spray to replace the butter. Walnuts, high in omega-3 fatty acids, replace the pistachios, and a small amount of honey in place of sugar syrup supplies enough sweetness while cutting down on the sugar content. All these changes, and the fact that the pastry is pre-portioned, make this sweet treat delicious and good for you.
Honey, composed of the sugars glucose and fructose, is also full of minerals like magnesium, potassium, calcium, sodium chloride, sulphur, and iron. This golden liquid glimmers with health benefits, but the value of the benefit depends on the quality of the honey. Some studies have shown that a single dose of buckwheat honey before bedtime effectively relieved the symptoms of night-time coughing and sleeping difficulties. Although honey is a healthier alternative to sugar, it is slightly higher in calories.
Ingredients:
10 sheets (13- by 8-inch) phyllo dough from 1/2 (16-ounce) box
Olive-oil flavored nonstick cooking spray
¾ cup walnuts
1⁄3 cup sugar
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
¼ teaspoon fine sea salt
¼ cup honey
3 tablespoons water
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
Instructions:
Defrost phyllo according to package directions. Keep the stack covered with a damp cloth when not using, to prevent the sheets from drying out. Spray a 12-serving muffin tin with nonstick cooking spray. Preheat oven to 375°F.
In the bowl of a small food processor, combine walnuts, sugar, cinnamon, and salt. Pulse until the mixture is finely ground and uniform.
Place one phyllo sheet horizontally on the cutting board, with the long edge closest to you. Evenly coat the dough with the spray — enough to cover, but not soak the phyllo. Sprinkle about 5 teaspoons of the walnut mixture all over the sheet, and top with a second sheet. Repeat, so that there are 5 layers of phyllo dough, and 5 layers of walnut mixture.
Fold the dough into thirds, like you would a letter. You should now have a long piece about 13- by 4-inches. Spray the top.
Starting right to left, cut six 2- by 4-inch pieces. Gently fold in half so you now have a thick piece that is about 2- by 2-inches. Gently place each into a sprayed muffin cup. Repeat the whole process to make 6 more.
Bake about 15–20 minutes, or until golden brown and baked through. White spots in the dough may indicate that it is undercooked.
Meanwhile, in a small microwave-safe container, combine the honey and water. Heat for 40 seconds or until the honey and water are hot and thoroughly combined. Add the vanilla.
Remove the baklava bites from the oven. Let cool 5 minutes, then remove from the tin and place onto a wire rack. Drizzle the bites with the honey-vanilla syrup and cool completely.
Serve 1 baklava bite per person, with any extra syrup drizzled over the top or in a ramekin on the side.
Profiled in The New York Times and on CNN, Ms. Fishbein has been a guest on such network television and radio programs as “The Today Show,” “Living it Up with Ali and Jack,” and “Martha Stewart Radio.” The release of “Kosher by Design Lightens Up” marks the sixth book in seven years for Ms. Fishbein. Other bestselling cookbooks in the series include “Kosher by Design,” “Passover by Design,” and “Kosher by Design Kids in the Kitchen.” She has traveled the country sharing recipes and techniques through book signings and cooking demonstrations, and has been the featured celebrity guest on cruise ships. Ms. Fishbein has also taught at the Degustibus cooking school in New York.
SHS Cheerleaders To Go To The Nationals
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Good news … the SHS Varsity Cheerleaders will attend the National High School Cheerleading Championship at Walt Disney World February 13 and 14, 2010 and the championship semifinals will be on national television on ESPN.
We previously reported on the site, that the team had qualified to go, but lacked the necessary funds to make the trip. In the interim, the resourceful girls on the team, raised money by selling ads in the program for the Scarsdale Invitational Cheerleading Tournament that will take place this Saturday at Scarsdale High School. The school will host over 40 visiting area teams and the fun starts at 10 a.m. on 1/16. Tickets can be purchased at the door and refreshments will be sold.
Best of luck to Coach Stacy Monteiro and the Varsity Squad.
Purple Haze
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I’m on the verge of putting a bumper sticker on my car that says “slap me: I’m obsessed with purple.” Purple shoes, purple sweaters, purple leather gloves with cashmere lining. I’ve got it all. I love it all! I recently had to call a friend while I was standing in Lord & Taylor and demand an intervention on a purple pocketbook that was dangling on my arm. It was begging me to take it home. “No more
purple!!!” Kate demanded. “But...but...” I stammered, turning this way and that in front of the mirror, cell phone pressed to my ear. “If you are thinking that this bag will look great with your new purple flats, you are seriously misguided. That would be a fashion disaster.” I sort of heard her through the purple haze in my brain. Then my mom beeped in. “Hold on, Kate.” I switched over and immediately started talking. “Mom, I know I just called you before and didn’t leave a message. I’m having a purple problem, but Kate’s on it.”
“Just say no!” I heard her say as I hung up and switched back to an awaiting Kate, thinking that everyone sounded a bit too drug-era Nancy Reagan for me. Because I was thinking just say yes.
What is it with trends? How do I fall into every trap every season? My friend Andie thinks it’s because of the trend reports we receive from magazines and department stores, telling us what’s on this year’s “hot list” and “must haves.” It’s sad but true. I read those things and, suddenly, I find myself looking for accessories with studded hardware, or tops with cutouts at the shoulders (which, by the way look incredibly ridiculous on me). It’s hot! It’s a must-have, so I must have it…right?
Grey nail polish? Awesome. Just walk me to the counter and give them my credit card. I’m like a fashion lemming.
When I go shopping, I try really hard to drown out the sound of the little voice telling me what’s hot, cool and new. And I know that, as I get older, most of these trends are not meant for me, at least not in their purest and hippest form. I’m fine with a watered-down, suburban mom version of leggings, for example. I have them, but I wear them with ballet flats and a long sweater instead of with heels, a micro-mini skirt, and a tank top that looks like it has been mauled by a rabid cat.
Just, you know, for example.
By telling you about my recent color addiction, I like to think that I’m in the first steps of recovery. The picture accompanying this proves that I’m not exaggerating. Unfortunately.
What’s next? I’m thinking rose gold jewelry. It’s so pretty. And it looks great with purple.
Columnist and blogger Julie Gerstenblatt is always "on the verge" of something. She writes with humor and candor about her life in Scarsdale, her friends and family, and the particular demands of motherhood and wifedom in modern-day suburbia. This week, she's in a "Purple Haze." Read what she has to say here, and then follow her online at: http://julie-ontheverge.blogspot.com/
Paul Feiner's Response to Edgemont Residents
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Is crime up in Edgemont? According to Greenburgh Town Supervisor Paul Feiner, here are the actual statistics about area crime and his response to concerned Edgemont residents:
--From Paul Feiner
Reports circulating in some of the media would indicate that crime is out of control in Edgemont. This is not the case. As you will note from the data below, crime actually went down in Edgemont in 2009. In 2007 there were 29 robberies and/or burglaries in commercial or residential properties. In 2008 the number was down to 20 and in 2009 we were at 17.
Although crime in Edgemont is down from 2007 – the Town Board and I are determined to work hard so that Edgemont residents feel safe and are safe. We have advised the police chief that he will have the resources necessary to provide residents with the protection they need. We have authorized overtime, have been increasing patrols, and will be creating an Edgemont community policing post. The Town Board and I are in touch with the police department on a daily basis and will be re-evaluating initiatives taken to make sure that we’re doing everything possible to keep people safe. We also have contacted the school district and have asked the schools if we should make available a Juvenile Officer who can answer questions students may have (stranger danger, other safety tips). Finally, the Police Chief, Captains and other high ranking officers are also spending some time patrolling the streets of Edgemont.
No. of Robberies or Burglaries in Edgemont by Year
2005 17
2006 10
2007 29
2008 20
2009 17
