Dear Friends:

There is nothing fresh in India Ink this morning (11 02 2012) except the Image 
of the Day for .Feb. 10

There is however an article by Anand Giridhar Das, a name famliar with readers 
of the International Herald Tribune. But 'Two Classes Divided by a Kitchen 
Door' is a departure from
the usual stuff he writes about.Please taste it yourself from below:

-bhuban



Two Classes Divided by a Kitchen Door
By ANAND GIRIDHARADAS
Published: February 10, 2012

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BOSTON — Not far from where Barbara Lynch is standing is an electric door. 


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Through it, you leave this kitchen of tattoos and beer for a room of Riesling 
and pearls. The waiters repeatedly line up at the door, shivering with nerves 
like children in a play; then a button is pressed and the electric door opens 
and they’re off, totally poised, even a little superior, to deliver your dish 
or clarify whether your allergy extends to truffle dust. 
That electric door, in an upscale Boston restaurant called Menton, stands atop 
an increasingly forbidding border of class in American life. Restaurants like 
these are among those spaces where America’s educated elite and the working 
class still mingle night after night in dimly lit intimacy, feigning through 
pleases and thank yous that they share a way of life. 
Ms. Lynch — the chef and owner of Menton and several other high-end 
restaurants, and the grande dame of Boston’s foodscape — still wonders what 
allowed her to walk through fate’s electric door. 
Maybe, she half-jests, it was that blood transfusion she had as a girl, lifting 
her while leaving her siblings to the usual South Boston fates: police officer, 
trucker, recovering addict. Maybe it was walking as a teenager into the St. 
Botolph Club, a prestigious society that John Quincy Adams once ran, to work 
alongside her mother, and realizing that “not everybody is Irish and working at 
the Post Office, construction or down on the docks or phone company or 
Gillette,” as she put it, referring to the Boston-based maker of razors. 
Ms. Lynch is an American mobility story in times when they’re getting harder to 
pull off. 
A spry 47-year-old with short black hair and an intense gaze, she grew up in 
the Mary Ellen McCormack public housing project in South Boston, more commonly 
known as Southie — a heavily Irish, down-on-its-luck peninsular swath of the 
city. Her father, a taxi driver, died of a heart attack just before she was 
born. 
She started smoking at age 7. By middle school, she had begun her first 
business: a one-woman gambling enterprise in which she would place bets on 
horses for her schoolteachers and often pocket the money. 
The idea of cooking came to Ms. Lynch, she says, from a stir-fry recipe in a 
Good Housekeeping magazine. She was 12 or so, and remembers marveling at the 
possibility of following a few written rules and ending up with a meal from 
another continent. As she grew, she hustled to find cooking jobs. A hastily 
told lie turned her into a chef on a dinner cruise ship docked on Martha’s 
Vineyard, an affluent island off Massachusetts. 
Talent and fortune carried her to jobs with the well-known Boston chef Todd 
English, and at last to restaurants of her own. Today her empire spans an 
oyster bar, a speakeasy cocktail lounge, a butcher shop, a cookbook store, an 
Italian diner, an upscale American saloon and other things. 
But she claims to be done with fancy restaurants. She savors her 
come-from-behind victory, but now she finds herself longing to make such 
victories less rare. She wants to attack the obesity and ill health that plague 
the people she grew up with, and so she is creating a new company that is, 
among other things, experimenting with ways to create affordable, healthy, 
ready-to-eat meals. To do her bit to restore the manufacturing jobs that fled 
Southie, she hopes to locate the factory for her new company there. 
But these are small interventions. Ms. Lynch will tell you that this is 
becoming a harder country in which to twist your fate. Consider her line cooks. 
She pays them $10 to $12 an hour, what she says she can afford. That buys them 
less than did the $6 an hour she was making doing the same job 25 years ago. 
This is America’s economic reality writ small: as Ms. Lynch has thrived and 
Boston has become a more worldly and expensive place to eat, it has become a 
worse place to cook — unless you own the place. 
On this particular evening, Ms. Lynch was cooking with a world-famous chef — 
Daniel Humm, of Eleven Madison Park in New York, who was in town to promote a 
book. But the company that most excited Ms. Lynch was that of a precocious 
13-year-old boy whom she called her apprentice. As the line cooks toiled for 
their hourly wage, hoping for a flash of recognition from Chef Lynch, she 
mostly hung around the boy, watching as he chopped, explaining the dishes. 
He was fortunate, this aspiring chef, to receive this attention. And he was 
talented. But he was there because his father is one of Ms. Lynch’s best 
customers — a man who runs an investment fund and, according to Ms. Lynch, has 
private jets and all the rest of it. Basically, the customer brought his kid 
in, and his kid likes to cook, and so he’s got the pre-eminent chef in Boston 
as his private tutor: the kind of stacked odds that she once knew from the 
other side. 
For four hours that night, the kitchen was awhirl. The staff rushed back and 
forth through the electric door, barking at each other under the white lights 
of the kitchen, then assuming a different accent, a different posture, an air 
of restrained quiet every time they crossed the borderline into the beautiful 
darkness. 
When it was over, the guests spilled into the street. In the kitchen, the 
anxieties instantly melted away. A drawer was opened, and chilled cans of 
Miller High Life beer pulled out. They cracked open the cans and bit into some 
pizza delivered hours earlier. The nightly pantomime was done, and the relief 
palpable




 
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