The talk

September 2008: What's new, what matters, what's next.

Mary Jo Bowling, Gina Kessler, Mia Lipman, Chris Smith, and Robin Wilkey; Edited by Scott Hocker

FOOD
From Berkeley to Paris to the home kitchen
When a chef who has run the downstairs kitchen at Chez Panisse off and on for 25 years writes a cookbook, the food cognoscenti are bound to pay attention. When that author is David Tanis, a man as famous for dinner parties in his Paris apartment as he is for his professional credentials, the home cook’s ears should perk up as well. In his first solo book, A Platter of Figs and Other Recipes (Artisan, $35), Tanis offers 24 menus, 6 for each season of the year, with influences that bounce from North Africa to Provence to China to Italy. They all feed 8 to 10 people, but are so straightforward that they can easily be adapted for fewer—or more. If Tanis is embarrassingly fond of trumpeting the joys of peasant food (even peasants don’t want to eat like peasants), it’s difficult to argue with such vibrant dishes as cherry tomato and ricotta crostini, duck hams with lentils, and roasted-pepper salad with capers and olives. So call up your friends, break out the plates, and start cooking.—Scott Hocker

MEDIA
"Dirty words still have the power to bite you in the ass."
—Ellen Sussman, editor of the recently published Dirty Words: A Lit­erary Encyclopedia of Sex. Chain bookstores are hiding the acclaimed compendium in their reference sections or simply won’t carry it; radio shows are squeamish about inviting Bay Area resident Sussman on air; and, to accompany its laudatory review, O, the Oprah Magazine featured the book’s cover with its collection of epithets blurred.

gun the talk

CITY LIFE
Gunning for the status quo
If—or when—the city shuts it down, San Francisco’s gun club (yes, there is one) will go out with a bang.

It’s a chilly summer day at Lake Merced. On a strip of concrete near the shore, a man in a vest and safety glasses nestles a shotgun into the small of his shoulder. He sights a clay disc lofted out over the lake and, a moment later, blows it apart. The air echoes with the dull clap of the gun.

Inside the worn, barrackslike clubhouse nearby, a few of the Pacific Rod and Gun Club’s 350 members drink coffee and discuss the past. Once upon a time, the 80-year-old club was a regular stopover for city pols and entertainment royalty: Ernest Hemingway shot here, as did actors Barbara Stanwyck and Rex Harrison. The stars are long gone, but the club remains a refuge.

“This place keeps me young,” says Walt Biondi, a lanky 90-year-old with a genial, Reagan-esque twinkle in his eyes. The son of a Calabrian teamster, Biondi was born in San Francisco and grew up with guns. As the club’s shooting instructor, he has schooled everyone from cops to former mayor Willie Brown. Biondi recently lost both his wife and his son;

Inside In the Know

POLITICS

Wave that flag

5/15/08—From gun racks to gay marriage, I've come a long way.

CULTURE

Opening a Treasure Box

At the new Asian Art Museum, an unrivaled collection gets a splendid display, at last.

BUSINESS

Supporting local business

5/16/08—Small Business Week is almost over, but the sidewalk sale is yet to come.

INSIDER

End of the Affairs

Divorce can be a nasty, bitter proposition for two individuals. But for three or more

THE PROFILE

The believer behind bars

A time traveler from the incorrigible '60s, the brilliant criminal defense lawyer Tony Serra has been conducting his antiauthority career as if nothing has changed in the last 40 years. With Serra stuck in prison, BURR SNIDER assesses the legal legend's stubborn (but principled) resistance to convention and wonders: is Serra an anachronism or is his mistrust of government power more relevant than ever?

SOCIALIST

At the Lake

It was a scene from Hamptons Hell as the social crowd descended upon traffic-snarled Lake Tahoe by boat, plane, and car for, you guessed it: a fashion show.

SOCIETY

San Francisco's Best-Dressed, 2006

In this special edition of Outtakes, we applaud the people who give these pages style each month.

METROPOLUST

Just doing it

Complicated intimacy with women and men was nothing new to Anna. But when your sex buddy changes gender, the rules change, too.

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