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Tuesday, February 28, 2023

How to Make Beef Stew? Tips from Around the World - The New York Times

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Beef stew may be considered old-fashioned, but it remains one of the world’s great dishes, and one of the easiest. Since realizing that I could call it “wine-braised short ribs” and serve it at a dinner party, I have made beef stew in whatever form I find it: rendang and chili, stracotto and birria, daube and galbijjim.

For all of their differences, each of these versions from around the globe perform the same feat, spinning a small amount of meat into a complex, flavorful one-pot wonder. Making, and eating, them again and again has helped me appreciate the wisdom they contain about what works best.

It turns out that a few basic decisions can generate a nearly foolproof formula for beef stew. Is stock better than water? (No; meat makes its own stock.) Cook covered or uncovered? (Covered, but use less water.)

Is a stew different from a braise, a soup or a pot roast ? (Not meaningfully.) Which meats, seasoning and methods generate the kind of dish that you can’t stop eating? (Read on.)

For a rich, succulent stew, resist the instinct to buy the gorgeously marbled piece of meat you would want for a steak or roast. Look instead for cuts with cartilage, tendons and (at least a few) bones: Chuck, brisket, oxtails, cheeks and shin are ideal. A classic Cantonese stew, such as braised beef with radish, is often made with “rough flank,” untrimmed flank with lots of connective tissue. (American butchers trim the same cut to produce flank steak.). The collagen and gelatin these cuts yield as they simmer will lend body to the stew; fat just floats. (If your finished stew has a puddle of oil on top, strain off all the liquid and chill it. The hardened fat on top will lift off easily.) What grocery stores label as “stew beef” is less succulent but perfectly fine, especially in large pieces like two-inch chunks; with smaller pieces, keep the heat especially gentle to prevent them from drying out.

Bundles of fresh scallions, spring onions, ramps and shallots, with green tops, spread on a white marble counter.
The combination of beef with leeks, garlic and other alliums — from left, shallots, scallions and onions — is found in stew pots around the world. Bryan Gardner for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne

Beef always gets along with alliums: scallions and leeks, garlic and onions. The last two are nearly the only seasonings in the Jewish American pot roast at the beginning of my beef-stew journey, from the former New York Times restaurant critic Mimi Sheraton. Her recipe, published in her memoir-cookbook “From My Mother’s Kitchen,” is as compact and straightforward as she is, and I followed it religiously for a time. Eventually I got brave and added carrots, which threw open the doors to other changes.

A recipe from the Manhattan cookbook-store owner Nach Waxman introduced the heretical idea of tomato paste, and the writer Laurie Colwin threw in a hot green pepper; both flavors add notes that make the base of meat and onions sing. Eventually I stopped investing in brisket and switched to chuck roast, cut into large chunks that demand less searing, thanks to unstinting research by the Times cooking columnist J. Kenji López-Alt.

Brisket or chuck can be used for a beef stew made like traditional pot roast, with lots of onions and carrots.Julia Gartland for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

Beef stew can take nearly any seasoning you throw at it, but the most delicious ones have lots of fresh aromatics and spices that balance out the heaviness of meat. For one of New York’s hottest restaurant dishes of the moment, the pastrami Wagyu suya at Tatiana in Lincoln Center, the chef Kwame Onwuachi brines short ribs with coriander and mustard seeds, juniper and garlic, then braises them with ginger, paprika and grains of paradise, and finally dusts them with a Nigerian spice mix of ginger, garlic, cayenne and paprika. “We hold nothing back in our braises,” he said. (Jamaican oxtail stew is also on the menu.)

When trying a new recipe, I lean toward ingredients like tomato paste, which adds sweet and tart flavors. Just as Hungarian goulash is transformed by paprika, Italian brasatos benefit from the rasp of red wine, and some Southeast Asian and Caribbean stews are lifted by the bittersweet edge of caramelized brown sugar. Some Canadian cooks add pickled cocktail onions. Also look for ingredients that layer extra umami underneath the beef’s natural savor, like dried mushrooms, Worcestershire sauce or the dark soy sauces and doubanjiang in Taiwanese beef stew.

Browning the meat is entirely optional and far from universally practiced. Browning does generate caramelized flavors, but that’s not a priority for everyone. Boiling produces a richer cooking liquid, eliminating the need for stock or bouillon cubes, the Mexican food writer and historian Pati Jinich told me over the phone. She added that in Mexico, as in most countries, the meat in beef stew is traditionally from older animals and off-cuts, and therefore not the focus of the dish. “In Mexico, the best sauce is more important than making the best piece of meat,” she told me. “Cook it hard, until it has no choice and falls apart.”

Pati Jinich, who grew up in Mexico City, said that what makes mole de olla a stew rather than a soup is the chile-thickened broth. David Butow for The New York Times

Mexico has innumerable beef stews — puchero, birria, puntas al albañil — but the most homey, she said, is mole de olla, a true one-pot dish because fresh vegetables like corn, zucchini, cactus and chayote are added at the last minute. (Olla means pot, and the word mole doesn’t refer just to the famous thickened sauces of Puebla and Oaxaca. In this context, as translated by Ms. Jinich, it means “mix-mash of a saucy thing.”) What makes mole de olla a stew and not a soup is the purée of roasted dried chiles, along with epazote and garlic, that both thickens and seasons the stew.

When making mole de olla, cooks in Mexico boil the meat first. Ms. Jinich’s advice: “Cook it hard, until it has no choice and falls apart.”

Beef stews in Mexico, like those in other places where pork is a staple, often include a pork rib or two. When beef stew is made mainly from older animals, pork is added to carry flavor and lend richness. (Pork fat tastes neutral, while beef fat can have a distinct taste of tallow.) Since I lack the patience to peel pearl onions, I make a streamlined version of boeuf bourguignon, the French classic anchored by lardons, salt-cured pork belly. Many Italian stracottos and brasatos begin with pancetta. And salt pork features in a remarkable 1866 recipe for “Boeuf a la Mode” by Malinda Russell, a renowned cook who was the first Black person to publish a cookbook in the United States. Ms. Russell, whose mother had been enslaved in Virginia, fled to Michigan during the Civil War, established a successful pastry shop and self-published “A Domestic Cookbook.” She begins her stew by poking “a great many holes” in the meat, then filling them with salt pork seasoned with thyme, salt, pepper and cloves. The result is stewed for five hours in onions, milk and butter until soft.

“Nihari is the only reason I’m not a vegetarian,” said the chef Anita Jaisinghani when I called to talk about the bone-rich, lavishly spiced stew popular for breakfast in northern Indian cities like Jaipur, Lucknow and New Delhi. Scented with clove, ginger and cardamom, nihari is enriched with ghee and bone marrow, then cooked overnight and often eaten to break the fast during Ramadan. The legend of nihari is that its deep flavor comes from saving some of every batch to begin the next, like sourdough starter, in an unbroken chain called taar that some vendors say reaches hundreds of years into the past. Ms. Jaisinghani uses oxtail or short ribs for the nihari at her Houston restaurant, Pondicheri, where — like many chefs — she serves the stew a day or two after cooking. “The flavors in a stew are all dissimilar and fight for attention,” she said. “They need to hang out for a bit to get along.”

Nihari, a gingery beef stew popular in northern India and Pakistan, is traditionally sealed in the pot and cooked overnight. Julia Gartland for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

Ever since I discovered Amanda Hesser’s recipe for Roman oxtails, I have baked all my stews in a covered pot instead of simmering them uncovered on the stove. The heat comes from all directions, instead of just the bottom, which eliminates the need for frequent stirring. And moving that big pot to the oven frees up space on your stovetop and in your mind for other things. 

In an oven set at 250 or 275 degrees, a heavy pot behaves like a slow cooker. But the oven’s concentrated, dry heat works even better than the machine, coaxing sinews into submission, transforming water into sauce and adding roasted flavors. (That said, any of these stews can be adapted for a slow cooker.)

When the pot is covered, your ingredients should not be swimming in liquid but wading, waist deep. I am suspicious of stew recipes that confidently call for more than two quarts of water, because the amount of liquid depends very much on the size and shape of your pot. A good rule is to cover the aromatics and vegetables, but leave an inch of meat sticking out above the surface.

Until recently, home cooks didn’t have instant thickeners at their fingertips; starchy vegetables contributed lushness to stews like Egyptian kabab halla and sancochos from Latin America and the Caribbean. A little starch is a good thing, but ingredients like cornstarch, flour and tapioca can also muffle your stew’s most exciting flavors. When everything is cooked through, if the liquid is still thin and soupy, taste it carefully. If the liquid is strongly flavored and well seasoned, by all means thicken it. If it tastes watery, thickener won’t help. In that case, remove all the meat and vegetables and boil down the liquid until it tastes right, then thickens to a saucy consistency.

The chef Floyd Cardoz, known for bringing ingredients from around the world into his dishes at Tabla in New York, died of Covid in 2020.Devin Yalkin for The New York Times

No cook was more entranced by stew’s mysterious power to fuse flavors than the New York chef Floyd Cardoz, who died of Covid early in the pandemic. Growing up in Goa, a state in southern India where the cuisine was influenced by Portuguese colonizers and Malay spice traders, he ate complex stews like vindaloo and sorpotel (meat braised with vinegar, chiles, liver, garlic, clove and cinnamon).

At his Manhattan restaurant Tabla, Mr. Cardoz became a master of the meld, known for bringing ingredients and techniques from around the world to a single dish. His wife, Barkha Cardoz, told me he was always inventing stews at home as well. After having a Filipino kare-kare at his restaurant’s staff meal, he created a haunting, savory recipe for short ribs with peanuts and anchovies, tasting of neither, that bears the hallmark of a great stew: many flavors, distinct but indivisible, in one bowl.

Mr. Cardoz created this stew of short ribs and cabbage braised with peanuts and anchovies from his memories of a Filipino kare-kare.Julia Gartland for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

“You’ll know you’ve gotten it just right when they can’t quite put their finger on what the combination of flavors is, or why they feel they must take another bite … and another,” he wrote in his 2016 cookbook, “Flavorwalla.” “That’s the sign of perfectly balanced elements.”

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Monday, February 27, 2023

New York: Where the Money Is for Republican Presidential Hopefuls - The New York Times

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Potential candidates are heading to the city looking for deep-pocket donors. Also, two brothers are accused of stiffing construction workers of wages.

Good morning. It’s Tuesday. We’ll look at potential Republican presidential candidates who are making the rounds in New York City. We’ll also look at a crackdown on wage theft.

Mike Pence leans and looks to his right as he sits on a chair on a stage. Behind him is a blue screen.
Winnie Au for The New York Times

The next presidential election is more than 600 days away, but already some potential Republican presidential candidates are headed to New York. They’re hoping to capitalize on what appears to be waning support for former President Donald Trump among Republican-leaning donors. “Most of these people are coming in only because they are looking to raise money,” said Alfonse D’Amato, the former Republican senator. “Where is the money? The money is in New York.”

I asked our political reporter Nicholas Fandos, who with Maggie Haberman wrote about the parade of presidential hopefuls visiting New York, to explain who’s been here recently and who’s coming this week.

You write that would-be Republican candidates are finding their way to New York, and donors are opening their doors, if not their wallets. Isn’t one of the potential candidates Mike Pence, the former vice president?

Yes, indeed.

There may only be a few Republicans who have formally declared they are running for president so far, but a bigger shadow primary is well underway here in New York. The idea is not so much to woo voters — New York remains a safely Democratic state — but the huge concentration of political donors who live here.

Many of them are business executives and billionaires who backed Donald Trump as president but are now interested in playing the field for an alternative. Very few seem ready to commit to a single candidate yet, but when they do, some of these donors have the capacity to put millions of dollars behind someone they believe in.

Pence is a prime example. He is still weighing whether to run for president, but he came to town last week to meet with a Jewish group and some donors to gauge their interest in a candidate who shares Trump’s agenda without being Trump. Their response could affect whether he jumps into the race.

But there are others potential candidates. Isn’t a fund-raiser on Nikki Haley’s calendar?

That’s right, and it’s today.

Though she was governor of South Carolina from 2011 to 2017, Haley is no stranger to New York. She lived here for her next job, as Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations in 2017 and 2018.

Haley has already declared herself a candidate for the Republican nomination against Trump. So she’s not just meeting with donors, she’s collecting checks. She hopes to get quite a few from her event with Wall Street types. It’s been reported that the tickets range from $3,300 to $6,600.

What about Gov. Glenn Youngkin of Virginia?

He’s scheduled to meet with donors and other influential figures in New York on Wednesday, but it is less clear right now if Youngkin will actually run.

His star has been rising in recent years after winning the governorship of a solidly Democratic state.

Like many of the donors he would need to court, he is a successful businessman, having made a fortune in private equity. He’s a former chief executive of the Carlyle Group, the big Washington-based firm.

But he is not particularly well known nationally, and so his visit this week seems to be more of a “get to know you” tour. One stop will be a visit with a group called the Committee to Unleash Prosperity, whose members include the media mogul Steve Forbes, the conservative economist Arthur Laffer, the Trump economics adviser Larry Kudlow and John Catsimatidis.

Who is John Catsimatidis, and what’s his role here?

Catsimatidis, known to friends as “Cats,” is a larger-than-life New York character who made a fortune in grocery stores, hosts a political talk radio show (on WABC-AM, which he bought in 2019) and has been a high-dollar political donor to both parties for years. He ran for mayor as a Republican in 2013 and was a big booster of his fellow billionaire, Donald Trump.

Now, though, he seems to be open to at least exploring some fresh Republican blood. He told me he’d be willing to host a dinner for any big G.O.P. candidate who asks. He also said he has some concerns about Trump’s ability to win this time unless the former president adjusts his approach.

Is all this a sign that Donald Trump can no longer count on big-money contributions from people in New York who gave to his campaigns in 2016 and 2020? And when will we know who’s actually contributing to whom?

It’s probably too early to say, but the idea that influential Republican donors in Trump’s former hometown are openly flirting with potential challengers to him feels significant. I hedge because it is certainly still possible that Trump will do well in the primaries and many of these donors line up behind him once again. But for now, at least some of these donors are heading toward putting real money behind efforts to prevent him from getting the nomination.

Who exactly they are and how much they give may remain a mystery for a while. The biggest donors in the country are adept at using our lenient campaign finance system to steer large amounts of money to support candidates through dark money groups that shield their identity.


Weather

Expect snow and sleet early, then rain and wind in the afternoon, with a high near 40. It will be partly cloudy at night with a slight breeze and temps in the low 30s.

ALTERNATE-SIDE PARKING

Will be suspended today to facilitate winter weather operations.


Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times
Jefferson Siegel for The New York Times

Prosecutors say twin brothers stiffed day laborers on construction sites for thousands of dollars — and one of them punched a worker who asked to be paid.

The charges came a week after the Manhattan district attorney’s office announced that a new unit was being set up to prosecute wage theft. One of the twins — Lulzim “Luis” Shabaj, 41 — was charged with scheming to defraud. Prosecutors said he and his brother Gzim “Jimmy” Shabaj had stolen thousands from Spanish-speaking workers by declining to pay them for work at a site in Harlem.

Prosecutors said that when one worker asked to be paid in early September 2022, Gzim Shabaj pulled out a knife and, with his other hand, punched the worker in the head. The man’s ear bled.

A few weeks later, a second laborer asked for his money. That time, prosecutors said, Gzim Shabaj ripped a side mirror off the worker’s van and repeatedly hit the van with the detached mirror, cracking the windshield and denting a hubcap. Cursing and saying “Hispanics, get out of the country,” he hit the laborer in the shoulder and threatened to call immigration enforcement. He later canceled one of the worker’s paychecks, prosecutors said.

The twins and their construction contracting company, 3 Brothers, were accused of stealing more than $7,500 from the two workers. A third brother who works with them was not involved and was not accused.

A spokesman for the Legal Aid Society, which is representing Gzim Shabaj, said he had pleaded not guilty. A lawyer for Lulzim Shabaj, Patricia Wright, said her client was “innocent until proven guilty by a jury.”


METROPOLITAN diary

Dear Diary:

It was May 1996, and I was on my first date with Dave from Brooklyn. He picked me up at a friend’s house in Bayside and we headed into Manhattan for dinner and a night out at the Back Fence on Bleecker Street.

Dave accidentally drove onto the Long Island Expressway heading east before realizing we were going the wrong way. “Oops,” he said with a smile before exiting the highway, turning around and heading back west.

When we finally arrived in the West Village, we weren’t too confident in our sense of direction, so we left the car at a garage on West Third Street and hopped in a cab. Dave told the driver the address of the restaurant, and the cab pulled away.

We went one block, made a quick turn, pulled over and stopped. Dave and I looked at each other perplexed, but then we noticed we were right in front of the restaurant.

I braced myself for what for what I expected would be a heated exchange, knowing the driver could simply have told us that we were so close to our destination.

Instead, Dave from Brooklyn turned to me with a big smile.

“We’re here,” he exclaimed and then paid the driver.

Twenty-seven years later, we’re still getting lost, even with GPS, and laughing about the shortest cab ride ever.

— Valarie Neirman

Illustrated by Agnes Lee. Send submissions here and read more Metropolitan Diary here.


Glad we could get together here. See you tomorrow. — J.B.

P.S. Here’s today’s Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. You can find all our puzzles here.

Walker Clermont and Ed Shanahan contributed to New York Today. You can reach the team at nytoday@nytimes.com.

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'Never Seen Anything Like It': New Bill Would Write DeSantis's Higher-Ed Vision Into Law - The Chronicle of Higher Education

In recent months, Florida’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, has laid out a comprehensive vision that would place public higher education under extraordinary state control. A bill introduced this week would write that vision into law.

House Bill 999 takes up almost every bullet-pointed goal that DeSantis included for public higher education in a press release last month. It would prohibit public colleges from funding any projects that “espouse diversity, equity, and inclusion or Critical Race Theory rhetoric,” no matter the funding source; allow boards of trustees to conduct a post-tenure review of faculty members at any time for cause; and put faculty hiring into the hands of trustees. It also has new specifics DeSantis hadn’t proposed, such as a ban on gender studies as a major or minor.

In recent months, Florida’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, has laid out a comprehensive vision that would place public higher education under extraordinary state control. A bill introduced this week would write that vision into law.

House Bill 999 takes up almost every bullet-pointed goal that DeSantis included for public higher education in a press release last month. It would prohibit public colleges from funding any projects that “espouse diversity, equity, and inclusion or Critical Race Theory rhetoric,” no matter the funding source; allow boards of trustees to conduct a post-tenure review of faculty members at any time for cause; and put faculty hiring into the hands of trustees. It also has new specifics DeSantis hadn’t proposed, such as a ban on gender studies as a major or minor.

“This bill will be a gut punch to anyone who cares about public education in a democracy or academic freedom or the fact that our system of higher education is the envy of the world,” said Irene Mulvey, president of the American Association of University Professors. “Because higher ed in America is organized around the fact that research and teaching and decisions involving research and teaching are best made by experts and scholars in the field.”

“We need to protest, we need to vote, we need to make our voices heard,” Mulvey added, acknowledging a student protest on Thursday. “I’ve never seen anything like it. The future of higher education is at stake. If it works in Florida, you know it’ll spread to other red states.”

In a news conference in January, DeSantis said his proposals would help Florida “continue to lead in the area of higher education,” and the governor has expressed a desire to rein in public spending on campus initiatives related to diversity, equity, and inclusion. Neither DeSantis nor Robert Alexander “Alex” Andrade, HB 999’s sponsor, returned requests for comment.

The bill is very early in the legislative process. Andrade, a Republican representative in the Florida House, who has filed another bill aligned with DeSantis’s agenda (that one aimed at making it easier for public figures to sue journalists for defamation), filed HB 999 on Tuesday. The legislative session doesn’t start until March 7. HB 999 may yet change before it passes, if it passes at all, but at least one politics expert in Florida saw it as a sign of what’s to come.

“My hope is that we get at least some of the more alarming things that are in these bills toned down a little bit, but, at the same time, I think there’s definitely a lot of momentum among Florida Republicans to do something here,” said Nicholas R. Seabrook, a professor of political science at the University of North Florida who has been critical of DeSantis’s posture on higher ed. “We’re definitely going to see something come out of this legislative session.”

Although he expects legal challenges to HB 999 if it passes, Seabrook also thought it could better pass legal muster than last year’s “Stop WOKE” Act, which has its higher-ed portions under injunction. HB 999 takes aim at funding for programs, curriculum, and hiring, issues in which the state “legitimately has a greater role,” Seabrook said.

Among the specifics of the bill: It directs trustees to remove from their universities majors and minors “in Critical Race Theory, Gender Studies, or Intersectionality, or any derivative major or minor of these belief systems.” It’s not clear whether any public Florida university has a critical race theory or intersectionality major or minor, but a majority of the 12 institutions offer gender studies as either a major or a minor or both.

(Critical race theory refers to a set of ideas that arose from legal scholars decades ago that, among other things, positions racism as a structural force. Intersectionality is a theory that refers to “the idea that forms of prejudice overlap.” Both resist simple definition.)

HB 999 would make boards of trustees responsible for hiring faculty members, and while it would allow boards to delegate that task to the college president, it prohibits the president from further delegating hiring to, say, faculty members. It clarifies that while “diversity” programs are banned, that doesn’t include support for “military veterans, Pell Grant recipients, first generation college students, nontraditional students, ‘2+2’ transfer students from the Florida College System, students from low-income families, or students with unique abilities.”

The bill would create new rules around general-education courses. For example, they may not teach “American history as contrary to the creation of a new nation based on universal principles stated in the Declaration of Independence.” It continues: “Whenever applicable,” gen-ed courses are to “promote the philosophical underpinnings of Western civilization and include studies of this nation’s historical documents, including the United States Constitution, the Bill of Rights and subsequent amendments thereto, and the Federalist Papers.”

But teaching history well does include some realities that are contrary to the principles of the Declaration of Independence, according to James Grossman, executive director of the American Historical Association, who has written books about 20th-century African American history. Inviting students to wrestle with colonialism and slavery in early American history is both truthful and helps with “students learning how to think historically and students learning how no ideas exist outside of context. Their ideas, their parents’ ideas, their teachers’ ideas, no ideas exist outside of a context,” Grossman said.

There are some parts of HB 999 that Seabrook, the University of North Florida professor, agrees with. The bill adds language to Florida law about how a part of public universities’ mission is to prepare students “for citizenship of the constitutional republic.” He also thinks colleges could do more to foster intellectual diversity on campus, but HB 999 is not the way to go about it.

“It’s identifying that there’s perhaps a problem with academia leaning one way on the ideological spectrum, and then you see what they’re doing at New College,” he said. “They’re just replacing it with an even worse model that goes in the opposite direction.”

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NFL free agent Jordan Poyer isn't fan of states that 'take half my money' - Fox News

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Some probably think about it, but free agent star safety Jordan Poyer said it: Professional athletes are thinking about state taxes when thinking about where to play next in free agency.

There’s so much that goes into the free agent process, but the financials of new deals around the league are one of the main factors that entices a player to join a new squad. Of course, state taxes get involved when looking at the grand total on the game-day check.

Poyer has become one of the best safeties in the NFL during his time with the Buffalo Bills after joining them in 2017. He signed a four-year, $13 million deal back then and was given a two-year extension in 2021 worth $19.5 million.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Jordan Poyer of the Buffalo Bills looks on prior to the game against the Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium on October 16, 2022 in Kansas City, Missouri.

Jordan Poyer of the Buffalo Bills looks on prior to the game against the Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium on October 16, 2022 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Jason Hanna/Getty Images)

Poyer went on to make first team All-Pro in 2021 and earned a Pro Bowl bid last season.

Speaking on his podcast this week, Poyer discussed where he might go in free agency and said that state taxes are among the boxes to check off.

"I would love to go to a state that doesn’t take half my money," he said. "It’s crazy to me how taxes work. Some people will say, ‘You’re already making X amount of money.’ Taxes play a big part in all of our lives."

EX-BILLS PUNTER MATT ARAIZA NOT PLAYING FOOTBALL IN MEXICO DESPITE TEAM'S ANNOUNCEMENT, HOPING FOR NFL RETURN

In New York state, Poyer is in the tax bracket where he makes between $5,000,001 to $25,000,000 annually. So, that means he’s paying $450,500 plus 10.3% of the amount over $5,000,000 at the end of the day in taxes.

Though Poyer is living better than most because of his lucrative contract, those numbers don’t always add up the way people may think after paying his taxes.

Now, if Poyer played in Florida, it’s a different story. Florida doesn’t have state income tax, which is why many athletes are intrigued by joining a team down there.

Jordan Poyer of the Buffalo Bills looks on during the second half against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Raymond James Stadium on December 12, 2021 in Tampa, Florida.

Jordan Poyer of the Buffalo Bills looks on during the second half against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Raymond James Stadium on December 12, 2021 in Tampa, Florida. (Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

The Miami Dolphins were brought up on the podcast, and Poyer is already friends with their quarterback Tua Tagovailoa despite being rivals in the AFC East with the Bills.

"If it wasn’t Buffalo, it’d be nice to be warm," Poyer said. "It would be nice to see the sun, maybe, every week or so. Every other week at least."

Poyer, though, is just excited to see where the free agency process takes him.

BILLS' JOSH ALLEN ‘STARSTRUCK’ AFTER MEETING TIGER WOODS: ‘NEVER FORGET IT’

"I know how to play this game. I know how to prepare for this game," he said. "This offseason already has started off great, getting my body right. I feel really good right now."

"Not really sure what to expect. I do know I’m a ball player, so whatever team does get J-Po, I believe they’re going to be better."

Other than Florida, Texas, Washington, Tennessee, Alaska, Wyoming, South Dakota, New Hampshire and Nevada have no income taxes.

Buffalo Bills safety Jordan Poyer (21) addressed the media following the NFL football team's training camp in Pittsford, N.Y., Sunday July 24, 2022.

Buffalo Bills safety Jordan Poyer (21) addressed the media following the NFL football team's training camp in Pittsford, N.Y., Sunday July 24, 2022. (AP Photo/ Jeffrey T. Barnes)

That means, if Poyer isn’t looking for big deductions from Uncle Sam, he can choose the Dolphins, Jacksonville Jaguars, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Tennessee Titans, Houston Texans, Dallas Cowboys, Seattle Seahawks and the Las Vegas Raiders.

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The NFL free agency period begins March 15 at 4 p.m. ET.

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Sunday, February 26, 2023

Muppet Makers Turn to Creating Whooping Cranes - The New York Times

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At Jim Henson’s Creature Shop in Queens, puppet makers craft characters for a musical featuring Native American performers.

Good morning. It’s Monday. We’ll visit the workshop where more than the “Sesame Street” Muppets takes shape. We’ll also look at how one center for runaway and homeless young people reacted when the city said teenagers and young adults could not sleep there.

A smiling woman holding a whooping crane puppet in a workshop with tools on the wall behind her. A coyote puppet and bison costume are sitting on a table in front of her.
James Estrin/The New York Times

In the world of fleece, foam and feathers in Jim Henson’s Creature Shop in Queens, they make more than the “Sesame Street” Muppets. Sometimes they make birds other than that big yellow one, like a whooping crane that Heather Henson was standing next to.

She is the daughter of Jim and Jane Henson, whose puppets have been more than daily television buddies to generations of youngsters. The whooping crane is about to go on a national tour, along with the bison across the table and a coyote puppet that was not far away.

They are mainstays of “Ajijaak on Turtle Island,” a musical that will be performed tomorrow at the Gerald W. Lynch Theater at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, at 524 West 59th Street. It features 17 puppets, five of them whooping cranes, and an ensemble of Native American performers from seven tribes or nations. Henson co-directed the show with the Grammy-winning composer Ty Defoe, a member of the Oneida and Ojibwe nations who wrote the book.

Henson said she had set out to tell stories of nature and animals “and also our relationship to our landscape” using puppets made in the workshop, in a wedge-shaped industrial building less than a mile from the Queensboro Bridge. It’s one part prop shop, one part wardrobe department: She walked the coyote in a space where fabrics were stored before moving to a room with tall windows where the walls were filled with hand tools and boxes that had labels like “clippers,” “rivets” and “sandpaper.” Elsewhere there were also racks stuffed with rolls of fabric dyed to look good on monsters — the next Cookie or Elmo?

In “Ajijaak,” the story centers on a young whooping crane on her first solo migration from Canada across the Great Plains to coastal Texas. Henson said the show incorporates Native American traditions that “reflect our connectedness with creation.”

It also reflects one of her passions: She is a former board member of the International Crane Foundation, whose mission is to conserve cranes and the flyways and watersheds they depend on.

She discovered whooping cranes when she had an intern-level job at a zoo in Providence, R.I., where she had gone to college. “They would start dancing at sunrise and sunset,” she said.

Her infatuation deepened a few years later when she moved to Orlando, Fla. The Gulf Coast was a destination for ultralight pilots who were leading cranes south for the winter. “I got caught up in it,” she said. “They do not migrate naturally. If their parents or their cousins don’t teach them, they won’t. They’re in big groups, but somebody has to teach them.”

In “Ajijaak” (pronounced Ah-JEE-jock), there is more to worry about than learning to navigate an environment that is changing for the worse. The young crane has been separated from her parents. “Cranes need their parents to teach them how to fly,” said Henson. “Ajijaak has to learn from other animals and from Native Americans on the flyway who understand the seasons and the way the land works and help that bird on its journey.”

What the audience sees as the journey unfolds, said Jason Weber, a creative supervisor at the workshop, is “an interpretation of nature.” For Ajijaak, he dyed the wings using a Japanese technique that made them look like feathers.

“Our challenge had been to use organic materials as much as possible and try not to use synthetics,” he said. “We used bamboo. We used reeds. The unfortunate thing was, they didn’t hold up as well with the stress of travel touring and night on, night off performances.”

The result? “The feet were breaking — the legs,” he said. “We needed to move to something we could cast to look like bamboo.” They found a plastic that he said was “definitely going to hold up and not dry and crack.”

Along the way, the fabric for parts of the crane’s body was switched to nylon, from crepe de Chine silk, because nylon is less likely to wear thin. “But we kept with the silk on the wings because nothing moves like silk,” he said.

The coyote, too, has a synthetic body. “I couldn’t use corn husks because they would obviously not hold up over any length of time,” said Rollie Krewson, an Emmy Award-winning master puppet designer and builder who has worked on Henson puppets since the 1970s, “so I was using Tyvek.” She said it “had the look and feel and sound of a corn husk” — once she had sprayed it the color of a corn husk, a more subdued color than the Sesame Street palette.

“Sesame Street puppets are not as based in reality,” she said. “I mean, you’ve got Abby Cadabby.”


Weather

Expect clear skies early, then a chance of snow starting in the afternoon, with a high around 40. It will be windy at night with snow or rain and temps in the upper 30s.

ALTERNATE-SIDE PARKING

In effect until March 7 (Purim).


Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times
  • Maimonides Medical Center: A group called Save Maimonides has financed a relentless, monthslong campaign to disparage a struggling Brooklyn medical center. Can you save a hospital by attacking it?

  • A through line between two remarkable events: Thirty years ago, Tim Lang was injured in the first attack on the World Trade Center, an ominous but often overlooked prelude to 9/11. He does not forget.

  • Lived lives: Ward B. Stone, New York State’s maverick wildlife pathologist, died in Troy, N.Y. He was 84.


James Estrin/The New York Times

The number of runaway and homeless young people in overnight drop-in centers has surged. Last month, city officials delivered an unexpected message: The centers had to “discontinue the practice of allowing youth and young adults to sleep overnight.”

At least one center is pushing back. Alexander Roque, who runs Ali Forney, a Manhattan center for L.G.B.T.Q. youth, said “they would have to shut us down and put me in handcuffs” before he would comply — even if the city took away Ali Forney’s funding.

The drop-in centers, operated by city-funded nonprofits and serving young people from ages 14 to 24, are not homeless shelters, though many have had cots or other places where young people could sleep. The city’s Department of Youth and Community Development said the no-sleeping directive was intended to see that the centers complied with state law and were not operating as “unlicensed shelters.” The directive said people at the centers could still “rest” there.

Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal, a Democrat whose district includes Hell’s Kitchen and much of the Upper West Side, called the edict “impossibly cruel.”

“The city needs to do more to pave the way for housing these people,” she said. “Getting rid of cots is not a housing plan.”


METROPOLITAN diary

Dear Diary:

It was a warm August day in New York in 1969. I was 21 and just back from Vietnam.

I had been drafted into the Army two years earlier, and my second year in Southeast Asia had been the longest in my life. It ended with me returning to the World — Brooklyn — in one piece as one of the lucky ones.

I took a cab from Port Authority to Bensonhurst. I was in my khaki uniform. The cabdriver, a middle-age man, kept looking at me through the rearview mirror. There was no conversation between us. I was lost in a swirl of emotions.

When we got to my block, I could see all of my neighbors sitting out on their porch steps. Someone had strung up a large banner: “Welcome Home, Lenny!” They were all cheering.

Through my tears, I could make out my parents, my sisters and my girlfriend. I was overcome, completely surprised by the reception I was receiving from the people who had watched me grow up.

What moved me the most, though, was when I reached for my wallet to pay the substantial sum of money showing on the taxi meter.

“Put your money away, son,” the cabby said. “You’ve paid enough. This ride’s on me.”

Len DiSesa

Illustrated by Agnes Lee. Send submissions here and read more Metropolitan Diary here.


Glad we could get together here. See you tomorrow. — J.B.

P.S. Here’s today’s Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. You can find all our puzzles here.

Walker Clermont and Ed Shanahan contributed to New York Today. You can reach the team at nytoday@nytimes.com.

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Mets' Justin Verlander hasn't experienced spring training like this in a while - New York Post

PORT ST. LUCIE — Justin Verlander isn’t sure where he’s supposed to be, but is encouraged about how he feels. 

After throwing live batting practice Sunday — his first session in camp in which hitters swung — the Mets co-ace said the fact he hasn’t had a normal spring training since 2019 has left him wondering if he is progressing correctly. 

Verlander underwent Tommy John surgery after the pandemic-shortened 2020 season that scrapped his ensuing spring training. Last year, spring training was condensed throughout MLB following the lockout. 

“I’ve asked my agent and old pitching coaches, ‘Hey where was I at this time?’ ” Verlander said. “I think I am where I need to be.” 

Verlander expects to pitch in his first Grapefruit League on Friday or Saturday. He’s been working in camp on refining his changeup, but as much as anything, he’s working on developing relationships in the clubhouse. 

Justin Verlander
Justin Verlander hasn’t had a spring training like this in a while.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST
Justin Verlander
Justin Verlander is encouraged with where he’s at in spring training.
Corey Sipkin for NY Post

The three-time Cy Young award winner, who arrived in the offseason on a two-year contract worth $86.7 million, compared it to changing schools. 

“This is my first time coming to a new team in spring training when everybody is just getting back together and the routine is a little bit different, everybody is just going about their business,” Verlander said. “It’s like [transferring to] a new high school. Everybody has got their cliques, they know each other and they are just getting to know you and I’m trying to get to know them. It’s fun. 

“The last few years I have really taken a vested interest in trying to get to know my teammates and communicate better, and just help guys as much as I possibly can. Taking that mindset into this is going to help … but spring training is difficult — we don’t have a lot of B.S. time like we do during the season.” 

Justin Verlander
Justin Verlander is still getting accustomed to his new Mets teammates.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Verlander said he would like to refine his changeup just to give him another pitch with his four-seam fastball, slider and curveball. Last season Verlander threw 63 changeups, according to Statcast. 

“I would like to get my other stuff sharp first, because I know what works and I feel [the changeup] is pretty close,” Verlander said. “I’ll start working it in.”

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