ultimate in broke-ass, drunk-ass, peasant food. slow-cooked cows foot and/or other bits, tender and tasty and, believe me, one of my favorites, especially at this hour. we opt for the elite version with a raw quail egg because, well, need i remind you my confirmed record of egg sluttery? leonardo paixao: good stuff. anthony: wow. nice. this is like the greatest thing ever. leonardo paixao: so they tell that they serve 170 kilos of cow foot everyday. anthony: so that s about 350 pounds of, yeah, cow foot. and all that good stuff it ended up in here, man. gelatin, man. chef: the importations its it s big. have a beer. it s never too busy. but it goes on 24 hours. anthony: it s sort of a stout. leonardo paixao: it s a cow breed caracu.
our daughter was in camp, same camp as her mom. so this is when soul first sees a mom and runs into her arms. when we were waiting for her to get out of camp we went to montreal and in montreal you have to try the blue team. this is a food that is all the rage. i have a plate right in front of me right here, it s basically french fries with cheese kurds with brown gravy, and it used to be like peasant food but it s all the rage now. it looks like a carnival clown threw up. unemployment rate is low and everybody is out there looking for jobs and some are actually getting them. one woman went about at the wrong way. one woman who went to a career fair on her lunch break got
things are terrible. but having said all that, i think things are going to work out. thank you so much. cheers. there aren t a lot of chefs that get to sit down and interview the president of the united states, but the reason that i think president obama wanted to sit down with tony it was the talk about, again, was nothing to do with food. life. anthony interviewed a guy named boris nemtsov, a critic of the regime and he was really good at picking people who were critics of the government, of putin, bad things steam to happen to them. a known enemy of putin stricken wibe a bout of plutoni. are you concerned? me? absolute about myself? tony, i was born here 54 years
to speak out forcefully on jason s behalf. it was interesting to see him winding up in the center of political space stations. i also loved the episode when he went to jerusalem andent to israel and met with palestinians and met with israelis and brought his unique vantage of that suation. that was very powerful. any story that we sit on television and argue about and have these heated discussions about, all you have to do is interject some food and wine and whatever into it in a table and it becomes much more civilized. first, zucchini. and the apricots we had those are intensely delicious. are you hopeful? of course, i have my children. together we can build
when he was doing was journalistic, but more importantly, it was so human, bringing people on a journey with him while he met people in their place with their food and with their meals, with their culture. i think tony was trying to make the world a little bit more hospitable. a little bit more understanding and more friendly. he was trying to show, yes, we speak different languages and we come from different cultures and different religion, but we re all people and we have unique stories to tell and he wanted to share those stories. in the process he would make the world a little bit smaller, a little bit more personal, and i m sure his hope was maybe we could eliminate some of the abuses, the wars, the hatred and that was his goal. old. you could use my phone. or mine. you need the new iphone and you deserve it on the best network, verizon. camera s amazing. and now you can get a great deal at verizon. and i deserve to be the ring bearer.