Transcripts For WTSP Sunday Morning 20161120 : comparemela.c

Transcripts For WTSP Sunday Morning 20161120



which is where the online entrepreneurs come in. >> house calls from your grocer. >> hello. >> everything you want including dinner. >> it's wild alaskan salmon. >> ordered online, delivered to your door. >> we think we're making cooking at home more efficient, higher quality and better for the environment which is better than going to the grocery store. >> pauley: is your next meal coming out of the box? later on "sunday morning." if if the a meal at home from a box how about a delicious bite at the museum. our history that's not just on the gallery walls. >> now on display at san francisco's museum of modern art, delicious works by some of >> these dishes are coming. >> later on "sunday morning" a bite at the museum. >> bellissima is italian for beautiful. it's also the name of a sparkling wine from italy that has christie brinkley as its number one fan. >> i was watching an old movie -- >> nobody has to teac brinkley how to sell something. >> you can't say bellissima without bellissima! >> without wanting a drink. >> she has good reason to be enthusiastic about the prosecco wine she liked it so much she bought the, part of it. being bubbly about bubbly later on "sunday morning." >> the spice of life is land but first it has to come out of the ground in hawaii which is where you find lee cowan. >> that's yellow turmeric and mostly what i grow. >> hawaii is a land of many mysteries but one growing in the ground has people clamoring for a taste. >> i don't know if it's a miracle crop but they're doing a lot of research with it so we'll let those folks decide. >> the tropical super food that's super "sunday morning." >> pauley: what's bad is good or so say champions of the trio of foods under a cloud for quite some time. serena clears up the controversy. >> after years to high cholesterol the egg is finally coming out of its shell again. is the egg experiencing a renaissance? with a great deal of joy. >> here's more happy news, other great foods are having a revival too. butter, potato and -- eggs. sounds like breakfast later on "sunday morning." >> pauley: and more. first, here are the headlines for sunday morning the 20th of november 2016. president-elect donald trump is club in new jersey. yesterday trump welcomed former critic mitt romney. he's been mentioned as a possible secretary of state. new jersey governor chris christie will be among the visitors. he tweeted this morning again about the broadway show "hamilton" calling it highly overrated and demanding cast members apologize for their statement at friday night's show. mr. pence is the guest on "face the nation." in india a passenger train rolled off the tracks. no word on what caused the derailment. thousands of mourningers -- mourners td for the funeral of journalist gwen ifill. she died of uterine cancer and was 61 year old. now today's weather. a cold front from the midwest sent temperatures plummeting and snow across the east and there's stormy weather from seattle south to san francisco. watch for are the same trouble spots in the week ahead. travel safe if you're trotting >> pauley: next, food at your boost of online grocers. could this make the local grocer a thing of the past? our story is covered by anna werner. >> why go to the super market when it can come to you? >> hello. how are you? >> i'm good. thank you. >> seattle mom christine holm gets groceries from amazon. >> thank you. >> on this day from company's new prime now service. >> my husband and i both stay up late to watch tv once the baby's in bed. >> those items come to her in just one hour. >> it's about saving time. there's lots of people who don't want to be in online. though is not what your pantry looks like i promised this is organized chaos. >> stephanie landry heads up toys, sporting, equipment, all sorts of things. >> she walked us through this amazon facility where workers take those online orders and fill up brown paper bags for delivery. how many items can you keep in a smaller warehouse like this one? >> between 20,000 and 40,000 items. >> for larger items they have amazon fresh a b store and it's not just amazon. safeway and whole foods even google are among 50 major outlets offering online delivery. sales are up 15% from 2015 and could top $12 billion this year. >> feel free to dig in. there's a lot of food you get. >> the new shopping options aren't limited to plain groceries. >> we have garlic chives, celery. >> meet the meal kit. antibiotic-free chicken. >> complete with recipes. >> and a bottle of white wine vinegar. >> and precisely measured ingredients from the country's largest seller blue apron. the co-founder matt salzburg said subscribers order 8 million >> it's not bad to cook at home and we think we're making it more affordable, more efficient, higher quality and better for the environment than how people cook today going to the grocery store. >> want to cook like martha stewart? she sells kits too and plated and new york time. lucy blatter gets hers from a company called hello fresh. having the time to go through all the aisles and i take my kids that's really stressful. taking them shopping is super stressful. they ask for everything. it makes it super convenient. >> she gets three meals a week for $60. we should point out you have a grocery store right across the street. i can see it from here. >> i do. >> with all the new services profits can't be far behind, right? >> i not so fast said a retail analyst. >> they're doing it, they're doing it. just stop and think. is that right for you. >> so grocery stores are not dead? >> no, not at all. >> he says online shopping accounts for just 1.5% of the $800 billion grocery market. a key reason is that right now he says buying groceries online >> so if i'm shopping online versus in the store why's it so difficult to figure out what can of baked beans on the shelf i want? >> you don't have a frame of preference. you see it all at once and i'm usually familiar with the layout and go on to the next category. >> and online shopping may send you time but not money. prices can be up to 25% consumers still prefer the traditional grocery store. >> i like personal being able to see the sales. i love going up and down the aisles and seeing the ones i didn't get to see. it makes me feel good to see the products. >> by trying to move the process online are they trying to solve a problem that doesn't exist? >> i would say they are and trying to invest in something undermines the business that is successful and people are generally happy with. >> but don't tell that to amazon's stephanie landry. >> i see real solutions to people's problems and lives which are very busy and hustle and bustle and providing a solution to make peoples lives better. >> so maybe on a thanksgiving to come your cooking will be out of definitely good enough to eat. >> that looks insanely good. >> but in the long run will the recipe last? >> pauley: ahead, a feast for new or worsening depression, or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling, or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. with less pain, i can be more active. [burke] hot dog. seen it. covered it. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ? we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ? >> pauley: we'll take a bite at the museum. >> at san francisco's museum of modern art record crowds have been feasting their eyes on ellsworth kelly and warhol and master chefs like wylie dufrense and dominique ansel. >> it seems obvious. >> chef cory lee re-imagined the museum as another museum gallery. >> people stumble in and sit down and say what is this? >> it offers signature dishes of the world's most celebrated chefs. >> it likes like a museum program and see dishes from around the worl disorienting. >> something they didn't expect but it sprizs them. >> and continues the experience of discovery but with food. >> lee is a celebrated chef himself. his restaurant is blocks away but the 37-year-old does not serve any of his own creations at insitu. >> i think of him as our curator museum-worthy rest wanaurant. >> he had curiosity and i explained if we wanted to do an exhibition our curator would identify the artist and bring limb to our museum. >> i wanted to do the same food so you can try a dish from belgium or hong kong. it can have a fun and new experience wit europe and asia have visited insitu teaching the kitchen staff to reproduce their dishes perfectly. when the executive chef brandon rogers prepares fresh steamed crab claw it looks as it did when it was served in 1970. >> we got the same bowl and the imitate that exactly. >> he does the same with the pan roasted duck breast from california's wine country. >> the dishes from 1995 so within the first year of them opening. >> some of the classic dishes served here are no longer on the menus where they originally appeared and sometimes the chefs who created them are among the diners here. alice waters stopped in to try the ago. >> there's pressure when someone tries a dish they entrusted you with is a weird feeling but that's the fun of trying something new. that has turmeric, ginger, lemon. >> coming up, going for the gold. >> this portion of sunday more "earning something you love" per roll bounty is more absorbent, so the roll can last 50% longer than the leading ordinary brand. so you get more "life" per roll. bounty, the quicker picker upper what a lovely home youav yea, that's my daughter, my son, and that's my... hey, kool-aid man! ...husband. oh yeah!!! [ crashing ] [ electricity crackles ] hey at least you got your homeowners insurance through progressive. by bundling it with your car insurance you saved a ton! yeah. do you want to see the rest of the house? >> good these golden stems be the true spice of life? lee cowan traveled all the way to hawaii to find out. >> not far from the surfers paradise on the north shore offer our bodies the same kind of healthy glow. it's turmeric. a member of the ginger family that before washed looks like an ugly carrot. it's not a root. it's stem is where all the good stuff is found. native to indians it's been around thousands of west. now people can't get enough. >> this year do you know how many thousands of pounds of turmeric you'll ship out? >> tonnage. major tonnage. >> phil greene and his wife bought the farm a decade ago? >> it's a beautiful day. a talked about super food. >> did you know what it was? >> barely. to me it was a powdered spice in a jar that stayed on your shelf until you made a curry recipe. >> curry is the most common use but turmeric's taste is only part of its allure. scattered to the wind it's a sacred part of hindu ceremony and has been used as a dye for fabric and gives hello hew but the compound makes it a powerful weapon against disease. >> parkinson's, arthritis, diabetes. >> it has an effect? >> it's such a wonderful compound it works in every stance. studying its qualities in dallas. he said thousands of studies have shown it's not only proven to be a powerful antioxident but can take on something as serious as cancer. >> h >> you know it works but not sure why. >> exactly. >> he says more research needs to be done but the word is out at restaurants like cafe gratitude in los angeles. here turmeric is mixed with steamedal mon steamed almond milk. lemon. >> cafe gratitude's owner. >> it can knock out diseases. it's crazy. it's become a phenomenon it's the buzz word in the health world. >> google's trend report called turmeric the rising star of 2016. is it as good as all the hype and as healthy and good for us? >> people love it and come back for it. do i know what it's providing to people, no? >> the greens aren't sure either but if it's both healthy and a cash crop so be it. >> farmers grow what people want, what people demand. we kept increasing because it kept selling. >> we all heard the advice eat the colors of the rainbow. here in hawaii it may be the pot >> pauley: food lovers welcome any word that things once thought to be bad for your health may be good and throughout the morning we have news of exactly that. >> hello, laidy. >> terry golson is a good egg. ask her chickens. happy to be home all 13 of them boston. >> this is florence and pearl. this chicken is veronica. >> do you look at them as the daughters you didn't have? >> not quite that far. i do recognize that they're chickens. >> and from chickens come eggs. what do you use your eggs for? morning. >> you do? >> i do. >> golson a professional cook -- that's orange. dedicated a cookbook to this single subject. talk about putting all your eggs in one basket. what came first the chicken or the egg? >> i like eggs. before i had my chickens but only after i got the chickens and started eating eggs that re could stand alone. >> but for decades eggs were a no-no because they were linked to high cholesterol. well, guess what? recent research suggests eggs are ok again so get them while they're hot. >> the entire egg is so luscious and wonderful. >> americans agree. do you think you have a love affair with eggs? >> i definitely have a love affair with eggs. i do. >> now that's something to cluck about. >> pauley: something's tasty in the state of denmark. >> wild blue lobster. >> he's alive. >> pauley: next. it'll get better. i'm at the edward jones office, like sue suggested. thanks for doing this, dad. so i thought it might be time to talk about a financial strategy. (laughing) you mean pay him back? knowing your future is about more than just you. so let's start talking about your long-term goals... and it's how edward jones makes sense of investing. >> pauley: the great dane is the the restaurant many critics have proclaimed the finest in the world. we take a peek in the kitchen. >> flour and not exactly what you might expect to find on your plate unless of course you're here. named best restaurant in the world in 2010. then again in 2011 and 2012 and 2014. >> never did i expect or dream up that it became what it is today. never >> 38-year-old chef opened 2003 limiting himself strictly to ingredients in the nordic region. tall order. >> if you were not cooking french or italian it was like forget about it. everything else was stupid. >> so noma off the danish word for food looked for culinary explanation from the land itself. foragers like michael larsson collect ingredients every day rain or shine. there's so many things you can do with this one. >> what's wrong with grabbing a bunch and sticking them in the freezer. >> that's the difference between fine dining and normal dining. we need the best every day and it needs to be fresh. back in the kitchen they get to work. >> it's sliced arugula. >> that's beautiful. >> cooked fresh. >> everything is fresh. >> here's a blue lobster. >> he's alive. >> he's alive. >> how much does it cost to eat at noma with drinks averaging $400 a person and if you envision everybody had a pay to enable them to have a nice home, a car, any meal would be very expensive or more expensive. of noma is a world away from his childhood in rural macedonia. >> there's no refrigerators. you pick something from the ground or kill an animal. if you want a chicken you have to grab a chicken and -- >> he came when he was 12 year old and dropped out of school at 15 and began working as a restaurant apprentice a year te culinar culinary scene. >> food was like microwave food like ready-made-meals most the time. >> noma turned copenhagen into a food destination and him into food royalty >> it was a game changer for noma and for the city and the nordic region. >> but the story doesn't end will move to a new part of town. >> we have the space to build a small urban farm which is amazing for a cook to actually be able to pick your parsley a minute before you need it. >> until then he'll also open a pop-up mexico and again filling plates is exactly what this man does best. >> i understand it'sus that as well. to some when they get a fine meal it's like a real transcendent moment and for others it's just a vessel to enjoy the conversation better and i'm perfectly fine with everything as long as they in joy their time with us. >> pauley: ahead -- >> this is a young cheese made only four days ago. >> one taste of this cheese and you may be tested to say holy cow. we find out why. regina loudes gather for prayer and the singing of the songs. this is their way of communing with the lord so is the work they do in this community in the connecticut town of wait for it, bethlehem. although she might deny it the big cheese among the 38 sister traditional cheese making. a 2002 pbs documentary dubbed her the cheese nun. did you eat a lot of cheese growing up? >> no. we didn't. >> she enter in 1973. >> i was a college dropout and went to st. lawrence because it was the most radical school in i didn't even know cows before i came here. so when you join you get to try many things you would have never done and i happen to fall in love with a cow named shiba and learned to make cheese. >> the dairy that began with shiba's arrival helps them be self-sustaining. one sister breakfast and vice versa. >> every morning i take my cup of coffee to the cow and squirt milk right into the coffee. >> you can do that? >> yes, and it makes it foamy -- >> like a cappuccino. >> a cow-paccino. >> she started making raw milk cheese but her early efforts so she prayed for a teacher. >> i was praying for an old french woman to teach me but a young one came and her grandmother taught her how to make this cheese. >> so in a sense your prayers were answered. >> definitely answered. >> what's made here is called bethlehem cheese. wheels of it age in the tiny cheese cellar. >> this right now is a young cheese made only four days ago so you wouldn't want to eat this >> it's the science behind cheese making that excites another noela who earned her ph.d in micro biology from the university of connecticut. >> what grew is the white powder and i did my doctorate on that. >> she went to france and fungi change the consistency and flavor of cheese. >> touch it. see how smooth that is. >> it's silky. >> you should see it under a microscope. >> we're looking at flavor on a microscopic level. i love your fungi. >> thank you. >> today younger nuns an intern learn how to separate the from the whey and wrap them. joke aside mother noella sees different things. >> i see god in the microorganisms and for me it can the motto is work and pray and for us or work is also a prayer. >> pauley: ahead, one potato, knowing where you stand. it's never been easier. except when it comes to your retirement plan. but at fidelity, we're making retirement planning clearer. and it all starts with getting your fidelity retirement score. in 60 seconds, you'll know where you stand. and together, we'll help you make decisions for your plan... it's your retirement. know where you stand. black friday deals are here all month long at lowe's. get up to 40% off appliance special values $396 or more, like this whirlpool refrigerator for only $898. and this whirlpool washer and dryer pair for only $579 each. make your home happy with great savings at lowe's. >> >> pauley: it's been setting the table for it's namesake steak for nearly two century. the first in america we're told to call itself a restaurant. del monaco's is and a list of spots to shake up state of. here's jim axelrod. del monaco in lower manhattan. >> it's challenging. the dishes invented here how do we keep people and grandchildren and people interested in those dishes. that's my biggest challenge here. >> the history -- >> and bring it forward. >> del monaco's is the nation's first formal restaurant. this kitchen is the birth place of what's growing into a $780 billion industry. it's influence on our nation's menus is unmistakable. eggs benedict, baked alaska. >> it's the start and finish. >> and the del monaco steak all when people say del monaco steak that's this guy. >> aged, boneless. >> the del monaco steak and this is it. >> with a history that dates back to 1837. >> we're going to del monaco's for super. >> lunch at del monaco's. >> join us on sunday at del more than our menus. >> most presidents, abraham lincoln ate here and teddy roosevelt. >> in the book there's ten restaurants that changed america. del monaco's may be on the cover. it's like kleenex or xerox became shorthand for restaurant. >> that's right. history. understand how we go out to eat is to understand how we live and that's to understand who we are. >> and how we think. >> how we look at the world, what sorts of things we desire and how we distinguish yourselves as americans. restaurants like mama lioni's and the mandarin in san francisco which elevated it beyond chopped silvia's and the influence of regiona regional cuisine. and the high-brow shaped restaurants and the middle-brow. howard johnson's? >> howard johnson's is the basis industry like mcdonald's or burger king but the fast casual industry like chile's or denny s denny's. >> americans now spend more money on eating out than on buying food to cook at home and even if you never step foot in the place that started it you will don't ever forget your favorite neighborhood joint has more in common with iconic have you been somewhere else and you open up the menu and see del monaco steaks and you think that's my place. >> the last time that happened to me i was with my mom and she told the waiter he works where >> pauley: what's hot? find out next. a little more... grandma! there you go... there's no more room. i know i had one more... hmmm... more. how's it looking? 20 more minutes... 8, 9... we need 1 more yes... let's enjoy. there was a little girl, and she became friends with every animal she met. it's getting late, grandma should go. one more? in the end, all we really need more of, is each other. happy thanksgiving from publix. >> when it comes to chicken some people like it hot as jan crawford discovered.>> down the block for what once was the city's best kept secret hot chicken. >> it's an addictive combination of pleasure and pain. fried chicken doused in cayenne and enough spices to make you that's father and son owner. nick bishop and nick junior. they fry up the chicken five ways including hot, damn hot and shut the cluck up. why do people want to eat things that cause them >> legend has it it started 80 years ago with the family of this woman. >> of course it started with a woman. my great uncle sergeant prince being as they say a womanizer. >> a womanizer who was cheating on his revenge was a dish best served hot and added spices to the fried chicken. >> but he liked it. >> he did. >> and that was the beginning. >> we'll see that was the beginning but it's so sad we don't know who she was. >> but her legacy lived on. great uncle thornton started a restaurant using the girlfriend's recipe and prince's hot chicken shack still packs them in. these days there's competition even from some of the big boys. >> kfc crispy chicken tenders. >> and for those with a stomach of steel there's the death row chicken at shakes. masks and participants in the death row challenge have to sign a waiver. >> you can start now. >> it's no gimmick even a few bites burn. but on the night we were there comedian chad wright except asking for more chewing his way to victory. there was a guy with three bites and had to r >> amateur. it's sad. why even come? >> if he's an amateur what does that make you? >> an idiot. >> and maybe that's why when it comes to taking the heat andre has a confession. >> you have different levels so which one do you like? >> mild. >> i can't tolerate anything hot. >> at least a potato i day? >> i do, yeah. >> he has potatoes in his roots. >> it's a staple on our dining table every night growing up. how are you? >> so when restaurant in 2011 guess what theme he had in mind? >> every item is potato based. >> you can't have cilantro and jalapeno. >> the humble potato isn't so humble any more. it's a star. dicker serves about 1,000 customers a day at his four east >> you pick it up and have unlimite unlimited veggies. >> the potato becomes the blank canvas for your imagination. >> exactly. >> white potatoes are now the single most eaten vegetable in the u.s. but when carb-free diets were all the rage potatoes were force to go underground. >> the problem is not the but the technique and how you cook it and what you add to it. >> seeming to back him up the most recent usda dietary guidelines recommends eating starchy vegetables including potatoes. having it plain is best for your health but flavor-wise -- >> there's so many techniques you can put the potato in. it's mind blowing. it is. >> take french fries for legend had it thomas jefferson introduced them to america at a white house dinner. now alen dicker is poise to lodge something equally revolutionary. what is this? >> a dough with creamy mashed potato filling. >> do you feel like it's ready for a comeback? >> absolutely. >> bet you can't top that. >> pauley: ahead, christie >> pauley: eat, drink and be merry. a special edition of "sunday morning." here again is jane pauley. uptown girl was a huge hit for marry christie brinkley. these days she's an advocate for bellissima a sparkling wine. upbeat and as mark phillips discovered very hands on. >> i'm involved here. it's my new workout. >> no one will ever accuse christie brinkley with a lack of enthusiasm. now she's even more motivated. without bellissima. >> without wanting a drink. bellissima is her very own wine label. a new range of prosecco. the italian fizz that's the hottest thing in the liquor business right now. u.s. sales are up a third each year lately. >> you are tasting nature not chemicals -- >> and christie brinkley and her partners think they found a way clutter, her. of all the places that picked you the loading dock wasn't one of them. >> believe me i'm involved in every aspect of this. >> more than four decades into a modelling career, christie brinkley never met a camera lens she didn't like or liked her back. point one at her and this sort of thing happens. >> cheers. >> long the pre-dinner tickle in italy is being marketed in the u.s. as a kind of champagne without the price tag. more bubbles for the buck. were you a prosecco involved before you got involved in the business? >> yeah, i've had my fair share. >> in the region of italy about an hour north of venice where anything that calls itself can't make enough of the stuff. >> it's happening right now. everybody wants prosecco. >> if you're going into the wine business this is the place and where christie has come. how can you tell these grapes. >> our grapes are gorgeous. >> she's not only found a wine she likes christie brinkley seems to have found the fountain of youth. she's 62 years old now. i'll say that again, she's 62 years old going on 22 by the look of her. >> i've been around a long time. has been 37 years since she became the nation's pin-up girl appearing on three consecutive sports illustrated swimsuit issue covers from 1979 to 1981. the only time anyone's ever done and her life has been like a time line of the boomer generation if a little more glamorous. not everybody has the pop-star husband and music video you can more or less play yourself. >> i have a theme song wherever i go. ? uptown girl ? >> billy joel was one of four husbands and two divorces. two good and two bad she says. there were three children along the way. it's been a life of mostly highs and some significant lows from her family's beginnings in michigan to surfer girl california to an art student's life in paris in a post office the legend goes. >> i never wanted to be a model. it was never a dream of mine and needed the money. my friends were like how can you do this and i was like, well, i can afford to take us to greece. and they were like ok. we like that. >> whenever she's been tapped out she's always seem to bounce back never with a higher or more unlikely rebound than when she was asked to the long-running musical "chicago." the reviews were mixed. >> i never felt retired. i always get insulted when i i read former model like former? what do they think i'm doing? i'm still here. i'm not doing anything. >> christie has used her name and product promotion before. gym equipment. >> total gym. >> and in keeping with the always look your best theme fans should know prosecco is organic and includes a sugar-free option. >> it's zero sugar, zero carbs. safe for people with diabetes or on a diet. >> what prosecco. down the hatch. and if anybody think christie brinkley's new line is a way of toasting the end of her career, toast again. >> it's like people are hoping to get a bottle of my prosecco like a cork and say yay, she's retired. that's not going to happen right retired. that's not going to happen right away. ...and high levels of humiliation in her daughter. in just 7 days, (my hero zero by lemonheads) zero really can be a hero. get zero down, zero deposit, zero due at signing, and zero first month's payment on select volkswagen models. this black friday sign then drive event. ? we asked people to write down the things they love to do most on these balloons. travel with my daughter. roller derby. ? now give up half of 'em. do i have to? this is a tough financial choice we could face when we retire. but, if we start saving even just 1% more of our annual income... i had frequent heartburn, but...my doctor recommended prilosec otc 7 years ago, 5 years ago, last week. just 1 pill each morning. 24 hours and zero heartburn, it's been the number 1 doctor recommended brand for 10 straight years, and it's still recommended today. use as directed >> nourishing the soul as well as the body is the goal behind a restaurant tracy smith now takes us to. >> on a busy corner in atlanta's old fourth ward is arguably one of the hottest restaurants in the city. here at staple house the open it's plated up and devoured by sell-out crowds and above their heads are quotes from famous fighters like muhammad ali. if you're dreams don't scare you they aren't big enough which perfectly describes this dream. a dream as big as the heart itself. >> chocolate mousse. >> jen and ryan were throwing five-star cuisines in their home and in 2012 they wanted to open a real place of their own. that the idea open a small neighborhood restaurant. >> simple. >> simple. >> and they were in the middle of making it happen when ryan went to his doctor for a stomach ailment. that's when their lives caved in. stage four gull bladder and you have six to 12 months. >> how did you hear he was sick? >> she is ryan's younger sister. >> i'm sorry. >> it's ok. >> it's an emotional story. it's our story and it's joyful and amazing but it's also ha >> wen the news got out >> when the news got out friends and neighbors wrapped their collective arms around ryan and threw a fundraiser. >> it was raise to help him out. >> $275,000. >> was that enough? >> more than enough. >> and they used the leftovers to start the giving kitchen a workers through their own personal catastrophes. abby mcdonald's son was born premature and the baby has an expensive machine to help keep him alive and the parents have help with the bills. >> what does the giving kitchen do in >> they don't know you personally but do anything to help you out. it's refreshing. >> the giving kitchen has helped more than 600 workers with grants adding up to more than $1 million but there was nothing money could do for ryan. he passed away in january 2014 at age 36. alive and opened staple house the following year. his wife jen runs the place. his old pal ryan smith does the cooking and his sister cara is in charge of service. >> i'd eat here with a day off. >> the editors of bon appetit felt the same way naming it the best new restaurant in america. >> yes. >> the charity gets a percentage of the profit like 100%. >> 100% of our net profit after taxes and pay everyone we donate those back to the giving kitchen. >> 100%. >> anything leftover. >> you have to believe somewhere ryan must be smiling. you guys had a conversation on what the menu might be in chicken wings. >> staple house could be as close to heaven as a restaurant can get. a reminder a dream like a meal itself is best when it's shared with the ones you love. >> pauley: for generations countless american cooks of great talent have been denied their place at the table. now michelle muller tells us one woman is working to give them the recognition they deserve. >> smiling, happy aunt jamima known for her pancakes. >> her smiling face has been selling pancake mix since 1889. recognizable, enduring and controversial icons in the world of commercial cookery. a happy plantation nanny who had little to do with the reality of slavery. >> the idea of a mammy was a constructed image and it was a myth on top of a myth. so i'm going to make cornbread distressing we have every year for thanksgiving. >> tony cook set out to uncover the real faces and stories of african-american cooking in the jamima code. >> the book was conceived of as a beautiful coffee table book that would contradict the negative degraded image of this enslaved woman in a box. >> so this book is from 1827. >> in her own collection of more cookbooks from african-americans was an important part of her research. >> cookbooks was a way for women in particular to find their identity. the recipe as they choose and stories they tell about themselves is unique to each writer. >> she published her cookbook in 1866. >> smhe credits the white women in her community to help her bring the book t p a lovely expression of community that existed between the women. >> chef rashard had her own tv cooking show in new orleans well before julia child took to the airwaves. >> what we learned about her is how she thought of herself. she portrays herself as a lady. >> her own cookbook was self-published in 1939. >> the great james beard helped book comes out and it's now calls new orleans cookbook but now guess what -- >> her image. >> it's not there. they've removed it. >> i don't think you cooked enough. >> no, i didn't. >> she hopes the cookbooks with their stories and recipes will provide a richer, truer picture of african-american contributions to the american table. cooking and who we stand culinarily speaking and the artistic aspect are evident in the books. >> and isn't that what thanksgiving is all about, sharing food and stories and celebrating our commonality and >> pauley: here's something worth spreading, butter is back. >> this one is from vermont. she's a bona fide butter lover. >> i would like to point out 50% of what's going on in your refrigerator is butter. how long have humans been eating >> thousands and thousands of year. it's a rich history. just talking about butter gets her all melty. >> you can cream it, you can whip it, layer it and still it comes to the table naked by itself and it's delicious there too. >> last year the average american ate more than 22 sticks of butter. for decades -- >> i switched from butter to imperial margin. >> for years margarine stole the show then came news of unhealthy transfats in some margarines. >> eating margarine over butter may not be as heart smart as we thought. >> and we were suddenly back to the basics of butter. >> it's so elemental and just tastes so good. >> still stick, being a heavy butter user could make you a heavy butter user. right now the usda guidelines discourage against eating too much saturated fats including butter. >> you don't sit down to a stick or half a stick of butter. you have a tablespoon here or there. >> and even in moderation one thing is certain -- butter makes [laughter] >> you want a good tablespoon of butter. >> somewhere julia child is smiling. >> pauley: ahead -- >> i don't know i state i haven't shipped at least one >> i don't know i state i haven't shipped at least one cake too. >> pauley: the island tradition that takes the cake. hello, all of you. get organized at voya.com. ? happy thanks for giving! thanks for giving lien the strength to outrun her brother. thanks for giving victor the energy to be the rowdiest fan. and joseph, the ability to see monsters. when you choose walgreens, you choose to make a difference... like how every vitamin and flu shot you get at walgreens to children in need. so, really... happy thanks for giving! walgreens. at the corner of happy and healthy. as soon as i left the hospital after a dvt blood clot, i sure had a lot to think about. what about the people i care about? ...including this little girl. and what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? so i asked my doctor. and he recommended eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. and pe blood clots. eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. both made me turn around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made eliquis the right treatment for me. ask your doctor if switching to eliquis is right for you. >> cakes tradition on one small american island. dessert island you may call it we set sail. >> this island available only by boat is off maryland but a world apart. british settlers first came in the 17th century and today it's happen onto the kitchen of the smith island cake lady. how many can you do in a day? >> no more than ten. >> no more than ten? >> i like to keep it at six or seven because i don't know who is going to order them. >> mary wishell ships to customers on the mainland but has no website. how do they find out about you? >> a neighbor tells a neighbor and the son tells or daughter or i have no idea. >> it is a labor-intensive process. eight to ten thin layers. each baked in its own pan and then carefully iced. >> i put a dab of frosting. >> he island roots go back countless generations and like most women here she learned to bake smith island cake as a >> i think it became a competition between the women of who can get the most little layers. >> does it taste as good as it looks? it does. and when she started to take them up to the legislature shay voted the cake the official maryland dessert in 2008. >> we were howling like we won the super bowl. setback. coastline lost to erosion and rising sea waters. a once thriving seafood industry now struggling and a population that's dwindled to around 200. cakes are on the rise every since a business school grad happen to taste one. when did you go from going this is really good cake to see if >> so graham murphy founded the smith island baking company in 2009. he started by visiting the island and talking to mary aida marshall. >> she said i love the idea i'll pray for you. >> murphy first opened the bakery right on the island with an all-local staff but after water to maryland vexed by the island's idiosyncrasies. the bakery still employs any original smith islanders who want to stay on. how do you no if it tastes good or not? >> when there's none left. >> but though she wish the wonders whether it's still a smith island cake if it isn't baked on smith island. >> it's just our dessert plain and simple. more "doing chores for mom" per roll bounty is more absorbent, so the roll can last 50% longer than the leading ordinary brand. so you get more "life" per roll. bounty, the quicker picker upper if you've been diagnosed with cancer, at cancer treatment centers of america. the evolution of cancer care is here. learn more at cancercenter.com/experts >> pauley: and now to john dickerson for more on what's ahead for face the nation. >> we'll >> pauley: we'll be watching and next week here on "sunday morning." >> once i cross the property line i'm not free any more. once i go out to the world i line i'm not free any more. once i go out to the world i belong in a way to everyone a not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo opens up airways to help improve breathing for a full 24 hours. breo contains a type of medicine that increases the risk of death from asthma problems and may increase the risk of hospitalization in children and adolescents. breo is not for people whose asthma is well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. once your asthma is well controlled, your doctor will decide if you can stop breo and prescribe a like an inhaled corticosteroid. do not take breo more than prescribed. see your doctor if your asthma does not improve or gets worse. ask your doctor if 24-hour breo could be a missing piece for you. see if you're eligible for 12 months free at mybreo.com. ? ?you don't own me? ?don't try to change me in any way? ?just let me be myself? ?that's all i ask of you? the new 2017 corolla with toyota safety sense standard. ?you don't own me? >> pauley: we leave you this sunday morning before thanksgiving among the wild turkeys at the aleghenny national forest near foster brooks, pennsylvania. captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by me access.wgbh.org >> pauley: i'm jane pauley, we wish all of you a happy thanksgiving and hope you'll join us when our trumpet sounds captioning sponsored by cbs >> dickerson: today on "face the nation," auditions for key roles in the trump administration and democrats look for a new way forward. president-elect trump and vice president-elect pence hunkered down this weekend to interview cab dates for top positions in >> we're seeing tremendous talent, people that, as i say, we will make america great again. >> dickerson: but will they? not everyone is so sure. friday night mr. pence received an unexpected message while attending a performance of the music hamilton. >> we, sir, we are a diverse america who are alarmed and anxious that your new administration will not protect us. >> dickerson: we'll talk to vice president-elect pence about that and get an update on

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Transcripts For WTSP Sunday Morning 20161120 : Comparemela.com

Transcripts For WTSP Sunday Morning 20161120

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which is where the online entrepreneurs come in. >> house calls from your grocer. >> hello. >> everything you want including dinner. >> it's wild alaskan salmon. >> ordered online, delivered to your door. >> we think we're making cooking at home more efficient, higher quality and better for the environment which is better than going to the grocery store. >> pauley: is your next meal coming out of the box? later on "sunday morning." if if the a meal at home from a box how about a delicious bite at the museum. our history that's not just on the gallery walls. >> now on display at san francisco's museum of modern art, delicious works by some of >> these dishes are coming. >> later on "sunday morning" a bite at the museum. >> bellissima is italian for beautiful. it's also the name of a sparkling wine from italy that has christie brinkley as its number one fan. >> i was watching an old movie -- >> nobody has to teac brinkley how to sell something. >> you can't say bellissima without bellissima! >> without wanting a drink. >> she has good reason to be enthusiastic about the prosecco wine she liked it so much she bought the, part of it. being bubbly about bubbly later on "sunday morning." >> the spice of life is land but first it has to come out of the ground in hawaii which is where you find lee cowan. >> that's yellow turmeric and mostly what i grow. >> hawaii is a land of many mysteries but one growing in the ground has people clamoring for a taste. >> i don't know if it's a miracle crop but they're doing a lot of research with it so we'll let those folks decide. >> the tropical super food that's super "sunday morning." >> pauley: what's bad is good or so say champions of the trio of foods under a cloud for quite some time. serena clears up the controversy. >> after years to high cholesterol the egg is finally coming out of its shell again. is the egg experiencing a renaissance? with a great deal of joy. >> here's more happy news, other great foods are having a revival too. butter, potato and -- eggs. sounds like breakfast later on "sunday morning." >> pauley: and more. first, here are the headlines for sunday morning the 20th of november 2016. president-elect donald trump is club in new jersey. yesterday trump welcomed former critic mitt romney. he's been mentioned as a possible secretary of state. new jersey governor chris christie will be among the visitors. he tweeted this morning again about the broadway show "hamilton" calling it highly overrated and demanding cast members apologize for their statement at friday night's show. mr. pence is the guest on "face the nation." in india a passenger train rolled off the tracks. no word on what caused the derailment. thousands of mourningers -- mourners td for the funeral of journalist gwen ifill. she died of uterine cancer and was 61 year old. now today's weather. a cold front from the midwest sent temperatures plummeting and snow across the east and there's stormy weather from seattle south to san francisco. watch for are the same trouble spots in the week ahead. travel safe if you're trotting >> pauley: next, food at your boost of online grocers. could this make the local grocer a thing of the past? our story is covered by anna werner. >> why go to the super market when it can come to you? >> hello. how are you? >> i'm good. thank you. >> seattle mom christine holm gets groceries from amazon. >> thank you. >> on this day from company's new prime now service. >> my husband and i both stay up late to watch tv once the baby's in bed. >> those items come to her in just one hour. >> it's about saving time. there's lots of people who don't want to be in online. though is not what your pantry looks like i promised this is organized chaos. >> stephanie landry heads up toys, sporting, equipment, all sorts of things. >> she walked us through this amazon facility where workers take those online orders and fill up brown paper bags for delivery. how many items can you keep in a smaller warehouse like this one? >> between 20,000 and 40,000 items. >> for larger items they have amazon fresh a b store and it's not just amazon. safeway and whole foods even google are among 50 major outlets offering online delivery. sales are up 15% from 2015 and could top $12 billion this year. >> feel free to dig in. there's a lot of food you get. >> the new shopping options aren't limited to plain groceries. >> we have garlic chives, celery. >> meet the meal kit. antibiotic-free chicken. >> complete with recipes. >> and a bottle of white wine vinegar. >> and precisely measured ingredients from the country's largest seller blue apron. the co-founder matt salzburg said subscribers order 8 million >> it's not bad to cook at home and we think we're making it more affordable, more efficient, higher quality and better for the environment than how people cook today going to the grocery store. >> want to cook like martha stewart? she sells kits too and plated and new york time. lucy blatter gets hers from a company called hello fresh. having the time to go through all the aisles and i take my kids that's really stressful. taking them shopping is super stressful. they ask for everything. it makes it super convenient. >> she gets three meals a week for $60. we should point out you have a grocery store right across the street. i can see it from here. >> i do. >> with all the new services profits can't be far behind, right? >> i not so fast said a retail analyst. >> they're doing it, they're doing it. just stop and think. is that right for you. >> so grocery stores are not dead? >> no, not at all. >> he says online shopping accounts for just 1.5% of the $800 billion grocery market. a key reason is that right now he says buying groceries online >> so if i'm shopping online versus in the store why's it so difficult to figure out what can of baked beans on the shelf i want? >> you don't have a frame of preference. you see it all at once and i'm usually familiar with the layout and go on to the next category. >> and online shopping may send you time but not money. prices can be up to 25% consumers still prefer the traditional grocery store. >> i like personal being able to see the sales. i love going up and down the aisles and seeing the ones i didn't get to see. it makes me feel good to see the products. >> by trying to move the process online are they trying to solve a problem that doesn't exist? >> i would say they are and trying to invest in something undermines the business that is successful and people are generally happy with. >> but don't tell that to amazon's stephanie landry. >> i see real solutions to people's problems and lives which are very busy and hustle and bustle and providing a solution to make peoples lives better. >> so maybe on a thanksgiving to come your cooking will be out of definitely good enough to eat. >> that looks insanely good. >> but in the long run will the recipe last? >> pauley: ahead, a feast for new or worsening depression, or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling, or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. with less pain, i can be more active. [burke] hot dog. seen it. covered it. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ? we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ? >> pauley: we'll take a bite at the museum. >> at san francisco's museum of modern art record crowds have been feasting their eyes on ellsworth kelly and warhol and master chefs like wylie dufrense and dominique ansel. >> it seems obvious. >> chef cory lee re-imagined the museum as another museum gallery. >> people stumble in and sit down and say what is this? >> it offers signature dishes of the world's most celebrated chefs. >> it likes like a museum program and see dishes from around the worl disorienting. >> something they didn't expect but it sprizs them. >> and continues the experience of discovery but with food. >> lee is a celebrated chef himself. his restaurant is blocks away but the 37-year-old does not serve any of his own creations at insitu. >> i think of him as our curator museum-worthy rest wanaurant. >> he had curiosity and i explained if we wanted to do an exhibition our curator would identify the artist and bring limb to our museum. >> i wanted to do the same food so you can try a dish from belgium or hong kong. it can have a fun and new experience wit europe and asia have visited insitu teaching the kitchen staff to reproduce their dishes perfectly. when the executive chef brandon rogers prepares fresh steamed crab claw it looks as it did when it was served in 1970. >> we got the same bowl and the imitate that exactly. >> he does the same with the pan roasted duck breast from california's wine country. >> the dishes from 1995 so within the first year of them opening. >> some of the classic dishes served here are no longer on the menus where they originally appeared and sometimes the chefs who created them are among the diners here. alice waters stopped in to try the ago. >> there's pressure when someone tries a dish they entrusted you with is a weird feeling but that's the fun of trying something new. that has turmeric, ginger, lemon. >> coming up, going for the gold. >> this portion of sunday more "earning something you love" per roll bounty is more absorbent, so the roll can last 50% longer than the leading ordinary brand. so you get more "life" per roll. bounty, the quicker picker upper what a lovely home youav yea, that's my daughter, my son, and that's my... hey, kool-aid man! ...husband. oh yeah!!! [ crashing ] [ electricity crackles ] hey at least you got your homeowners insurance through progressive. by bundling it with your car insurance you saved a ton! yeah. do you want to see the rest of the house? >> good these golden stems be the true spice of life? lee cowan traveled all the way to hawaii to find out. >> not far from the surfers paradise on the north shore offer our bodies the same kind of healthy glow. it's turmeric. a member of the ginger family that before washed looks like an ugly carrot. it's not a root. it's stem is where all the good stuff is found. native to indians it's been around thousands of west. now people can't get enough. >> this year do you know how many thousands of pounds of turmeric you'll ship out? >> tonnage. major tonnage. >> phil greene and his wife bought the farm a decade ago? >> it's a beautiful day. a talked about super food. >> did you know what it was? >> barely. to me it was a powdered spice in a jar that stayed on your shelf until you made a curry recipe. >> curry is the most common use but turmeric's taste is only part of its allure. scattered to the wind it's a sacred part of hindu ceremony and has been used as a dye for fabric and gives hello hew but the compound makes it a powerful weapon against disease. >> parkinson's, arthritis, diabetes. >> it has an effect? >> it's such a wonderful compound it works in every stance. studying its qualities in dallas. he said thousands of studies have shown it's not only proven to be a powerful antioxident but can take on something as serious as cancer. >> h >> you know it works but not sure why. >> exactly. >> he says more research needs to be done but the word is out at restaurants like cafe gratitude in los angeles. here turmeric is mixed with steamedal mon steamed almond milk. lemon. >> cafe gratitude's owner. >> it can knock out diseases. it's crazy. it's become a phenomenon it's the buzz word in the health world. >> google's trend report called turmeric the rising star of 2016. is it as good as all the hype and as healthy and good for us? >> people love it and come back for it. do i know what it's providing to people, no? >> the greens aren't sure either but if it's both healthy and a cash crop so be it. >> farmers grow what people want, what people demand. we kept increasing because it kept selling. >> we all heard the advice eat the colors of the rainbow. here in hawaii it may be the pot >> pauley: food lovers welcome any word that things once thought to be bad for your health may be good and throughout the morning we have news of exactly that. >> hello, laidy. >> terry golson is a good egg. ask her chickens. happy to be home all 13 of them boston. >> this is florence and pearl. this chicken is veronica. >> do you look at them as the daughters you didn't have? >> not quite that far. i do recognize that they're chickens. >> and from chickens come eggs. what do you use your eggs for? morning. >> you do? >> i do. >> golson a professional cook -- that's orange. dedicated a cookbook to this single subject. talk about putting all your eggs in one basket. what came first the chicken or the egg? >> i like eggs. before i had my chickens but only after i got the chickens and started eating eggs that re could stand alone. >> but for decades eggs were a no-no because they were linked to high cholesterol. well, guess what? recent research suggests eggs are ok again so get them while they're hot. >> the entire egg is so luscious and wonderful. >> americans agree. do you think you have a love affair with eggs? >> i definitely have a love affair with eggs. i do. >> now that's something to cluck about. >> pauley: something's tasty in the state of denmark. >> wild blue lobster. >> he's alive. >> pauley: next. it'll get better. i'm at the edward jones office, like sue suggested. thanks for doing this, dad. so i thought it might be time to talk about a financial strategy. (laughing) you mean pay him back? knowing your future is about more than just you. so let's start talking about your long-term goals... and it's how edward jones makes sense of investing. >> pauley: the great dane is the the restaurant many critics have proclaimed the finest in the world. we take a peek in the kitchen. >> flour and not exactly what you might expect to find on your plate unless of course you're here. named best restaurant in the world in 2010. then again in 2011 and 2012 and 2014. >> never did i expect or dream up that it became what it is today. never >> 38-year-old chef opened 2003 limiting himself strictly to ingredients in the nordic region. tall order. >> if you were not cooking french or italian it was like forget about it. everything else was stupid. >> so noma off the danish word for food looked for culinary explanation from the land itself. foragers like michael larsson collect ingredients every day rain or shine. there's so many things you can do with this one. >> what's wrong with grabbing a bunch and sticking them in the freezer. >> that's the difference between fine dining and normal dining. we need the best every day and it needs to be fresh. back in the kitchen they get to work. >> it's sliced arugula. >> that's beautiful. >> cooked fresh. >> everything is fresh. >> here's a blue lobster. >> he's alive. >> he's alive. >> how much does it cost to eat at noma with drinks averaging $400 a person and if you envision everybody had a pay to enable them to have a nice home, a car, any meal would be very expensive or more expensive. of noma is a world away from his childhood in rural macedonia. >> there's no refrigerators. you pick something from the ground or kill an animal. if you want a chicken you have to grab a chicken and -- >> he came when he was 12 year old and dropped out of school at 15 and began working as a restaurant apprentice a year te culinar culinary scene. >> food was like microwave food like ready-made-meals most the time. >> noma turned copenhagen into a food destination and him into food royalty >> it was a game changer for noma and for the city and the nordic region. >> but the story doesn't end will move to a new part of town. >> we have the space to build a small urban farm which is amazing for a cook to actually be able to pick your parsley a minute before you need it. >> until then he'll also open a pop-up mexico and again filling plates is exactly what this man does best. >> i understand it'sus that as well. to some when they get a fine meal it's like a real transcendent moment and for others it's just a vessel to enjoy the conversation better and i'm perfectly fine with everything as long as they in joy their time with us. >> pauley: ahead -- >> this is a young cheese made only four days ago. >> one taste of this cheese and you may be tested to say holy cow. we find out why. regina loudes gather for prayer and the singing of the songs. this is their way of communing with the lord so is the work they do in this community in the connecticut town of wait for it, bethlehem. although she might deny it the big cheese among the 38 sister traditional cheese making. a 2002 pbs documentary dubbed her the cheese nun. did you eat a lot of cheese growing up? >> no. we didn't. >> she enter in 1973. >> i was a college dropout and went to st. lawrence because it was the most radical school in i didn't even know cows before i came here. so when you join you get to try many things you would have never done and i happen to fall in love with a cow named shiba and learned to make cheese. >> the dairy that began with shiba's arrival helps them be self-sustaining. one sister breakfast and vice versa. >> every morning i take my cup of coffee to the cow and squirt milk right into the coffee. >> you can do that? >> yes, and it makes it foamy -- >> like a cappuccino. >> a cow-paccino. >> she started making raw milk cheese but her early efforts so she prayed for a teacher. >> i was praying for an old french woman to teach me but a young one came and her grandmother taught her how to make this cheese. >> so in a sense your prayers were answered. >> definitely answered. >> what's made here is called bethlehem cheese. wheels of it age in the tiny cheese cellar. >> this right now is a young cheese made only four days ago so you wouldn't want to eat this >> it's the science behind cheese making that excites another noela who earned her ph.d in micro biology from the university of connecticut. >> what grew is the white powder and i did my doctorate on that. >> she went to france and fungi change the consistency and flavor of cheese. >> touch it. see how smooth that is. >> it's silky. >> you should see it under a microscope. >> we're looking at flavor on a microscopic level. i love your fungi. >> thank you. >> today younger nuns an intern learn how to separate the from the whey and wrap them. joke aside mother noella sees different things. >> i see god in the microorganisms and for me it can the motto is work and pray and for us or work is also a prayer. >> pauley: ahead, one potato, knowing where you stand. it's never been easier. except when it comes to your retirement plan. but at fidelity, we're making retirement planning clearer. and it all starts with getting your fidelity retirement score. in 60 seconds, you'll know where you stand. and together, we'll help you make decisions for your plan... it's your retirement. know where you stand. black friday deals are here all month long at lowe's. get up to 40% off appliance special values $396 or more, like this whirlpool refrigerator for only $898. and this whirlpool washer and dryer pair for only $579 each. make your home happy with great savings at lowe's. >> >> pauley: it's been setting the table for it's namesake steak for nearly two century. the first in america we're told to call itself a restaurant. del monaco's is and a list of spots to shake up state of. here's jim axelrod. del monaco in lower manhattan. >> it's challenging. the dishes invented here how do we keep people and grandchildren and people interested in those dishes. that's my biggest challenge here. >> the history -- >> and bring it forward. >> del monaco's is the nation's first formal restaurant. this kitchen is the birth place of what's growing into a $780 billion industry. it's influence on our nation's menus is unmistakable. eggs benedict, baked alaska. >> it's the start and finish. >> and the del monaco steak all when people say del monaco steak that's this guy. >> aged, boneless. >> the del monaco steak and this is it. >> with a history that dates back to 1837. >> we're going to del monaco's for super. >> lunch at del monaco's. >> join us on sunday at del more than our menus. >> most presidents, abraham lincoln ate here and teddy roosevelt. >> in the book there's ten restaurants that changed america. del monaco's may be on the cover. it's like kleenex or xerox became shorthand for restaurant. >> that's right. history. understand how we go out to eat is to understand how we live and that's to understand who we are. >> and how we think. >> how we look at the world, what sorts of things we desire and how we distinguish yourselves as americans. restaurants like mama lioni's and the mandarin in san francisco which elevated it beyond chopped silvia's and the influence of regiona regional cuisine. and the high-brow shaped restaurants and the middle-brow. howard johnson's? >> howard johnson's is the basis industry like mcdonald's or burger king but the fast casual industry like chile's or denny s denny's. >> americans now spend more money on eating out than on buying food to cook at home and even if you never step foot in the place that started it you will don't ever forget your favorite neighborhood joint has more in common with iconic have you been somewhere else and you open up the menu and see del monaco steaks and you think that's my place. >> the last time that happened to me i was with my mom and she told the waiter he works where >> pauley: what's hot? find out next. a little more... grandma! there you go... there's no more room. i know i had one more... hmmm... more. how's it looking? 20 more minutes... 8, 9... we need 1 more yes... let's enjoy. there was a little girl, and she became friends with every animal she met. it's getting late, grandma should go. one more? in the end, all we really need more of, is each other. happy thanksgiving from publix. >> when it comes to chicken some people like it hot as jan crawford discovered.>> down the block for what once was the city's best kept secret hot chicken. >> it's an addictive combination of pleasure and pain. fried chicken doused in cayenne and enough spices to make you that's father and son owner. nick bishop and nick junior. they fry up the chicken five ways including hot, damn hot and shut the cluck up. why do people want to eat things that cause them >> legend has it it started 80 years ago with the family of this woman. >> of course it started with a woman. my great uncle sergeant prince being as they say a womanizer. >> a womanizer who was cheating on his revenge was a dish best served hot and added spices to the fried chicken. >> but he liked it. >> he did. >> and that was the beginning. >> we'll see that was the beginning but it's so sad we don't know who she was. >> but her legacy lived on. great uncle thornton started a restaurant using the girlfriend's recipe and prince's hot chicken shack still packs them in. these days there's competition even from some of the big boys. >> kfc crispy chicken tenders. >> and for those with a stomach of steel there's the death row chicken at shakes. masks and participants in the death row challenge have to sign a waiver. >> you can start now. >> it's no gimmick even a few bites burn. but on the night we were there comedian chad wright except asking for more chewing his way to victory. there was a guy with three bites and had to r >> amateur. it's sad. why even come? >> if he's an amateur what does that make you? >> an idiot. >> and maybe that's why when it comes to taking the heat andre has a confession. >> you have different levels so which one do you like? >> mild. >> i can't tolerate anything hot. >> at least a potato i day? >> i do, yeah. >> he has potatoes in his roots. >> it's a staple on our dining table every night growing up. how are you? >> so when restaurant in 2011 guess what theme he had in mind? >> every item is potato based. >> you can't have cilantro and jalapeno. >> the humble potato isn't so humble any more. it's a star. dicker serves about 1,000 customers a day at his four east >> you pick it up and have unlimite unlimited veggies. >> the potato becomes the blank canvas for your imagination. >> exactly. >> white potatoes are now the single most eaten vegetable in the u.s. but when carb-free diets were all the rage potatoes were force to go underground. >> the problem is not the but the technique and how you cook it and what you add to it. >> seeming to back him up the most recent usda dietary guidelines recommends eating starchy vegetables including potatoes. having it plain is best for your health but flavor-wise -- >> there's so many techniques you can put the potato in. it's mind blowing. it is. >> take french fries for legend had it thomas jefferson introduced them to america at a white house dinner. now alen dicker is poise to lodge something equally revolutionary. what is this? >> a dough with creamy mashed potato filling. >> do you feel like it's ready for a comeback? >> absolutely. >> bet you can't top that. >> pauley: ahead, christie >> pauley: eat, drink and be merry. a special edition of "sunday morning." here again is jane pauley. uptown girl was a huge hit for marry christie brinkley. these days she's an advocate for bellissima a sparkling wine. upbeat and as mark phillips discovered very hands on. >> i'm involved here. it's my new workout. >> no one will ever accuse christie brinkley with a lack of enthusiasm. now she's even more motivated. without bellissima. >> without wanting a drink. bellissima is her very own wine label. a new range of prosecco. the italian fizz that's the hottest thing in the liquor business right now. u.s. sales are up a third each year lately. >> you are tasting nature not chemicals -- >> and christie brinkley and her partners think they found a way clutter, her. of all the places that picked you the loading dock wasn't one of them. >> believe me i'm involved in every aspect of this. >> more than four decades into a modelling career, christie brinkley never met a camera lens she didn't like or liked her back. point one at her and this sort of thing happens. >> cheers. >> long the pre-dinner tickle in italy is being marketed in the u.s. as a kind of champagne without the price tag. more bubbles for the buck. were you a prosecco involved before you got involved in the business? >> yeah, i've had my fair share. >> in the region of italy about an hour north of venice where anything that calls itself can't make enough of the stuff. >> it's happening right now. everybody wants prosecco. >> if you're going into the wine business this is the place and where christie has come. how can you tell these grapes. >> our grapes are gorgeous. >> she's not only found a wine she likes christie brinkley seems to have found the fountain of youth. she's 62 years old now. i'll say that again, she's 62 years old going on 22 by the look of her. >> i've been around a long time. has been 37 years since she became the nation's pin-up girl appearing on three consecutive sports illustrated swimsuit issue covers from 1979 to 1981. the only time anyone's ever done and her life has been like a time line of the boomer generation if a little more glamorous. not everybody has the pop-star husband and music video you can more or less play yourself. >> i have a theme song wherever i go. ? uptown girl ? >> billy joel was one of four husbands and two divorces. two good and two bad she says. there were three children along the way. it's been a life of mostly highs and some significant lows from her family's beginnings in michigan to surfer girl california to an art student's life in paris in a post office the legend goes. >> i never wanted to be a model. it was never a dream of mine and needed the money. my friends were like how can you do this and i was like, well, i can afford to take us to greece. and they were like ok. we like that. >> whenever she's been tapped out she's always seem to bounce back never with a higher or more unlikely rebound than when she was asked to the long-running musical "chicago." the reviews were mixed. >> i never felt retired. i always get insulted when i i read former model like former? what do they think i'm doing? i'm still here. i'm not doing anything. >> christie has used her name and product promotion before. gym equipment. >> total gym. >> and in keeping with the always look your best theme fans should know prosecco is organic and includes a sugar-free option. >> it's zero sugar, zero carbs. safe for people with diabetes or on a diet. >> what prosecco. down the hatch. and if anybody think christie brinkley's new line is a way of toasting the end of her career, toast again. >> it's like people are hoping to get a bottle of my prosecco like a cork and say yay, she's retired. that's not going to happen right retired. that's not going to happen right away. ...and high levels of humiliation in her daughter. in just 7 days, (my hero zero by lemonheads) zero really can be a hero. get zero down, zero deposit, zero due at signing, and zero first month's payment on select volkswagen models. this black friday sign then drive event. ? we asked people to write down the things they love to do most on these balloons. travel with my daughter. roller derby. ? now give up half of 'em. do i have to? this is a tough financial choice we could face when we retire. but, if we start saving even just 1% more of our annual income... i had frequent heartburn, but...my doctor recommended prilosec otc 7 years ago, 5 years ago, last week. just 1 pill each morning. 24 hours and zero heartburn, it's been the number 1 doctor recommended brand for 10 straight years, and it's still recommended today. use as directed >> nourishing the soul as well as the body is the goal behind a restaurant tracy smith now takes us to. >> on a busy corner in atlanta's old fourth ward is arguably one of the hottest restaurants in the city. here at staple house the open it's plated up and devoured by sell-out crowds and above their heads are quotes from famous fighters like muhammad ali. if you're dreams don't scare you they aren't big enough which perfectly describes this dream. a dream as big as the heart itself. >> chocolate mousse. >> jen and ryan were throwing five-star cuisines in their home and in 2012 they wanted to open a real place of their own. that the idea open a small neighborhood restaurant. >> simple. >> simple. >> and they were in the middle of making it happen when ryan went to his doctor for a stomach ailment. that's when their lives caved in. stage four gull bladder and you have six to 12 months. >> how did you hear he was sick? >> she is ryan's younger sister. >> i'm sorry. >> it's ok. >> it's an emotional story. it's our story and it's joyful and amazing but it's also ha >> wen the news got out >> when the news got out friends and neighbors wrapped their collective arms around ryan and threw a fundraiser. >> it was raise to help him out. >> $275,000. >> was that enough? >> more than enough. >> and they used the leftovers to start the giving kitchen a workers through their own personal catastrophes. abby mcdonald's son was born premature and the baby has an expensive machine to help keep him alive and the parents have help with the bills. >> what does the giving kitchen do in >> they don't know you personally but do anything to help you out. it's refreshing. >> the giving kitchen has helped more than 600 workers with grants adding up to more than $1 million but there was nothing money could do for ryan. he passed away in january 2014 at age 36. alive and opened staple house the following year. his wife jen runs the place. his old pal ryan smith does the cooking and his sister cara is in charge of service. >> i'd eat here with a day off. >> the editors of bon appetit felt the same way naming it the best new restaurant in america. >> yes. >> the charity gets a percentage of the profit like 100%. >> 100% of our net profit after taxes and pay everyone we donate those back to the giving kitchen. >> 100%. >> anything leftover. >> you have to believe somewhere ryan must be smiling. you guys had a conversation on what the menu might be in chicken wings. >> staple house could be as close to heaven as a restaurant can get. a reminder a dream like a meal itself is best when it's shared with the ones you love. >> pauley: for generations countless american cooks of great talent have been denied their place at the table. now michelle muller tells us one woman is working to give them the recognition they deserve. >> smiling, happy aunt jamima known for her pancakes. >> her smiling face has been selling pancake mix since 1889. recognizable, enduring and controversial icons in the world of commercial cookery. a happy plantation nanny who had little to do with the reality of slavery. >> the idea of a mammy was a constructed image and it was a myth on top of a myth. so i'm going to make cornbread distressing we have every year for thanksgiving. >> tony cook set out to uncover the real faces and stories of african-american cooking in the jamima code. >> the book was conceived of as a beautiful coffee table book that would contradict the negative degraded image of this enslaved woman in a box. >> so this book is from 1827. >> in her own collection of more cookbooks from african-americans was an important part of her research. >> cookbooks was a way for women in particular to find their identity. the recipe as they choose and stories they tell about themselves is unique to each writer. >> she published her cookbook in 1866. >> smhe credits the white women in her community to help her bring the book t p a lovely expression of community that existed between the women. >> chef rashard had her own tv cooking show in new orleans well before julia child took to the airwaves. >> what we learned about her is how she thought of herself. she portrays herself as a lady. >> her own cookbook was self-published in 1939. >> the great james beard helped book comes out and it's now calls new orleans cookbook but now guess what -- >> her image. >> it's not there. they've removed it. >> i don't think you cooked enough. >> no, i didn't. >> she hopes the cookbooks with their stories and recipes will provide a richer, truer picture of african-american contributions to the american table. cooking and who we stand culinarily speaking and the artistic aspect are evident in the books. >> and isn't that what thanksgiving is all about, sharing food and stories and celebrating our commonality and >> pauley: here's something worth spreading, butter is back. >> this one is from vermont. she's a bona fide butter lover. >> i would like to point out 50% of what's going on in your refrigerator is butter. how long have humans been eating >> thousands and thousands of year. it's a rich history. just talking about butter gets her all melty. >> you can cream it, you can whip it, layer it and still it comes to the table naked by itself and it's delicious there too. >> last year the average american ate more than 22 sticks of butter. for decades -- >> i switched from butter to imperial margin. >> for years margarine stole the show then came news of unhealthy transfats in some margarines. >> eating margarine over butter may not be as heart smart as we thought. >> and we were suddenly back to the basics of butter. >> it's so elemental and just tastes so good. >> still stick, being a heavy butter user could make you a heavy butter user. right now the usda guidelines discourage against eating too much saturated fats including butter. >> you don't sit down to a stick or half a stick of butter. you have a tablespoon here or there. >> and even in moderation one thing is certain -- butter makes [laughter] >> you want a good tablespoon of butter. >> somewhere julia child is smiling. >> pauley: ahead -- >> i don't know i state i haven't shipped at least one >> i don't know i state i haven't shipped at least one cake too. >> pauley: the island tradition that takes the cake. hello, all of you. get organized at voya.com. ? happy thanks for giving! thanks for giving lien the strength to outrun her brother. thanks for giving victor the energy to be the rowdiest fan. and joseph, the ability to see monsters. when you choose walgreens, you choose to make a difference... like how every vitamin and flu shot you get at walgreens to children in need. so, really... happy thanks for giving! walgreens. at the corner of happy and healthy. as soon as i left the hospital after a dvt blood clot, i sure had a lot to think about. what about the people i care about? ...including this little girl. and what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? so i asked my doctor. and he recommended eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. and pe blood clots. eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. both made me turn around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made eliquis the right treatment for me. ask your doctor if switching to eliquis is right for you. >> cakes tradition on one small american island. dessert island you may call it we set sail. >> this island available only by boat is off maryland but a world apart. british settlers first came in the 17th century and today it's happen onto the kitchen of the smith island cake lady. how many can you do in a day? >> no more than ten. >> no more than ten? >> i like to keep it at six or seven because i don't know who is going to order them. >> mary wishell ships to customers on the mainland but has no website. how do they find out about you? >> a neighbor tells a neighbor and the son tells or daughter or i have no idea. >> it is a labor-intensive process. eight to ten thin layers. each baked in its own pan and then carefully iced. >> i put a dab of frosting. >> he island roots go back countless generations and like most women here she learned to bake smith island cake as a >> i think it became a competition between the women of who can get the most little layers. >> does it taste as good as it looks? it does. and when she started to take them up to the legislature shay voted the cake the official maryland dessert in 2008. >> we were howling like we won the super bowl. setback. coastline lost to erosion and rising sea waters. a once thriving seafood industry now struggling and a population that's dwindled to around 200. cakes are on the rise every since a business school grad happen to taste one. when did you go from going this is really good cake to see if >> so graham murphy founded the smith island baking company in 2009. he started by visiting the island and talking to mary aida marshall. >> she said i love the idea i'll pray for you. >> murphy first opened the bakery right on the island with an all-local staff but after water to maryland vexed by the island's idiosyncrasies. the bakery still employs any original smith islanders who want to stay on. how do you no if it tastes good or not? >> when there's none left. >> but though she wish the wonders whether it's still a smith island cake if it isn't baked on smith island. >> it's just our dessert plain and simple. more "doing chores for mom" per roll bounty is more absorbent, so the roll can last 50% longer than the leading ordinary brand. so you get more "life" per roll. bounty, the quicker picker upper if you've been diagnosed with cancer, at cancer treatment centers of america. the evolution of cancer care is here. learn more at cancercenter.com/experts >> pauley: and now to john dickerson for more on what's ahead for face the nation. >> we'll >> pauley: we'll be watching and next week here on "sunday morning." >> once i cross the property line i'm not free any more. once i go out to the world i line i'm not free any more. once i go out to the world i belong in a way to everyone a not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo opens up airways to help improve breathing for a full 24 hours. breo contains a type of medicine that increases the risk of death from asthma problems and may increase the risk of hospitalization in children and adolescents. breo is not for people whose asthma is well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. once your asthma is well controlled, your doctor will decide if you can stop breo and prescribe a like an inhaled corticosteroid. do not take breo more than prescribed. see your doctor if your asthma does not improve or gets worse. ask your doctor if 24-hour breo could be a missing piece for you. see if you're eligible for 12 months free at mybreo.com. ? ?you don't own me? ?don't try to change me in any way? ?just let me be myself? ?that's all i ask of you? the new 2017 corolla with toyota safety sense standard. ?you don't own me? >> pauley: we leave you this sunday morning before thanksgiving among the wild turkeys at the aleghenny national forest near foster brooks, pennsylvania. captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by me access.wgbh.org >> pauley: i'm jane pauley, we wish all of you a happy thanksgiving and hope you'll join us when our trumpet sounds captioning sponsored by cbs >> dickerson: today on "face the nation," auditions for key roles in the trump administration and democrats look for a new way forward. president-elect trump and vice president-elect pence hunkered down this weekend to interview cab dates for top positions in >> we're seeing tremendous talent, people that, as i say, we will make america great again. >> dickerson: but will they? not everyone is so sure. friday night mr. pence received an unexpected message while attending a performance of the music hamilton. >> we, sir, we are a diverse america who are alarmed and anxious that your new administration will not protect us. >> dickerson: we'll talk to vice president-elect pence about that and get an update on

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