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  • In this fun, hands-on, and interactive class, learn how to spread, layer, tuck and roll your way to sushi heaven! Your Chef Instructor will teach you the tricks of the trade on how to make sushi and spring rolls like a pro. Learn the recipe for perfect sushi rice, cut your fresh ingredients using proper knife skills, and master the art of rolling using a variety of techniques. All participants will make three rolls: • Spicy Scallop Hand Roll • Inside Out Roll (with yellowtail, cucumber, and mango) • Shrimp Spring Roll. Enjoy your rolls with two custom made-from-scratch sauces: Thai Sweet Chili Peanut and a Basic Spicy Mayo. Date | Thursdays, February 24, March 17, and March 31 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Location | Quigley Fine Wines Get tickets here! General admission is $59 per person. Please note: We recommend you arrive 15 minutes early to check in, wearing your masks. Our venue partner, Quigley Fine Wines, will have a wonderful selection of pours waiting for you. Drinks are available for purchase from the venue and are not included in your ticket price. Outside drinks are not available. 21+ only. For more information, please visit https://cocusocial.com/newevent/San-Diego_Hand-Rolled-Sushi or call the venue at (619) 795-7043.
  • Saturday, April 2, 2022 at 2:30 p.m. on KPBS TV / On Demand. The queen of southern cooking, Emmy Award winning chef Carla Hall joins Ming Tsai in his loft kitchen. Carla cooks up a childhood favorite: Fried Fish Southern Style with Black-Eyed Pea Salad and a Hot Sauce Vinaigrette.
  • Being able to drive makes life easier. It can open up job opportunities. But it also has challenges, especially if there's a language barrier. And traffic stops can be especially high stakes.
  • Tilda Swinton plays a botanist who is haunted by a mysterious sound in an intriguing new film. Reviewer Justin Chang says Memoria's climax will leave your jaw on the floor.
  • The Leonardo DiCaprio film The Beach helped put Maya Bay on the "must see" list of every visitor to Thailand. But that proved too much for its delicate ecosystem. The pandemic helped change that.
  • When we interviewed her in September 2020, she was hoping the pandemic would end soon so tourists could return to Thailand. But the COVID crisis has only worsened in the country.
  • From the organizers: "So The Last Shall Be The First..." In October 2010, Camera Lucida performed the very last string quartet of Beethoven, the Quartet in F major, Opus 135. Not only the last of his string quartets, Opus 135 is in fact Beethoven's last full composition, completed in October 1826, months before his death. With that performance, Camera Lucida initiated an extended survey of all sixteen quartets of Beethoven – not in one weekend, or in one season, but over years. In certain years we presented only one quartet; in some, more than one. These complex, intensely demanding works were situated in the familiar habitat of music by Haydn, Schubert, Dvorak, Brahms, surrounded by the avatars of that intoxicating and abundant world, 19th century European chamber music. Perversely, we programmed the Beethoven cycle in backwards order from the last to the first, working in reverse historical time, but forwards in lived time. We hoped to trace the mysteries of this music back to its beginnings, from the enigmas of the late quartets, to the almost embarrassing opulence and exhibitionism of the middle quartets, back to the initial salvo of six quartets published as Opus 18 in 1801. The penultimate installment of our cycle was the Quartet in c minor, Opus 18 No. 4, on February 10, 2020. And then the world pandemic stopped us in our tracks. Camera Lucida returns on Monday, November 7 to the Conrad Prebys Concert Hall to complete our task. As the last chapter in this quixotic endeavor, 12 years after its inception, we will present the very first of Beethoven's quartets, the String Quartet in (again!) F major, Opus 18 No. 1. Our program includes the Piano Trio in E-flat major of Haydn, as well as Dvorak's Piano Quintet in A major. We rejoice in welcoming you back to our concert hall, and to the sounds, vibrations, and shimmering resonances of the illuminated chamber, Camera Lucida. Camera Lucida: Reiko Uchida, piano Jeff Thayer and Wes Precourt, violins Che-Yen Chen, viola Charles Curtis, cello Program: Haydn: Piano Trio in E-flat major, Hob XV:30 Beethoven: String Quartet in F major, Opus 18 Nr. 1 Dvorak: Quintet for Piano and Strings in A major, Opus 81 Ticket Information: music.ucsd.edu/tickets Non-Campus Affiliate: $37.00 | Campus Affiliate: $25.00 Tickets are free at the door for UC San Diego students with ID. First come first serve and subject to availability.
  • Ryan Weathers got his first big-league win in two years as his father, former major league pitcher David Weathers, watched from a second-row seat.
  • A U.N. official calls for new policies across East Asia to halt the soaring production of methamphetamines.
  • Taking the crown on Feb. 6, 1952, the queen has ruled the United Kingdom for more than 70 years. Her tenure on the throne is second only to French King Louis XIV.
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