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]]>What a fun project to work on with such a great crew of people thanks for making this all happen Kent. www.ftcsf.com
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By Colman Andrews
Editor
The Daily Meal Council is an assembly of respected chefs, restaurateurs, writers, purveyors, food historians, and others who play key roles in the food world. They have agreed to share their opinions and their expertise with us from time to time, answering occasional queries, responding to surveys, advising us on matters of importance to us all.
Chris Cosentino, aka @OffalChris, is a graduate of the culinary program at Johnson & Wales University and went on to build his résumé at Red Sage in Washington, D.C. and Rubicon, Chez Panisse, Belon, and Redwood Park in the San Francisco Bay Area. Cosentino took his first executive chef position at Incanto in 2002, where his interpretations of rustic Italian fare earned the acclaim until the place closed earlier this year. Along the way, he gained international recognition as a leading expert and proponent of offal cookery. He is now chef/partner of Porcellino, open the site of the former Incanto, and is also the co-creator and chef of Boccalone artisanal salumeria. Cosentino has been notably featured on the Food Network in “Next Iron Chef America” and “Chefs vs. City” and has written for several national publications, including the cult-favorite comic “Wolverine.” His first cookbook, Beginnings: My Way to Start a Meal, was published by Olive Press in 2012. He won the fourth season of BRAVO’s “Top Chef Masters” series, earning over $140,000 for the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research. Cosentino is a brand ambassador for Shun Cutlery, with a proprietary line of knives, and is currently working on a book dedicated to offal with writer and photographer Michael Harlan Turkell, to be published by Clarkson Potter in 2015.
What’s your earliest food memory?
Having clambakes with my family as a kid in Portsmouth, RI. All of my cousins would come down to the beach and there would be lobsters, steamers, chorizo, clams, corn, and potatoes buried under seaweed and all layered to cook perfectly. Dipping clams in drawn butter and cracking lobsters are some of my fondest and most powerful food memories.
When did you first decide that you wanted to be a chef, and why?
As a 14-year-old I found myself working at an IHOP washing dishes alongside two cooks making breakfast for so many people with so many options. I was completely blown away at what high volume they were cooking at and that energy really resonated with me. I came from family where food was such a big part of our life. I grew up on the beachfront of Aquidneck Island in Rhode Island, digging for clams and fishing for bluefish with my grandparents. As I got older, I started working with my friend’s father helping lobster and commercial fishing, and this instilled in me a deep respect for hyper-fresh product. I was never an ideal student in the classroom, but the kitchen is where I always thrived.
Who was your most important culinary influence?
The first chef that really changed the way I thought and my approach to food was Mark Miller. He was an anthropologist first then a chef second and his approach was so eye-opening. He showed me that understanding history in food would help guide me in the future and I am forever grateful for that. He truly fueled my obsession for food.
What are the most important lessons you learned from that culinary influence?
That the importance of food history is so key to understanding why things work. He also taught me: acid and herbs before salt!
What advice would you give to a young would-be chef just starting out?
Be patient because success and respect of your peers takes time. Listen, read, take notes, and follow direction. Most of all show up early, leave late, and always ask questions. Find a restaurant that you want to work in and a chef you want to learn from. Commit to the restaurant and work your way up the kitchen brigade. Don’t think that you will be the sous-chef in a year. It takes time to build a solid base of skills to work with before you can be a leader. [related]
You were a pioneer of what has come to be called “nose-to-tail” cooking. What led you to this approach?
I wouldn’t call myself a pioneer as I was just reviving what thousands of grandmothers and peasant cooks did all over the world. You don’t need to yell at someone to eat a carrot but to eat liver or tripe you need to be a little more persuasive. I think I just had a big mouth and yelled a lot and that’s why people call me a pioneer. I am a cook who loved the tastes and flavors of all the cuts of meat because they are so unique that I wanted to share those flavors on my menus. Peasant food is based on the principle that you had to make the most out of everything, and at the time when I started cooking these cuts of meat I was focusing on the traditional peasant dishes of Italy. I was also so frustrated and unsettled by how so much of the animal was being pitched into the trash bin because people were afraid of what they didn’t know how to cook. There was such a dearth of appreciation for offal in the U.S. and I was hoping to make sure that these cuts of meat wouldn’t disappear off the dining tables out of fear and the misunderstanding of how to cook them. When prepared properly, each cut has so much to offer and moreover, tastes so damn good.
Have Americans become more appreciative of offal and other “exotic” foods in the years that you’ve been cooking, and if so, why do you think that is?
I think more people are willing to try offal now than they were even five years ago because more talented chefs are putting it on mainstream menus. Also, great travel programs from people like Anthony Bourdain and Andrew Zimmern have helped catapult the appreciation of global cuisine overall, including offal.
Do chefs and restaurateurs have social responsibility beyond simply feeding people honestly in their restaurants?
Yes we have a responsibility to our staff, our guests, and the public to do our jobs with integrity. What I mean by that is treat people well, buy properly, educate, and help by donating time to others, volunteering, and giving back to the community.
What future project, real or imagined, excites you most?
I am opening a new place mid summer in the SoMa area of San Francisco that will be entirely different from what people expect. I’m most excited about that!
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]]>This decision each year gets harder and harder. There was not one bad person in the bunch so it made this years decision even harder. I look forward to welcoming this years 2 new stages in my Kitchen. Thank you all for applying I wish everyone all the best, I wish I could accept more there is just not enough room.
The 2 stages are:
Elias Seda from Washington D.C The Mini Bar
Andrew Ticer from Memphis, TN Hogs & Hominy
Both of there essays are below with there names at the top of each.
Elias Seda’s essay below:
When I was growing up all I wanted was to make people happy through the power of food.
There was nothing more satisfying than watching people’s delight in sampling one of my culinary creations.
Family gatherings were always a treat because I was able to watch all these great chefs work their magic in the kitchen. My attraction to cooking was due to the respect these family cooks earned, the knowledge they had acquired and the simplicity of their food. I was intrigued by the power they wielded over people through their cooking and it inspired me to pursue my culinary career with hopes that I could make people just as happy through my cooking.
After graduating from high school I took a year off from my studies because I had no idea what to do with my life. With that free time I reflected back on my time cooking with family and how I was at my happiest when I was working in the kitchen with them. So I decided to get a kitchen job, but I had no experience as a cook so I started at the bottom as a dishwasher. It didn’t matter that I was just washing dishes because I knew that as long as I found my way into a kitchen there would be an opportunity to learn something about food and cooking. The next step to continue to feed my passion for cooking was culinary school. It provided me with some of the beginning tools in becoming the best chef I could possibly be. Around this time I was introduced to my future chef and friend Omar Rodriguez. He provided me an opportunity to intern at Oyamel, a Jose Andres restaurant, in Washington, DC. I instantly fell in love with Oyamel and I wanted to learn everything about Mexican cuisine. My goal as an intern was to master what it took to be a great line cook and hopefully land myself a full time job at Oyamel. After three months I landed myself a full time job and within a year I had achieved my goal of learning all the stations on the line. Even with my success at Oyamel I still yearned to learn more about cooking and wanted to continue to master my craft.
So the following year I tried out for one of the coveted cook positions at Minibar. My hard work paid off and I was offered the opportunity be a part of Minibar’s culinary magic. The chefs at Minibar were doing things with food that I never thought possible. Not only did they teach me new techniques but they helped me develop my palate and provided me with a new perspective of what it meant to be a chef. Despite everything I’ve learned within the past two & half years I still keep things in perspective and I know I’m nowhere close to being the chef I want to be. I still consider myself a student of the culinary arts and this is why I would love the opportunity to be a part of the Head to Tail dinner.
My family is filled with many great chefs such as my mother, grandmother and tio Dave.
Andy Ticer’s essay is below:
Rooter to the tooter
After hearing that this year is the tenth anniversary of Incanto’s head to tail dinner, I was impressed. It’s hard to believe that it started that long ago. My business partner Michael Hudman and I have followed Chris Cosentino since our first dining experience at Incanto six years ago. It was the first dinner we had state side that recalled to our memories our time in Italy, and ever since it has had a lasting impact on our lives. The dinner has even inspired our own version of a head to tail dinner, our Swine and Wine dinner here in Memphis, in it’s fifth year this February. Looking back at how our restaurant has evolved, it’s amazing the impact that Chris has had on us, and the domino effect it has had on our community. Its awe inspiring that an idea from someone in San Francisco could affect our city across the country.
The relationships born with our farmers out of whole animal utilization and from our vegetable farmers in the surrounding south have helped to shape our restaurant and Michael and I as cooks. Every week our farmers deliver a whole pig, three whole lamb, and a forequarter of beef to our restaurants’ back door. They all come from a proper farm not two hours from our restaurant. If you stop and do the math over the past five years, it’s fucking awesome to know that we have done these things when it’s not convenient, more expensive, but it’s the right way to operate a restaurant. We stay true to our roots and where the food comes from. We know what the animals eat, the farmers, and how the farms are managed. We use Newman Farm heritage Berkshire Pork and Dorper Lamb, Claybrooks Farm Beef, vegetables from Woodson Ridge, Hanna Organics, and Delta Sol. We pride ourselves on using locally farmed products, utilized wholly with little waste.
Breaking down the animals has become just as much a meditation to us as making fresh pasta. We work with these animals, creating new and inventive ways to utilize it in its entirety, to respect the life that lies on our butcher block. Not only do we support our local farmers, but we also open the eyes of our customers. When we first put a pig cheek, a trotter, or a pastrami pig tongue on our menus, people wouldn’t dare order it. Now they demand it. Through Chris’s example, not only are we better cooks, but our city has been educated, our farmers have been supported and we’ve contributed to the growing food movement in Memphis.
Incanto and Chris have had a lasting presence that inspire us to push ourselves, become more creative, and they motivate us to do our best work. One way that Michael and I believe that we can continue to grow as cooks and chefs is to constantly learn. We will never know everything there is to know in this business. It’s part of why I love to cook as much as I do. There is always someone working harder, and learning more that pushes us to continue to try and be the best we can. It’s so important to us that our cooks know and respect continuing their own education in the kitchen, and we try to lead by example. I would love the opportunity to cook the tenth anniversary dinner. It doesn’t matter if you have ten restaurants or zero, there is always room to learn and to keep yourself grounded and humble, and I believe that I could learn new and better ways to think about full animal utilization from someone for whom I have a great amount of respect.
It would be my extreme pleasure to participate in the tenth annual dinner. I know that what I would learn would further my abilities as a cook and as a contributor to the support of our farming community. Thank you for considering my essay.
Sincerely,
Andrew N. Ticer
Hog & Hominy
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]]>After each years head to tail I look back and say how can we top that, and each year its a challenge that I gladly welcome. With the past 3 year we have brought in stages to spend a week cooking with the Incanto team, and it has been alot of fun and a great experience. Each stage has come and left their mark, thank you to Derek & Omar 1st year , Michael & Jonah 2nd year, Kylie & Michael 3rd year, Italo and Adam 4th year. So to continue on in that spirit we shall do it again, its time for someone else to come and play. This is all about sharing, inspired by the constant requests for knowledge about how to cook offal. Now’s your chance to learn. I will be accepting 2 volunteers to help with the event this year. You get to come into my kitchen and help cook 2 nights of head to tail dinners. You will work your ass off, have some fun and learn a ton, but there are rules to this game. This offer is open to professional cooks only. You will be an unpaid volunteer. You must commit to working in my kitchen for 5 days, from Friday, March 29th through Wednesday april 3rd except for Tuesday, which you’ll have off to enjoy S.F. But usually i take us all out to eat and do something fun. You must submit your resume and a short essay on why you should be one of the chosen ones. This is a busy time and I don’t have time to be baby sitting. The Head to Tail dinner is a multi-course menu with a shit load of detailed work.
Here is the pay out; you get some t-shirts to take home and you will be able to sit down and enjoy the head to tail menu in the dinning room on the last night. And you have to write a story for me to share on this website after your time here to share with the world. hey Jonah I am still waiting for yours 2 years later.
Email your resume and brief essay to me at [email protected] by tuesday march 5th. I will make a final decision and contact the 2 lucky winners on march 6th to confim your participation. This gives you 3 weeks to make travel arrangements. Ultimately, this is a fun opportunity to be a part of a great team for a week and learn how to cook some innards.
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]]>There is an endless number of words I can use to describe my week at what might very well be the most interesting restaurant in the country, Incanto. I hope to use a few of them to both reflect on my time at the restaurant, as well as give all future applicants a better idea of what the experience may entail if they are fortunate enough to be selected. Before I begin though I would like to say thank you to Chef Chris, Chef Manny, and the entire Incanto crew for inviting me into your world for a few short days, and that I am incredibly grateful for both the experience and our time together. You were all unbelievably gracious hosts as well as phenomenal cooks and I consider it a privilege to have been a part of the team even if only for a week. Thank you for that. Now onto the experience.
First off I must say the stage was intense. I’m not going to lie and say that there weren’t points where I did not feel as though I was in over my head. Flying across the country to an unfamiliar city, to work in an unfamiliar kitchen, doing unfamiliar food was certainly more difficult than I had imagined it would be. It is a tremendous amount of pressure entering a kitchen and representing not only yourself, but all of the people you have worked for over the years. My first two days I could barely hold my knife straight. It took me until service the first night of the dinner before I was able to finally get out of my head and just cook. This was all exacerbated by the fact Incanto is a vigorous place to work. There are no throw away items on the menu at Incanto. All of the food is executed at a tremendously high level and as Chef wrote on his blog to describe the experience: “there is a shit ton of detailed work to be done.” This was certainly the case. I may have flown 6 hours from New York to northern California, but this was in no way a vacation. There were sinks of tripe to be cleaned, thousands of fava beans to be shelled, and gallons of consommé to be clarified. My fellow stage Italo and I were there 15 hours a day, and there was constantly something to be done. This is by no means a complaint, but rather the reality.
For those future applicants, if you are reading this and are concerned about taking your vacation days and spending crazy amounts of money to fly out to California to work harder than you probably do at your normal job don’t be. As a restaurant, Incanto is an inspirational place to work even if only for a few days. I don’t know if there are any other restaurants in the world where food is looked at and viewed the way it is there. Yes the nose to tail cooking is the main draw but there are so many great things going on in the Incanto kitchen. The restaurant makes almost everything imaginable in house. There are the basics like preserves and jams and pickles, but there is so much more. They dehydrate and grind their own spices and chiles. Make their own bread. Their own garum. Salt and cure egg yolks. I swear to god there was a fish drying from the ceiling. Also everything at the restaurant gets used. Almost nothing is thrown out. Herb stems go into confit oil. Confit oil gets used to cook with. Incanto is a model for sustainability. Every ingredient is treated with the utmost respect from the most expensive protein down to a single stem of mint. Nearly every product there offers one hundred percent yield. It is through these practices that even with using almost exclusively sustainable and organic products the restaurant is able to operate with a ridiculously low food cost. It is amazing to witness and something all cooks and chefs should not only learn how to do, but strive every day to do better.
Now speaking of learning. This brings me to what I feel is the word that best describes my stage at Incanto – educational. There is so much to learn at this restaurant, and everyone there is more than willing to teach. From cooking spleen, to making pasta out of pig skin, dehydrating and puffing beef tendons, and even making panna cotta out of foie gras you will learn a lot. I know I certainly did. The chefs at Incanto make it a point that when you work there you are actively learning. Education often seems like the number one priority. This extends even beyond food and cooking. It may mean taking ten minutes out of the busiest day to watch a video about a Japanese man making coffee for tsunami survivors, or taking twenty minutes out of the day to go down the street to browse the cookbook Mecca that is Omnivore Books. It was a constant theme running through the restaurant that even though we were busy and there was work to be done, we should always be learning something. Even our day off included lunch with Harold McGee and a trip to the market to check out the different products you won’t find just anywhere.
Perhaps the most important thing I took away from my stage at Incanto though was the memories of a once in a lifetime experience, and if you are reading this still wondering what to expect if you are selected for the stage I offer you this information. You will have the opportunity to work side by side with an unbelievably brilliant and knowledgeable chef, and a team of cooks as talented as you are likely to encounter anywhere in the country. You will make extraordinary friends. You will cook great food and also eat exceptionally well. And you will work. Hard. And when it is over you will want to do it again and again. Once again I’m incredibly thankful for this experience, and I encourage anyone who is a serious cook to apply. If you are reading this and have already been accepted I offer you my congratulations and this parting advice. Work hard. Work clean. Cook with confidence. Have fun. And mostly importantly even if you’ve done something a million times before, always read your labels and double/triple check your math.
Thank you Incanto crew and good luck to all applicants. I look forward to the opportunity to work with you in the future.
Sincerely,
Adam R. Wile
Brooklyn, New York
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]]>A few days into my stage Manny asked me if I was having fun, and I answered him in the only way I could truly sum up how I was feeling. I said “This restaurant is like Disneyland for cooks!” It is truly a cooks dream. A beautiful kitchen, a friendly crew, and all of the fun products a cook could ever ask for. The produce is amazing, the offal beyond fresh, and working never felt like work. Chris told me, “We’re all just here to have fun.” I have honestly never had more fun in a kitchen while working so hard. The hours start early and end late, but by the end of the week it all seemed too have gone by too quickly. And what you take with you at the end cannot be learned in any book.
Anyone who considers themselves a chef, or even a cook, needs to experience Incanto first hand. They epitomize what it is to truly cook, to let a product be and not to manipulate it. Just coax it along and help it shine. And any cooks who are thinking about applying for next year’s dinner, DO IT! To not send them your essay would be doing yourself a great injustice.
My time at Incanto was second to none. I have never learned so much in such a short time. And not just recipes and techniques but what it truly is to be a cook. We as cooks have a job, which is prepare food. Pretty obvious there. But what most seem to forget about is that we have a duty to honor the products we are using. Take nothing for granted. I have never seen a kitchen that respects food as much as Incanto. And with zero pretention may I add. When you have pulled mint from the ground essentially you have killed it just as much as when you knock a hog on the head. Now you owe it to that piece of mint and that hog that they were not killed in vain, and that none of it will go to waste. And Incanto was an amazing example of this philosophy.
I honestly had the time of my life and I can’t begin to thank Chef and the rest of the crew enough for the amazing opportunity to work and learn alongside them. I look forward to next year’s head to tail and my next trip to Incanto.
Thank you
-Italo
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]]>I first fell in love with offal at thirteen. I come from a very large and very old world Sicilian family. And every year, for generations now, all of the men in the family get together for what they call “tripe-fest.” It’s been a family tradition since my grandfather was a child, and when they moved to America they’ve kept the tradition alive. All of us meet at one of the uncles’ houses and everyone brings something. Whether it is a case of wine, a box of cigars, or some homemade lemoncello, everyone contributes. It’s a day for drinking and eating and catching up with family u may only see once a year.
And the meal is an all offal feast. Three kinds of tripe, headcheese, grilled beef heart and pork liver skewers, chicken and duck liver mousse, brains, sweetbreads, kidneys wrapped in caul fat, all sorts of sausages and a few simple salads. But the day I fell in love with offal it wasn’t my uncles tripe, which is still the best I’ve been able to find anywhere, but it was a simply braised pigs trotter that stopped me dead in my tracks. It was nothing more than a foot simmered in a basic tomato sauce, but this was it! There was practically no meat to be found anywhere on that foot and I didn’t miss it at all. The skin was so tender, which held in all of the delicious gelatin and cartilage and all the lovely bits that are hidden in a trotter. All the old timers thought it was great. The first year I had been invited and I’m sitting behind a pile of picked over bones. I must have had half a dozen or so.
I had the good fortune to be able to work in three amazing Michelin starred restaurants while living in New York. Now that I have moved out of the city I luckily found a position under a young chef as excited about food as I. The highlight of my week is when we get our pork delivery from Keegan Filion Farm. But the best part is not only the beautiful grass fed pork, beef, and poultry, but each week they bring us a box of mixed offal. They give it to us for free because none of their other clients want anything to do with them.
Each week it’s something different. Sometimes it’s a couple of pig heads, liver and tails. Other times it’s a case of 40 pigs feet and beef hearts. But each week we get to take these products and work them into specials for our restaurant or our Italian restaurant next door. Testa, guanciale, smoked hearts, liver sausage, all sorts of things that test us on a daily basis. And every now and then when I serve a one of my special I cant help but think about that simply braised trotter on a paper plate sitting on a picnic table all those years ago.
AdamR. Wile from Brooklyn, NY
Chef,
Although I am sure you will be reviewing a great deal of applications I am submitting this essay to make the case why I believe I should be chosen as one of the stages for this year’s Head to Tail dinner. First I must say that growing up in Queens New York I have never visited Incanto. This however has not stopped me from becoming a huge fan of the restaurant and the type of food you prepare. I follow you closely on twitter and am often awed by the dishes and ideas you post. I believe in the philosophy of using the whole animal, and as a cook have tried to work in restaurants that believe in that philosophy as well. It is one of the main reasons I was drawn to the kitchens of Momofuku and Fatty ‘Cue. Both these restaurants are at the forefront of the New York dining scene when it comes to sustainability, and both restaurants afforded me the opportunity to work with parts of the animal not often seen on menus. Still when it comes to head to tail eating I can’t help but feel both of these restaurants could have gone further, moving beyond the more popular though still untraditional parts of the animal and showing people just how delicious all parts of it can be.
“That animal gave its life for you… Don’t waste any,” I remember a cook at Momofuku saying to me as I was bone-ing out pork shoulders one afternoon. I was very aware. It reminded me of the lessons my uncle passed onto me as he was teaching me how to slaughter roosters at his farm in upstate New York when I was younger. It’s something that has stuck with me ever since. Animals which have given their lives must be treated with respect, and part of that respect is not wasting any useable piece of them. To do so is to waste life. There is a quote from Fergus Henderson I like to remember along the same lines; “Once you knock an animal on the head it is only polite to eat the whole animal.” This seems simple and fair enough, but I believe in it deeply. I feel what stops many people from acting on this idea, myself included, is a lack of knowledge. There may be no better kitchen in the world right now to truly learn how to cook offal and innards than at Incanto.
Clearly as cooks and chefs our responsibility to sustainability goes beyond just the meat we cook with, but also the produce and the vegetables we use as well. This idea led me to turn my tiny Queens backyard into a full on organic garden which my sous chef affectionately referred to as Wild Wile Farms. Growing everything from my own Mizuna to Shishito peppers to French Breakfast radishes has given me a deeper respect for the work and time that goes into growing delicious fresh food and has furthered that same notion of “Don’t waste any.” I know California and San Francisco in particular offer local and seasonal produce rivaled by very few places in the world. It would be extraordinary to have the opportunity to be able to work with some of these products if I was selected.
With Fatty Cue Brooklyn recently shutting its doors for renovations I am in the unique position to be able to pack my bags and head to San Francisco for this incredible opportunity. It would be an honor to be selected. I feel as though I have so much to learn and would take this experience with me far beyond my cooking career. Thank you for your consideration and best of luck with the decision making process.
Sincerely,
Adam Wile
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]]>Here is the pay out; you get all 4 of my t-shirts to take home and you will be able to sit down and enjoy the head to tail menu in the dinning room on the last night. And you have to write a story for me to share on this website after your time here to share with the world. hey Jonah I am still waiting for yours.
Email your resume and brief essay to me at [email protected] by friday February 20th th. I will make a final decision and contact the 2 lucky winners on February 24th to confim your participation. This gives you 4 weeks to make travel arrangements. Ultimately, this is a fun opportunity to be a part of a great team for a week and learn how to cook some innards.
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This was so much fun, I hope they had as much fun as Aaron and I did. Who would have thought it would come down to that! Be sure to look to Zappos for our shoes, they cant be beat
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]]>Some how I got paired with the super forward thinking CEO of Zappos in a cooking competition I don’t know how, but I am not going to complain Tony is a true visionary.
This was a fun event we did at Zappos headquarters in Las Vegas with the entire staff watching on.
There is another video with part 2 coming to see who win take the crown so keep watching.
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