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Village Squire, 1979-02, Page 3geOicrn /eitr/enJ If you're re -decorating and can't find what you want in placemats, tablecloths, chair pads, curtains, tiffany shades or towels we will design and make everything to your specifications, in your choice of colour for your lifestyle. Call us and we'll be nappy to answer your questions. UP FRONT What does go on behind the scenes at a prestigious restaurant? To get some of the answers to that question we talked this month to Jim McLaren Nisbet the new chef of the Mill at Benmiller, the first of the explosion of most expensive eating places in the area. He tells us not only of what goes into making your evening worth the price, but also about the long training that a chef must undergo before he is ready for this demanding job. The growing interest in food is also evidenced in the number of specialty food shops that have sprung up the last five years or so. It's ironic that the growth of these shops should come at a time when supermarkets have expanded to the point you can get nearly anything in a food or non-food line there. Yet many people have come to feel the quality of food and service offered in those huge stores is not good enough and they've turned to the small shops. Perhaps the largest local collection of small food specialty shops is in Festival Square, the new development in downtown Stratford. We'll give an illustrated tour inside this issue. When many of us think of food, we don't think of the fundamental source of it all, the farm. Nor do we think often enough about the importance to the food industry of knowledgeable and able people to keep farms, farm organizations and rural communities operating well. Giving rural people a wider opportunity to learn is part of the work of the Rural Learning Association. Freelance writer Adrian Vos this month takes a look at the R.L.A. and its work. Theatre reviews in a monthly magazine are seldom of much use because by the time the magazine is in the readers' hands, the show is closed. This month, thanks to two extensive tours, we are able to look at two shows that will still be available to local audiences in February: Les Canadiens, from Theatre Passe Muraille and Billy Bishop Goes to War from Vancouver East Cultural Centre. Also on the review side of things we have a review of Western Ontario writer Orlo Miller's latest book Twenty Mortal Murders. And our reviewers visited London's Marienbad Restaurant and liked what they found. In P.S. this month is a proposal to strengthen rural culture. And there's much more. CONTENTS Being a chef 3 Tempting shop 10 Rural Learning Association 15 People 19 Travel 20 Book Review 23 Theatre 27 Diary 31 Dining 32 Entertainment Listings 37 VILLAGE SQUIRE Published monthly by Squire Publishing House, R.R. 3, Blyth, Ontario. NOM 1H0. Telephone 523-9636. Single copy 50 cents; one-year subscription $3.50. Co -Publishers, Keith and Jill Roulston; Editor, Keith Roulston; Advertising Representative, Mrs. Mary Walden. Authorized by the Canada Post Office for second class mailing privileges. Second class mailing registration number 3122. February 1979, Village Squire 1