
“It may look like a dinner party, but it’s really an underground supper club. The diners are a mix of New Yorkers and tourists. CBS 2’s undercover cameras captured one experience — eight people who didn’t know each other eating a meal in a stranger’s home. That hostess, Naama Shafi, writes about food but is not a chef. Leitner found her through a website, which connects amateur foodies and professional chefs in 20 different countries with people who want unique dining experiences. Clandestine dinner parties like the one Leitner attended are completely unregulated. If caught hosting an underground dinner party, the hosts could be fined $2,000 and ordered to shut down.”
Related posts:
Bitcoin Spawns China Virtual IPOs as U.S. Scrutiny Grows
'You were rude to the President' Medea Benjamin: 'Killing innocent people with drones is rude'
Central banks last year bought most gold since '64
Cyprus bail-out leaves 'bitter taste' for residents
Sleeping Bag Coat for the Homeless Finds Fans in the Fashion World
U.S. flies B-52 bombers over South Korea
UberPOP halts service in France after clampdown, protests
56-year-old lover of married Taiwanese man faces 298 years in jail
CIA rendition flights from rustic North Carolina called to account by citizens
Medical Marijuana Research Hits Wall of U.S. Law
Investors in Hot IPOs Are Overlooking Some Serious Risks
Eric Holder defends prosecution against Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom
Alcoholics who use marijuana have lower risk of liver disease, study finds
Business fined $4,000 over missing trashcan lid
Facebook launches global Internet access initiative