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Search resuls for: "Christina Morales"


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Nearly two decades after the fast-casual salad chain Sweetgreen was founded, the company announced on Tuesday that it would introduce beef to its menu. According to Nicolas Jammet, a founder of Sweetgreen, the addition of a caramelized garlic steak option comes at a time when many Americans are trying to increase their protein intake and also as Sweetgreen is looking to attract more customers for dinner. The decision, however, leaves many questions about how the company, which has more than 225 locations, may accomplish its goal of carbon neutrality by 2027 when beef production is a significant factor in climate change. As the company’s website states, “Not only do we have a duty on a human level to do our part, but the business case for a great product that also protects the planet is clear.”Mr. Jammet said the company waited to introduce steak in part because it was challenging to prepare among other items in the restaurants, but also because Sweetgreen wanted to be intentional about how it sourced the beef.
Persons: Nicolas Jammet, , Mr, Jammet, Sweetgreen Organizations: Sweetgreen
There’s History in These Cheese Pulls
  + stars: | 2024-04-25 | by ( Christina Morales | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Queso fundido is a staple at many Mexican and Tex-Mex restaurants, but it has deeper roots as an essential appetizer during carne asadas. Credit... Kelly Marshall for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Samantha Seneviratne.
Persons: carne asadas, Kelly Marshall, Samantha Seneviratne Organizations: The New York Times Locations: carne asadas .
Why Is Tex-Mex the M.V.P. on the Super Bowl Menu?
  + stars: | 2024-02-06 | by ( Christina Morales | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
There are many origin stories for the Frito pie, but at least one thing is true: This dish is extremely popular in Texas, where it is a staple at high school football games. Credit... Christopher Testani for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
Persons: Christopher Testani, Simon Andrews Organizations: The New York Times Locations: Texas
If you ever order sopa, or soup, in Paraguay, don’t expect to be served a steaming bowl of broth. What you’ll get instead is a dense and cheesy hunk of cornbread. This bread, also known as sopa Paraguaya, is one of the country’s most popular dishes. Cornmeal, onion, cheese, milk and eggs are mixed together to make a custardy cornbread, with a texture similar to bread pudding, that is commonly served alongside grilled meats.
Locations: Paraguay
She expects they’ll make more than 500 bottles by mid-January for their business, Cremasse by Ducasse. Fortune, an owner of Kremas Creole Premium in East Flatbush, Brooklyn, estimates she’ll deliver or ship more than 1,000 bottles this season, from September to January. Ms. Absalon was captivated by the ease of the recipe, and in 2013, she started to make a bottled version. “It’s important for us to bring our culture, and what comes out of it, to the American forefront,” she said. What is clear is that the people who make the drinks throughout the Caribbean are loyal to their particular country’s rum, said Jeff Berry, the author of “Beachbum Berry’s Potions of the Caribbean.”
Persons: Nadine Ducasse, Raymond Ducasse, Dorty J, Fortune, Charlene Absalon, Absalon, , , Jeff Berry Organizations: Kremas Locations: East Setauket, Lakay, Flatbush , Brooklyn, East Flatbush , Brooklyn, Long, American, Caribbean
While many in the world of cocktails are familiar with Tom Bullock, renowned for his juleps and long considered the first African American bartender to publish a cocktail manual, fewer know the work of Atholene Peyton, a home economics teacher whose 1906 “Peytonia Cook Book” predated Bullock’s by a decade. Peyton’s story is just one told in Toni Tipton-Martin’s new book, “Juke Joints, Jazz Clubs and Juice: Cocktails From Two Centuries of African American Cookbooks,” a chronicle of the ways in which Black people contributed to American cocktail culture. “This is really a work of investigative journalism. It’s not just a book of cocktails,” said Ms. Tipton-Martin, a James Beard award-winning author of several cookbooks and the editor of Cook’s Country magazine, who pored through centuries’ worth of published recipes for her new work. The book is a continuation of her 2015 book, “The Jemima Code: Two Centuries of African American Cookbooks,” which credited Black women for much of the country’s culinary history, and her 2019 follow-up, “Jubilee: Recipes From Two Centuries of African American Cooking.”
Persons: Tom Bullock, Atholene Peyton, Peytonia, Toni Tipton, It’s, , Tipton, James Beard Locations: Bullock’s, Martin
On Thanksgiving, the Houston restaurateur Sylvia Casares serves at least three dozen for dessert at her family celebrations. The recipe is from her grandmother Sarita Casares, who was born and raised in the late 1800s in the border town Reynosa, Mexico. Ms. Casares has tweaked the formula, sprinkling cinnamon sugar on top to give the empanadas a sheen. “During Thanksgiving, I’ll have a pumpkin pie, but the empanadas are definitely the star of the show,” said Ms. Casares, the author of “The Enchilada Queen Cookbook: Enchiladas, Fajitas, Tamales, and More Classic Recipes from Texas-Mexico Border Kitchens.”Empanadas have been around since at least 250 B.C. They made their way to Spain, and followed the Spaniards to Latin America, said Sandra Gutierrez, the author of several cookbooks including “Empanadas: The Hand-Held Pies of Latin America.”
Persons: , Marquez, Bueno, Sylvia Casares, Sarita Casares, Casares, Sandra Gutierrez Locations: Highlands, Colo, , Reynosa, Mexico, Texas, Spain, Latin America, America
Chaat Party Has Entered the Party Chat
  + stars: | 2023-11-05 | by ( Sam Sifton | More About Sam Sifton | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Good morning. This took a lot of gas, a lot of time and a toll on our bodies. So we laughed hard when the only good fishing we had came at the very end of the day, a few boat lengths from the marina, across from Four Sparrow Marsh near Mill Basin, Brooklyn. For dinner that night, and for you this evening: a chaat party, essentially a no-recipe recipe that Priya Krishna adapted from one in the 2020 cookbook “Chaat,” by Maneet Chauhan and Jody Eddy. It also served as a kind of rehearsal for the celebration of Diwali, the Hindu celebration of lights, on Nov. 12.
Persons: Sandy Hook, Priya Krishna, Maneet Chauhan, Jody Eddy, Naz Deravian’s, gulab jamun, Christina Morales’s Organizations: Midland, Cabanas, New York Times Locations: Lower, Midland Beach, Staten, New Jersey, Queens, Jamaica, Mill Basin , Brooklyn
A Golden Treat for Diwali
  + stars: | 2023-11-02 | by ( Christina Morales | More About Christina Morales | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
In the past decade, Ms. Mehta said, Indians have integrated some global ingredients into their traditional cooking for Diwali. In the United States, many Indian Americans make Diwali catering orders through Facebook or WhatsApp. Urja Shukla Bhatt, of Warminster, Pa., has been taking catering orders for snacks and dinner since at least August. Her mother-in-law, Daksha Bhatt, helps make the snacks, but Urja Shukla Bhatt cooks the Indian dishes for dinner. The pair is expecting to make at least 20 items, including hundreds of samosas and more than 20 pounds of chakri.
Persons: Bharadwaj, they’re, Nita Mehta, Mehta, Urja Shukla Bhatt, Daksha Bhatt, chakri, Bhatt Organizations: Facebook Locations: United States, Warminster, Pa
Ali Hooke began posting her tinned fish date nights to the social media platform last year. She opens up a few cans from her collection of more than 200 tins and arranges them on a board along with toasted sourdough, cheeses and pickled mustard seeds. “It really just spurred out of the need for quality time together,” said Ms. Hooke, 32, who lives in Seattle with her husband, Sathya Prakash, and their toddler, Alden. Both economical and convenient, tinned seafood fits into a shift in eating habits for many who are turning snacks into meals, said Anna Hezel, the author of “Tin to Table: Fancy, Snacky Recipes for Tin-thusiasts and A-fish-ionados.” “Tinned seafood is an approachable form of luxury,” she said.
Persons: Ali Hooke, , Hooke, Sathya Prakash, Alden, Anna Hezel, Locations: Seattle
Then he took a closer look at his statements and found that he was paying $2,000 a month in credit card fees. “They pile fees on top of fees, on top of fees,” Mr. Theoktisto said about credit card processing companies. In January, he decided that instead of raising prices, he would add a 4 percent convenience fee to the bills of customers who pay by credit card. He is just one of an increasing number of restaurant owners adopting these policies as inflation cuts into his bottom line and credit card fees rise. Arepas about seven years ago near Troy, N.Y., the number of customers using electronic payments has increased from 50 percent to 90 percent.
Persons: José Theoktisto, ” Mr, Theoktisto Locations: New York, Troy, N.Y
Two of his smokers open toward each other, creating what he calls a “heat alley,” in the middle of the room. To mitigate the impact on his staff, he has them rotating in shifts of 10 to 15 minutes in the pit room. “I grew up around heat my whole life,” he said, explaining that he got lightheaded at an outdoor event recently. About two weeks ago, they had to close the restaurant for two days as temperatures in the kitchen reached 124 degrees. Now, they’re paying about $1,200 a month for electricity, about 50 percent more than before the heat wave.
Persons: , Esperanza Luzcando Organizations: , El Locations: Phoenix, Peruvian
Barboncino, a Neapolitan-style pizza restaurant in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, has become the first unionized pizzeria in New York City after its workers unanimously voted to approve the formation of a union. The restaurant staff began organizing more than a year ago with Workers United, which has also supported the employees who are organizing at Starbucks stores. On May 22, staff asked the pizzeria’s owners to formally recognize the union and filed for an election with the National Labor Relations Board. Workers said they’d like higher wages and benefits, including higher minimum starting hourly rates and health care assistance. But they’d also like consistent schedules, protections from unjust disciplinary action and more direct involvement in establishing health and safety protocols.
Persons: Jesse Shapell, Emma Walton, Mr, Shapell, they’d Organizations: Workers United, National Labor Relations Board, Workers Locations: Crown Heights , Brooklyn, New York City
Here, the customers drink $3 beers and play dominoes, or sit around and chat over free plates of food like arroz con gandules. The walls are crowded with Puerto Rican flags and portraits of the bar’s owner and matriarchal figure, Maria Antonia Cay, who is more commonly known as Toñita. She opened the place in the 1970s as the Caribbean Social Club, a members-only hangout for the neighborhood baseball team. In 2000, she obtained a liquor license and opened the spot to everyone for cheap drinks and pots of Puerto Rican dishes that she makes in her apartment kitchen upstairs. “It reminds me of home,” said Djali Brown-Cepeda, an archivist and filmmaker who runs the Nuevayorkinos Instagram account.
Persons: Maria Antonia Cay, , Djali Brown, Cepeda Organizations: Puerto, Caribbean Social Locations: Williamsburg , Brooklyn, Toñita’s, Puerto Rican, New York City
Over the last decade, as dairy-free ice cream gained a foothold in the commercial market, its flavors were limited, its texture was often watery and its taste could be questionable. Today, many of these ice creams are smooth and creamy. They can twirl like soft serve and pack into scoops for waffle cones. And the options for both soft and hard versions have vastly improved as the plant-based milk and creamers used to make them have gotten better. “It was just as creamy as regular soft serve,” said Ms. Darnell, 26, who lives in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
Persons: Hanna Darnell, , Darnell, Locations: Williamsburg , Brooklyn
In July 1973, the Haitian activist Viter Juste moved his family and his belongings in a U-Haul truck from Bushwick, Brooklyn, to a neighborhood in Miami-Dade County known as one of the earliest settlements in the area. Mr. Juste’s move — about a decade after he relocated to the United States — was the catalyst for a change in the neighborhood then known as Buena Vista. Thousands of others later migrated from Haiti and created a new community that Mr. Juste is credited for naming Little Haiti. Little Haiti’s proximity to the hippest restaurants, bars, shops and clubs in Miami is enticing for developers. And as much of Miami-Dade County endures torrents brought on by climate change, the neighborhood’s elevation — about 10 feet above sea level and in an area of minimal flood hazards — is particularly attractive.
Persons: Viter Juste, Juste’s, United States —, Juste Organizations: Little Locations: Haitian, Bushwick , Brooklyn, Miami, Dade, United States, Buena Vista, New York City, Haiti, Little Haiti
All of the cooks at La Dinastia’s kitchen are Chinese and have learned to make Cuban dishes over time. Many original cooks and waiters retired during the pandemic. Michael Lan, an owner at La Dinastia who has worked there for decades and is knowledge about the kitchen, is planning his own exit. “I’ll be there for him,” Mr. Lan, 64, said about the younger Mr. Lam. “But they’re getting old,” said Marvin Chu, 40, an owner who operates the restaurant’s three locations with his brother and great-uncle.
Emily Meggett, a Southern home cook who never measured her ingredients or used recipes but became one of America’s most important Gullah Geechee cooks and last year published a best-selling cookbook on Gullah Geechee cuisine, died on Friday at her home in Edisto Island, S.C. She was 90. Mrs. Meggett had been cooking for nearly 80 years before “Gullah Geechee Home Cooking: Recipes From the Matriarch of Edisto Island,” was published in April of last year — the first high-profile cookbook centered on the food of the descendants of the enslaved people of the coastal South. “She left us with a lifetime of work that was overlooked and undervalued for years,” said Kayla Stewart, the book’s co-author. (Ms. Stewart has written for The New York Times.) “She really moved the needle in terms of how we’re talking about Gullah Geechee cuisine and culture.”“Gullah Geechee Home Cooking” became a New York Times best seller last July, and on Wednesday it was nominated for a 2023 James Beard book award in the category of U.S. Foodways.
More than 100 protestors gathered at the National Multifamily Housing Council's annual fall conference. On Tuesday, more than 100 tenant activists ambushed a national gathering of corporate landlords to demand that "lawmakers stop opposing tenant protections at the behest of real estate groups and developers." Chanting "down with corrupt greed" and "no more rent increases" activists stormed the hotel's halls, interrupting conference sessions to air their grievances with the nation's top multifamily developers. In the capital city of each of these states, rents have climbed by 13% and 4% year over year, respectively. "Without rent control, whether it's national, state or local, we're prioritizing profits at the expense of renters," she said.
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