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Search resuls for: "Julia Moskin"


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Read previewIt turns out chefs dislike tipping as much as you do. AdvertisementChefs don't like tipping as a practiceOverall, the chefs seemed frustrated with tipping as they spoke to Moskin, particularly since diners often resent the practice that is unique to American restaurants. AdvertisementThe chefs don't love tipping. Tipping culture as a whole has been under scrutinyThe restaurant industry isn't alone in reaching a reckoning with tipping. The practice of tipping is clearly at an impasse in the US, but it's unclear how Americans will adapt.
Persons: , Julia Moskin, David Chang, Eric Huang, Moskin, Huang, Grace Cary, Geoff Davis, Davis, Michael Rafidi, Hajime Sato, Rafidi, Tandy Wilson, Corey Mintz Organizations: Service, The New York Times, Business, City House Locations: America, New York, Burdell, Oakland , California, Albi, DC, Sozai, Clawson , Michigan, Nashville
It was one of the first modern French restaurants to receive three stars from The New York Times. At his restaurant Bouley, open from 1987 to 2017, he introduced New Yorkers to new ideas like tasting menus, vegetable-based sauces and the value of locally farmed ingredients. “This was even before the Union Square farmers’ market,” said Bill Yosses, the former White House pastry chef, who worked at with Mr. Bouley at Montrachet and Bouley for almost 20 years. Mr. Bouley was born and grew up in Connecticut, but his path was shaped by his mother’s French heritage. In New York City, Mr. Bouley also worked at the landmark French restaurants Le Cirque, Le Périgord and La Côte Basque.
Persons: David Bouley, Lisa Queen, , Bill Yosses, Bouley, , “ David, Dan Barber, Christina Tosi, Anita Lo, James Kent, Bouley’s, Paul Bocuse, Joël Robuchon, Roger Vergé, Gaston Lenôtre, Le Périgord Organizations: The New York Times, Union, White House, Basque Locations: French, American, Kent, Conn, Montrachet, TriBeCa, Connecticut, New York City, La
Ample Hills Founders Are Out of the Business Again
  + stars: | 2023-11-29 | by ( Julia Moskin | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Despite what the Hallmark Channel tells us at this time of year, fairy-tale endings don’t always stick. Brian Smith and Jackie Cuscuna, the Brooklyn couple who founded Ample Hills Creamery, have been fired by the same investors who came to the rescue of the popular ice cream brand in June. Mr. Smith said in an interview that he and Ms. Cuscuna had lost everything. But Mr. Brodsky said the terms of the couple’s departure have yet to be negotiated. “That talent does not extend to running a business.”
Persons: Brian Smith, Jackie Cuscuna, Norm Brodsky, Brodsky, Smith, Cuscuna, , Organizations: Hallmark, Brooklyn, Inc
Five restaurants in Colorado — four in Denver and one in Aspen — each won a Michelin star on Tuesday night, and no two- or three-star restaurants were anointed by the influential culinary guide in its first round of awards in the state. (A signature dish at the Wolf’s Tailor is called Venison and Its Diet: roast venison loin with matsutake mushrooms, huckleberries and bitter greens.) At a ceremony in Denver, 30 restaurants joined the ranks of “Michelin recommended,” one of several categories and awards the company has recently introduced to pull more restaurants into its brand orbit. (She was the only woman to win a star of her own.) A group of Colorado state and local tourism authorities and resort companies paid Michelin a total of about $600,000 to help create the guide, so only restaurants in Boulder, Denver, Aspen, Vail, Snowmass and Beaver Creek were eligible for stars, a decision that rankled chefs in municipalities that did not pitch in money.
Persons: Kelly Whitaker, Kiddo, Kelly Kawachi Organizations: Colorado —, Michelin, “ Michelin Locations: Colorado, Denver, Aspen —, Boulder, Boulder , Denver, Aspen, Vail, Snowmass, Beaver
Michelin gave no restaurant three stars, and named only one with two stars: L’Atelier de Joël Robuchon, in Miami’s Design District, an outpost of a global restaurant chain founded by French chef who had been dead for four years. “It was utter shock.”Amid decades of expansion, Michelin has maintained that its stars transcend geography, taste and trends; that a one-star restaurant in Hangzhou can (and must) have the same value as a one-star restaurant in Hamburg or Honfleur or Hialeah. Today, “when someone is flying from Germany to San Diego to eat at your restaurant, the stakes are much higher,” said William Bradley, the chef-owner of Addison, Southern California’s only three-star Michelin restaurant. Michelin inspectors are full-time employees, and are sent around the world to perform evaluations, ensuring that no inspectors can privilege relationships or preferences in their own regions. Mr. Poullenec said that Michelin’s culinary and editorial judgments far outweigh financial considerations.
Persons: L’Atelier, Robuchon, , , Niven Patel, William Bradley, Poullenec Organizations: Michelin, Design Locations: Miami, French, Hangzhou, Hamburg, Hialeah, France, Germany, San Diego, Addison , Southern
Both men say they hope to pull the company back from the brink and continue without Mr. Chapski, whom they hired as a financial adviser in 2011 and made a partner in 2016. The founders continued to develop new products and marketing efforts, but Mr. Chapski effectively ran the business. Mr. Quint is seeking at least $4 million, claiming damages arising from breach of contract, fiduciary irresponsibility and “willful misconduct” by Mr. Chapski. Mr. Quint said in an interview that Mr. Chapski has maintained his lifestyle even as the company has descended into debt. On Friday, Mr. Wladis said he had been granted permission to use the Big Gay brand and recipes by Mr. Chapski, who repeatedly assured him that the founders were no longer involved.
Persons: Chapski, Quint, Petroff, , Agnes, Jeremy Wladis, Wladis Organizations: Public, New York, Gay Locations: New York City, TriBeCa, Montauk, N.Y, Suffolk County, Manhattan
Now, be honest: How many of them were you proud of — perfect little pouches of fudgy yolk and silken, just-set white? Is this hollandaise going to be as cloudlike and perfect as it was the time before last? We need hacks, tips, advice, techniques that deliver consistent success. In the course of her work, Julia secured the family’s recipe for cacio e pepe (above). Cacio e pepe is a fantastic dish, but it can be a scary one, too: the sauce too clumpy, or not emulsified enough.
Persons: you’ve, you’ll, you’re, howdy, Julia Moskin, Julia, e pepe, Cacio, pepe Locations: Roscioli, Rome, SoHo, Manhattan
A Culinary Roman Empire’s Next Conquest? Manhattan.
  + stars: | 2023-06-30 | by ( Julia Moskin | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
But in New York, the challenge will be replicating the quality of ingredients that Roscioli is known for, not only in its pastas but also on its plates of exceptionally fresh cheeses like burrata, buffalo mozzarella and buffalo ricotta, and cured meats like mortadella and prosciutto — few of which can be served in the United States. Fresh cheeses made from raw milk can’t be imported at all, though aged cheeses like Pecorino Romano can be. “The winds keep changing,” said Zach Allen, who has overseen food imports at the U.S. locations of Eataly and the fast-growing Florentine sandwich chain All’Antico Vinaio. “The imports used to be so heat-treated and over-cured that they didn’t taste anything like the original,” he said, referring to regulations imposed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture on cured meatsOver decades, Mr. Allen has painstakingly developed relationships and recipes with U.S. producers who make what he needs, like a fatty, fennel-spiked Tuscan salami called sbriciolona for La Favolosa, a top-selling sandwich at the New York locations of All’Antico. “The Rosciolis are at the very beginning of that process.”
Persons: , Zach Allen, Allen, La Organizations: U.S . Department of Agriculture Locations: New York, United States, U.S, Eataly, York, All’Antico
It was a sad day in Brooklyn when Ample Hills Creamery closed its doors. Just before last Christmas, the beloved ice cream parlor in Prospect Heights — and all 12 of its remaining scoop shops across the country — shut down after a decade-long roller-coaster ride of brand-building, bankruptcies and heartbreak. “We made every mistake it is possible to make,” said Brian Smith, who founded Ample Hills with his wife, Jackie Cuscuna, in 2011. To their own great surprise, they will reopen that original store on Wednesday, followed over the summer by three others in New York City. Schmitt put the company in receivership and sold off its assets, including a factory in Red Hook that cost nearly $7 million to build.
Persons: , , Brian Smith, Jackie Cuscuna, Schmitt Organizations: Vanderbilt, Industries Locations: Brooklyn, Prospect Heights —, New York City, Oregon, Red Hook
The James Beard Foundation presented its coveted culinary awards for 2023 in Chicago on Monday night, with the top awards going to Rob Rubba of Oyster Oyster in Washington, D.C., as outstanding chef and to Friday Saturday Sunday in Philadelphia as outstanding restaurant. Reflecting the awards’ growing clout, Mayor Brandon Johnson of Chicago and Gov. J.B. Pritzker of Illinois appeared live onstage, and Secretary of State Antony Blinken, in a video, praised the soft power of culinary diplomacy, citing the Beard-award-winning chef Edward Lee’s Maryland crab cakes with gochujang vinaigrette, which were served at a recent state dinner. In some ways, the gala was the eye in a recent storm of controversies about the group’s process and priorities. After an internal audit, the awards process was retooled to reward not only culinary excellence, but equity, leadership, sustainability and community-building.
Persons: James Beard, Rob Rubba, Brandon Johnson, J.B . Pritzker, Antony Blinken, Beard, Edward Lee’s, gochujang Organizations: James, James Beard Foundation, Washington , D.C, Gov, Illinois Locations: Chicago, Washington ,, Philadelphia, Edward Lee’s Maryland
In the late 1990s, beginning at age 15, Geena Rocero was a beauty queen working the transgender pageant circuit in the Philippines, where shows are broadcast on national television. Her victories earned her both money and fame. She said her signature wig style — a side bang and a flipped end — became a trend unto itself among fellow beauty contestants. In the Philippines, Ms. Rocero lived openly as a transgender woman with the support of both her relatives and chosen family, but she could not legally change her sex. ◆ ◆ ◆Written by Brett Anderson and Julia Moskin | Narrated by Brett Anderson
Persons: Geena Rocero, Cain, Rocero, , Brett Anderson, Julia Moskin Organizations: Modeling Locations: Philippines, San Francisco, New York, United States
The chef Sam Fore received an ominous voice mail message this month from an unknown number. The caller identified himself as a private investigator working for the James Beard Foundation. Later that day, Ms. Fore found herself on a Zoom call, answering questions from him and another man. Ms. Fore is among the first subjects of an investigatory process created in 2021 as part of that overhaul. But in many ways she is the kind of chef the retooled awards are meant to recognize more fully.
Persons: Sam Fore, James Beard, Fore, , ’ ”, Beard, Ms, Tuk Organizations: James, James Beard Foundation Locations: United States, Lexington, Ky, Sri Lankan
Ms. Johnson has accused Mr. Aghajanian of assaulting her, visiting prostitutes and torturing a number of pet kittens to death. He has accused her of threatening to kill him and deliberately burning him with kitchen implements. In January, Mr. Aghajanian responded with a similar request as part of a divorce filing, saying that Ms. Johnson had verbally and physically abused him for years, both at home and in their restaurants. In that filing, he stated that the couple no longer lived together and asked for sole custody of the dogs. A judge denied his request for a restraining order “for lack of sufficient showing of good cause.”
Dawn Davis, a veteran book editor who was hired in 2020 to put Bon Appétit magazine back on track after mass resignations and allegations of racism at its parent company, Condé Nast, resigned on Tuesday. She will return to Simon & Schuster as the publisher of 37 Ink, an imprint she founded in 2013, and as executive editor of the Simon & Schuster trade imprint. “I’ve made the difficult decision to return to book publishing,” Ms. Davis wrote in a note to her staff at Bon Appétit and Epicurious, the company’s recipe website. She said that she would remain in the job until September, and cited successes like “helping build Bon Appétit and Epicurious’ authority in the culinary industry, developing delicious and thought-provoking content, growing our audiences across channels, and diversifying our team and the audiences that we reach.”But, she said in a public statement, “being away from books has only made me realize how much I love working on manuscripts.” She did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In her first editor’s letter at Bon Appétit, in February 2021, Ms. Davis wrote that “when the call came to leave book publishing to take the helm at this storied magazine as it reckoned with racial and cultural equity, it was impossible to resist.”
By the time Boston restaurants reopened after the first pandemic wave in June 2020, Ms. Lynch had dismissed nearly all of her top team. Servers at Menton last week said that Ms. Lynch had briefly returned to work in the kitchen after the Menton cooks left. “I was there to learn from chef Rye,” Mr. Goncalves said, referring to Mr. Crofter. When he died in January, Ms. Lynch had just named him executive chef of all seven restaurants. She said in her statement that the deaths of the two Menton cooks “was a personal tragedy for me.
Her rise was tied to a period of reinvention for the wine world during which natural wine conquered millennial taste buds and became ubiquitous on menus across the US. Marissa Ross, Bon Appétit's wine editor from 2016 to 2020, often posted pictures of herself chugging straight from the bottle — a technique she called "The Ross test." "Natural wine," a nebulous term that generally refers to wine made with minimal intervention and without additives like sulfites, was tentatively entering the American wine world. Many in the wine world took the idea that you didn't have to be educated to know about wine as a personal insult. When she first told BA that she planned to cover only natural wines, Ross said, Rapoport called to try to change her mind.
‘The Menu’ Serves Fine Dining on a Skewer
  + stars: | 2022-11-17 | by ( Julia Moskin | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Is the new thriller “The Menu” a parody of the state of fine dining? You’d think so: A small group of people pay astronomical sums to be isolated on an island, fed ingredients that wash up on the beach by employees who are trapped there, and subjected to the hospitality of a creative visionary who is secretly filled with rage. Yet much of this is a reality in the top tier of modern restaurants, a world that has become a fascination of popular culture. The movie is billed as “black comedy horror,” but the horror that stalks this Agatha Christie-style island is not gore; it’s gastronomy. Anyone who has ever felt trapped in a “chef’s tasting,” whether of four or 40 courses, will recognize the roller coaster of claustrophobia and euphoria, satiation and starvation that is “The Menu.”In interviews with the people who dreamed up the food in the film, the consensus was that the tropes of modern fine dining are so extreme that there’s little need to exaggerate them.
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