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Search resuls for: "Sophie Strangio"


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ANYWAY YOU SLICE IT A frittata is a busy professional’s workhorse—simple but satisfying, and equally delicious served hot or cold. Photo: Emma Fishman for The Wall Street Journal, Food Styling by Pearl Jones, Prop Styling by Sophie Strangio
Persons: Emma Fishman, Pearl Jones, Sophie Strangio Organizations: Wall Street
PLAY BOWL Nutty farro anchors this satisfying grain salad, but you can creatively adapt the add-ins to suit the changing seasons. Photo: Emma Fishman for The Wall Street Journal, Food Styling by Tyna Hoang, Prop Styling by Sophie Strangio
STEW YOU CAN USE A beloved Filipino dish that’s packed with layered flavors, pork afritada is homestyle comfort food at its best. Photo: Emma Fishman for The Wall Street Journal, Food Styling by Tyna Hoang, Prop Styling by Sophie Strangio
IMMEDIATELY UPON entry to Deux Chats, the Art Nouveau-style bar/restaurant in Brooklyn, N.Y., you’re greeted with an extravagant bar-top display of crab legs, lobster claws, shrimp, oysters, clams and sunny lemons, all perched on mounds of crushed ice. In the dining room, heads turn as two-tiered seafood towers parade by. At the base of the one that landed on my table, mussels, oysters and clams nestled among seaweed tendrils, pickled vegetables and radishes. The top tier featured a kick-line of those crab legs, bright-red lobster tails and shrimp, plus pink cubes of salmon crudo garnished with wasabi caviar, and a dainty dice of tuna tartare served on scallop shells. A display like this invariably inspires a chain reaction of copycat orders, at Deux Chats and at restaurants around the country where the classic seafood tower is this season’s towering success.
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