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Search resuls for: "Brett Anderson"


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This week, Brett Anderson looked deep into America’s emergence as a pizza capital, and the New York Times Food staff shared their list of 22 of the best pizza places in the United States. And though we crisscrossed the country searching for the paragon pie, we know that slices and pizza joints can be deeply personal, nostalgic and adored for reasons that may have not landed them on our list. So we’re looking to you, our passionate readers, asking you to share your favorite pizza places across the country (or even the world). Maybe the pizza you have in mind has evolved into something other pies are racing to catch up to. And while our search examined pizza in America, maybe you thought it should have at least tipped its hat to a slice joint in … Brazil?
Persons: Brett Anderson Organizations: New York Times Food Locations: United States, America, … Brazil
How America Became the Capital of Great Pizza
  + stars: | 2024-06-25 | by ( Brett Anderson | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Marisol Doyle wasn’t bothered by the frozen dough and canned mushrooms common in the pizzas she ate as a kid growing up in Sonora, Mexico. “But as an adult,” she said, “I wanted something better.”Ms. Doyle’s first experience with better pizza came in 2006 at Pizzeria Bianco, in Phoenix, and it was probably a lot like yours. Mozzarella that melts into pools. Crust that invites comparisons to fresh bakery bread. These are qualities found in the Neapolitan-style pies served at the wood-fire-oven pizzerias that are now fixtures of urban America.
Persons: Marisol Doyle wasn’t, , Ms, Doyle’s Organizations: Bianco Locations: Sonora, Mexico, Phoenix, America
Josie Duran overheard Matthew Kenney’s pitch many times. As a lead server at Plant Food + Wine in Venice Beach, Calif., Ms. Duran often waited on Mr. Kenney, the restaurant’s chef and owner, as he entertained potential investors on the restaurant’s fig-tree-shaded patio, persuading them to trust him with their money for his ambitious culinary projects. At a time when adopting a plant-based diet has become an environmental and ethical cause around the world, Mr. Kenney, 59, is among the world’s most famous vegan chefs. Plant Food was the flagship restaurant of Matthew Kenney Cuisine, a sprawling, health-focused company that until recently operated, managed or invested in more than 50 restaurants across the globe, from Los Angeles to São Paulo to Dubai. But Ms. Duran grew to resent Mr. Kenney’s visits — in part, she said, because she believed she was helping the chef cultivate a misleading image of success.
Persons: Josie Duran, Matthew Kenney’s, Duran, Kenney, Matthew Kenney, São Paulo, Kenney’s Organizations: Food Locations: Venice Beach, Calif, Los Angeles, Dubai,
The 25 Best Restaurants in New Orleans Right Now
  + stars: | 2023-10-16 | by ( Brett Anderson | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Where to EatThe 25 Best Restaurants in New Orleans Right NowThere’s plenty of great Creole and Cajun food, of course, but also outstanding Vietnamese, Indian and Trinbagonian cuisine.
Locations: New Orleans
Clockwise from top left: pork in the pit at Valentina’s; Pitforks and Smokerings, in Slaton, Texas; a tray of barbecue at Pitforks and Smokerings; the chalkboard menu at Pitforks and Smokerings; a platter of smoked meat at Charlie’s, in Beaumont; Evan LeRoy and Sawyer Lewis, co-owners of LeRoy and Lewis, in Austin. Credit... Jessica Attie for The New York Times, JerSean Golatt for The New York Times, JerSean Golatt for The New York Times, JerSean Golatt for The New York Times, Jessica Attie for The New York Times, Sarah Karlan for The New York Times.
Persons: Evan LeRoy, Sawyer Lewis, Lewis, Jessica Attie, JerSean Golatt, Sarah Karlan Organizations: Austin . Credit, The New York Times Locations: Slaton , Texas, Pitforks, Beaumont, LeRoy, Austin .
Damien Brockway, who opened the Austin barbecue truck Distant Relatives in 2020, said he was inspired by the creative ferment of Austin’s barbecue scene. After a career spent in fine dining, he began to study cuisines of the African diaspora and his own heritage. Mr. Brockway’s team uses techniques enslaved Africans brought to plantations in the Caribbean and American South to cook dishes like roasted peanuts and pulled pork with tamarind molasses barbecue sauce. “It was more like the process educated me.”***Regional distinctions in Texas barbecue today go beyond what kind of wood fuels the smokers — post oak? — and often reflect the demographics of the areas where the barbecue is made.
Persons: Damien Brockway, Locations: Caribbean, American, Texas, Houston
When the #MeToo movement gained momentum in exposing abuses at the highest levels of power, the restaurant industry was exposed as a chief offender. In 2020, the James Beard Awards, the food world’s main kingmaker, announced that there would be no winners in either 2020 or 2021 after allegations against several top chefs. Brett Anderson, a contributing writer on The Times’s Food desk and a former member of the awards committee, discusses the attempts to hold the industry to account.
Persons: James Beard, Brett Anderson
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
In Parched Arizona, the Produce Gardens Bloom
  + stars: | 2023-05-08 | by ( Brett Anderson | Adam Riding | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
In the face of a historic drought, gardeners and small farmers across Arizona are growing produce with a surprisingly scant amount of a precious ingredient: water. They are converting lawns to forest gardens, and tending urban farms in food deserts around Phoenix. And many are drawing on the agricultural knowledge of Native Americans, who thrived in the arid Southwest before colonization. Their work is inspiring. And if the rest of the state can follow their example, fast-growing Arizona could serve as a model of how the Southwest can survive a water crisis that is only getting worse.
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