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Results tagged “brooklynfare”

Six Restaurants For Eaters Who Like To Watch Hot Kitchen Action

Six Restaurants For Eaters Who Like To Watch Hot Kitchen Action

America's fascination with watching chefs cook has reached a rolling boil—entire networks are devoted to food's entire journey from farm to kitchen to table to mouth-hole. (Thankfully, the coverage tends to stop there.) But here in NYC you don't need to sit in front of the boob tube to indulge your obsessive culinary voyeurism. Restaurants are all too eager to satisfy diners' craving for a kitchen floor show; here are five six where you can follow every sweaty move of some of the city's most talented chefs. more ›

Brooklyn Fare, Eleven Madison Park Bumped Up On Brand New Michelin Guide

Brooklyn Fare, Eleven Madison Park Bumped Up On Brand New Michelin Guide

For those who follow these sorts of things: the 2012 Michelin Guide for New York restaurants is being released this week, and aspiring gourmands will need to prepare their Metrocard if they hope to achieve the ultimate in dining out bragging rights. more ›

Midweek Special: NYC Restaurant Review Roundup

Midweek Special: NYC Restaurant Review Roundup
   

This week Sam Sifton takes his Times expense account to Cesar Ramirez's Chef's Table at Brooklyn Fare and gives it three stars. "What Mr. Ramirez is doing at the Chef’s Table is entirely his own production, a kind of sui generis exercise in personal expression," and though at $165-bucks-a-pop it can be expensive "it is worth the money" to see what Ramirez and his crew are doing. As a regular told Sifton regarding the 18-seat restaurant's meals, “It’s best if you let it just happen to you.” more ›

Reporter Skewers Brooklyn Fare Chef's "Soup Nazi" Denial

Reporter Skewers Brooklyn Fare Chef's "Soup Nazi" Denial

Yesterday Joshua David Stein, currently senior editor at Eater National, published an open letter to Chef Cesar Ramirez in the NY Press. The letter excoriated Ramirez over an incident that took place at the intimate "Chef's Table" at Brooklyn Fare, where Ramirez asks customers not to take photos of the phone, or use cell phones, or take notes. Stein says that when Ramirez caught him scribbling, the chef got in his face and accused him of disrespect and "sneaky shit." Ramirez insists he's never sworn at a customer and tells us he doesn't remember any of this. Today Stein sent us this statement in response: more ›

Brooklyn Fare Chef Denies Going "Soup Nazi" on Note Taker

Brooklyn Fare Chef Denies Going "Soup Nazi" on Note Taker

Chef Cesar Ramirez runs a tight ship at his lauded Chef's Table at the Brooklyn Fare grocery store in downtown Brooklyn. Customers pay $135 each for a no-substitutions 20 course menu served at a stainless steel counter facing the open kitchen. Photography is verboten, as is cell phone use and note-taking. Dem's the rules requests! But scofflaw writer Joshua David Stein recently flouted rule #3 during his wife's birthday dinner, and was shocked when the bull he messed with (Ramirez) gave him the horns (a tongue-lashing that made his wife cry on her birthday). more ›

Michelin Guide 2011 Names Brooklyn's First 2 Star Restaurant

Michelin Guide 2011 Names Brooklyn's First 2 Star Restaurant

As we noted earlier, Zagat's thunder-stealing upstaging cannot thwart the power of the new Michelin restaurant guide to NYC, which hits shelves tomorrow. Though more influential abroad, inclusion in the famously rigorous guide is a major feather in any chef's cap. This edition deems 715 restaurants worthy of mention, and out of those just five restaurants earned three stars. Ten restaurants were rated two stars, while 42 restaurants nabbed a single star. Among them is the first Brooklyn restaurant to score the coveted two star status—and it's not even technically a restaurant! more ›

Brooklyn Fare Adds Dinner to Its Fare

Brooklyn Fare Adds Dinner to Its Fare

They're labeling it "cooking class," but don't be fooled: the recently opened grocery store Brooklyn Fare is rolling out an unusual kind of dinner service this week. Four courses—including a vegetable course, fish course, meat course, and dessert—go for a steep-seeming $70 (plus tax, tip), but what sets these dinners apart (and presumably makes the cost worth it) is that they're held inside Brooklyn Fare's working kitchen, an intimate, separate space located a few doors down the block. There's only one seating a night, three nights a week, and twelve seats available; the set menu might include local asparagus, rouget, or wagyu beef. Cooked by César Ramirez and team, the educational component of the meal means that diners have the opportunity to ask questions about the food. Directly. Considering that the dining table is literally Ramirez’s real, working table in the middle of Brooklyn Fare's kitchen (it's one huge, square piece of seamless stainless steel opposite the stoves) this is something new, a little bit more up close and personal than most chef's counters. Calling it cooking class may turn out to be the understatement of the year. More information here. more ›

Brooklyn Fare to Open Tomorrow

    

Brooklyn Fare, a new non-chain Downtown Brooklyn grocery store, will open tomorrow. The man behind the refrigerated counter is Cesar Ramirez, a Bouley/Bar Blanc vet who’ll create and maintain Brooklyn Fare’s line of hot and cold prepared foods. Next month, Brooklyn Fare will also introduce a small restaurant inside the store’s standalone commissary kitchen, located a few doors down on Schermerhorn Street. Its single dining table is actually one seamless, stainless steel table in the center of the kitchen. Here, Ramirez says, he will serve five-course meals for a “super reasonable price.” more ›

Brooklyn Fare to Open in Two Weeks

Brooklyn Fare to Open in Two Weeks

Brooklyn Fare, a new, independent grocery store located in downtown Brooklyn, will open April 22nd at 200 Schermerhorn Street. Owner Moe Issa, a borough native, is working with chef Cesar Ramirez to outfit the 6,000-square-foot space with a deluge of pret-a-manger goods to be available alongside the regular groceries: sandwiches, meatballs, soups, terrines, and so on. The store will sell such a vast amount of cheese and beer it will likely blow your mind. Ramirez has snagged a real sushi chef to make sushi throughout the day (as in, not just some dude to oversee each morning's epic batch of outsourced California rolls that are left to hang out all day in a refrigerated display). The idea here seems to be real food, not boutique food. more ›

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