ReportWire

Tag: these

  • The James Beard Foundation Unveils a Fresh Crop of Celebrity Hosts for Its 2024 Gala

    The James Beard Foundation Unveils a Fresh Crop of Celebrity Hosts for Its 2024 Gala

    The James Beard Foundation announced five new hosts for its annual red-carpet gala on Tuesday, May 21, just weeks ahead of the awards ceremony that’s considered among the highest honors in the American restaurant industry.

    The first-time co-hosts poised to take the stage on Monday, June 10 at the Lyric Opera in Chicago are California-based Top Chef alum Nyesha Arrington, named Eater LA’s chef of the year in 2015; Top Chef: All-Stars champion and Beard-nominated cookbook author Richard Blais; celebrity chef, cookbook author, and Food Network regular Amanda Freitag; and celebrity chef and multiple James Beard Award-winner Marcus Samuelsson.

    Michelle Miller, a national correspondent for CBS News and co-host of CBS Saturday Morning, will host the media awards on Saturday, June 8. Karen Washington, winner of the 2023 James Beard Humanitarian Award will host the leadership awards ceremony on Sunday, June 9.

    This media-savvy group will oversee the proceedings at the June gala, where just four Chicago restaurants and chef finalists will vie for their respective awards.

    Tune in with Eater’s livestream on June 10.

    Correction, Tuesday, May 21, 4:17 p.m.: This piece has been updated to reflect the hosts of the media and leadership awards ceremonies.

    Disclosure: Some Vox Media staff members are part of the voting body for the James Beard Awards. Eater is partnering with the James Beard Foundation to livestream the awards in 2024. All editorial content is produced independently of the James Beard Foundation.

    Naomi Waxman

    Source link

  • These Chicago Chili Crisps Chomp David Chang’s Chutzpah

    These Chicago Chili Crisps Chomp David Chang’s Chutzpah

    Last week, Asian Americans — including Chicago’s Anna Desai — felt knots of frustration while processing the condiment controversy instigated by Momofuku Goods, the grocery arm of celebrity chef David Chang’s empire. In March, Momofuku’s attorneys sent cease-and-desist orders to companies that used “chili crunch” and “chile crunch.”

    It turns out that the terms chili crisp and chili crunch are sometimes interchangeable, something Momofuku didn’t know. The popularity of these condiments — used on ice cream, eggs, noodles, etc. —has skyrocketed in recent years. Momofuku filed for a U.S. trademark in 2023. Some argued the letters were ploys to seize control of the market. Others, including Momofuku CEO Marguerite Mariscal, countered saying Momofuku needed to show the government they were willing to defend their trademark or risk losing it. In the end, Momofuku lost the goodwill of several members of the AAPI community, including Desai. For years, Desai has used her Instagram platform to champion small and local businesses, many owned by BIPOC women. It may remind Chicagoans of the poke incident of 2018, where Aloha Poke made national headlines for sending cease and desists to restaurant owners who used “aloha” in their names. A difference is Chang is a member of the AAPI community, while the owners of Aloha Poke are not. But the similarity comes from two entities wanting control of a seemingly generic cultural term.

    The backlash led to Chang backtracking, describing the letter as a misunderstanding. He explained what happened in a podcast late last week in which he apologized and announced Momofuku’s attorneys would stand down.

    Desai, who was born in Hong Kong and moved to southern Illinois with her family as an infant, listened to that very special episode of The David Chang Show and says she was glad he apologized, though she still holds mixed feelings: “How do you claim this term when it really belongs to the culture?” she says.

    After hearing about Momofuku’s legal shenanigans, Desai launched a four-part series ofbrands to support right now” spotlighting vendors who sell Asian condiments including Tasting India, Maa Maa Dei, and Guiz. She says she didn’t want to vilify Chang, but felt she needed to respond in an uplifting way. The posts received an outpouring of support across the country.

    Desai’s parents are ethnically Chinese and were born in Vietnam. They ran a Chinese restaurant in St. Louis, which is how Desai’s interest in the restaurant industry grew. She established Over the Moon, a fundraiser where bakers created mooncakes filled with more approach fillings; Desai says her children weren’t so excited about traditional flavors, the kind her father bakes and sends annually to celebrate the Moon Festival. It’s not about brainwashing her kids into tradition, but rather, instilling in them an appreciation for original flavors. She refers to her parents’ love of spicy foods, something that wasn’t passed along to her. While heat isn’t her forte, she can still appreciate time-honored recipes that were passed along.

    Inspired by Desai’s work, here are a few local vendors selling chile concoctions.

    Tasting India

    Tasting India’s Bombay Chili Crunch

    Tasting India, the company founded by Jasmine Sheth, explores India’s diverse culinary traditions by offering a series of goods that amplify any home cook’s pantry. The Bombay Chili Crunch demonstrates this with a cumin-forward condiment that transports eaters to Chinese restaurants in India, where food tends to be spiced to the tastes of locals. It’s a contrast to Sichuan cooking and carves out a unique niche among chili crunch brands. It’s particularly tasty on Chinese American foods taking dishes like Mongolian Beef to new heights. Mushrooms give the blend a punch of umami.

    A jar of Vargo Brother Ferments chili crisp.

    Here Here Market

    Vargo Brother Ferments’ Chili Crisp

    Chefs and spouses Sebastian Vargo and Taylor Hanna are best known in Chicago for their impressive and ever-evolving lineup of lacto-fermented pickles and krauts, but the duo has also earned a sizable following with their chili crisp. Made with smoked shiitakes and four types of chiles, it’s rich and fragrant yet balanced enough to serve in concert with delicate flavors. Vargo and Hanna recommend using a spoonful to punch up eggs, fried chicken, fish, and even pizza.

    Two jars of Chilee Oil.

    Chilee Oil

    Original CHILEE Chili Oil

    Second-generation Korean American James Lee and wife Sufei Zhan cite two primary inspirations behind their local brand Chilee (pronounced “shy-lee”) Oil: Lao Gan Ma (literally the “old godmother” of chili oil brands), and Lee’s nonagenarian grandfather, who immigrated from South Korea to Chicago in the hope of greater opportunity. The couple even came up with their own riff on Lao Gan Ma’s packaging, swapping out a grainy photo of a grandmother for an illustration of Lee’s grandfather grinning up from the label. Packed with aromatics, it plays on a traditional flavor profile with a touch of sweetness from caramelized shallots.

    A jar of Co-Op Sauce Garlic Chili Crisp

    Co-Op Sauce

    Co-Op Sauce’s Garlic Chilli Crisp

    Co-op Sauce, a favorite among Chicago’s hot sauce aficionados since its founding in 2003, leans heavily into the crunchy side of things with its pungent garlic chili crisp. Every spoonful of zingy oil is accompanied by crispy mounds of garlic, which translates into a flavor bomb that’s great for doctoring up a boring snack or bare-bones meal. It’s also nut-free, and thus more accessible for all kinds of diners.

    A jar of Maa Maa Dei Chili Crisp

    Maa Maa Dei

    Maa Maa Dei Chili Crisp – The OG

    Jaye Fong, the one-woman band (read: baker and chef) behind sweet and savory Asian American pop-up Maa Maa Dei, has garnered a loyal following with her OG (mild) and Dragon (“WOOF-level spicy,” per Fong) chili crisps. That’s not surprising, as its complex flavor stems from more than 20 ingredients, including fried shallots and garlic, ginger threads, peanuts, and much more. Both varieties are sold out for the time being, but Fong says she’s planning another drop in early May. Keep an eye on her Instagram for a pre-order announcement.

    A jar of Nam Prik Pao.

    Here Here Market

    Pink Salt Kitchens Nam Prik Pao

    A traditional Thai condiment, nam prik pao doesn’t fall neatly into the chili crisp category, but Chicago chef Palita Sriratana’s smokey, subtly sweet version is a noteworthy cousin. Sriratana describes the texture as “somewhere between a jam and an oil,” so there’s no crunch, but it still packs a spicy punch (those with tender tongues can cut it with honey to scale down the burn). There’s a vegan version and another variant with more heat.

    Ashok Selvam

    Source link

  • Crab Rangoon Isn’t a Joke at These Chicago Restaurants

    Crab Rangoon Isn’t a Joke at These Chicago Restaurants


    Crab rangoon can be a polarizing menu item, but a new crop of chefs and diners are embracing the Chinese American staple in Chicago and beyond.

    The fried wonton wrappers are normally filled with some ratio of cream cheese and imitation crab, then served with some variant of duck sauce. Its origins aren’t well defined, with the most accepted narrative being it was invented in the ‘40s or ‘50s in the kitchen of Trader Vic’s, the famous Polynesian and tiki bar chain that had a Chicago outpost until 2011 in Gold Coast. There’s not a ton written about the appetizer’s origins. Most scouring the Internet will be taken to a 2019 story in Atlas Obscura.

    In 2022, crab Rangoon broke through to social media thanks to a series of TikTok posts made over the years by a Rangoon superfan. The item’s name is derived from a city in Myanmar. Yangon is the largest city in the South Asian country.

    Though not a prime example of gourmet cooking, a handful of chefs are dressing the item up using premium ingredients. Some may not take the Rangoon seriously, but the item is enjoying a surge in popularity. And with Lunar New Year approaching (the Year of the Dragon starts on Saturday, February 10) here’s a trio of restaurants offering their unique takes.

    Lobster Rangoon from Duck Inn
    The Duck Inn

    Kevin Hickey reveres Chicago’s Chinatown and he grew up nearby in Bridgeport. For the last nine years, the chef and owner of the Duck Inn has celebrated Lunar New Year. It’s the only time they change how they prepare the restaurant’s signature duck, prepping it Beijing-style for the holiday. Hickey reasons that many of his customers are part of the Chinese community. Up until Saturday, February 10, the Duck Inn will offer lobster-filled Rangoon. They come with a pomegranate sweet & sour and optional chili crunch.

    The Rangoon Royale served at Bixi Beer in Logan Square is like the Mercedes Benz of the Rangoon circuit. Chef and owner Bo Fowler gave in to her staff’s request for the item and created a souped-up version of the appetizer. Fowler, who was also the mastermind behind Owen & Engine, does not like to skimp on premium ingredients, sourcing from some of the Midwest’s best farmers. After much experimentation, uses a thicker wonton wrapper and fills it with lobster, crawfish, lump crab meat, and snow crab. Instead of cream cheese, she whips cream by hand for a mousse-like texture. She put the item on the menu and didn’t think customers would want a $20 order of fancy crab rangoon. She was wrong, and behind the burger, it’s Bixi’s No. 2-selling item: “I didn’t think they would sell at that price, but they sold like crazy,” she says.

    Perfect with one of the beers brewed on the premises, the Rangoon Royale is a permanent menu item at Bixi.

    Chef Henry Cai wanted an appetizer to complement the more American items on the menu of his Chinese American restaurant, something to pair with his burger and chicken sandwiches. He dipped into the nostalgia vault for memories of growing up in America with an immigrant family, seeing kids eat Tontino Pizza Rolls and Hot Pockets, and begging his parents to buy those products for him.

    In January, he unveiled the Pizza Rangoon, a superior version of what he wanted in his youth. Unlike Hot Pockets, the crusts aren’t soggy. The wonton is a better vessel, Cai says, and he stuffs it with shredded mozzarella, white onions, tomato puree, pizza sauces, a dash of five spice, and then wraps the filling with a slice of mozzarella. The latter gives the Rangoon a cheese pull worthy of an old cartoon, Cai says. The exterior is coated with Italian season and Romano cheese. This is a permanent menu item at Cai’s new South Loop restaurant.





    Ashok Selvam

    Source link

  • If you liked Hazbin Hotel, here’s what you should watch next

    If you liked Hazbin Hotel, here’s what you should watch next


    Hazbin Hotel’s frenetic first season finished up on Friday, with a dozen reveals and dangling plot threads, all primed for a second season. The devilish comedy comes from creator Vivienne Medrano, who first posted the pilot episode on her YouTube channel, and follows Charlie, the princess of Hell, who opens a hotel in hopes that demons will rehabilitate and get to heaven. Oh, and it’s also a musical!

    The first season finished with a bang, but it might be some time before we see the second season of Hazbin Hotel. So if you need something to sate your devilish desires for now, Medrano handpicked some of the show’s biggest influences.

    Invader Zim

    Image: Netflix

    Where to watch: Paramount Plus

    Merdano calls this one a “huge one” and it’s not hard to see why: Both shows share a similar kind of feverish sensibility, along with a strong, vibrant color palette. The spindly style of Invader Zim feels clearly at play in Hazbin, with characters like Alastor and Angel Dust feeling like they could fairly comfortably roll between shows.

    The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy

     A scowling blonde girl stands next to a oafish boy, who stands next to the Grim Reaper, who’s making a disgusted face

    Image: Cartoon Network Studios

    Where to watch: Max

    The other childhood show Merdano cites is about two kids (one a clueless happy-go-lucky oaf, the other a cynical and smart-ass tomboy) who summon the Grim Reaper and beat him at a game of limbo, thus making him their eternal servant best friend. They get wrapped up in the paranormal world of demons, gods, and other supernatural creatures, but it’s all done with a goofy spin. The infernal through-line from Grim Adventures to Hazbin Hotel is pretty obvious.

    BoJack Horseman

    BoJack looking sad in front of the Griffith Observatory

    Image: Netflix

    Where to watch: Netflix

    While there were other shows she watched when she was younger, Medrano says Netflix’s BoJack Horseman — about an anthropomorphic, depressed washed-up sitcom actor (who is also a horse) — is the one that came at the “perfect time” to show her that she could tell a complicated emotional story in adult animation.

    “[It’s] actually one of my favorites of all time; phenomenal show,” Medrano says. “It kind of showed me that adult animation can not only just be raunchy comedy, but it can be a story that has intense development of its characters. It can have incredibly flawed characters. It can make you cry. It can really get deep and dark.

    “It had just started around the time that I was like, really making the pilot and they kind of made me go, Oh, wow, adult animation is starting to change. And it’s starting to evolve.”

    South Park

    South Park stick of truth hero

    Where to watch: Paramount Plus

    Medrano calls South Park a “huge turning point” for her with adult animation — an experience a lot of people had around Comedy Central’s classic. The show tackled topical ideas and events, all with a gleeful, jaded humor that has kept it running since 1997. “From that point on,” Medrano says, “I kind of just kept watching [adult animation].”

    Rick and Morty

    (L-R) Morty and Rick staring at a holographic projection of the multiverse with Evil Morty in Rick and Morty.

    Image: Adult Swim

    Where to watch: Max

    Similar to BoJack, Medrano cites this ever-popular Adult Swim comedy as a proponent of the depth and humor she tries to balance with her work. As anyone who has watched Rick and Morty can attest, there’s more to the show and more to Pickle Rick than the reputation it gives. “Something like Rick and Morty that is still very raunchy, and vulgar, and shocking in a lot of ways — it went this direction of like, Yeah, but let’s go a little deeper, let’s get a little darker. I think that also helped shift the space kind of more towards Oh, that works! That has an audience that did really well.



    Zosha Millman

    Source link

  • Sandbags

    Sandbags

    A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty).

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some mdf bases.

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    4 layers should be high enough.

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    Then I used Vallejo Dark Earth texture paste for the ground.

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    When the glue and texture paste were dry, I primed them with black and white spraypaint.

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    After that, I painted them with a bunch of different washes and contrast paints.

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    The paints I used for the wash stage.

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    When the wash was dry the next day, I drybrushed them with a mix of various off-whites and grey.

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    Finally, I glued a bunch of grass tufts and rocks to the bases.

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    And here are the finished terrain pieces! These will come in handy for warhammer 40k, but they’re also very useful for historical wargames.

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    Sandbags. A few months ago, I made these sandbags from Keramiplast (modelling putty). Finally decided to make something with them. First I glueg them on some md

    How do you guys like them?

    Source link