And all the food news you missed this week
| Hey everyone, Happy (??) New Year! I never put much stock in a new year bringing a fresh start, but wow 2021 is really building on the chaotic and depressing energy of 2020 right out of the gate. I am, of course, referring to the insurrection this week, but things aren't looking especially bright in the world of food and restaurants either. Restaurants close. Unemployment grows. Subcultures find it harder and harder to hang on. We've been covering the idea of restaurants going into "hibernation" since the fall, but in the last few weeks there's been a bit of a groundswell, at least where I live, of places deciding to hunker down until the spring. (Which again ties back to that unemployment number). But if we want to focus on the positives going into 2021, some restaurant workers will get the vaccine in February. Some small business owners will get to access a new round of PPP loans, in addition to new grants from local governments and charities. Some chefs continue to prioritize people in need. And for those restaurants that make it through, some investments (outdoor dining infrastructure), collaborations, and adaptations (retail, product lines) could pay off in years to come. Best of all, Viennetta, everyone's favorite '90s freezer aisle dessert, is coming back. Oh and Democrats control the Senate, which should lead to, among many other things, more money in the pockets of American restaurant workers. So not exactly New Year New You, but we have something to hold on to. | | | | | | Birria at El Garage in Richmond California | Patricia Chang/Eater SF | | — While most restaurateurs are struggling to keep their shirts right now, Ombra in the UK (aka your "4th favourite Italian restaurant") is having the best year ever. — Bill Esparza tracks the history of birria, from its origins in Mexico to the recent boom in the United States. — Robert Sietsema files a review on the most exciting restaurant in New York ... which just went into hibernation. — VP-to-be Kamala Harris visited a restaurant that has plastered posters of her all over their outdoor dining tents. — Three designers on their inspiration and process for creating trendy wine labels. | | | | | | | | |
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