And all the food news you missed this week
Hey everyone, Yesterday, while buying bread at my favorite local restaurant-turned-grocer, I asked the owner if she had any fun weekend plans, kind of a dark joke at this point since few of us really do anything. Turns out she and her whole staff are getting vaccinated today. A few hours earlier I had emailed a different restaurateur asking if he'd be around tonight because I'll be in his neighborhood, and he said he was taking the day off to get his vaccine. Then last night, scrolling Instagram I saw vaccine selfies from the owners of Dame and Té Company and comments about confirmed appointments for the full staff at Crown Shy and an owner of Contra. Hundreds of thousands of restaurant workers are newly eligible for the vaccine in New York City, a concession from our governor when pushed on how he could open restaurants for indoor dining without extending protections. Interestingly, New York City is one of the last major areas outside of California to reopen indoor dining but is one of the first (alongside Detroit) to open up vaccine access. I had predicted Nevada would be the first state to extend vaccines to hospitality workers, given Las Vegas' reliance on the industry. But they are still waiting. Chicago is expecting March 29, D.C. later in February, Colorado sometime next month. I'm glad to at least see some recognition that these workers are on the front lines of this pandemic in so many ways, interacting with customers in person, waiting on people without masks, working in cramped kitchens. How long it will take them all to actually get shots in their arms, given the slow rollout, and how equitable the access will be is another story. But I was to see this progress yesterday — and to hear owners are booking appointments for their full staffs, not just themselves. I hope actions like that will help us get to a place where undocumented porters are getting shots at the same rates as GMs and owners (and people who will inevitably game the system). For more information on the vaccine rollout, check out NYC's Vaccine Command Center. | | | | | | | | | | - Part one of Reply All's four-part investigation into the 10 years of workplace toxicity that led to Bon Appetit's implosion and rebuilding this summer is a must-listen. BA is getting the full autopsy because its downfall was so notable but what's so devastating about the magazine's "original sin," (hiring a cliquish group of all-white top editors) is that it's so common. [Gimlet]
- I haven't finished the whole thing but standing ovation for this Primal Scream package from the New York Times' Parenting section that fully captures the chaos and the devastation this pandemic has wrought for working parents. [NYT]
- Exploring the best-looking streeteries in New York. [Curbed]
- This week I learned Tootsie Roll is a public company (since 1922!) and it's run by an 89-year-old woman who inherited it from her family. [Fortune]
- Is it ethics, money, or both driving the alt-meat speculators? [The Baffler]
- What it was like to wait on Stephen Miller and other Trumpers at a D.C. power restaurant (spoiler: it wasn't great). [Slate]
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