Manipulated Milk Prices?; Americans Still Throwing Food Away
Plus: Mesa Grill's role in a forthcoming mystery novel, what Michael Huynh is up to, where Kid Rock eats barbecue, and more in our morning roundup of food news and gossip.
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Plus: Mesa Grill's role in a forthcoming mystery novel, what Michael Huynh is up to, where Kid Rock eats barbecue, and more in our morning roundup of food news and gossip.
Up-and-coming model Taylor Fuchs lives in Greenpoint, where he finds pierogi akin to the ones his grandmother makes for him back in Canada.
It looks like that “recession diet” the 'Times' talked about doesn’t include Spiced Pumpkin Lattes, because the profits at Starbucks are down a very venti 28 percent.
Starbucks will introduce "smoothie-like" drinks this summer, the 'Times' sets out to find the next great New York sandwich, and a former Frank Sinatra hangout will reopen in Hell's Kitchen come June.
Plus: Will Mariah Carey win an Oscar? Hahahahaha. Sorry.
Tim Murphy went to Union Square for lunch yesterday and surprised more than one diner with the fat truth about their food.
The 'Times' finds easy pickings at Starbucks.
Calorie charts are hitting chain restaurants, a comedy gift to food writers everywhere.
The London-based songstress doesn't much think about frugality when she's eating in New York.
WD-50 kicks off lunch service this month, Starbucks' Pike Place Roast is as mild as one from Dunkin' Donuts, and a second Sakae Sushi will open downtown.
Starbucks has a new coffee you can try for free, second-graders made their way into the Waverly Inn, and snow-cone vendor NYC ICY might be returning.
Inspired by their California counterparts, Starbucks baristas in New York are suing for the right to keep their tips.
In this week's magazine: Platt on Eighty One, De Niro’'s new restaurant opens, and Starbucks's problems are solved.
Chain restaurants don't have to post calorie info just yet, nightclub/boat the Frying Pan plans to reopen in May, and Spike from ‘Top Chef’ plans a burger-and-shake joint.
Chefs let their parents down, Seamus Mullen will pull your iPod, and Eric Ripert comes up with a menu using ingredients from a 99-cent store.
A cockroach shows up at the Waverly Inn, New York is running out of plutocrats, and KFC plans to sell grilled chicken. What is the world coming to?
Did Bear Stearns collapse in part because of a whisper campaign? How will Starbucks keep its customers if everyone starts pinching pennies? And what did Sarah Jessica Parker think of Maxim naming her the "unsexiest woman alive"? Our weekly roundup of law, media, and business news.
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