Nation’s Restaurant News reports on mobile payment technology.
A growing number of large-scale brands are attaching their names to mobile platforms. Where do you stand?
Nation’s Restaurant News reports on mobile payment technology.
A growing number of large-scale brands are attaching their names to mobile platforms. Where do you stand?
We had written earlier this year about Starbucks’ search for tea, it ends and begins with a purchase of Teavana for $620 million cash.
Adding to the list of Teatailers in New York this week is Palais du Thés, a French tea importer and retailer, started in 1987 by François-Xavier Delmas. The chain has 28 boutiques worldwide. The 29th is its first in the United States and the first outside France that is not a franchise.
Fairway Market was amongst the businesses in Red Hook that sustained extreme damage during Hurricane Sandy. They’ve made a video that shows the cleared out market and discusses their plans for the rebuild.
Fairway General Manager Andy Zeluta Gives a Look Inside Red Hook’s Cleared Out Fairway
PECK SLIP PICKLE FESTIVAL
Sunday, November 11
11:00AM to 5:00PM
New Amsterdam Market
South Street between Beekman Street & Peck Slip
New Amsterdam Market’s second annual Peck Slip Pickle Festival will take place this Sunday so please come out and show your support as the Seaport neighborhood recovers from damage caused by Hurricane Sandy. Over 20 pickle and fermented food producers will join our regular roster of market vendors and our hours will be extended until 5:00PM.
Save the date for the next NY Foodies happy hour on 12/6 at 6pm, location TBD. Please RSVP to NYFoodies@peeledsnacks.com.
The speaker is Julie Cottineau, Founder of BrandTwist and former VP of Brand at Richard Branson’s Virgin (one of the most successful entrepreneurial empires on the planet). She’ll help explore 5 Key strategies to build and promote brands for maximum impact, leveraging examples from Virgin and other entrepreneurial brands. Julie has an incredible background, working with many iconic brands and as a professor at Columbia and Cornell.
Tropical Storm Sandy changed a lot of things but it didn’t change how GrowNYC responds when the City most needs a sense of normalcy.
We’re keeping Greenmarkets and Youthmarkets open and collecting and delivering food to those in need.
We’re getting back up and running – our home office on Chambers Street has reopened – hopefully with phone and heat soon but already filled with no shortage of willing and enthusiastic staff. Please check our blog for updates on compost and textile collections, Greenmarkets and other events.
We’re grateful for all the well wishes and concern you have expressed to us and we’re grateful for what many of you have already done, be it volunteer your time, donate money and cleaning supplies and other essentials or purchasing a bag of Greenmarket produce to donate.
Here’s how we can help you – and you can help New Yorkers and GrowNYC:
1) Buy local and enjoy the bounty of the season while supporting family farms – shop at any one of the 50+ Greenmarkets or 11 Youthmarkets open for business. For a complete list go to grownyc.org/greenmarket
2) Donate-A-Bag opportunities are available at many Greenmarket locations from now through Thanksgiving. Help feed hungry New Yorkers, those affected by Sandy and relief workers by purchasing an extra bag of produce and bring it to the Market Information Tent. We’ll get it where it needs to go. For an up-to-date schedule of markets where you can Donate-A-Bag go to grownyc.org/blog/
Customers are donating harvest season items in record numbers in response to the immense need for hunger relief that Sandy created. Over 10,000 pounds have found their way to community kitchens, churches, shelters, food pantries and others serving victims of the storm.
3) Please consider a donation to GrowNYC when you are thinking about how to help New York City recover – many of the City’s community and school gardens suffered damage and need assistance, our compost infrastructure took a hit and many items need replacing, additionally, GrowNYC will continue to provide the kind of education and services that help us understand and combat climate change through education, recycling, tree planting and care, storm management best practices like rainwater harvesting systems and more. To make a donation, go to grownyc.org/donate now and help us get NYC back on its feet.
Thank you from all of us at GrowNYC
NYC community board 3 Your Business Affected By Hurricane Sandy?
Apply For Fema Relief And Emergency Loans Join the following: Congresswoman Nydia M. Velazquez Speaker Sheldon Silver State Senator Daniel Squadron Assembly Member Brian Kavanagh Council Member Margaret Chin Council Member Rosie Mendez
U.S. Small Business Administration FEMA NYC Department of Small Business Services Lower East Side Business Improvement District (LES BID) Community Board 3
Friday, November 9, 2012 9:00 am – 11:00 am Houston Street Center 273 Bowery Street (Corner of East Houston & Bowery next to Whole Foods)
LEARN ABOUT THE EMERGENCY LOAN PROGRAMS AND OTHER SERVICES TO HELP SMALL BUSINESSES IMPACTED OR INTERRUPTED BY HURRICANE SANDY If your business was impacted or interrupted by Hurricane Sandy, this is a great opportunity to learn about relief available to small businesses. The U.S. Small Business Administration, NYC Business Solutions, and the Small Business Development Center will be present to provide important information regarding these processes. You will learn about FEMA relief and emergency loan assistance – long and short term assistance. RSVP not required. Lower East Side Business Improvement District 54 Orchard St, NYC 10002 y 212-226-9010 y http://www.lowereastsideny.com
Restaurant operators are always looking for the latest solutions to help them cut costs and provide better and faster service. Technologies claiming to do all three emerge daily, so FastCasual.com sat down with the CEOs or founders of four such companies — FrontFlip, Breadcrumb, Irisys and GoPago — to find out if their solutions are worth the investment.
New Restaurant Technology to help your business manage its guests
Red Hook, recently revitalized neighborhood in Brooklyn with coffee bars, restaurants, Fairway and Ikea in its backyard now needs a new revitalization. After Hurricane Sandy rolled through, all along Van Brunt Street, the air was thick with the steady thrumming of sump-pumps all the way up and down Van Brunt, every building having had its basement flooded, the arriviste businesses and long-time residents finding one another at a kind of clean-up block-party-meets-wake, counting the cost of Sandy’s devastation, soldiering on in the knowledge that whatever they’ve suffered has been suffered by all their neighbors too. Sometimes, it takes a disaster to remind folks that they’re part of a single community whether they choose to recognize it or not.
Red Hook Apocalypse: How Sandy Undid an Up-and-Coming New York Neighborhood