Pig Butchering Demo: Wed 11/13

Join Meat Hook butcher Sara Bigelow for a comprehensive demonstration of snout-to-tail butchering techniques. All porcine queries are encouraged as Ms. Bigelow will show how to butcher an entire cross section of a farm-raised pig. Attendees will have the opportunity to learn about unfamiliar cuts and even try some of Brooklyn Kitchen’s house-made sausages and Great Brewers’ beer. Leave your knives at home; this class is not hands on (however, participants will receive a 10% discount on equipment on the day of class).

Company: Brooklyn Kitchen

Location: Williamsburg

Address: 100 Frost St (Manhattan Ave & Leonard St)

Time: 6:30pm-8:30pm

Tickets: $85

24/7 Biscuits in the East Village

Empire Biscuit, the newest niche-food outpost, opened its doors to the East Village this week. As of today at 8am, the Southern biscuit restaurant will be open twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. The neighborhood’s most-anticipated munchie-food joint offers twelve butters and spreads and twelve jams, jellies and marmalades to complement this comfort snack food. Biscuit sandwiches and biscuits & gravy are ideal options for meals.

More complex biscuits, including biscuit sandwiches, cost $6-8.50 and custom biscuits with one of the aforementioned spreads cost $4.50. Empire Biscuit also serves the popular, cold-pressed Blue Bottle coffee. The wide range of options allows customers to keep it simple with a plain biscuit and butter or to opt for a more adventurous meal, such as the spiced fried chicken, pickled carrots and sauce à l’orange biscuit sandwich. Some of the more gourmet accouterments include the oxtail & brown sugar jelly, pear & vinho verde butter and the bacon & cracklin’ butter.

Empire Biscuit’s slogan says it all: “Breakfast Lunch Dinner Drunk”.

Verve: Brooklyn Coffee Pop-Up

Verve coffee is scheduled to open a three-month pop-up shop this week at 33 Grand Street in Williamsburg.  Expect to find a full coffee bar, full espresso machine and Chemex pour-over coffeemakers. Menu items like the One-and-One, a single macchiato and single espresso artfully situated adjacent to one another on a saucer, will be available. If all goes well, the successful Santa-Cruz based company will consider making its next home in New York. On par with competitors Stumptown, Intelligentsia and Ritual, Verve should have no problem settling into the Brooklyn coffee scene.

Rwanda Documentary & Blue Marble Ice Cream

The documentary Sweet Dreams premieres tomorrow at Quad Cinema. Sweet Dreams illustrates the remarkable story of Rwandan women who teamed with Blue Marble Ice Cream’s founders in pursuit of gaining financial independence. The triumph and entrepreneurial spirit of these empowered, industrious women is inspiring to any business owner.

After the 1994 genocide, Rwandan citizens needed to rebuild their sense of community. Rwandan theater director Kiki Katese founded Ingoma Nshya, the country’s first and only female drumming troupe. While drumming was an effective means of therapy, these women needed a way to support themselves financially. Consequently, Katese reached out to Alexis Miesen and Jennie Dunas of Brooklyn’s Blue Marble Ice Cream. From there, the Hutu and Tutsi women learned the ice cream trade down to cone.

Inzozi Nziza (“Sweet Dreams”) will be Rwanda’s first ever local ice cream shop. Sweet dreams is the heartening product of women helping women gain prosperity, independence and confidence on both a personal and business scale.

Food for Thought: Chipotle’s Partnership with Huffington Post

Two days ago Huffington Post launched Food for Thought, Chipotle’s latest brand marketing strategy. Food for Thought is a HuffPost section dedicated to promoting awareness about healthful habits and sustainability practices. Contributing writers from all walks of life including doctors, lawyers and food authors discuss everything from food legislation to finding seasonal produce. This strategic move on Chipotle’s behalf is timely considering the recent shift of priorities since McDonald’s was its major investor. Now more than ever Chipotle is making efforts to be an industry leader in sustainable, GMO-free fast food chains.

Mark Crumpacker, Chipotle’s Chief Marketing Officer, writes that “people are more aware than ever of the impact that food has on people, animals and the environment.”

Through this partnership, Chipotle hopes to change customers’ perceptions of them as the burrito joint that’s owned by McDonald’s, to the Mexican fast food chain that genuinely cares about the sourcing of its ingredients and our affect on the environment.

Restaurant Inspection Letter Grades Become Ubiquitous Online

Thanks to a savvy coder, the public no longer has to rely on only one source to view restaurants’ letter grades. Health department inspection grades and points are now available on several popular restaurant-targeted sites including MenuPages, Yelp, Seamless, GrubHub, Zagat and Delivery via Google Chrome. In just one click, viewers get the insider’s scoop on the most recently updated restaurant grade, last inspection date and score while simultaneously making reservations or ordering delivery online. The pressure for restaurant owners, chefs and management to comply with health department standards has never been greater since the launching of Google Chrome’s latest extension.

New York Hospitality Group Event: Tuesday November 12th

The New York City Hospitality Group  will host “A Taste of New York” with Chef Marc Murphy at Landmarc on November 12th.

Murphy will lead an all-star panel of New York food and wine producers for a Q & A session along with a uniquely curated drink and tasting menu featuring food and wine from New York State.

Attendees will have the opportunity to connect with hospitality industry leaders to celebrate and discuss the importance of utilizing local products and supporting New York farmers, distillers and winemakers.

Buy tickets here.

Keeping Your Customers Safe: Allergens Seminar Monday 10/28

The NYC Hospitality Alliance is hosting a seminar on food allergies.  This would be a very helpful seminar for operators in the area to attend.

When: Monday, October 28th, 2013, 9:30am – 11:00am

Where: Dallas BBQ Times Square, 241 W 42nd St, New York, NY

Cost: $20 member    $35 non-member

Over 15 million Americans suffer from food allergies and currently there is no cure. Reactions can range from mild to life threatening and can be easily avoided with the right precautions. Learn how to address this growing problem by effectively and confidently serving your customers with food allergies.

Please join Mike Spigler, Vice President of Education at Food Allergy Research & Education (FARE), as he reviews and explains:

  • Common missteps restaurants often make when attempting to serve a customer with food allergies
  • How to communicate effectively with food allergic patrons before, during and after their visit to your establishment
  • How to tell the difference between food intolerances, Celiac Disease and food allergies
  • The emerging epidemic of food allergies and the financial potential associated with reaching out to this segment of the population
  • What the future holds for those with food allergies, including treatment and future research

Click here for more info and to register.

SCHNIPPER’S: FAST-CASUAL BURGER ENTERPRISE

23 East 23rd Street at Madison Avenue (Flatiron District) • 212.233.1025

Schnipper’s

Their Success…creating an impeccable guest experience by serving each guest “one at a time.”  Created by founder and former owner/CEO of Hale and Hearty, Schnipper’s manages to make fast-casual feel friendly and personal with a well-trained, service-focused staff and an optimized service flow.

Staff plays a critical role in making guest experiences positive at any fast casual enterprise, where there is often high guest turnover and, frequently, a captive audience that owners mistakenly believe they do not need to court.   This attitude is nowhere to be found at Schnipper’s.  Staff greets guests enthusiastically, help them navigate the menu, and frequently offer to clear tables for guests, who would ordinarily buss their own trays.

These small touches make a huge difference in a guest’s experience in the enterprise.  Guests are often on a lunch break, or bringing their small children out for an easy bite to eat, or taking an order to-go so that they can eat while working a long day.  Being met by a friendly face and having a staff member go out of their way to make the guest’s day easier goes a long way to making the guest feel connected to the enterprise.  They remember it as a positive experience in their day, and are more likely to come back again.

While this level of service could be challenging in a fast casual enterprise such as Schnipper’s, careful planning in layout and operations, and a culture of hospitality starting from the top down, means staff can do their jobs seamlessly and focus on guest service.  In the enterprise, there are clear pathways for staff to walk between the pickup window, kitchen, and guest seating area without getting in each other’s or guests’ way.  There are also designated areas for staff to drop off collected table signs, which are then periodically returned to the cashiers so they do not run out.

These systems and design features means staff are able to focus on serving guests needs, addressing any questions or concerns, and going the extra mile to enhance guest experience without worrying about logistics.

Not only that, this attention to detail signals to the staff that the owners care about their experience as well by ensuring they have a clear, well-designed space in which to work.  Showing care and concern for employees translates into them showing that same care and concern for guests.

Take Aways…Take care of your staff and they will take care of your guests.  Make sure your enterprise has clear systems and a layout that works with your operations so that staff can accomplish tasks and do their jobs easily.  This will keep your guest experience—not operations glitches— at the forefront of staff’s minds.  Furthermore, by being hospitable to your staff with training and a thoughtful service flow, they will take ownership of your enterprise and carry your hospitality forward to your guests.

The Aussie Coffee Invasion Continues Strong in NYC

New York’s obsession with all things Aussie, at least retail-wise, is strongest in coffee, and getting stronger. With the large (and growing) number of Australian ex-pats that flock to these shores in finance and law, there are plenty of customers at the ready to sing their praises – when it comes to coffee, Australians believe they do it best.

The Wall Street Journal highlights the wave of specialty cafes opening across the city. One owner, Leon Unglik, is a former lawyer who named his shop, Little Collins, after a Melbourne street. He tells the WSJ that customers enter saying “Oh, thank God you’re here now, we can finally get decent coffee…We’ve got a very strong coffee culture back home,” he said. “In Australia, everywhere you go you can expect to get a decent coffee.”