Cherry Bombe, New Women’s Food Magazine Will Launch in May

Smith Street restaurateur Kerry Diamond is launching a magazine next month, Cherry Bombe, which will feature “women and food” as the subject. They’ve just met their Kickstarter goal, and have what sounds like a fantastic first issue laid out.

Smorgasburg and Brooklyn Flea Kick Off Spring This Weekend

Exciting openings this weekend reported on DNAinfo.com:

Smorgasburg food market kicks off Saturday in its new home at East River State Park, with new businesses offering everything from fried chicken-filled biscuits to lobster soup dumplings. More than 100 vendors will set up shop at the market from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., including Bolivian Llama Party, Blue Marble Ice Cream and Brooklyn Soda Works, the event’s website notes. 

Then, on Sunday, Brooklyn Flea unleashes more than 250 tables of trinkets, antiques, vintage clothing and even bicycles at the Williamsburg waterfront park from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Investors Hot on Brooklyn Blue Apron, Kitchensurfing, Underground Eats

Brooklyn startups are continuing to attract serious investor interest by directly connecting eaters to meals and chefs online.

“I think technology has been kind of late to come to food,” said Adam Sirois, of Dumbo-based Underground Eats, tells Crain’s New York Business. “It’s one of the last major categories that developers and coders are starting to explore.”

Crain’s details three which have been garnering much attention:

• Blue Apron

Williamsburg-based Blue Apron announced a $3 million Series A funding round in February, with investors including First Round Capital, Bessemer Venture Partners and Dave Tisch, who manages early-stage investment fund BoxGroup.

Blue Apron delivers prepackaged kits containing the ingredients needed to prepare a gourmet meal. The idea is partly to make ingredient shopping more efficient—no more ending up with too much leftover parsley—but also to introduce at-home cooks to unique recipes and hard-to-find ingredients, said CEO and co-founder Matt Salzberg.

“That’s an important part of our product,” Mr. Salzberg said. “It’s an experience, not just a convenience.”

• Kitchensurfing

Gowanus-based Kitchensurfing raised $1 million late in 2012 and this year expanded from New York City and Berlin into Boston.

Kitchensurfing brings chefs directly into subscribers’ kitchens. Customers can purchase catered meals starting at about $20 per person or place their own requests and receive proposals from Kitchensurfing chefs. After chef and customer agree on a plan, the chef shows up with the ingredients, then cooks and cleans up.

CEO and co-founder Chris Muscarella, a tech and food industry vet, says he sees two trends in food. Restaurants are trying to put diners closer to the chef via open kitchen designs and special events. “Kitchensurfing takes that to its utmost extreme,” Mr. Muscarella said.

The second trend is based on convenience. Customers are looking for one-click, online access to food delivery. But a bespoke dining experience can actually be facilitated surprisingly quickly, Mr. Muscarella said. In some cases, meals have been arranged in as little as a day.

• Underground Eats

Mr. Sirois’ Underground Eats, which has four employees, opted to forgo outside funding after meeting with early-stage investors last year, he said. However, the company exceeded 20,000 subscribers in January, roughly one year after launching. It plans to double its small staff over the next year.

Brooklyn seems to be the heart of the growing tech-food scene. The city’s Food+Tech Meetup group—which started in Brooklyn—has more than 800 members and hosts regular discussions running the gamut from e-commerce to sustainability.

“I think it’s the fact that in Brooklyn you’re surrounded by food thinking,” said Elizabeth McVay Greene, a founder of the Food+Tech Meetup as well as Plovgh, which allows consumers to buy produce directly from nearby farms. “And there are also the technologists and designers who can, in 48 hours, put an app together.”

That being said, the food space is complex, and industry experience outside the traditional tech space is invaluable, said Ms. Greene.

“I see a lot of people building restaurant apps and websites for agriculture, but you can’t just build an Etsy for food,” she said. “I’ve seen a lot of companies come and go.”

The fundamental problem with scaling up a high-end food-based business is the artisanal nature of food. If you build a food operation on the scale of Costco, it tastes like food from Costco.

On the other hand, meeting that challenge is easier in the tight confines of New York City.

“Food in New York City is kind of the ultimate pursuit,” Ms. Greene said. “It’s the coolest thing you can do, and now technology is right up there with it. So the combination is appealing.”

Leske’s Bakery Opens in Park Slope

Leske’s, a Scandinavian bakery with solid Brooklyn history, has opened in Park Slope. Serious Eats takes a first look at their expanded offerings.

Expansion and Relocation for Steve’s Key Lime Pies

Hurricane Sandy brought major decisions and great changes for Steve’s Authentic Key Lime Pies in Red Hook. The company will move within the Red Hook neighborhood on April 1.

Dnainfo.com spends some time with owner Steve Tarpin and his wife Victoria Gomez.

Runner & Stone: Pastry Grows in Brooklyn

Runner and Stone, Gowanus’ newest kid on the block, has been making waves, but none bigger than it’s breakfast pastry. Fork in the Road makes a comparative visit.

Gowanus: Brooklyn’s Newest Center of Hip

Gowanus is the latest Brooklyn neighborhood to boom with restaurants, having almost a “restaurant row” with Runner & Stone opening last month. DNAinfo.com gives us a tour.

Brooklyn Specialty Startups Succeeding

Brooklyn’s explosion of homemade treats shows no signs of stopping. The culinary economy is booming, reports DNAinfo.com.

Red Hook, Brooklyn Needs Help from Sandy Aftermath

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

Williamsburg’s McCarren Pool seeks mobile food vendors. Proposals due Wednesday, September 12th

In light of several arrests made for vendors who have sold illegally on or near the pool’s grounds, the city is now seeking licensed vendors. Local vendors are happy about the proposal request as they describe the vending around the pool’s site as a “free for all”.
DNA Info reports more on the information surrounding this new RFP