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24 Sep 17:35

Ribalta: Neo-Neapolitan in Union Square

by Ed Levine

From Slice

Slideshow

VIEW SLIDESHOW: Ribalta: Neo-Neapolitan in Union Square

The DOC. [Photographs: Robyn Lee]

Ribalta

48 East12th Street (b/n University Place & Broadway; map), New York, NY 10003; 212-777-7781; ribaltapizzarestaurant.com
Service: Friendly and Italian, in a good way
Setting: High-ceilinged airy space with red leather trim and some knick-nacks
Must-Haves: DOC pizza, Brussels sprouts, pizza in pala
Cost: Appetizers $7 to $14, pastas $14 to $20, pizza $9 to $23
Compare To: Motorino, Don Antonio, Keste
Recommendation: Good for the neighborhood. Simple pies are excellent, but not all toppings and sides deliver.

A couple of months ago, I received an e-mail from Rosario Procino, former partner of Neapolitan guru Roberto Caporosco. Rosario was the charming, always smiling business person, or what might be called the Bizzaiolo, at Keste.

Rosasio recently joined the team that runs Ribalta in Union Square with the goal of "leveraging the existing strengths but also elevating the overall experience. The idea," he said, with a paranthetical admission that it's a big one, "is to build a dream team of Neapolitan Pizza." To that end, he hired Pasquale Cozzolino to make the pies, drawing on his recent experience as chef at PizzArte and Dellarocco's. "This may be the only pizzeria in New York run (front and back of house) by Neapolitan-born and-raised individuals."

His goal is to balance tradition and creativity. Pizzas are leavened by a natural starter that Pasquale brought back from Italy—it's somewhere between 80 and 100 years old, and over the course of a five to seven day rise, it brings a noticeable lightness and cultured flavor to the dough. But unlike certain Neapolitan pizzerias that take a monastic approach to the One and Only pie, Ribalta plays around with tradition—just ask the hot dog and fries pizza or the limoncello-marinated chicken wings.

The result is part of the new wave of Neapolitan pizzerias we've seen in New York—those that embrace traditional techniques, but aren't constrained by them. Ribalta has been light on buzz, so we paid a visit to see if Rosario and Pasquale's pizza could match their story.

Interior

Ribalta is a vast space with white-tiled walls, red leather trim, and pizza-centric photos facing down at you from the ceiling. They have many ovens, including one that will be devoted exclusively to gluten-free pizza, but curiously none that are exclusively wood-burning.

The extensive menu includes many starters, pastas, and salads, but we focused on the equally extensive pizza menu, though not exclusively.

We ordered two starters, Brussels Sprouts ($8) studded with pancetta and Pecorino and crowded into an oblong terra cotta roasting pan, which were seriously delicious, a satisfying combination of thoroughly cooked but not mushy sprouts and crunchy pancetta cubes. We'd order it again today. There was also a straight-from-the-fridge watermelon, plum tomato, and burrata salad ($14), which we'd steer clear from forever unless they fixed the potato-like plum tomatoes (it's September in New York, one of the two great tomato months of the year) and cold-as-late-November cheese.

Ribalta ($17)

The Ribalta.

The DOC ($15), always a litmus test pie, was terrific: the Italian starter combined with 00 flour and New York water, cooked in a gas oven with wood accents, made for a yeasty, low-lipped pie that was simultaneously light and chewy, with a lovely crispy exterior and just the right hint of sourness. The low lip and the lack of excessive oil in the middle of pie made it post-Neapolitan, Neapolitan-inspired or -derived, rather than exactingly traditional.

Our white pie with sausage and broccoli rabe ($17) was not as successful: too much fior di latte and unseasoned sausage pellets that, at the very least, need salt and fennel seeds to come to life.

Pizza In Pala ($28)

Pizza in pala.

Ribalta's menu has a section for pizza in pala, twice-baked pizzas "for two" (or more), which explains the $28 price tag. They're the Italian designer version of a Sicilian pizza, but made with less oil in the crust and mercifully less cheese. The crust was lighter than it looks, with decent hole structure, and our server announced that these suckers were so big you could split your topping order, which we did. The Norma half featured eggplant, cherry tomatoes, mozzarella, and Parmesan, all well-cooked—this is the half I'd order again. Our other half featured pancetta and mushrooms; the once-cooked pork should have been cooked twice.

As for that hot dog and fries pizza? We've saved it for another visit.

Doughnuts ($9)

Doughnuts.

For dessert, we had something that was a cross between bombolini, mini-crullers without the twist, and churros, doughnuts ($9) that were moistened and lightened by adding potato starch to the dough. They were topped with Nutella, which is what just about every Italian dessert in a pizzeria is topped with. Some people are Nutella lovers. I am not, though if Ribalta used one of the expensive chocolate hazelnut spreads made both in the U.S. and Naples, I would have been very happy. The doughnuts themselves, coated with just the right amount of sugar, were excellent.

Ribalta is a work in progress. Order the brussels sprouts, the DOC, and, if you have a large party or want to take a lot of pizza home, a pizza in pala, and the doughnuts for dessert—you will be very happy Neo-Neapolitan campers. The menu items that needed work seem eminently fixable, and we look forward to going back in a month or two to see if they will be.

21 Sep 19:45

Uber update lets riders share their ETA with friends

by Jacob Kastrenakes

Uber's making it a bit easier for riders to let others know where they are and — perhaps more importantly — know how much longer it's going to take for them to get where they're going. With a new feature called "Share my ETA," Uber lets riders easily send out text messages with links to a live-updating map of their location. The map opens on the web as well, so recipients won't need to have Uber's app installed in order to view it. The app can also now estimate a rider's arrival time too, all as part of an update arriving on iOS and Android today that should make keeping others up to date on Uber-riders' whereabouts just a bit simpler — at least when they want it to be.

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20 Sep 16:39

One of Japan's Most Amazing Buildings

by Brian Ashcraft

One of Japan's Most Amazing Buildings

Japan is filled with buildings—many of them are impressive. One Osaka building, however, stands apart. It's not because it's particularly tall or even that beautiful. It has a highway passing through it.

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20 Sep 16:24

How Titanfall Could Stack Up For Pro Gamers

by Alex Mendez

Titanfall has taken the gaming world by storm. Every time I've gotten my hands on Respawn Entertainment's latest game I experience something new. It's a game that is fresh, yet familiar to fans of Call Of Duty who might be yearning for more out of their first-person shooters. It's not easy breathing new life into a genre that hasn't had much innovation in the twilight of this console generation. Titanfall certainly has its work cut out for it.

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20 Sep 16:09

Pay Attention, GTA V's Cell Phones Are Great

by Kirk Hamilton

Pay Attention, GTA V's Cell Phones Are GreatGrand Theft Auto V is an incredibly detailed game. How detailed? Well, it features three protagonists: Three men with different lives, different outlooks, different incomes... and different cell phones.

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20 Sep 16:07

Pokemon Deserve A Companion This Pretty

by Luke Plunkett

Pokemon Deserve A Companion This Pretty

After years of fan-made efforts, Nintendo finally went and released their own Pokedex app for iOS. It works, but it's kinda gross, and nowhere near as pretty as this gorgeous design by Jake Moore, which brings Pokemon into the iOS7 era.

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20 Sep 15:58

taiwanese: 21 Reasons to Love Taipei- Food Edition!

by joanh


Where does the time go? I have lots I want to share about new places to drool over, but I can't seem to put it all together. It doesn't help with the days of grey, pouring rain alternated with the cooler fall weather that's too nice to stay indoors. I've finished reading Crazy Rich Asians months ago in LA and wrapped up my binge marathons of Orange Is the New Black, Newsroom and Homeland, so I'm forced to stop procrastinating and finish up my myriad of half finished blog posts.

I thought in honor of the shout out on Buzzfeed's 28 Reasons to Love Taipei last month, I'd make a list all about FOOD, since you know I'm obsessed with food. Thanks to Buzzfeed and Kevin Tang for highlighting Taipei and the many reasons to love it- the weird (yes, the city of themed restaurants, and no, I've yet to go to Modern Toilet or the Ninja restaurant or Barbie cafe) and the wonderful (clubbing, shopping, cafe-ing, karaoke singing, eating).

So for fun, here's my own list just for food- 21 Reasons to Love Taipei- Food Edition! If it's your first time checking out my blog, hope this list helps inspire your next trip to Taipei or if you live here already, to seek out something new.

21 Reasons to Love Taipei- Food Edition!

1. Mango shaved ice

Mango shaved ice was invented in Taipei in the 1990s and since then copied around the world. Tourists flock to Ice Monster for avalanches of juicy, sweet mango atop ice, even after its move from its original home on Yong Kang St. If you don't want to wait in line, also check out Mango Cha Cha, Smoothie House or your favorite night market for this summer must eat.


2. Taiwanese shaved ice and snowflake ice

I love the blanket of sticky condensed milk over crushed ice and freshly made rice balls and red bean (my favorite is at Tai Yi Milk King), but there's no shortage of toppings for Taiwanese shaved ice. One version that is becoming trendy in the US is snowflake ice or snow cream which has a fluffier, creamier, melt-in-your-mouth texture and is being served up with flavors and toppings similar to frozen yogurt- said to have originated from the night market vendor in Shilin. A must in Taipei's humidity and heat. 

  



3. Din Tai Fung

I've come to appreciate Din Tai Fung after taking friend after friend when they were in town to visit. It's consistently delicious, quick and efficient, and you just can't beat their paper thin skin on each juicy, hot dumpling. Of course there are many other great xiao long bao places in Taipei (such as hole in the wall Little Shanghai or trendier San Yuan), but classic Din Tai Fung is the one the tourists will wait in lines to go to.


4. Carb-ilicious and soy milk Taiwanese breakfasts

The perfect place to go for an early breakfast when you are getting over jetlag- with hot or cold soy milk, sweet or salty, and fried and baked dough combinations of you tiao, sao bing or fan tuan to fill you up for the rest of the day. Look for Yong He Dou Jiang signs around town, or the basket of fried "oil sticks" out front. The previously only-famous-with-locals spot, Fu Hang, had lines snaking around the stairs and out the front entrance on my last visit there (after I mentioned it to CNN.com and it was included on its list of 40 Taiwanese Must Eats). Doh! I'm keeping all my favorites a secret from now on!



5. Ridiculously sweet fruits

Mango, guava, wax apples, pineapple- the fruits here are so sweet, you have to wonder if it's natural!

6. Ice cream wraps AKA bin chi ling run bing

This might change your life like it did mine. Essentially an ice cream burrito, there's ice cream, peanut brittle shavings and cilantro (which is optional but recommended) wrapped up in a crepe-thin flour wrapper. Salty, sweet and usually only NT$40 or a buck and some change. It's like a treasure hunt finding it- X marks the spot with the huge block of peanut brittle at the night market stands- I've had great ones at Ximending (in front of the movie theater) or Lehua or Longshan night market.

  

7. Night markets!

Taiwan night markets are late night adventures- eating, shopping, people watching, eating, bargaining, eating. Some of my best memories of my first Taiwan summer after 17 years away are from discovering hot 5NT shui jian baos and shaved ice at Shilin Night market for the first time. It's an culinary experience so unique that it's even being recreated in LA to overwhelming crowds (or so I hear). Try everything at least once, even things that look (or smell) indimidating- you might be surprised what your favorites are.


 


8. Chinese sausage in sticky rice buns AKA da chang bao xiao chang

One of my personal night market must eats- grilled sweet Taiwanese sausage stuffed in a grilled sticky rice sausage, cut in half to act as a bun, topped with some pickled or fresh veggies. Some vendors will also offer options for condiments, spicy sauces or different flavored sausages. The sticky rice gets a slight carmelized crispy skin from the being grilled and the veggies give it a nice crunch- put all together, it's SO good hot off the grill. You might even spot street vendors outside various clubs or KTVs late at night (kind of like the hot dog vendors at the Rose Bowl or Hollywood Bowl after concerst).



9. Fresh bread and bakeries EVERYWHERE

While cute doesn't always mean tasty, you can't help but to admire the adorable confections that sit next to the not-as-photogenic-but-delicious mentaiko breads, squid ink bread, garlic bread, cheese bread or pineapple buns. I don't know how all the locals stay so thin with the temptations of freshly baked bread on practically every street corner. Whether you pick bread from Taiwanese style, Japanese style or French style bakery, it's going to be fresh.



10. Baos and buns
Baos and buns for less than US$1. Yes please.




11. Spicy mala hotpot

While not for everyone, this red blood broth complete with tofu and cubes of silky, tofu-like blood inside is addictive. Hotpot in Taipei is a DIY affair with plates of raw meat to cook and fishcake to scoop out. Spicy mala hotpot so good that I even crave it during the summer. My favorite part is dipping the crispy you tiao dunk it in the spicy side just for a few seconds to soak up the broth and flavor, but taking it out and eating it before it gets soggy.



12. Gua bao
Pork belly, crushed peanuts, cilantro in a clam shell bun. Don't mess with the classic Taiwanese street snack.

 

13. Amazingly fresh and affordable sashimi

You wouldn't think that sashimi would be a must eat in Taipei, but some of the best sashimi experiences I've EVER had are in Taipei, and not at prices that would cost a week's worth of pay. I actually didn't learn to enjoy raw fish/sashimi until I was in my mid 20s and I think part of the reason is because there's so much more variety and freshness to the sashimi in Taiwan.



14. Dessert tofu AKA dou hua

Silky, sweet and topped with peanuts, minature tapioca balls or mung beans, a bowl of dou hua tofu is a refreshing Taiwanese dessert that can be eaten hot or icy cold. I love getting it from Xiao Nan Men, which also serves red bean soup and aiyu bing, a lemon jelly type dessert, all for under US$2.

 

15. Pan fried dumplings AKA guo tie

Nothing beats homemade potstickers fried up by my dad, but since he's in LA and I'm not, I've found some good substitutes until he visits. The perfect pan fried dumplings have a crispy crunchy base and right pork/veggie combination inside. The overpriced and bad gyozas in LA have made me appreciate how magical the chefs are here when frying up their potstickers. Check out the chain Ba Fang Yun Ji for ultra cheap and tasty guo tie (10 will set you back NT$50 or US$1.50), with options like curry or kimchi flavors besides the traditional pork/cabbage and pork/chives options. Even better are the ones from this hidden hole in the wall in Ximending.



16.  Beijing roast duck


Having visited Beijing recently and been disappointed at the portions and prices of Beijing Roast duck there, I have to say that this is a reason that I do love Taipei. Full platters of meat and crispy skin to share with a table full of friends or family- the ducks here are plump and the portions are generous.



17. Taipei Food courts

While you won't find Hot Dog on a Stick or Panda Express (haha!) at any of the food courts in Taipei, there's no shortage of things of places to choose from. A typical make up of a Taipei mall food courts will include Korean, Omelette rice, Ramen, Pho or Southeast Asian, American fast food (McD/Burger King or Subway), Italian (Taiwanese version of pasta), sizzling steak plates, sometimes Indian, teppanyaki, conveyor belt sushi, tonkatsu, dessert, tea shop and lots of Chinese/Taiwanese options which offer dishes cheaper and tastier than the average Chinese restaurant in the states. Check out the mega Breeze food court at Taipei Main Station which has a section of shops selling just beef noodle soups to choose from.



18.  Beef noodle soup AKA niu rou mian

Speaking of beef noodle soup, this is another reason to love Taipei. Hot, savory broth, tender pieces of beef and tendon, and a bowl full of chewy noodles- it's the dish that has its own annual Beef Noodle Festival. Whether you eat it at your fave neighborhood joint or one of the award winning places (many which I still have to try), 



19. Stinky tofu AKA chou do fu

Not going to be on everyone's list to love Taipei, but it's on mine. You can smell the it before you can see it, but the fermented tofu really does taste better than it smells (most of the time). Served hot with pickled, spicy cabbage and sometimes stuffed with garlic, it's a bite to remember. At the very least you'll have some good laughs over seeing tourist friends' reactions to the smell for the first time.





20. Bubble/boba tea shops

I love that you can get a cup of boba milk tea (aka zhen zhu nai cha) in Taipei for around US$1.50, half the usual price in the states. And Taipei shops offer up more than just tapioca milk tea- there's fruity drinks, jelly drinks, slushy drinks, and options like mini boba, pudding, passion fruit, grass jelly, green tea, as well as asking you to choose what level of sweetness and ice you want with each order. Chun Shui Tang, the inventor of bubble tea, has over 80 drinks on its menu and serves its drinks in huge jug-like glasses. I personally love the shops like Genki Q Nai (which recently was renamed) or the more well known Chen Shan Ding in Gongguan, use fresh milk and boba boiled in brown sugar so that each chewy ball has a carmelized sweet taste- try it once with less ice, no sugar, all milk.



21. Ah Chung rice noodle soup

Deceptively simple looking, this little bowl packs a lot of flavor with stewed silky rice noodles, a thick broth, intestines and cilantro- add your own mix of vinegar, chili or sesame oil. A bowl of noodles that's almost too hot to hold and you gotta eat it standing up in the middle of an alley in Ximending (unless you go to the sit down location near ZhongXiao Sogo). 


This list could go up to 100 reasons, but putting this list together (and digging out all the matching photos)  already took a lot longer than I anticipated! Haha. So it's a good place to start from if you're visiting Taipei or looking for a list of must eats. Did I leave off your favorite food reason to love Taipei? Share it in the comments!
20 Sep 15:41

Iran's secret New York City skyscraper seized by US government

by Tom Warren

The Iranian government has secretly owned and controlled an office building in the middle of New York City for years. Set on Fifth Avenue and close to the Rockefeller Center, the 36-story skyscraper houses a number of businesses across its floors. The US government has won a judgement to seize the building, and plans to use the money to compensate "victims of Iranian-sponsored terrorism."

The skyscraper, 650 Fifth Avenue, was originally built in the 1970s by the Pahlavi Foundation, a non-profit organization operated by the Shah of Iran at the time. Construction of the building was financed by a loan from Bank Melli, a bank controlled by the Iranian government. Following the Iranian Revolution, the loan was canceled in 1989 and 40...

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19 Sep 21:14

Google makes QuickOffice free, gives away 10 GB in Drive storage

by Casey Newton

In an aggressive move to compete with Microsoft, Google today made document editing software QuickOffice free for iOS and Android. The professional version of the software, which previously called $19.99, allows users to edit Microsoft Office documents on their mobile devices.

Google bought QuickOffice in June 2012 for an undisclosed price, bringing the company a popular mobile productivity suite that integrates with Google Drive storage. As part of making QuickOffice free, anyone who logs in to a Google account from Android or iOS by Sept. 26th will get 10 GB of free extra storage in Drive for two years.

Quickoffice is available for Android and iOS.

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19 Sep 21:12

Apple letting developers prevent old app versions from being downloaded

by Jacob Kastrenakes

Apple may have inadvertently made it easier for broken and buggy apps to find their way onto iPhones earlier this week, but it's quickly making changes in order to ensure that nothing too bad slips through. App developers will now be able to remove older versions of their apps from iTunes — that previously wasn't an issue because users could only access the newest version, but on Tuesday, Apple began allowing older version of iOS to download older versions of apps that still supported them.

While it was a simple change that could make it easier for owners of older iPhones and iPads to find working apps, it may not have been the best change to spring on developers. Users could have ended up accessing versions of apps that developers...

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19 Sep 21:12

Google reveals new logo and redesigned navigation bar

by Chris Welch

The rumored new Google logo is real. Google has just announced that it is updating its iconic emblem with a refined color palette and slightly altered letter shapes. The revised design matches the flatter Google logo that leaked earlier this month, and Google says it will roll out across more products and services in the coming weeks. Simultaneously, the company has revamped its traditional navigation bar in an attempt to bring users a more streamlined experience. Gone is the black bar many users see today; instead, Google's products are now organized into the same apps grid seen on Android, providing quick access to the company's most frequently used services.

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19 Sep 04:54

Apple raises over-the-air download cap in iOS to 100MB

by Bryan Bishop

With the release of iOS 5.1 Apple raised the App Store's built-in cap on cellular downloads up to 50MB. That was back in 2012, and since then Apple's entire mobile product line has been equipped with LTE while the cap has stayed the same. As spotted by CNET, today's launch of iOS 7 raises that limit up to 100MB. That means users will be able to download more apps and particularly lengthy podcasts while they're out and about. Of course, if you want to watch that latest episode of Breaking Bad, you'll still need to turn to Wi-Fi.

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19 Sep 04:54

Jackie Chan planning 'JC World' theme park to show off ancient Chinese architecture

by Nathan Olivarez-Giles

Jackie Chan wants to build a theme park in Beijing that bears his name. That could be viewed as a little egotistical, but Chan's vision does seem to have some heart to it: in a report from the The Malaysian Times, the seminal martial arts actor says that cultural preservation is a major reason he wants to create JC World. In the 1990s, Chan purchased 10 historic sandalwood buildings that are between 200 and 400 years old. Since then, the Chinese action star has dumped money into restoring and maintaining the buildings, but he's never been able to find a permanent home for most of them.

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19 Sep 04:53

Nikon's AW1 might be the best underwater camera ever made

by Nathan Ingraham

The concept of a waterproof camera is nothing new — most camera manufacturers offers a variety of waterproof point-and-shoots, and Nikon even made mass-market, waterproof film cameras back in the '60s and '70s. However, Nikon's now bringing something new to the waterproof market: the oddly-named Nikon 1 AW1 is a mirrorless, interchangeable lens camera based on 2011's Nikon 1 J1, but it keeps shooting when submerged in the water and is also shockproof and freezeproof.

Physically, it's cut from the same cloth as the J1, though it's obviously quite a bit more durable than its predecessor. The AW1 is rated waterproof down to 49 feet (even the pop-up flash is waterproof), shockproof up to 6.6 feet, and freezeproof down to 14 degrees...

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19 Sep 04:51

PSA: Battle.net authenticator may not be friendly with iOS 7 update

by Jessica Conditt
Battle.net members with a mobile authenticator on an iPhone, iPad or iPod, listen up: Today's iOS 7 update may reset your authentication info. Blizzard has a few suggestions to make sure you're still protected after the update hits:
  • Write down your authenticator's serial number and restore code, and restore it to your phone after the update
  • Remove the authenticator before updating and reattach it after iOS 7 is installed
  • Use Blizzard's SMS Protect, a free service that can remove an authenticator from your account
  • Update via wi-fi, since this reduces the risk of an accidental reset altogether
Read through the mobile authenticator troubleshooting page for specific questions, and enjoy that fancy new version of iOS.

JoystiqPSA: Battle.net authenticator may not be friendly with iOS 7 update originally appeared on Joystiq on Wed, 18 Sep 2013 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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19 Sep 04:48

On the regular

by Jason Kottke

Former NY Times restaurant critic Frank Bruni writes about the joys of being a regular at your neighborhood restaurant.

What you have with a restaurant that you visit once or twice is a transaction. What you have with a restaurant that you visit over and over is a relationship.

My wife and I eat out at least once a week and we used to travel all over the city to try all sorts of different places, just-opened hot spots and old favorites alike. It was great. But now we mostly go to a bar/restaurant1 around the corner from where we live and that's even better. Bruni covers the experience pretty well, but I just wanted to share a couple of seemingly small aspects of being a regular:

1. Our local is popular and always crowded, especially during the dreaded 7-10pm hours and double especially Thu-Sat nights. But even when I go in by myself at a peak time, when the bar's jam-packed, there's always a seat for me. It might take a bit, but something opens up and they slot me in, even if I'm only stopping in for a drink and they could seat a two-top for dinner at the bar. (A regular in the hand is worth two in the rush.)

2. This is a totally minor thing but I love it: more than once, I've come in early in the evening, had a drink, left without paying to go run an errand or meet someone somewhere else, and then come back later for another drink or dinner and then settle my bill. It's like having a house account without the house account.

3. Another nice thing about being a regular at a place that values regulars is that you meet the other regulars. This summer I was often left to my own devices for dinner and a couple times a week, I ended up at my local. And almost without exception, I ended up having dinner with someone I'd previously met at the bar. Routinely turning a solo dining experience into dinner with a friend is an amazing accomplishment for a restaurant.

[1] Something I read in one of food writer Jeffrey Steingarten's books has always stuck with me. He said there are certain restaurants he frequents that he never writes about critically. Those places are just for him and he would never recommend them to his readers. Having written for so long here on kottke.org, there are certain things I hold back, that are just for me. Having a public opinion on absolutely everything you love is no way to live.

So, no, I'm not going to tell you what restaurant I'm talking about. It's beside the point anyway...Bruni's not trying to persuade you to try Barbuto or Charlie Bird, it's about you finding your own local.

Tags: food   Frank Bruni   NYC   restaurants
19 Sep 04:32

Shiny Tablets Trick Americans Into Buying More Food From Chili’s

by Belle Cushing

The future!

Chili's has apparently figured out how to get people to spend more money on their meals: Just let them order food and pay for dinner with a digital tablet. The chain tested Ziosk tablets — like iPads for the QSR set — at around 200 locations and found that customers tipped more (the tablet defaults to suggesting a 20 percent gratuity), ordered more food (pictures and speedy response facilitate impulse orders), and ate more quickly (the tablet sits on the table so diners don't have to wait to get a check). So, Chili's — and surely other chain restaurants reading about their success (McDonald's is testing ordering apps, too) — will install tablets at almost all of its 1,200-plus locations next year. [Businessweek]

Read more posts by Belle Cushing

Filed Under: the chain gang, chili's, food news, mcdonald's, restaurants, ziosk


    






19 Sep 04:22

Bruni Celebrates Restaurant Regularity

by Alan Sytsma

Bruni goes for Barbuto's chicken.

Click on over to the Times "Dining" section today — or look in the actual paper — and you'll see ex-critic Frank Bruni's piece on the joys of being a restaurant regular (something Bruni obviously couldn't be during his semi-anonymous reviewing days). In case you needed reminding, it's a pretty sweet deal: As a customer, it's comforting to know what to expect. Staff members will recognize you and hook you up with things they might not otherwise. And, if you're Frank Bruni, you'll be "ushered" to one of the Breslin's curtained-off booths, though Grub Street doubts that same perk applies to the hoi polloi. [NYT]

Read more posts by Alan Sytsma

Filed Under: returning to the well, barbuto, frank bruni, restaurants, the other critics


    






18 Sep 04:53

LA Game Space pack stars things from Pendelton Ward, Cactus, more

by Jessica Conditt


Experimental Game Pack 01 from LA Game Space includes 23 new, trippy titles from a lineup of high-profile indie developers and pop-icon game enthusiasts, and it's available for 11 more days. The pack will eventually include more than 30 games, added as they're completed. Grab all of them now for just $15.

The cast includes Cactus (AKA Jonatan Soderstrom, creator of Hotline Miami), Santa Ragione (MirrorMoon EP), developers of Kentucky Route Zero, Beau Blyth (Samurai Gunn), Ben Vance (Skulls of the Shogun), Steve Swink (Scale), and tons more. Working together, Katamari Damacy creator Keita Takahashi and Canabalt's Adam Saltsman created Alphabet for the game pack, while Adventure Time mastermind Pendelton Ward and QWOP's Bennett Foddy are collaborating on Cheque Please.

See a list of all of the Game Pack developers, their games and their platforms (PC, Mac, Linux) here.

Swink developed Inputting, a keyboard-controlled game about getting a ball into a hole (and so much more), while Alphabet uses a similar scheme in a racing capacity. Santa Ragione's VideoHeroeS is a film-based physics game about pleasing picky customers, also to be featured at Fantastic Arcade.

LA Game Space is a non-profit organization for video game research and exhibition, funded through Kickstarter in December.

JoystiqLA Game Space pack stars things from Pendelton Ward, Cactus, more originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 17 Sep 2013 21:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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17 Sep 22:10

Legendary designer Peter Saville is redesigning Kanye West

by Aaron Souppouris

Legendary graphic designer Peter Saville is working on a new visual identity for Kanye West, according to Dezeen. Saville, who rose to fame as the designer of many album sleeves for Factory Records, says that he's been "looking at ways of writing 'Kanye West'... What does 'Kanye' and 'Kanye West' look like written down?" According to Saville, the collaboration is open-ended, rather than a single commission for a logo or specific artwork. "It's very casual."

Kanye West has made no secret of his love for design. The rapper, producer, and aspiring filmmaker commissioned renowned minimalist Claudio Silvestrin to design his Manhattan loft, paid Yves Behar to craft a custom chandelier, and owns several works by Maarten Baas. "He loves...

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17 Sep 22:02

Broken Pentagon fax machine rejecting FOIA requests, won't be replaced until October

by Adrianne Jeffries

The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) is supposed to guarantee that the press gets access to public records within a timely fashion, and has been instrumental in gathering documents related to the recent National Security Agency revelations. But the existence of the Act isn't enough to make reporters' lives easy.

Until recently, the most efficient method for making FOIA requests to the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) was via fax. It was speedy and reliable, unlike snail mail and the registration-required web portal. About two weeks ago, MuckRock reports, the fax machine stopped working and won't be back up any time soon. "We would hope that it is back up sometime in October, but could extend into November," a spokesman...

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17 Sep 20:39

Expensive dollar bills

by Jason Kottke

File this under "markets in everything": people will pay big money for US currency notes with interesting serial numbers.

In addition to the "low numbers," which stop at 100, there are "ladders," which have numbers in sequence, such as 12345678 or 54321098. These sell for as much as $1,300. A "radar" (selling for $20 to $40) is a palindrome, such as 35299253, and "repeaters" are notes with two blocks of the same four digits, like 41884188. Undis observes subcategories of each of these, such as "super radars" ($75 to $100) that have all internal digits the same, like 46666664.

And here I thought I was being pretty eagle-eyed by fishing a $2 bill out of the tip jar at the bagel place this morning. (via digg)

Tags: currency   money
17 Sep 20:30

App Store Ghosts

by John Gruber

Apple just unveiled a seemingly neat new App Store feature — the ability to download an older version of an app if the latest version of that app requires a newer version of iOS than the one you have installed on your device. Sounds great, right? Kyle Richter raises some interesting questions about it, though:

No one ever told us [developers] about it. Let me rephrase that, because it sounds pretty entitled. No developer expects Apple to run this kind of stuff by them ahead of time. The problem is no one ever thought this was a possibility. The common misconception here is when an app is updated it is updated to add new features and maybe some bug fixes. These new features may require a newer version of iOS so old users are left in the cold. The truth is a lot happens under the covers during updates, API endpoints are updated, data models changed, multiplayer protocols changed, even legal issues are addressed.

The likelihood of any complex app, especially anything API driven, working after several years of neglect are slim.

17 Sep 20:27

Diablo 3 closing auction house in 2014

by Alexander Sliwinski
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The Diablo 3 auction house is being sent to the nether realm on March 18, 2014.

"It became increasingly clear that despite the benefits of the AH system and the fact that many players around the world use it, it ultimately undermines Diablo's core game play: kill monsters to get cool loot," Blizzard Production Director John Hight writes. "With that in mind, we want to let everyone know that we've decided to remove the gold and real-money auction house system from Diablo 3."

The company believes that this move, along with the upgrades in the upcoming Reaper of Souls expansion, will create a "more rewarding game experience for our players."

JoystiqDiablo 3 closing auction house in 2014 originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 17 Sep 2013 14:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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17 Sep 01:46

Cronut Mania: Triple Breaking: Cronuts Don't Sell Out Every Morning

by Marguerite Preston

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This was the scene outside Dominique Ansel Bakery at 10 a.m. this morning. One might assume that they had already sold out of Cronuts for the day, and the frenzied masses had dispersed, but that was not the case at all:

cronutnoline.JPG

This is a Cronut purchased at 10 a.m., after waiting a total of zero minutes in line. Although the bakery did not have the Cronuts displayed on the counter with the rest of their pastries, and a sign taped to the chalkboard menu said that they were sold out, there were definitely plenty of Cronuts to be had. That sign is apparently just a permanent fixture at this point, and the cashier was happily boxing up Cronuts for anyone who asked. She said that since Labor Day, there's usually at least one day a week when the coveted pastry doesn't sell out. That day varies, but a dreary Monday morning like today makes sense.

Is Cronut mania finally waning? Clearly somewhat, and that's probably because summer vacation is over for most people. Now fewer people have time to wait in line for three hours on a weekday. But Sunday's line was still as long as ever. The bakery may have to make some adjustments to its weekday numbers.
· All Coverage of Cronuts [~ENY~]

17 Sep 01:45

Sietsema: Sietsema's Ramen Heatmap: 12 Bowls to Try Right Now

by Robert Sietsema

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123121212_bk12_bk1212123123112008_10_hasmaps%20%281%29.jpegNobody wants a steaming bowl of ramen when it's 80 or 90 degrees outside, right? But now that the mercury is plunging, ramen season is finally upon us! Here are my current 12 favorite bowls, in no particular order.

16 Sep 22:22

Metareview: Grand Theft Auto 5

by Alexander Sliwinski
Grand Theft Auto 5. We reviewed it. So did other outlets. Opinions differ slightly.
  • Edge (100/100): "Everything works. It has mechanics good enough to anchor games of their own, and a story that is not only what GTA has always wanted to tell but also fits the way people have always played it. It's a remarkable achievement, a peerless marriage of world design, storytelling and mechanics that pushes these aging consoles to the limit and makes it all look easy."
  • Game Informer (98/100): "Open world games are often weighed down by "errand boy syndrome," tasking players with menial jobs that seem beneath the ability of the protagonists or outside the cause of the narrative. ... The majority of the tasks feel more important because you can often see the direct benefit. For example, running weapons across Los Santos may increase the amount of money the airfield you purchased generates. This also applies to the heists serving as the game's centerpiece."
  • Destructoid (90/100): "Though aspects of the game remain old fashioned and more could have been done to switch things up, the end result of still a game of spectacular scope and density of content. And while the narrative is as morally reprehensible as ever, the underlying intelligence backing up the wanton immaturity manages to keep GTA V treading the line of acceptable."
  • Escapist (70/100): "Driving is forgiving, and your inevitable crashes have a low chance of tossing you through the windshield or flipping over your car permanently. Not only can you nab the fastest or best-handling car on the road for a more pleasurable ride, but you also level up each character's driving skill as you play. Franklin starts out as the most expert driver, and he has a special ability that slows down time for a short period to allow you to navigate around corners and between cars. Using the ability to win races and escape cops is very fun, and the RPG-lite mechanics of leveling provide some structure to the experience."

JoystiqMetareview: Grand Theft Auto 5 originally appeared on Joystiq on Mon, 16 Sep 2013 17:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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16 Sep 21:42

American Hero Has Eaten 12,000 Big Macs

by Belle Cushing

Denis Rosinlof is a 64-year-old Vietnam vet, washing-machine salesman, and daredevil skydiver. Also, he really likes McDonald's. He told his local news station that he's eaten at least ten Big Macs each week for the past twenty years. All told, that's an estimated 12,000 all-beef patties with special sauce, lettuce, cheese, etc., eaten in his lifetime. And he seems fine — physically, anyway. Mentally, we're not so sure. [KSL via BI]

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Filed Under: super fans, big macs, mcdonald's, the chain gang


    






16 Sep 20:52

Rockstar's iFruit app lets you customize 'Grand Theft Auto V' vehicles outside of the game

by Chris Welch

Ahead of Grand Theft Auto V's release tomorrow, Rockstar Games has launched a companion app for the game on iOS. And while the name iFruit pokes fun at Cupertino some, this mobile app isn't merely a satirical attempt at promotion; it's tied directly to your GTA V experience on consoles. Users can remotely access Los Santos Customs — the game's vehicle customization shop — and choose new paint jobs, wheels, lights, window tints, spoilers, and more for their car. Internal upgrades to the engine, brakes, and suspension can also be performed.

All of your modifications will be waiting for you on PlayStation 3 or Xbox 360 the next time you visit your garage. You can even make customizations while playing, and you'll get an in-game call...

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15 Sep 20:56

A film critic struggles with her aversion to horror movies

by Russell Brandom

In The Washington Post, film critic Stephanie Merry takes on her biggest professional problem: she can't stand horror movies. As films like Insidious and The Conjuring win at the box office, Meyer is left to wonder why the films repel her so powerfully and appeal so much to others. “The going theory is that these are fears that we have, and that what horror movies allow us to do is to either come to terms with them or to overcome them,” says one psychologist quoted in the piece. Merry's problems with the genre may be even simpler: like many moviegoers, she describes being turned off by Saw and the genre's subsequent shift to so-called "torture porn."

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