Crooning and Jamming: Las Vegas Lounge Acts Set the Vibe
On the Strip and beyond, clubs, bars and restaurants spotlight local performers who deliver some of the city’s best entertainment.
On the Strip and beyond, clubs, bars and restaurants spotlight local performers who deliver some of the city’s best entertainment.
This week, Ligaya Mishan, a chief restaurant critic for the New York Times reviews Babbo in Manhattan. Many of the old favorites are back at this hot spot once scorched by scandal, but with smart updates by the chef Mark Ladner.
In Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, these women have forged a friendship while serving baskets of dumplings at a cavernous dim sum restaurant.
Eating a burger in front of a virtual companion comes with its challenges.
In several cities where immigrants are being detained, owners say they’re struggling to stay open as fear keeps customers and workers from leaving home.
Three destinations for shio pan, torched sweet potatoes and Hamburg steaks with the works.
Few European cities combine history, beauty and walkability as seductively as this Andalusian capital.
Our latest batch of reviews includes the buzzy Cambodian spot, the Mediterranean favorite in Fort Greene and a remarkably well priced Thai fine-dining experience.
“I remember getting there and he was standing outside, smoking. It was hours of white wine and fish,” says the “Sopranos” actor.
Double Knot New York goes all out with a sushi and robata grill, Dahla brings high-end Thai to the meatpacking district and more.
The latest from David Chang’s restaurant supergroup — a 200-seat modern Korean spot — may be in a mall, but hear me out.
Turin has Baroque architecture, ‘light-as-an-angel’ pizza and a flourishing contemporary art scene.
Mister Jiu’s, Brandon Jew’s flagship San Francisco restaurant, brings a distinctly Californian point of view to his Chinese American fine dining.
In the first starred New York Times review from the Hawaiian islands, our chief restaurant critic Ligaya Mishan finds intriguing twists on a cuisine that’s already fluid with Asian influences.
And for some reason the best ones are in Brooklyn. Apologies to the other boroughs.
Nigeria’s mega metropolis is gaining attention for its youth culture and Afrobeats music scene.
De aprobarse una nueva iniciativa, los chefs de alto nivel del país podrían optar a financiación artística. Sin embargo, no todos en el mundo del arte y la cocina brindan por la idea.
Keep the comfort dining going with Delos Greek Restaurant, the reopened Confidant and more.
In Minneapolis and St. Paul, business owners work to lift up a community that has been roiled by the presence of thousands of immigration agents.
Novel approaches to the all-day cafe are working for diners and creative chefs across the country.
Since 1962, she had overseen her father’s stately Italian restaurant, Barbetta, and became one of the city’s most enduring female restaurateurs.
High-level chefs in the country could become eligible for arts funding under a new initiative. Not all in the art and culinary worlds are raising a glass to the idea, though.
Almost three of every four restaurant orders in the U.S. weren’t eaten in a restaurant, according to recent data. We spoke to readers who are devoted to delivery but question the costs.
Pizza Studio Tamaki is readying a pop-up in advance of opening in New York City, and beyond.
The city’s hottest doughnut shops are transplants, all with a unique take on the breakfast favorite.
Drive winding roads, past free-roaming horses, to the secluded white-sand beaches of this rugged Puerto Rican island.
Tacos Fonda comes to the Time Out food hall, Ops in the East Village serves pizza by guest restaurants and more news.
Brandon Jew’s flagship San Francisco restaurant brings a distinctly Californian point of view to his Chinese American fine dining.
The Sundance Film Festival is moving on from Park City, Utah. What does that mean for its longtime host?
Plus: a new hotel at Utah’s Sundance Resort, an exhibition of Sarah Sze’s artwork in Los Angeles and more recommendations from T Magazine.
Two nights a week at Refettorio Harlem, chefs turn donated food that would otherwise go to waste into a multicourse dinner that is served to anyone who is hungry.
The restaurant will serve wines that are at least 10 years old by the full pour, half-pour and bottle, alongside vegan dishes.
Lawyers for Carnegie Hall said there could be “consumer confusion” if a diner were allowed to keep sharing its name.
In the first starred Times review from Hawaii, our critic visits a rule-bending restaurant where the eating and drinking are inseparable.
The restaurant, Dooky Chase’s, is a New Orleans fixture with deep ties to the civil rights movement. Authorities say it wasn’t deliberately targeted.
Through Covid, protests, strikes and fires, the Independent Hospitality Coalition is helping local business navigate a volatile civic landscape.
Only a small portion of the city’s restaurants have applied for permits to set up dining structures under new regulations. Owners say the process is complex and expensive.
The rejection of one bar’s sidewalk seating permit may be a sign of what’s to come.
New York City was on the front lines of the Covid-19 crisis. It has largely recovered, but has transformed into a place of greater extremes.
A program to restart outdoor dining in New York City on April 1 is facing an extensive backlog of applications.
Facebook Marketplace, a platform often used for furniture and electronics, is an increasingly popular place to buy and sell home-cooked meals.
Readers respond to a guest essay by a recent college graduate. Also: New York City’s new outdoor dining program; how immigrants built America.
How missed opportunities, a $1.5 billion real estate deal, all-you-can-eat shrimp and the global pandemic sank the country’s largest seafood chain.
Readers disagree about whether putting off sentencing until after the election was the right move. Also: Risky Covid behavior; outdoor dining; a librarian’s fight.
Under new outdoor dining rules, inspectors are ticketing some restaurants and coffeehouses that have a few chairs or tables outside but no formal structures.
The city, which is among those most devastated in the country after the pandemic, is trying to lure businesses back with a free-rent period.
New requirements for the city’s outdoor dining program are being met with concern by restaurant owners.
Responses to a guest essay asserting that the pandemic likely began with a lab leak. Also: President Biden’s image problems; “junk fees” in restaurants.
Delivery-only operations boomed during the pandemic. Now Wendy’s, Kroger and mom-and-pop food businesses are rethinking their operations.
The pandemic upended everything at the Red Hook Lobster Pound. By mid-2022, the co-founder felt she had no choice but to raise the price of her signature item, a lobster roll and fries.
Many restaurants are fundamentally changing how they do business after the pandemic.
The neighbors may complain about the noise, but outdoor spaces that bloomed under a pandemic program are now a permanent and vibrant fixture of city life.
Britain’s vegetable producers are hoping this is a moment for the humble frozen pea, a cost-effective staple at a time of rising food prices.
Called one of the world’s best islands, the Philippine resort was closed by the government for six months and reopened with a cap on visitors. Now, with travelers coming back, will it continue to hold the line?
They were crucial for restaurants and cooped-up New Yorkers during the pandemic. Now their usefulness is being debated.
A road trip in the country’s South Island offered perfect wines, stunning views, intimate restaurants and the chance to make a pilgrimage to a salmon Shangri-La.
The business must reinvent itself to survive.
Downtown lunch spots that rely on catering to white-collar professionals are rethinking their business model as more employees work from home.
From Barbiecore to revenge travel, social media trends gave us a clear picture of the forces reshaping the economy.
Representative Lee Zeldin painted a bleak portrait of New York, while Gov. Kathy Hochul stressed her rival’s anti-abortion stance and his support for Donald Trump.
By promoting outdoor dining, the city’s Open Streets program has helped some eating and drinking establishments survive the pandemic, a new report finds.
More bars and restaurants are closing their doors at earlier hours, and more New Yorkers are grabbing dinner earlier in the evening. One of our reporters set off to find out why.
Readers discuss an investigation into the lack of secular education at New York’s yeshivas. Also: Outdoor dining; climate-crisis deniers.
Denver has regained its prepandemic vibrancy, with a plethora of new restaurants and hotels, and the return of some old favorites.
The Hulu drama is resonating partly because it shows workers demanding a better workplace, which is happening in the restaurant industry and beyond.
Mayor Eric Adams is a big supporter of outdoor dining, but those who dislike the program are trying to kill it in court.
As remote work persists and business deals are sealed online, many upscale restaurants that catered to the nation’s downtown office crowd are canceling the meal.
Jumbo Floating Restaurant, which closed in 2020, capsized in the South China Sea after being towed from the city. The sinking triggered nostalgia for a happier period of Hong Kong history.
Theater, art and music are flourishing, and on the culinary scene, a 13-course Filipino tasting menu and a sleek Black-owned winery in Bronzeville are just a few of the city’s new offerings.
American Express, a sponsor, said it would refund the price of the $700-a-person dinners after hearing that the chef, René Redzepi, tested positive for Covid.
The Great Resignation was in fact a moment many people traded up for a better-paying gig.