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Not Too Hot, Not Too Crowded: 6 Spots for a Late Summer Trip
Let others fight the lines and the heat while you relax on a secluded beach or bike a trail through the mountains.
Let others fight the lines and the heat while you relax on a secluded beach or bike a trail through the mountains.
A perfect Vietnamese coffee is reason enough to celebrate. But a few sweet treats can’t hurt.
At Lapis in Washington, D.C., the beloved shrimp mantoo are inspired by the chef Shamim Popal’s life and her love for Afghanistan.
A local’s guide to Tasmania, with tips on where to sleep, eat and surf.
The French Riviera resort town brims with the unexpected, including a wealth of prehistory, ancient ruins and newer attractions.
The birthplace of anime, manga and, of course, Pokémon, has child-friendly attractions at every turn. Here, six spots your children will thank you for visiting.
The renamed Kent Hospitality Group has reshuffled staff, brought in the chef of Clover Hill and made plans for the future.
New York’s Fulton Fish Market, which supplies the city with nearly half its seafood, is run by third-, fourth-, even sixth-generation fishmongers.
She was, she said, unable to cook a basic meal into her mid-20s. But she went on to a successful career as a restaurateur and an authority on Asian cuisine.
Heading to France’s capital for the Olympics, or after the crowds have thinned? A travel editor picks some recent Paris stories to help plan your trip.
Crawfish cakes with Creole aioli, a classic wild shrimp po’ boy and grits with red-eye lamb gravy are also on the menu.
The French will have to meet a welter of health and cultural requirements, but they still want to serve up some delight.
Why our food critic tossed the fake glasses and quit his dream job.
Burgers and hot dogs, yes, but also jerk oysters and crispy-bottomed seafood paella.
Plus: a Miami riverfront restaurant, cashmere blankets and more recommendations from T Magazine.
San Diego serves up gorgeous beaches, arty neighborhoods and rich history, yet it still excels at being underrated.
Pete Wells deja su puesto de crítico gastronómico en el Times, un trabajo con muchas recompensas y quizá demasiadas comidas.
His Texas-style brisket, made with exacting precision, inspired a generation of New York City pit masters, who opened a wave of smoky joints in the 2000s.
Hallie Meyer’s new Brooklyn branch of her Irving Place spot deploys the signature cloud of panna on sundaes and affogatos.
Pete Wells is moving on from his role as the Times restaurant critic, a job with many rewards and maybe too many courses.
The Times’s restaurant critic is stepping down after a dozen years on the job. Here are some of his most engaging reviews and essays.
The competitions can seem almost an afterthought as the country rolls out 80 pop-up restaurants and countless dining experiences to wow spectators.
Eliminating the tipped minimum wage and raising the minimum wage for all workers would help working people far more than a tax cut on tipped wages.
The Treasury secretary views food as a way to connect, and her dining decisions have become the subject of global intrigue.
The band said that the restaurant chain had ripped off the song and its music video in advertising videos posted to social media. The group has won similar cases in the past.
Breakfast sandwiches and lattes give way to kosho cod and Lambrusco.
Thousands of years of culture and history converge in this vibrant, coastal city known as the “Pearl of the Aegean.”
His innovative version of the chocolate chip cookie, studded with irregular pieces of dark Swiss chocolate, led to a chain of more than 100 stores worldwide.
Purslane Cafe, from the group behind Rucola and more, serves sandwiches and drinks; Parcelle adds a new location; and more restaurant news.
The chefs Lee Hanson and Riad Nasr have restored this French gem on the Upper East Side.
Will Guidara, who has a co-producing and writing credit on Season 3, talks about the power of surprise and the calling of restaurant work.
A new arts district, stylish restaurants and a museum that pays homage to the Games greet visitors to this Swiss city, home to the International Olympic Committee.
Soon, dining sheds around the city will be dismantled — no matter how attractive they are.
The meals that we love are informed as much by the experience of eating them as by the flavor of the food itself.
Exemplary pies can be found in Kathmandu, Rio de Janeiro, Kyoto and across the United States.
In Williamsburg and Manhattan, robbers have stolen watches worth tens of thousands of dollars before fleeing on motorbikes.
Cherry and mascarpone, vanilla with soy sauce caramel and more ice cream (sadly without a jingle).
Soak up history, relax in beer gardens that pop open like tulips in summer, and make a pilgrimage to Fenway Park.
Styles staffers talk about the show’s turn to fine dining and its flashy cameos.
The show is praised for its gritty realism, and some of the details are spot-on. Others, not so much, according to food insiders.
Subtle, and not so subtle, culinary references are sprinkled throughout the show’s third season.
Spice Brothers is a showcase for the power of cinnamon, turmeric and other flavors of the Middle East.
Drinks and pastries at Liz’s Book Bar, Il Mulino adds a steakhouse and more restaurant news.
The writer and director, famous for making theatergoers squirm in their seats, says he feels most at home wherever the outsiders gather in his native city.
Money-strapped millennials, inflation and the tough economics of the restaurant business have birthed a wait-in-line dining culture.
Un estudio presentó reseñas de restaurantes hechas por escritores humanos y otras por inteligencia artificial a un grupo de personas. Resultado: no pudieron notar la diferencia.
Old Bay waffle fries, loaded nachos or a Nathan’s hot dog on the Coney Island boardwalk will go nicely.
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.