#Julia Ruzicka
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Future of the Left - Sheena is a t-shirt salesman
#future of the left#sheena is a t-shirt salesman#andrew falkous#jack egglestone#julia ruzicka#jimmy watkins#noise rock#punk#punk rock#the plot against common sense#2012#Youtube
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GET TO KNOW ME MEME :::: favourite band [3/5]
Million Dead
“The footnote swallows the page, the dispossessed define the dying age”
#million dead#frank turner#tom fowler#ben dawson#julia ruzicka#get to know me meme#(mine)#my claim to hipster fame#they pushed out 2 awesome albums and then disappeared again#all before youtube was a thing so they barely left a trace
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Julia Ruzicka - Undervalue Love (Feat: Guy McKnight)
09//06/17
This is my first post in six months and who better to blab about other than Julia Ruzicka of Welsh hard hitting improv outfit Future Of The Left? The thing that made me intrigued about this very song, was the unexpected appearance of one time Eighties Matchbox B-line Disaster frontman Guy McKnight as guest vocalist. From the opening bars of this track, I am instantly hooked. Menacing bass lines complement discord riffage, and Guy's voice is as powerful as ever! The chorus has a subpop element to it reminiscent of 'Trompe Le Monde' era Pixies meets The Meat Puppets. After hearing this I honestly feel that they should do a whole album together, as this has blown my entire face off. There's been a few collaborations of late that have really caught my ears, though this one has had them peeling off the side of my head.
By Gavin Tate
for Gavin Tate's Music Journal
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Can't wait for the mclusky live dvd to come out so my ~3 mutuals on here who listen to them can catch me in a crowd shot awkwardly holding an empty beer cup and trying not to get shoved into julia ruzicka
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Here Are the 2020 James Beard Awards Restaurant, Chef, and Media Finalists
Getty/Victor Spinelli/WireImage | Getty/Victor Spinelli/WireImage
The full list of nominees
Today, on what would have been the 30th annual James Beard Awards ceremony, the James Beard Foundation announced the finalists for the 2020 James Beard Awards, which honors the year’s outstanding restaurants and chefs, as well as food journalism, books, and broadcast media. The announcement was originally scheduled for March 25, but the coronavirus pandemic forced the Foundation to cancel the planned Philadelphia event and postpone both the finalists reveal and the awards themselves.
COVID-19 has left the restaurant industry in a precarious position, to put it mildly. Restaurants are pivoting their operations to stay in business, closing temporarily, and in some cases, closing for good. When the Foundation opted to postpone the finalist announcement, it acknowledged that it did so in part to focus on rebuilding the restaurant industry, awards being the last thing on anyone’s mind. And so it came as a bit of a surprise when on April 27 the Foundation announced plans to move forward with a virtual finalist announcement and, eventually, the 2020 James Beard Awards. Today, the Foundation revealed the Restaurant and Chef Awards Gala will take place in late September, and the Media Awards will take place in late May.
In a post on the James Beard Foundation website, chief strategy officer Mitchell Davis explained that the Foundation consulted with chefs, restaurateurs, and others in the industry and determined that the James Beard Awards finalists, like the list of semifinalists announced in late February, deserved recognition for their work in 2019. “Those we consulted felt the Awards could also offer a glimmer of hope to an industry looking for light in a very dark time,” he writes. Davis acknowledged that it is also a particularly dark time for the media, which will be recognized for the first time in the 2020 James Beard Awards cycle with the finalists announcement.
Given the ongoing restrictions related to COVID-19, the format for the 2020 James Beard Awards is still undecided — but they will go on, and “take place” in Chicago at some date later this year. “We want every James Beard Award winner to have a chance to have their moment in the spotlight,” Mitchell writes. “We have partners who support this industry, who support the Foundation, who are willing to work with us to figure out what’s best for all.”
Visit Philadelphia, which stands to lose millions due to the coronavirus pandemic, is still sponsoring the virtual event. Last year, Houston hosted the finalist announcement and although there was plenty of Texas representation on the semifinalists list, including 11 chefs and restaurants from Houston, the city’s restaurants and chefs were completely shut out of the whittled down finalists list. Philadelphia didn’t see the same fate.
Below, the 2020 James Beard Awards finalists.
James Beard Foundation Restaurant and Chef Awards Finalists
Best New Restaurant
Automatic Seafood & Oysters, Birmingham, AL
Demi, Minneapolis
Eem, Portland, OR
Fox & the Knife, Boston
Gado Gado, Portland, OR
Gianna, New Orleans
Kalaya, Philadelphia
Nightshade, Los Angeles
Pasjoli, Santa Monica, CA
Verjus, San Francisco
Outstanding Baker
Graison Gill, Bellegarde Bakery, New Orleans
Zachary Golper, Bien Cuit, NYC
Lisa Ludwinski, Sister Pie, Detroit
Avery Ruzicka, Manresa Bread, Los Gatos, CA
Maura Kilpatrick, Sofra Bakery, Cambridge, MA i
Outstanding Bar Program
Anvil Bar & Refuge, Houston
Expatriate, Portland, OR
Kimball House, Decatur, GA
Lost Lake, Chicago
Trick Dog, San Francisco
Outstanding Chef
David Kinch, Manresa, Los Gatos, CA
Corey Lee, Benu, San Francisco
Donald Link, Herbsaint, New Orleans
Missy Robbins, Lilia, NYC
Ana Sortun, Oleana, Cambridge, MA
Marc Vetri, Vetri Cucina, Philadelphia
Outstanding Hospitality
Brigtsen’s, New Orleans
Canlis, Seattle
Saison, San Francisco
Swan Oyster Depot, San Francisco
Zingerman’s Roadhouse, Ann Arbor, MI
Outstanding Pastry Chef
Lincoln Carson, Bon Temps, Los Angeles
Juan Contreras, Atelier Crenn, San Francisco
Margarita Manzke, République, Los Angeles
Diane Moua, Spoon and Stable, Minneapolis
Natasha Pickowicz, Flora Bar, NYC
Miro Uskokovic, Gramercy Tavern, NYC
Outstanding Restaurant
FIG, Charleston, SC
Frasca Food and Wine, Boulder, CO
Jaleo, Washington, D.C.
Pizzeria Bianco, Phoenix
Quince, San Francisco
Outstanding Restaurateur
Paul Bartolotta, The Bartolotta Restaurants, Milwaukee (Ristorante Bartolotta, Harbor House, Lake Park Bistro, and others)
Jamie Bissonnette and Ken Oringer, JK Food Group, Boston (Little Donkey, Toro, Coppa)
JoAnn Clevenger, Upperline Restaurant, New Orleans
Alex Raij and Eder Montero, NYC (La Vara, Saint Julivert Fisherie, Txikito)
Jason Wang, Xi’an Famous Foods, NYC
Outstanding Wine Program
Bacchanal, New Orleans
Canard, Portland, OR
COTE, NYC
Miller Union, Atlanta
Night + Market Sahm, Venice, CA
Spiaggia, Chicago
Outstanding Wine, Beer or Spirits Producer
Scott Blackwell and Ann Marshall, High Wire Distilling Co., Charleston, SC
Cathy Corison, Corison Winery, St. Helena, CA
Drew Kulsveen, Willett Distillery, Bardstown, KY
Todd Leopold and Scott Leopold, Leopold Bros., Denver
Rising Star Chef of the Year
Will Aghajanian and Liz Johnson, The Catbird Seat, Nashville
Irene Li, Mei Mei, Boston
Gaby Maeda, State Bird Provisions, San Francisco
Ashleigh Shanti, Benne on Eagle, Asheville, NC
Paola Velez, Kith/Kin, Washington, D.C.
Jon Yao, Kato, Los Angeles
Best Chef: California
Jeremy Fox, Birdie G’s, Santa Monica, CA
Brandon Jew, Mister Jiu’s, San Francisco
Jessica Koslow, Sqirl, Los Angeles
Mourad Lahlou, Mourad, San Francisco
Joshua Skenes, Angler, San Francisco
Pim Techamuanvivit, Kin Khao, San Francisco
Best Chef: Great Lakes (IL, IN, MI, OH)
Gene Kato, Momotaro, Chicago
Jason Hammel, Lula Cafe, Chicago
Noah Sandoval, Oriole, Chicago
John Shields and Karen Urie Shields, Smyth, Chicago
Erick Williams, Virtue, Chicago
Lee Wolen, Boka, Chicago
Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic (D.C., DE, MD, NJ, PA, VA)
Amy Brandwein, Centrolina, Washington, D.C.
Nicholas Elmi, Laurel, Philadelphia
Rich Landau, Vedge, Philadelphia
Cristina Martinez, South Philly Barbacoa, Philadelphia
Jon Sybert, Tail Up Goat, Washington, D.C.
Cindy Wolf, Charleston, Baltimore
Best Chef: Midwest (IA, KS, MN, MO, NE, ND, SD, WI)
Steven Brown, Tilia, Minneapolis
Michael Corvino, Corvino Supper Club & Tasting Room, Kansas City, MO
Michael Gallina, Vicia, St. Louis
Jamie Malone, Grand Café, Minneapolis
Christina Nguyen, Hai Hai, Minneapolis
Best Chef: Mountain (CO, ID, MT, UT, WY)
Carrie Baird, Bar Dough, Denver
Jen Castle and Blake Spalding, Hell’s Backbone Grill & Farm, Boulder, UT
Jeff Drew, Snake River Grill, Jackson, WY
Caroline Glover, Annette, Aurora, CO
Dana Rodriguez, Super Mega Bien, Denver
Kelly Whitaker, The Wolf’s Tailor, Denver
Best Chef: New York State
Sean Gray, Momofuku Ko, NYC
Brooks Headley, Superiority Burger, NYC
Junghyun Park, Atomix, NYC
Daniela Soto-Innes, ATLA, NYC
Alex Stupak, Empellón, NYC
Best Chef: Northeast (CT, MA, ME, NH, RI, VT)
Vien Dobui, CÔNG TỬ BỘT, Portland, ME
Ben Jackson, Drifters Wife, Portland, ME
Tiffani Faison, Orfano, Boston
Krista Kern Desjarlais, The Purple House, North Yarmouth, ME
Greg Mitchell and Chad Conley, Palace Diner, Biddeford, ME
Cassie Piuma, Sarma, Somerville, MA
Best Chef: Northwest & Pacific (AK, HI, OR, WA)
Peter Cho, Han Oak, Portland, OR
Gregory Gourdet, Departure, Portland, OR
Chris Kajioka and Anthony Rush, Senia, Honolulu
Katy Millard, Coquine, Portland, OR
Kristen Murray, MÅURICE, Portland, OR
Rachel Yang and Seif Chirchi, Joule, Seattle
Best Chef: South (AL, AR, Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, FL, LA, MS)
Jose Enrique, Jose Enrique, San Juan, PR
Kristen Essig and Michael Stoltzfus, Coquette, New Orleans
Michael Gulotta, Maypop, New Orleans
Mason Hereford, Turkey and the Wolf, New Orleans
Isaac Toups, Toups’ Meatery, New Orleans
Best Chef: Southeast (GA, KY, NC, SC, TN, WV)
Katie Button, Cúrate, Asheville, NC
Cassidee Dabney, The Barn at Blackberry Farm, Walland, TN
Cheetie Kumar, Garland, Raleigh, NC
Andy Ticer and Michael Hudman, Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen, Memphis, TN
Julia Sullivan, Henrietta Red, Nashville
Best Chef: Southwest (AZ, NM, NV, OK)
Dan Krohmer, Other Mama, Las Vegas
Jonathan Perno, Campo at Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm, Los Ranchos de Albuquerque, NM
Chrysa Robertson, Rancho Pinot, Scottsdale, AZ
Silvana Salcido Esparza, Barrio Café Gran Reserva, Phoenix
Jeff Smedstad, Elote Cafe, Sedona, AZ
James Trees, Esther’s Kitchen, Las Vegas
Best Chef: Texas
Kevin Fink, Emmer & Rye, Austin
Michael Fojtasek, Olamaie, Austin
Anita Jaisinghani, Pondicheri, Houston
Steve McHugh, Cured, San Antonio
Trong Nguyen, Crawfish & Noodles, Houston
America’s Classics Awards
Previously announced
El Taco de Mexico, Denver, Colorado
Lassis Inn, Little Rock, Arkansas
Oriental Mart, Seattle, Washington
Puritan Backroom, Manchester, New Hampshire
Vera’s Backyard Bar-B-Que, Brownsville, Texas
Zehnder’s of Frankenmuth, Frankenmouth, Michigan
Humanitarian of the Year:
Jessica B. Harris
Leadership Awards:
Phillip and Dorathy E. Barker, Operations Spring Plant
Rosalinda Guillen, Community to Community Development (C2C)
Abiodun Henderson, The Come Up Project
Mark and Kerry Marhefka of Abundant Seafood
Caleb Zigas, La Cocina
James Beard Restaurant Design Awards
Design Icon
Chez Panisse
Outstanding Restaurant Design, 75 Seats and Under:
SIMPLICITY for HALL by o.d.o
Heliotrope Architects for Rupee
Vermillion Architects, LLC for Spoonbill Watering Hole and Restaurant
Outstanding Restaurant Design, 76 Seats and Over:
Hacin + Associates for Shore Leave;
Ken Fulk, Inc for Swan & Bar Bevy
Klein Agency and ORA for Auburn
2020 James Beard Foundation Book Awards
For cookbooks and other non-fiction food- or beverage-related books that were published in the U.S. in 2019. Winners, including the Book of the Year Award and the Cookbook Hall of Fame inductee will be announced on Wednesday, May 27, 2020.
American Books with recipes focused on the cooking or foodways of regions or communities in the United States.
Cook Like a Local: Flavors That Can Change How You Cook and See the World; Chris Shepherd and Kaitlyn Goalen, (Clarkson Potter)
Jubilee: Recipes from Two Centuries of African American Cooking; Toni Tipton-Martin, (Clarkson Potter)
South: Essential Recipes and New Explorations; Sean Brock, (Artisan Books)
Baking and Desserts Books with recipes focused on breads, pastries, desserts, and other treats.
Dappled: Baking Recipes for Fruit Lovers; Nicole Rucker, (Avery)
Living Bread: Tradition and Innovation in Artisan Bread Making; Daniel Leader and Lauren Chattman, (Avery)
Pastry Love: A Baker’s Journal of Favorite Recipes; Joanne Chang, (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
Beverage with Recipes Books focused on recipes for how to make beverages.
Last Call: Bartenders on Their Final Drink and the Wisdom and Rituals of Closing Time; Brad Thomas Parsons, (Ten Speed Press)
The Martini Cocktail: A Meditation on the World’s Greatest Drink, with Recipes; Robert Simonson, (Ten Speed Press)
The NoMad Cocktail Book; Leo Robitschek, (Ten Speed Press)
Beverage without Recipes Beverage-focused books and guides that either don’t contain recipes or that may have minimal recipes but aren’t recipe-centric.
The Complete Guide to Japanese Drinks: Sake, Shochu, Japanese Whisky, Beer, Wine, Cocktails and Other Beverages; Stephen Lyman and Chris Bunting, (Tuttle Publishing)
Red & White: An Unquenchable Thirst for Wine; Oz Clarke, (Little, Brown Book Group)
World Atlas of Wine 8th Edition; Hugh Johnson and Jancis Robinson, (Mitchell Beazley)
General Books with recipes that address a broad scope of cooking, not just a single topic, technique or region.
All About Dinner: Simple Meals, Expert Advice; Molly Stevens, (W. W. Norton & Company)
Milk Street: The New Rules: Recipes That Will Change the Way You Cook; Christopher Kimball, (Voracious)
Where Cooking Begins: Uncomplicated Recipes to Make You a Great Cook; Carla Lalli Music, (Clarkson Potter)
Health and Special Diets Books with recipes related to health and nutrition, or that address specific health issues, such as allergies or diabetes.
The Beauty Chef Gut Guide: With 90+ Delicious Recipes and Weekly Meal Plans; Carla Oates, (Hardie Grant Books)
Cannelle et Vanille: Nourishing, Gluten-Free Recipes for Every Meal and Mood; Aran Goyoaga, (Sasquatch Books)
Gluten-Free Baking at Home: 102 Foolproof Recipes for Delicious Breads, Cakes, Cookies, and More; Jeffrey Larsen, (Ten Speed Press)
International
Books with recipes focused on food and cooking traditions of countries or regions outside of the United States.
Black Sea: Dispatches and Recipes – Through Darkness and Light; Caroline Eden, (Quadrille Publishing)
Ethiopia: Recipes and Traditions from the Horn of Africa; Yohanis Gebreyesus, (Interlink Publishing)
The Food of Sichuan; Fuchsia Dunlop, (W. W. Norton & Company)
Photography
American Sfoglino: A Master Class in Handmade Pasta; Eric Wolfinger, (Chronicle Books)
Le Corbuffet: Edible Art and Design Classics; Esther Choi, (Prestel)
Oaxaca: Home Cooking from the Heart of Mexico; Quentin Bacon, (Abrams Books)
Reference, History, and Scholarship Includes manuals, guides, encyclopedias, and books that present research related to food or foodways.
Gandhi’s Search for the Perfect Diet: Eating with the World in Mind; Nico Slate, (University of Washington Press)
A South You Never Ate: Savoring Flavors and Stories from the Eastern Shore of Virginia; Bernard L. Herman, (The University of North Carolina Press)
The Whole Okra: A Seed to Stem Celebration; Chris Smith, (Chelsea Green Publishing)
Restaurant and Professional Books written by a culinary professional or restaurant chef with recipes that may include advanced cooking techniques, use specialty ingredients, and require professional equipment. This includes culinary arts textbooks.
Dishoom: From Bombay with Love; Shamil Thakrar, Kavi Thakrar, and Naved Nasir, (Bloomsbury Publishing)
Eleven Madison Park: The Next Chapter, Revised and Unlimited Edition; Daniel Humm, (Ten Speed Press)
The Whole Fish Cookbook: New Ways to Cook, Eat and Think; Josh Niland, (Hardie Grant Books)
Single Subject Books with recipes focused on a single or category of ingredients, a dish, or a method of cooking – such as lobster, seafood, grains, pasta, burgers, or canning. Exceptions: baking and desserts books, vegetable-focused books, health and special diets books, restaurant and professional books, and beverage books should be entered in those respective categories.
From the Oven to the Table: Simple Dishes That Look After Themselves; Diana Henry, (Mitchell Beazley)
Pasta Grannies: The Official Cookbook: The Secrets of Italy’s Best Home Cooks; Vicky Bennison, (Hardie Grant Books)
Sour: The Magical Element That Will Transform Your Cooking; Mark Diacono, (Quadrille Publishing)
Vegetable-Focused Cooking Books that feature recipes for how to prepare and serve vegetables and plant-based ingredients. Books may be vegetarian, vegan, or vegetable-focused with minimal reference to meats.
Ruffage: A Practical Guide to Vegetables; Abra Berens, (Chronicle Books)
Vegetables Illustrated: An Inspiring Guide with 700+ Kitchen-Tested Recipes; Editors at America’s Test Kitchen, (America’s Test Kitchen)
Whole Food Cooking Every Day: Transform the Way You Eat with 250 Vegetarian Recipes Free of Gluten, Dairy, and Refined Sugar; Amy Chaplin, (Artisan Books)
Writing Narrative nonfiction books, including memoirs, culinary tourism, investigative journalism, food advocacy, and critical analysis of food and foodways for a general audience.
Eat Like a Fish: My Adventures as a Fisherman Turned Restorative Ocean Farmer; Bren Smith, (Knopf)
Notes from a Young Black Chef: A Memoir; Kwame Onwuachi with Joshua David Stein, (Knopf)
Women on Food: Charlotte Druckman and 115 Writers, Chefs, Critics, Television Stars, and Eaters; Charlotte Druckman, (Abrams Press)
2020 James Beard Foundation Broadcast Media Awards
For radio, television broadcasts, podcasts, webcasts, and documentaries appearing in 2019. Winners will be announced on Wednesday, May 27, 2020.
Audio Program
The Food Programme – The Search for Esiah’s Seeds; Airs on: BBC Radio 4 and BBC Sounds
It Burns: The Scandal-Plagued Race to Breed the World’s Hottest Chili; Airs on: Audible
The Sporkful – When White People Say Plantation; Airs on: iTunes, Sporkful, Spotify, and Stitcher
Audio Reporting
California Foodways – The Curious Second Life of a Prather Ranch Cow: Biomedical Research; Trans Man Finds – and Creates – Refuge in His Family’s Small-Town Cafe; Legalizing Cannabis Impacts Food, Farming in Humboldt; Reporter: Lisa Morehouse; Airs on: KQED, California Foodways, iTunes, Google Play, Radio Public, SoundCloud, and Stitcher
Food Actually – Junk Food Actually; Reporter: Tamar Adler; Airs on: Luminary
Gravy – Mahalia Jackson’s Glori-Fried Chicken; Reporter: Betsy Shepherd; Airs on: southernfoodways.org and iTunes
Documentary
Harvest Season; Airs on: PBS
Nothing Fancy: Diana Kennedy; Airs on: Premiered at SXSW in March 2019
That’s My Jazz; Airs on: Vimeo
Online Video, Fixed Location and/or Instructional
Chef Studio: The Crumby Bits – Cricket Macarons; Airs on: YouTube
Grace Young – Wok Therapist; Airs on: GraceYoung.com and YouTube
Ready Jet Cook - How to Make Pad Thai with Jet Tila; Airs on: FoodNetwork.com and YouTube
Online Video, on Location
Eat, Drink, Share, Puerto Rico Food – El Burén de Lula; Airs on: YouTube
Handmade – How Knives Are Made for New York’s Best Restaurants; How a Ceramics Master Makes Plates for Michelin-Starred Restaurants; Airs on: Eater and YouTube
In Real Life – Why Eating This Fish Could Save Coral Reefs; Airs on: YouTube and AJ+
Outstanding Personality/Host
Alton Brown, Good Eats: The Return; Airs on: Food Network
David Chang, Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner; Airs on: Netflix
Roy Choi; Broken Bread with Roy Choi; Airs on: Tastemade and KCET
Television Program, in Studio or Fixed Location
Good Eats: The Return – American Classic: Chicken Parm; Airs on: Food Network
Lidia’s Kitchen – Trattoria Favorites; Airs on: PBS
Pati’s Mexican Table – A Local’s Tour of Culiacán; Airs on: WETA; distributed nationally by American Public Television
Television Program, on Location
Chef’s Table – Asma Khan; Airs on: Netflix
Las Crónicas del Taco (Taco Chronicles) – Canasta; Airs on: Netflix
Street Food – Bangkok, Thailand; Airs on: Netflix
Visual and Audio Technical Excellence
Chef’s Table; Adam Bricker, Chloe Weaver, and Will Basanta; Airs on: Netflix
Street Food; Alexander D. Paul, Matthew Chavez, and Shane Reed; Airs on: Netflix
The Taste of Place – Wild Rice; Jesse Roesler and Kevin Russell; Airs on: Vimeo
Visual Reporting (on TV or Online)
Fork the System – Moro Food of Muslim Mindanao: This is Filipino, Too; Reporters: Joi Lee and HyoJin Park; Airs on: Al Jazeera English Digital, YouTube, and Facebook
In Real Life– Why This $300 Clam Is so Important to Native Americans and China; Reporters: AJ+ Staff; Airs on: YouTube and AJ+
Rotten – The Avocado War; Reporters: Christine Haughney, Erin Cauchi, and Gretchen Goetz; Airs on: Netflix
2020 James Beard Foundation Journalism Awards Finalists
For articles published in English in 2019. Winners, including the Emerging Voice Award, will be announced on Wednesday, May 27, 2020.
Columns
What She’s Having: “Popeyes’ Fried Chicken Sandwich: A Delicious Distraction, a Cultural Lesson”; “Every Season Is Soup Season”; “Why a Somali Nook in East Boston Is One of the Country’s Best New Restaurants” — Devra First, The Boston Globe
Power Rankings: “The Official Fast Food French Fry Power Rankings”; “The Official Spicy Snack Power Rankings”; “The Official Domestic Beer Power Rankings” — Lucas Kwan Peterson, Los Angeles Times
Rooted in Place: “In Service”; “Hair, Food, and Hustle”; “The Best That We’ve Got” — Rosalind Bentley, Gravy
Craig Claiborne Distinguished Restaurant Review Award
“Le Colonial Is an Orientalist Specter”; “The Ultimate Chaat Truck Crawl”; “The Fantasy — and Reality — of Dining at Chez Panisse” — Soleil Ho, San Francisco Chronicle
“NYC’s Buzziest New Sushi Parlors Are Transcendent, If You Can Handle the Bros”; “Wall Street’s Underground Russian Spa Is a Dining Destination for the Soul”; “Estiatorio Milos Is One of the Last Big Restaurant Scams in New York” —Ryan Sutton
Eater New York
“Peter Luger Used to Sizzle. Now It Sputters.”; “The 20 Most Delicious Things at Mercado Little Spain”; “Benno, Proudly Out of Step With the Age”
Pete Wells
The New York Times
Dining and Travel
“In Pursuit of the Perfect Pizza”
Matt Goulding
Airbnb Magazine
“Interview With the Vampiro”
Dylan James Ho
Taste
“These Are the World’s Best Restaurants: North America, South America, Africa and Middle East”
Besha Rodell
Travel + Leisure and Food & Wine
Feature Reporting
America’s farmers in crisis during Trump’s trade wars: “Left Behind: Farmers Fight to Save Their Land in Rural Minnesota as Trade War Intensifies”; “’I’m Gonna Lose Everything’: A Farm Family Struggles to Recover after Rising Debt Pushes a Husband to Suicide”; “In Trump Country, a Season of Need on Family Farms”
Annie Gowen
The Washington Post
“The Great Land Robbery”
Vann R. Newkirk II
The Atlantic
“Value Meal”
Tad Friend
The New Yorker
Food Coverage in a General Interest Publication
The Bitter Southerner
Gastro Obscura
The New Yorker
Foodways
“An Indigenous Community in Mexico Finds Its Voice — and Strength — in Wild Mushrooms”
Michael Snyder
Los Angeles Times
“On Hawaii, the Fight for Taro’s Revival”
Ligaya Mishan
T: The New York Times Style Magazine
“A Real Hot Mess: How Grits Got Weaponized Against Cheating Men”
Cynthia R. Greenlee
MUNCHIES | Food by VICE
Health and Wellness
“The AGEs Puzzle: How We Cook Food Is Killing Us. Scientists in SC Know Why.”; “9 Easy Ways to Eat Fewer AGEs: A Stress-Free Guide”
Tony Bartelme
The Post and Courier (Charleston, SC)
“How Washington Keeps America Sick and Fat”; “Meet the Silicon Valley Investor Who Wants Washington to Figure Out What You Should Eat”
Catherine Boudreau and Helena Bottemiller Evich
Politico
“Protein Nation”
Shaun Dreisbach
EatingWell
Home Cooking
“6 Holiday Cookies That Will Win You the Cookie Swap”
Hilary Cadigan and Rick Martinez
Bon Appétit
“Fry Time”
Nancy Singleton Hachisu
Saveur
“In Praise of Schmaltz”
Rachel Handler
Grub Street
Innovative Storytelling
“Best New Restaurants 2019”
Kevin Alexander, Nicole A. Taylor, and Adriana Velez
Thrillist
“Food and Loathing on the Campaign Trail”
Gary He, Matt Buchanan, and Meghan McCarron
Eater
“Made in America”
Tim Carman and Shelly Tan
The Washington Post
Investigative Reporting
“How USDA Distorted Data to Conceal Decades of Discrimination Against Black Farmers”
Nathan Rosenberg and Bryce Wilson Stucki
The Counter
“‘The Man Who Attacked Me Works in Your Kitchen’: Victim of Serial Groper Took Justice into Her Own Hands”
Amy Brittain and Maura Judkis
The Washington Post
“The Young Hands That Feed Us”
Karen Coates and Valeria Fernández
Pacific Standard
Jonathan Gold Local Voice Award
“Forget Democratic Votes. Which Presidential Hopeful Will Eat 16 Iconic SC Foods First?”; “A James Island Meat-and-Two Secretly Switched to Carolina Gold Rice. Here’s What Happened.”; “In Prisons Across South Carolina, It’s Not a Birthday Without Cake Made by a Fellow Inmate”
Hanna Raskin
The Post and Courier (Charleston, SC)
“In Search of Hot Beef”; “Chef Jack Riebel Is in the Fight of His Life”; “Harry Singh on the Perfect Roti, Trinidad, and Life in the Kitchen”
Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl
Mpls.St.Paul Magazine
“In a Wheelchair and Hungry”; “Where to Eat Regionally Inspired Mexican Food in New York City”; “How Sichuan Became NYC’s Dominant Chinese Cuisine”
Robert Sietsema
Eater New York
M.F.K. Fisher Distinguished Writing Award
“A Mind to Stay Here”
Rosalind Bentley
Gravy
“My Mother’s Catfish Stew”
John T. Edge
Oxford American
“An Undeserved Gift”
Shane Mitchell
The Bitter Southerner
Personal Essay, Long Form
“The Dysfunction of Food”
Kim Foster
Kim-Foster.com
“Love, Peace, and Taco Grease: How I Left My Abusive Husband and Found Guy Fieri”
Rax King
Catapult
“Seeking Jewish Identity at the Sabra Hummus Factory”
Orr Shtuhl
The Forward
Personal Essay, Short Form
“For 20 Years, happy hour has seen us through work — and life”
M. Carrie Allan
The Washington Post
“How the Starbucks Macchiato Ruined My Indie Coffee Shop Experiences”
Nicole A. Taylor
Thrillist
“In Memoriam of Hominy Grill, the Restaurant That Defined Charleston”
Ali Rosen
Plate
Profile
“First Course”
Zoe Tennant
Granta
“The Fruit Saver”
Tejal Rao
Women on Food
(Abrams Press)
“The Provocations of Chef Tunde Wey”
Brett Martin
GQ Magazine
Wine, Spirits, and Other Beverages
“How Climate Change Impacts Wine”
Eric Asimov
The New York Times
“May I Help You With That Wine List?”
Ray Isle
Food & Wine
“Seltzer Is Over. Mineral Water Is Forever.”
Jordan Michelman
PUNCH
Disclosure: Some Vox Media staff members are part of the voting body for the James Beard Foundation Awards.
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The full list of nominees
Today, on what would have been the 30th annual James Beard Awards ceremony, the James Beard Foundation announced the finalists for the 2020 James Beard Awards, which honors the year’s outstanding restaurants and chefs, as well as food journalism, books, and broadcast media. The announcement was originally scheduled for March 25, but the coronavirus pandemic forced the Foundation to cancel the planned Philadelphia event and postpone both the finalists reveal and the awards themselves.
COVID-19 has left the restaurant industry in a precarious position, to put it mildly. Restaurants are pivoting their operations to stay in business, closing temporarily, and in some cases, closing for good. When the Foundation opted to postpone the finalist announcement, it acknowledged that it did so in part to focus on rebuilding the restaurant industry, awards being the last thing on anyone’s mind. And so it came as a bit of a surprise when on April 27 the Foundation announced plans to move forward with a virtual finalist announcement and, eventually, the 2020 James Beard Awards. Today, the Foundation revealed the Restaurant and Chef Awards Gala will take place in late September, and the Media Awards will take place in late May.
In a post on the James Beard Foundation website, chief strategy officer Mitchell Davis explained that the Foundation consulted with chefs, restaurateurs, and others in the industry and determined that the James Beard Awards finalists, like the list of semifinalists announced in late February, deserved recognition for their work in 2019. “Those we consulted felt the Awards could also offer a glimmer of hope to an industry looking for light in a very dark time,” he writes. Davis acknowledged that it is also a particularly dark time for the media, which will be recognized for the first time in the 2020 James Beard Awards cycle with the finalists announcement.
Given the ongoing restrictions related to COVID-19, the format for the 2020 James Beard Awards is still undecided — but they will go on, and “take place” in Chicago at some date later this year. “We want every James Beard Award winner to have a chance to have their moment in the spotlight,” Mitchell writes. “We have partners who support this industry, who support the Foundation, who are willing to work with us to figure out what’s best for all.”
Visit Philadelphia, which stands to lose millions due to the coronavirus pandemic, is still sponsoring the virtual event. Last year, Houston hosted the finalist announcement and although there was plenty of Texas representation on the semifinalists list, including 11 chefs and restaurants from Houston, the city’s restaurants and chefs were completely shut out of the whittled down finalists list. Philadelphia didn’t see the same fate.
Below, the 2020 James Beard Awards finalists.
James Beard Foundation Restaurant and Chef Awards Finalists
Best New Restaurant
Automatic Seafood & Oysters, Birmingham, AL
Demi, Minneapolis
Eem, Portland, OR
Fox & the Knife, Boston
Gado Gado, Portland, OR
Gianna, New Orleans
Kalaya, Philadelphia
Nightshade, Los Angeles
Pasjoli, Santa Monica, CA
Verjus, San Francisco
Outstanding Baker
Graison Gill, Bellegarde Bakery, New Orleans
Zachary Golper, Bien Cuit, NYC
Lisa Ludwinski, Sister Pie, Detroit
Avery Ruzicka, Manresa Bread, Los Gatos, CA
Maura Kilpatrick, Sofra Bakery, Cambridge, MA i
Outstanding Bar Program
Anvil Bar & Refuge, Houston
Expatriate, Portland, OR
Kimball House, Decatur, GA
Lost Lake, Chicago
Trick Dog, San Francisco
Outstanding Chef
David Kinch, Manresa, Los Gatos, CA
Corey Lee, Benu, San Francisco
Donald Link, Herbsaint, New Orleans
Missy Robbins, Lilia, NYC
Ana Sortun, Oleana, Cambridge, MA
Marc Vetri, Vetri Cucina, Philadelphia
Outstanding Hospitality
Brigtsen’s, New Orleans
Canlis, Seattle
Saison, San Francisco
Swan Oyster Depot, San Francisco
Zingerman’s Roadhouse, Ann Arbor, MI
Outstanding Pastry Chef
Lincoln Carson, Bon Temps, Los Angeles
Juan Contreras, Atelier Crenn, San Francisco
Margarita Manzke, République, Los Angeles
Diane Moua, Spoon and Stable, Minneapolis
Natasha Pickowicz, Flora Bar, NYC
Miro Uskokovic, Gramercy Tavern, NYC
Outstanding Restaurant
FIG, Charleston, SC
Frasca Food and Wine, Boulder, CO
Jaleo, Washington, D.C.
Pizzeria Bianco, Phoenix
Quince, San Francisco
Outstanding Restaurateur
Paul Bartolotta, The Bartolotta Restaurants, Milwaukee (Ristorante Bartolotta, Harbor House, Lake Park Bistro, and others)
Jamie Bissonnette and Ken Oringer, JK Food Group, Boston (Little Donkey, Toro, Coppa)
JoAnn Clevenger, Upperline Restaurant, New Orleans
Alex Raij and Eder Montero, NYC (La Vara, Saint Julivert Fisherie, Txikito)
Jason Wang, Xi’an Famous Foods, NYC
Outstanding Wine Program
Bacchanal, New Orleans
Canard, Portland, OR
COTE, NYC
Miller Union, Atlanta
Night + Market Sahm, Venice, CA
Spiaggia, Chicago
Outstanding Wine, Beer or Spirits Producer
Scott Blackwell and Ann Marshall, High Wire Distilling Co., Charleston, SC
Cathy Corison, Corison Winery, St. Helena, CA
Drew Kulsveen, Willett Distillery, Bardstown, KY
Todd Leopold and Scott Leopold, Leopold Bros., Denver
Rising Star Chef of the Year
Will Aghajanian and Liz Johnson, The Catbird Seat, Nashville
Irene Li, Mei Mei, Boston
Gaby Maeda, State Bird Provisions, San Francisco
Ashleigh Shanti, Benne on Eagle, Asheville, NC
Paola Velez, Kith/Kin, Washington, D.C.
Jon Yao, Kato, Los Angeles
Best Chef: California
Jeremy Fox, Birdie G’s, Santa Monica, CA
Brandon Jew, Mister Jiu’s, San Francisco
Jessica Koslow, Sqirl, Los Angeles
Mourad Lahlou, Mourad, San Francisco
Joshua Skenes, Angler, San Francisco
Pim Techamuanvivit, Kin Khao, San Francisco
Best Chef: Great Lakes (IL, IN, MI, OH)
Gene Kato, Momotaro, Chicago
Jason Hammel, Lula Cafe, Chicago
Noah Sandoval, Oriole, Chicago
John Shields and Karen Urie Shields, Smyth, Chicago
Erick Williams, Virtue, Chicago
Lee Wolen, Boka, Chicago
Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic (D.C., DE, MD, NJ, PA, VA)
Amy Brandwein, Centrolina, Washington, D.C.
Nicholas Elmi, Laurel, Philadelphia
Rich Landau, Vedge, Philadelphia
Cristina Martinez, South Philly Barbacoa, Philadelphia
Jon Sybert, Tail Up Goat, Washington, D.C.
Cindy Wolf, Charleston, Baltimore
Best Chef: Midwest (IA, KS, MN, MO, NE, ND, SD, WI)
Steven Brown, Tilia, Minneapolis
Michael Corvino, Corvino Supper Club & Tasting Room, Kansas City, MO
Michael Gallina, Vicia, St. Louis
Jamie Malone, Grand Café, Minneapolis
Christina Nguyen, Hai Hai, Minneapolis
Best Chef: Mountain (CO, ID, MT, UT, WY)
Carrie Baird, Bar Dough, Denver
Jen Castle and Blake Spalding, Hell’s Backbone Grill & Farm, Boulder, UT
Jeff Drew, Snake River Grill, Jackson, WY
Caroline Glover, Annette, Aurora, CO
Dana Rodriguez, Super Mega Bien, Denver
Kelly Whitaker, The Wolf’s Tailor, Denver
Best Chef: New York State
Sean Gray, Momofuku Ko, NYC
Brooks Headley, Superiority Burger, NYC
Junghyun Park, Atomix, NYC
Daniela Soto-Innes, ATLA, NYC
Alex Stupak, Empellón, NYC
Best Chef: Northeast (CT, MA, ME, NH, RI, VT)
Vien Dobui, CÔNG TỬ BỘT, Portland, ME
Ben Jackson, Drifters Wife, Portland, ME
Tiffani Faison, Orfano, Boston
Krista Kern Desjarlais, The Purple House, North Yarmouth, ME
Greg Mitchell and Chad Conley, Palace Diner, Biddeford, ME
Cassie Piuma, Sarma, Somerville, MA
Best Chef: Northwest & Pacific (AK, HI, OR, WA)
Peter Cho, Han Oak, Portland, OR
Gregory Gourdet, Departure, Portland, OR
Chris Kajioka and Anthony Rush, Senia, Honolulu
Katy Millard, Coquine, Portland, OR
Kristen Murray, MÅURICE, Portland, OR
Rachel Yang and Seif Chirchi, Joule, Seattle
Best Chef: South (AL, AR, Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, FL, LA, MS)
Jose Enrique, Jose Enrique, San Juan, PR
Kristen Essig and Michael Stoltzfus, Coquette, New Orleans
Michael Gulotta, Maypop, New Orleans
Mason Hereford, Turkey and the Wolf, New Orleans
Isaac Toups, Toups’ Meatery, New Orleans
Best Chef: Southeast (GA, KY, NC, SC, TN, WV)
Katie Button, Cúrate, Asheville, NC
Cassidee Dabney, The Barn at Blackberry Farm, Walland, TN
Cheetie Kumar, Garland, Raleigh, NC
Andy Ticer and Michael Hudman, Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen, Memphis, TN
Julia Sullivan, Henrietta Red, Nashville
Best Chef: Southwest (AZ, NM, NV, OK)
Dan Krohmer, Other Mama, Las Vegas
Jonathan Perno, Campo at Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm, Los Ranchos de Albuquerque, NM
Chrysa Robertson, Rancho Pinot, Scottsdale, AZ
Silvana Salcido Esparza, Barrio Café Gran Reserva, Phoenix
Jeff Smedstad, Elote Cafe, Sedona, AZ
James Trees, Esther’s Kitchen, Las Vegas
Best Chef: Texas
Kevin Fink, Emmer & Rye, Austin
Michael Fojtasek, Olamaie, Austin
Anita Jaisinghani, Pondicheri, Houston
Steve McHugh, Cured, San Antonio
Trong Nguyen, Crawfish & Noodles, Houston
America’s Classics Awards
Previously announced
El Taco de Mexico, Denver, Colorado
Lassis Inn, Little Rock, Arkansas
Oriental Mart, Seattle, Washington
Puritan Backroom, Manchester, New Hampshire
Vera’s Backyard Bar-B-Que, Brownsville, Texas
Zehnder’s of Frankenmuth, Frankenmouth, Michigan
Humanitarian of the Year:
Jessica B. Harris
Leadership Awards:
Phillip and Dorathy E. Barker, Operations Spring Plant
Rosalinda Guillen, Community to Community Development (C2C)
Abiodun Henderson, The Come Up Project
Mark and Kerry Marhefka of Abundant Seafood
Caleb Zigas, La Cocina
James Beard Restaurant Design Awards
Design Icon
Chez Panisse
Outstanding Restaurant Design, 75 Seats and Under:
SIMPLICITY for HALL by o.d.o
Heliotrope Architects for Rupee
Vermillion Architects, LLC for Spoonbill Watering Hole and Restaurant
Outstanding Restaurant Design, 76 Seats and Over:
Hacin + Associates for Shore Leave;
Ken Fulk, Inc for Swan & Bar Bevy
Klein Agency and ORA for Auburn
2020 James Beard Foundation Book Awards
For cookbooks and other non-fiction food- or beverage-related books that were published in the U.S. in 2019. Winners, including the Book of the Year Award and the Cookbook Hall of Fame inductee will be announced on Wednesday, May 27, 2020.
American Books with recipes focused on the cooking or foodways of regions or communities in the United States.
Cook Like a Local: Flavors That Can Change How You Cook and See the World; Chris Shepherd and Kaitlyn Goalen, (Clarkson Potter)
Jubilee: Recipes from Two Centuries of African American Cooking; Toni Tipton-Martin, (Clarkson Potter)
South: Essential Recipes and New Explorations; Sean Brock, (Artisan Books)
Baking and Desserts Books with recipes focused on breads, pastries, desserts, and other treats.
Dappled: Baking Recipes for Fruit Lovers; Nicole Rucker, (Avery)
Living Bread: Tradition and Innovation in Artisan Bread Making; Daniel Leader and Lauren Chattman, (Avery)
Pastry Love: A Baker’s Journal of Favorite Recipes; Joanne Chang, (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
Beverage with Recipes Books focused on recipes for how to make beverages.
Last Call: Bartenders on Their Final Drink and the Wisdom and Rituals of Closing Time; Brad Thomas Parsons, (Ten Speed Press)
The Martini Cocktail: A Meditation on the World’s Greatest Drink, with Recipes; Robert Simonson, (Ten Speed Press)
The NoMad Cocktail Book; Leo Robitschek, (Ten Speed Press)
Beverage without Recipes Beverage-focused books and guides that either don’t contain recipes or that may have minimal recipes but aren’t recipe-centric.
The Complete Guide to Japanese Drinks: Sake, Shochu, Japanese Whisky, Beer, Wine, Cocktails and Other Beverages; Stephen Lyman and Chris Bunting, (Tuttle Publishing)
Red & White: An Unquenchable Thirst for Wine; Oz Clarke, (Little, Brown Book Group)
World Atlas of Wine 8th Edition; Hugh Johnson and Jancis Robinson, (Mitchell Beazley)
General Books with recipes that address a broad scope of cooking, not just a single topic, technique or region.
All About Dinner: Simple Meals, Expert Advice; Molly Stevens, (W. W. Norton & Company)
Milk Street: The New Rules: Recipes That Will Change the Way You Cook; Christopher Kimball, (Voracious)
Where Cooking Begins: Uncomplicated Recipes to Make You a Great Cook; Carla Lalli Music, (Clarkson Potter)
Health and Special Diets Books with recipes related to health and nutrition, or that address specific health issues, such as allergies or diabetes.
The Beauty Chef Gut Guide: With 90+ Delicious Recipes and Weekly Meal Plans; Carla Oates, (Hardie Grant Books)
Cannelle et Vanille: Nourishing, Gluten-Free Recipes for Every Meal and Mood; Aran Goyoaga, (Sasquatch Books)
Gluten-Free Baking at Home: 102 Foolproof Recipes for Delicious Breads, Cakes, Cookies, and More; Jeffrey Larsen, (Ten Speed Press)
International
Books with recipes focused on food and cooking traditions of countries or regions outside of the United States.
Black Sea: Dispatches and Recipes – Through Darkness and Light; Caroline Eden, (Quadrille Publishing)
Ethiopia: Recipes and Traditions from the Horn of Africa; Yohanis Gebreyesus, (Interlink Publishing)
The Food of Sichuan; Fuchsia Dunlop, (W. W. Norton & Company)
Photography
American Sfoglino: A Master Class in Handmade Pasta; Eric Wolfinger, (Chronicle Books)
Le Corbuffet: Edible Art and Design Classics; Esther Choi, (Prestel)
Oaxaca: Home Cooking from the Heart of Mexico; Quentin Bacon, (Abrams Books)
Reference, History, and Scholarship Includes manuals, guides, encyclopedias, and books that present research related to food or foodways.
Gandhi’s Search for the Perfect Diet: Eating with the World in Mind; Nico Slate, (University of Washington Press)
A South You Never Ate: Savoring Flavors and Stories from the Eastern Shore of Virginia; Bernard L. Herman, (The University of North Carolina Press)
The Whole Okra: A Seed to Stem Celebration; Chris Smith, (Chelsea Green Publishing)
Restaurant and Professional Books written by a culinary professional or restaurant chef with recipes that may include advanced cooking techniques, use specialty ingredients, and require professional equipment. This includes culinary arts textbooks.
Dishoom: From Bombay with Love; Shamil Thakrar, Kavi Thakrar, and Naved Nasir, (Bloomsbury Publishing)
Eleven Madison Park: The Next Chapter, Revised and Unlimited Edition; Daniel Humm, (Ten Speed Press)
The Whole Fish Cookbook: New Ways to Cook, Eat and Think; Josh Niland, (Hardie Grant Books)
Single Subject Books with recipes focused on a single or category of ingredients, a dish, or a method of cooking – such as lobster, seafood, grains, pasta, burgers, or canning. Exceptions: baking and desserts books, vegetable-focused books, health and special diets books, restaurant and professional books, and beverage books should be entered in those respective categories.
From the Oven to the Table: Simple Dishes That Look After Themselves; Diana Henry, (Mitchell Beazley)
Pasta Grannies: The Official Cookbook: The Secrets of Italy’s Best Home Cooks; Vicky Bennison, (Hardie Grant Books)
Sour: The Magical Element That Will Transform Your Cooking; Mark Diacono, (Quadrille Publishing)
Vegetable-Focused Cooking Books that feature recipes for how to prepare and serve vegetables and plant-based ingredients. Books may be vegetarian, vegan, or vegetable-focused with minimal reference to meats.
Ruffage: A Practical Guide to Vegetables; Abra Berens, (Chronicle Books)
Vegetables Illustrated: An Inspiring Guide with 700+ Kitchen-Tested Recipes; Editors at America’s Test Kitchen, (America’s Test Kitchen)
Whole Food Cooking Every Day: Transform the Way You Eat with 250 Vegetarian Recipes Free of Gluten, Dairy, and Refined Sugar; Amy Chaplin, (Artisan Books)
Writing Narrative nonfiction books, including memoirs, culinary tourism, investigative journalism, food advocacy, and critical analysis of food and foodways for a general audience.
Eat Like a Fish: My Adventures as a Fisherman Turned Restorative Ocean Farmer; Bren Smith, (Knopf)
Notes from a Young Black Chef: A Memoir; Kwame Onwuachi with Joshua David Stein, (Knopf)
Women on Food: Charlotte Druckman and 115 Writers, Chefs, Critics, Television Stars, and Eaters; Charlotte Druckman, (Abrams Press)
2020 James Beard Foundation Broadcast Media Awards
For radio, television broadcasts, podcasts, webcasts, and documentaries appearing in 2019. Winners will be announced on Wednesday, May 27, 2020.
Audio Program
The Food Programme – The Search for Esiah’s Seeds; Airs on: BBC Radio 4 and BBC Sounds
It Burns: The Scandal-Plagued Race to Breed the World’s Hottest Chili; Airs on: Audible
The Sporkful – When White People Say Plantation; Airs on: iTunes, Sporkful, Spotify, and Stitcher
Audio Reporting
California Foodways – The Curious Second Life of a Prather Ranch Cow: Biomedical Research; Trans Man Finds – and Creates – Refuge in His Family’s Small-Town Cafe; Legalizing Cannabis Impacts Food, Farming in Humboldt; Reporter: Lisa Morehouse; Airs on: KQED, California Foodways, iTunes, Google Play, Radio Public, SoundCloud, and Stitcher
Food Actually – Junk Food Actually; Reporter: Tamar Adler; Airs on: Luminary
Gravy – Mahalia Jackson’s Glori-Fried Chicken; Reporter: Betsy Shepherd; Airs on: southernfoodways.org and iTunes
Documentary
Harvest Season; Airs on: PBS
Nothing Fancy: Diana Kennedy; Airs on: Premiered at SXSW in March 2019
That’s My Jazz; Airs on: Vimeo
Online Video, Fixed Location and/or Instructional
Chef Studio: The Crumby Bits – Cricket Macarons; Airs on: YouTube
Grace Young – Wok Therapist; Airs on: GraceYoung.com and YouTube
Ready Jet Cook - How to Make Pad Thai with Jet Tila; Airs on: FoodNetwork.com and YouTube
Online Video, on Location
Eat, Drink, Share, Puerto Rico Food – El Burén de Lula; Airs on: YouTube
Handmade – How Knives Are Made for New York’s Best Restaurants; How a Ceramics Master Makes Plates for Michelin-Starred Restaurants; Airs on: Eater and YouTube
In Real Life – Why Eating This Fish Could Save Coral Reefs; Airs on: YouTube and AJ+
Outstanding Personality/Host
Alton Brown, Good Eats: The Return; Airs on: Food Network
David Chang, Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner; Airs on: Netflix
Roy Choi; Broken Bread with Roy Choi; Airs on: Tastemade and KCET
Television Program, in Studio or Fixed Location
Good Eats: The Return – American Classic: Chicken Parm; Airs on: Food Network
Lidia’s Kitchen – Trattoria Favorites; Airs on: PBS
Pati’s Mexican Table – A Local’s Tour of Culiacán; Airs on: WETA; distributed nationally by American Public Television
Television Program, on Location
Chef’s Table – Asma Khan; Airs on: Netflix
Las Crónicas del Taco (Taco Chronicles) – Canasta; Airs on: Netflix
Street Food – Bangkok, Thailand; Airs on: Netflix
Visual and Audio Technical Excellence
Chef’s Table; Adam Bricker, Chloe Weaver, and Will Basanta; Airs on: Netflix
Street Food; Alexander D. Paul, Matthew Chavez, and Shane Reed; Airs on: Netflix
The Taste of Place – Wild Rice; Jesse Roesler and Kevin Russell; Airs on: Vimeo
Visual Reporting (on TV or Online)
Fork the System – Moro Food of Muslim Mindanao: This is Filipino, Too; Reporters: Joi Lee and HyoJin Park; Airs on: Al Jazeera English Digital, YouTube, and Facebook
In Real Life– Why This $300 Clam Is so Important to Native Americans and China; Reporters: AJ+ Staff; Airs on: YouTube and AJ+
Rotten – The Avocado War; Reporters: Christine Haughney, Erin Cauchi, and Gretchen Goetz; Airs on: Netflix
2020 James Beard Foundation Journalism Awards Finalists
For articles published in English in 2019. Winners, including the Emerging Voice Award, will be announced on Wednesday, May 27, 2020.
Columns
What She’s Having: “Popeyes’ Fried Chicken Sandwich: A Delicious Distraction, a Cultural Lesson”; “Every Season Is Soup Season”; “Why a Somali Nook in East Boston Is One of the Country’s Best New Restaurants” — Devra First, The Boston Globe
Power Rankings: “The Official Fast Food French Fry Power Rankings”; “The Official Spicy Snack Power Rankings”; “The Official Domestic Beer Power Rankings” — Lucas Kwan Peterson, Los Angeles Times
Rooted in Place: “In Service”; “Hair, Food, and Hustle”; “The Best That We’ve Got” — Rosalind Bentley, Gravy
Craig Claiborne Distinguished Restaurant Review Award
“Le Colonial Is an Orientalist Specter”; “The Ultimate Chaat Truck Crawl”; “The Fantasy — and Reality — of Dining at Chez Panisse” — Soleil Ho, San Francisco Chronicle
“NYC’s Buzziest New Sushi Parlors Are Transcendent, If You Can Handle the Bros”; “Wall Street’s Underground Russian Spa Is a Dining Destination for the Soul”; “Estiatorio Milos Is One of the Last Big Restaurant Scams in New York” —Ryan Sutton
Eater New York
“Peter Luger Used to Sizzle. Now It Sputters.”; “The 20 Most Delicious Things at Mercado Little Spain”; “Benno, Proudly Out of Step With the Age”
Pete Wells
The New York Times
Dining and Travel
“In Pursuit of the Perfect Pizza”
Matt Goulding
Airbnb Magazine
“Interview With the Vampiro”
Dylan James Ho
Taste
“These Are the World’s Best Restaurants: North America, South America, Africa and Middle East”
Besha Rodell
Travel + Leisure and Food & Wine
Feature Reporting
America’s farmers in crisis during Trump’s trade wars: “Left Behind: Farmers Fight to Save Their Land in Rural Minnesota as Trade War Intensifies”; “’I’m Gonna Lose Everything’: A Farm Family Struggles to Recover after Rising Debt Pushes a Husband to Suicide”; “In Trump Country, a Season of Need on Family Farms”
Annie Gowen
The Washington Post
“The Great Land Robbery”
Vann R. Newkirk II
The Atlantic
“Value Meal”
Tad Friend
The New Yorker
Food Coverage in a General Interest Publication
The Bitter Southerner
Gastro Obscura
The New Yorker
Foodways
“An Indigenous Community in Mexico Finds Its Voice — and Strength — in Wild Mushrooms”
Michael Snyder
Los Angeles Times
“On Hawaii, the Fight for Taro’s Revival”
Ligaya Mishan
T: The New York Times Style Magazine
“A Real Hot Mess: How Grits Got Weaponized Against Cheating Men”
Cynthia R. Greenlee
MUNCHIES | Food by VICE
Health and Wellness
“The AGEs Puzzle: How We Cook Food Is Killing Us. Scientists in SC Know Why.”; “9 Easy Ways to Eat Fewer AGEs: A Stress-Free Guide”
Tony Bartelme
The Post and Courier (Charleston, SC)
“How Washington Keeps America Sick and Fat”; “Meet the Silicon Valley Investor Who Wants Washington to Figure Out What You Should Eat”
Catherine Boudreau and Helena Bottemiller Evich
Politico
“Protein Nation”
Shaun Dreisbach
EatingWell
Home Cooking
“6 Holiday Cookies That Will Win You the Cookie Swap”
Hilary Cadigan and Rick Martinez
Bon Appétit
“Fry Time”
Nancy Singleton Hachisu
Saveur
“In Praise of Schmaltz”
Rachel Handler
Grub Street
Innovative Storytelling
“Best New Restaurants 2019”
Kevin Alexander, Nicole A. Taylor, and Adriana Velez
Thrillist
“Food and Loathing on the Campaign Trail”
Gary He, Matt Buchanan, and Meghan McCarron
Eater
“Made in America”
Tim Carman and Shelly Tan
The Washington Post
Investigative Reporting
“How USDA Distorted Data to Conceal Decades of Discrimination Against Black Farmers”
Nathan Rosenberg and Bryce Wilson Stucki
The Counter
“‘The Man Who Attacked Me Works in Your Kitchen’: Victim of Serial Groper Took Justice into Her Own Hands”
Amy Brittain and Maura Judkis
The Washington Post
“The Young Hands That Feed Us”
Karen Coates and Valeria Fernández
Pacific Standard
Jonathan Gold Local Voice Award
“Forget Democratic Votes. Which Presidential Hopeful Will Eat 16 Iconic SC Foods First?”; “A James Island Meat-and-Two Secretly Switched to Carolina Gold Rice. Here’s What Happened.”; “In Prisons Across South Carolina, It’s Not a Birthday Without Cake Made by a Fellow Inmate”
Hanna Raskin
The Post and Courier (Charleston, SC)
“In Search of Hot Beef”; “Chef Jack Riebel Is in the Fight of His Life”; “Harry Singh on the Perfect Roti, Trinidad, and Life in the Kitchen”
Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl
Mpls.St.Paul Magazine
“In a Wheelchair and Hungry”; “Where to Eat Regionally Inspired Mexican Food in New York City”; “How Sichuan Became NYC’s Dominant Chinese Cuisine”
Robert Sietsema
Eater New York
M.F.K. Fisher Distinguished Writing Award
“A Mind to Stay Here”
Rosalind Bentley
Gravy
“My Mother’s Catfish Stew”
John T. Edge
Oxford American
“An Undeserved Gift”
Shane Mitchell
The Bitter Southerner
Personal Essay, Long Form
“The Dysfunction of Food”
Kim Foster
Kim-Foster.com
“Love, Peace, and Taco Grease: How I Left My Abusive Husband and Found Guy Fieri”
Rax King
Catapult
“Seeking Jewish Identity at the Sabra Hummus Factory”
Orr Shtuhl
The Forward
Personal Essay, Short Form
“For 20 Years, happy hour has seen us through work — and life”
M. Carrie Allan
The Washington Post
“How the Starbucks Macchiato Ruined My Indie Coffee Shop Experiences”
Nicole A. Taylor
Thrillist
“In Memoriam of Hominy Grill, the Restaurant That Defined Charleston”
Ali Rosen
Plate
Profile
“First Course”
Zoe Tennant
Granta
“The Fruit Saver”
Tejal Rao
Women on Food
(Abrams Press)
“The Provocations of Chef Tunde Wey”
Brett Martin
GQ Magazine
Wine, Spirits, and Other Beverages
“How Climate Change Impacts Wine”
Eric Asimov
The New York Times
“May I Help You With That Wine List?”
Ray Isle
Food & Wine
“Seltzer Is Over. Mineral Water Is Forever.”
Jordan Michelman
PUNCH
Disclosure: Some Vox Media staff members are part of the voting body for the James Beard Foundation Awards.
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Staff Picks: January
This month I’m asking the staff to choose visuals that correlate with their songs. This could be a photo they took, art or graphics they made, or even someone else’s work as long as they are credited. I wanted to take a break from writing, and visuals seem like an awesome alternative. Song wise, these are just what we’ve been digging lately; maybe a new personal discovery or maybe an old favorite.
Listen: https://open.spotify.com/user/23tashaa/playlist/4bddrdEf12dqZXz6ljHLXT
Era Extraña by Neon Indian
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/3iNyJNTzOxgcTdhlsqcwM6
song choice & photo by Tasha Bielaga, editor-in-chief
Winners by Clones of Clones
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/4JK5Qh4Pvhmd6HS4J01qV5
Song choice & photo by Lauren Lowell, photographer
Yellow Brick Road by Angus & Julia Stone
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/56VXpvquRnuWYZp6abwTyf
Song choice & photo by Aili Hauptmann, photographer
Stay Loose by BRONCHO
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/2hwXsSTs5oY2ffPgHtgRf7
Song choice & photo by Lindsey Fox, photographer
Alona by The Plastics
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/77oPBfV05yqQHGaq31OxFS
Song choice by Makari Andreotti, writer
Photo credit: ifeelanoceanoftears.tumblr.com
Hey Moon by John Maus
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/6KbpJjsh3U1yU1tiEzJvQV
Song choice by Jasmine Rodriguez, writer
Photo Credit: Will Emmons https://www.instagram.com/emmonswilliam/
Walking Home by HINDS
Spotify link: spotify:track:2u3zCt4ax2LLJOfWfv0OAy
Song choice & photo by Melody J. Myers, writer
Sweet Talk by The Killers
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/4IBTEftHDFMV8femNMlfMP
Song choice by Erika Alvarez, writer
Photo credit: Jacob Stoltz http://jacobstoltz.com/cigarette-lovers.html
Cigarette Buzz by Jane’s Party
Spotify Link: https://open.spotify.com/track/6Y5x2Ygid7eQd1tbUXLiBq
Song choice & photo by Dakotah Wilde, photographer & writer
Dreamer - Stripped Down by Kaptan Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/6Y0HlqAIaPvvP67GiXYgZD
Song choice & photo by Marisa Riley, photographer
Take This Love by Brothers and Company
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/74ehQPUbiEVkUM0UdmkVzc
Song choice by Katherine Stallard, writer
Photo credit: Madi Hansen (https://www.instagram.com/madi.hansen/)
Match Collector by La Lenguas
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/42jKcCN0rGb2ceLYiLfBQp
Song choice & art/photo by Kiley Early, writer
I Will Not Sing a Hateful Song by Constantines
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/25hl2ZQghAuEIRj92FkbOv
Song choice by Maggie Montgomery, photographer
Photo credit: Tasha Marie https://instagram.com/p/BLM1tOGgSTV/
She’s Really All I Need by Mac DeMarco
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/6ntqezTa3kJ05AburXDS6L
Song choice & photo by Eva Burns, writer
Hallelujah California by Luna Shadows
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/3Yli6uJEhTTVQm1mXjeEeZ
Song choice & photo by Inet Tino
Wappingers Creek by Told Slant
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/7MJY09YZ7LVn4J4pW3YOJM
Song choice by Joe Ruzicka, photographer
Photo Credits: Kevin Russ ( www.instagram.com/kevinruss )
Blah Blah Blah by My God
Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/track/3aeQcecvoUqmWqiwxjfL5S
song choice by Erin Christie, writer, photo credit: Blanco Pages https://blancopages.com
To me, “My God” is a song filled to the brim with pure light and solace—the simple vibe of this song reminds me of the color of the sky right before the sun sets—a deep purple-y, pink draped across the horizon and serving as a backdrop for the wild, spinning world around us. I see flowers swaying in the breeze in time with the flowing melody and riffs, almost as if they want to dance and move along with the rolling of our shoulders and hips. As the sun further sinks, the world is embraced in a deep glow and as the song draws to a close, the melodic and beautifully haunting vocals serves as a lullaby as we are surrounded by a cool black, our breaths going up in smoke and fading into the night.
#staff picks#january#january staff picks#playlists#new music to listen to#music to listen to#january playlist
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CONF: Border Control: On the Edges of American Art (Liverpool, 25-26 May 17)
Tate Liverpool, Albert Dock, Liverpool Waterfront, Liverpool L3 4BB,
UK, May 25 - 26, 2017 Registration deadline: May 5, 2017
Border Control: On the Edges of American Art Thursday 25 and Friday 26 May 2017 Tate Liverpool, Albert Dock, Liverpool Waterfront, Liverpool L3 4BB, UK
Conference convened by Julia Bailey (Tate Research) and Alex Taylor (University of Pittsburgh) Supported by the Terra Foundation for American Art
Reserve your place now for this major international conference. Led by Tate Research, the two-day event brings together historians of art and visual culture, to share new scholarship exploring the crossed boundaries and expanded limits of art from the United States.
Recent histories of American art have strived to uncover the varied acts of traversal and attempts at containment that have shaped its development. As migration and expatriatism have come to be understood among its defining characteristics, once carefully delineated edges between the national and the foreign seem increasingly porous. This shift corresponds with the dissolution of other kinds of borders. Artists have long transgressed the limits of artistic movement, medium specificity and other imposed restrictions, sometimes sneaking well outside the bounds of art itself. Historians of American art have also begun to more actively cross the disciplinary limits that once constrained the field.
Led by keynote speakers Philip Ursprung (Professor of the History of Art and Architecture, ETH Zurich) and Cécile Whiting (Chancellor¹s Professor, University of California, Irvine), ŒBorder Control: On the Edges of American Art¹ will embrace scholarship that attends to the boundaries of American art in the broadest visual, historical and conceptual terms.
This conference is presented as the culmination of the three-year Tate Research project ŒRefiguring American Art¹, and coincides with a related display at Tate Liverpool.
FREE BUT TICKETED As space is limited, attendees must RSVP to [email protected] by 5 May 2017 Places will be allocated on a first come, first served basis
SCHEDULE
Thursday 25 May
14.00 Arrival and coffee
14.30 Welcome Caroline Collier (Director, Partnerships and Programmes, Tate) John Davis (Executive Director for Europe and Global Academic Programs, Terra Foundation for American Art)
14.50 Introductory Remarks | Julia Bailey and Alex Taylor
15.00 Keynote Philip Ursprung Professor of the History of Art and Architecture, ETH Zurich ŒMost humans, it seems, still put up fences around their acts and thoughts¹: The Legacy of Allan Kaprow
15.40 Break
16.00 Session 1: Performing the Political Monica Steinberg Postdoctoral Research Fellow, University of Southern California Political Re-presentation: Artist-Candidates and the Boundaries of the Electoral Process
Catherine Spencer Lecturer, University of St Andrews Simultaneous Experience: Performance Art and the Psychology of the Border Zone
John A. Tyson Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Curatorial Fellow, National Gallery of Art ŒOn Sale at the Fondation Maeght¹: Hans Haacke¹s Un-American Art
Faye Gleisser Assistant Professor, Indiana University Artist Residency as Cultural Conduit: Sarabhai Patronage and the Stakes of Sponsorship
17.20 Discussion, chaired by Julia Bailey
18.00 Drinks reception and private view of the display Constellations: Highlights from the Nation¹s Collection of Modern Art. Bernard Perlin, Orthodox Boys 1948
20.00 End
Friday 26 May
09.30 Arrival and coffee
10.00 Welcome | Alex Taylor and Julia Bailey
10.20 Session 2: Entering the Common Culture Anthony Grudin Associate Professor, University of Vermont Policing Art¹s Borders: Pop Art and Vulgarity in the 1960s
Marina Moskowitz Reader, University of Glasgow and Edwin Pickstone, Lecturer, Glasgow School of Art Interdisciplinary: A Conversation about Rudolph Ruzicka
Suzanne Hudson Associate Professor, University of Southern California ŒToward a Happier and More Successful Life,¹ or When Veterans Made Art in the Modern Museum
Sarah Rich Associate Professor, Penn State Ellsworth Kelly¹s Abstraction
11.40 Discussion, chaired by Alex Taylor
12.20 Lunch
13.20 Keynote Cécile Whiting Chancellor¹s Professor, University of California, Irvine The Panorama and the Globe: Expanding the American Landscape in World War II
14.00 Session 3: Traversing Space, Transcending Place
Fiona Curran Senior Tutor, Royal College of Art Between the Earth and the Sky: Planetary Borders in Vija Celmins¹ ŒUntitled (Desert/Galaxy)¹
Matthew Holman PhD Candidate, University College London ŒBorders Meandering But Determined¹: Becoming an ŒApatride¹ with Joan Mitchell and John Ashbery (195965)
Elizabeth Buhe PhD Candidate, Institute of Fine Arts, NYU Sam Francis¹s Polycentric Abstraction
15.00 Discussion, chaired by Moran Sheleg, PhD Candidate, UCL
15.40 Response Jo Applin, Lecturer, Courtauld Institute of Art
16.00 End
Further details and full schedule are available at http://www.tate.org.uk/about/projects/refiguring-american-art/event-may-20 17-border-control
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The proportion of circulating CD45RO+CD8+ memory T cells is correlated with clinical response in melanoma patients treated with ipilimumab
Publication date: April 2017 Source:European Journal of Cancer, Volume 75 Author(s): Julia K. Tietze, Daniela Angelova, Markus V. Heppt, Markus Reinholz, William J. Murphy, Michael Spannagl, Thomas Ruzicka, Carola Berking BackgroundImmune checkpoint blockade (ICB) has been a breakthrough in the treatment of metastatic melanoma. But with only about 20–40% long-term responders and severe side-effects in about 12–17%, finding predictive markers for treatment response is of great interest.MethodsWe prospectively assessed clinical data, haematologic parameters and freshly isolated peripheral blood mononuclear cells of 30 patients treated with ipilimumab (n = 21) and pembrolizumab (n = 9) prior to the first 4 cycles with ICB and before the first tumour assessment.ResultsWe discovered that the baseline levels of CD45RO+CD8+ T cells significantly differed among the patients. Thirteen (43%) of our patients had normal baseline levels of CD45RO+CD8+ T cells, whereas 17 (57%) patients were low on CD45RO+CD8+ T cells. The baseline levels of CD45RO+CD8+ T cells correlated significantly with the response to ipilimumab but not pembrolizumab. Patients with baseline levels of lower/equal 25% of CD45RO+CD8+ T cells did not respond to treatment with ipilimumab. Phenotyping the CD8+ T cells in patients treated with ipilimumab revealed an activated HLA-DR+CD25− phenotype, implying antigen non-specific stimulation. The levels of the HLA-DR+CD25−CD8+ T cells were significantly higher in patients with a normal baseline of CD45RO+CD8+ T cells and even increased significantly during treatment. Furthermore, proliferation of melanoma antigen recognized by T cells 1 (MART-1)-specific CD8+ T cells was not observed. Patients with normal baseline levels of CD45RO+CD8+ T cells showed a significant longer overall survival when treated with ipilimumab but not pembrolizumab.ConclusionPatients with normal baseline levels of CD45RO+CD8+ T cells respond significantly more frequently to treatment with ipilimumab and the CD8+ T cells appear to be antigen non-specifically activated. The baseline level of CD45RO+CD8+ T cells represents a promising factor as biomarker for the prediction of the response to ipilimumab. http://ift.tt/2mzAOkn
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oi, ainda tem alguém aqui? usando esse troço?
e eu me remodelei de novo. esse som é maravilhoso. eu sumi. eu não consigo me explicar. mas. não. importa. mais. tudo bem. eu aprendi a conviver com essa confusão. eu mesma fiz um bambolê. eu tenho muita raiva, precisava de um. agora eu tenho. agora eu danço. eu não consegui organizar a minha bagunça e continuo precisando de férias. um tempo pra mim, sabe. talvez eu tenha substituído coisas. aparentemente, ou tentado substituir pela minha mais nova aquisição circular que me roda e me roda. eu me sinto mais centrada, sensata, depois de uns giros. é incrível. eu tenho substituído e substituído. tentado chegar aquele ponto. aquele pontinho. onde eu era só. somente plena. pura e simples. eu já estive muito bem sozinha. bambodança ajuda nisso. depende de mim.
eu queria um vocal feminino novo. agora eu tenho, esse aí em cima. mas nada substitui cat power. eu não tentei substituí-la. talvez ela tenha sido a única coisa que não tentei substituir. minha amiga musical, que sempre que ouço eu encontro novas formas de ouvir. mais e mais. certa feita, achei que a sharon van etten fosse uma boa substituta, mas foi ilusão. tudo delusional na minha vida. estou tentando buscar coisas concretas durante toda a minha vida. círculos e círculos. tudo é a droga de uns círculos.
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Julia Ruzicka ft. Black Francis - Painter Man Is Coming
Future of the Left-bassiste Julia Ruzicka heeft in de loop der jaren een album opgenomen met allerlei verschillende gasten. De meest voor de hand liggende van allemaal is er ook bij: Black Francis van The Pixies.
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Million Dead
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"Help me, I didn't want my own life!" He screamed at anybody who could hear, "But I definitely didn't want to change so much That the angels in the mirror couldn't recognize me"
#rock#andy falkous#Jack Egglestone#Jimmy Watkins#Julia Ruzicka#alternative rock#How To Stop Your Brain In An Accident
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Getty/Victor Spinelli/WireImage | Getty/Victor Spinelli/WireImage The full list of nominees Today, on what would have been the 30th annual James Beard Awards ceremony, the James Beard Foundation announced the finalists for the 2020 James Beard Awards, which honors the year’s outstanding restaurants and chefs, as well as food journalism, books, and broadcast media. The announcement was originally scheduled for March 25, but the coronavirus pandemic forced the Foundation to cancel the planned Philadelphia event and postpone both the finalists reveal and the awards themselves. COVID-19 has left the restaurant industry in a precarious position, to put it mildly. Restaurants are pivoting their operations to stay in business, closing temporarily, and in some cases, closing for good. When the Foundation opted to postpone the finalist announcement, it acknowledged that it did so in part to focus on rebuilding the restaurant industry, awards being the last thing on anyone’s mind. And so it came as a bit of a surprise when on April 27 the Foundation announced plans to move forward with a virtual finalist announcement and, eventually, the 2020 James Beard Awards. Today, the Foundation revealed the Restaurant and Chef Awards Gala will take place in late September, and the Media Awards will take place in late May. In a post on the James Beard Foundation website, chief strategy officer Mitchell Davis explained that the Foundation consulted with chefs, restaurateurs, and others in the industry and determined that the James Beard Awards finalists, like the list of semifinalists announced in late February, deserved recognition for their work in 2019. “Those we consulted felt the Awards could also offer a glimmer of hope to an industry looking for light in a very dark time,” he writes. Davis acknowledged that it is also a particularly dark time for the media, which will be recognized for the first time in the 2020 James Beard Awards cycle with the finalists announcement. Given the ongoing restrictions related to COVID-19, the format for the 2020 James Beard Awards is still undecided — but they will go on, and “take place” in Chicago at some date later this year. “We want every James Beard Award winner to have a chance to have their moment in the spotlight,” Mitchell writes. “We have partners who support this industry, who support the Foundation, who are willing to work with us to figure out what’s best for all.” Visit Philadelphia, which stands to lose millions due to the coronavirus pandemic, is still sponsoring the virtual event. Last year, Houston hosted the finalist announcement and although there was plenty of Texas representation on the semifinalists list, including 11 chefs and restaurants from Houston, the city’s restaurants and chefs were completely shut out of the whittled down finalists list. Philadelphia didn’t see the same fate. Below, the 2020 James Beard Awards finalists. James Beard Foundation Restaurant and Chef Awards Finalists Best New Restaurant Automatic Seafood & Oysters, Birmingham, AL Demi, Minneapolis Eem, Portland, OR Fox & the Knife, Boston Gado Gado, Portland, OR Gianna, New Orleans Kalaya, Philadelphia Nightshade, Los Angeles Pasjoli, Santa Monica, CA Verjus, San Francisco Outstanding Baker Graison Gill, Bellegarde Bakery, New Orleans Zachary Golper, Bien Cuit, NYC Lisa Ludwinski, Sister Pie, Detroit Avery Ruzicka, Manresa Bread, Los Gatos, CA Maura Kilpatrick, Sofra Bakery, Cambridge, MA i Outstanding Bar Program Anvil Bar & Refuge, Houston Expatriate, Portland, OR Kimball House, Decatur, GA Lost Lake, Chicago Trick Dog, San Francisco Outstanding Chef David Kinch, Manresa, Los Gatos, CA Corey Lee, Benu, San Francisco Donald Link, Herbsaint, New Orleans Missy Robbins, Lilia, NYC Ana Sortun, Oleana, Cambridge, MA Marc Vetri, Vetri Cucina, Philadelphia Outstanding Hospitality Brigtsen’s, New Orleans Canlis, Seattle Saison, San Francisco Swan Oyster Depot, San Francisco Zingerman’s Roadhouse, Ann Arbor, MI Outstanding Pastry Chef Lincoln Carson, Bon Temps, Los Angeles Juan Contreras, Atelier Crenn, San Francisco Margarita Manzke, République, Los Angeles Diane Moua, Spoon and Stable, Minneapolis Natasha Pickowicz, Flora Bar, NYC Miro Uskokovic, Gramercy Tavern, NYC Outstanding Restaurant FIG, Charleston, SC Frasca Food and Wine, Boulder, CO Jaleo, Washington, D.C. Pizzeria Bianco, Phoenix Quince, San Francisco Outstanding Restaurateur Paul Bartolotta, The Bartolotta Restaurants, Milwaukee (Ristorante Bartolotta, Harbor House, Lake Park Bistro, and others) Jamie Bissonnette and Ken Oringer, JK Food Group, Boston (Little Donkey, Toro, Coppa) JoAnn Clevenger, Upperline Restaurant, New Orleans Alex Raij and Eder Montero, NYC (La Vara, Saint Julivert Fisherie, Txikito) Jason Wang, Xi’an Famous Foods, NYC Outstanding Wine Program Bacchanal, New Orleans Canard, Portland, OR COTE, NYC Miller Union, Atlanta Night + Market Sahm, Venice, CA Spiaggia, Chicago Outstanding Wine, Beer or Spirits Producer Scott Blackwell and Ann Marshall, High Wire Distilling Co., Charleston, SC Cathy Corison, Corison Winery, St. Helena, CA Drew Kulsveen, Willett Distillery, Bardstown, KY Todd Leopold and Scott Leopold, Leopold Bros., Denver Rising Star Chef of the Year Will Aghajanian and Liz Johnson, The Catbird Seat, Nashville Irene Li, Mei Mei, Boston Gaby Maeda, State Bird Provisions, San Francisco Ashleigh Shanti, Benne on Eagle, Asheville, NC Paola Velez, Kith/Kin, Washington, D.C. Jon Yao, Kato, Los Angeles Best Chef: California Jeremy Fox, Birdie G’s, Santa Monica, CA Brandon Jew, Mister Jiu’s, San Francisco Jessica Koslow, Sqirl, Los Angeles Mourad Lahlou, Mourad, San Francisco Joshua Skenes, Angler, San Francisco Pim Techamuanvivit, Kin Khao, San Francisco Best Chef: Great Lakes (IL, IN, MI, OH) Gene Kato, Momotaro, Chicago Jason Hammel, Lula Cafe, Chicago Noah Sandoval, Oriole, Chicago John Shields and Karen Urie Shields, Smyth, Chicago Erick Williams, Virtue, Chicago Lee Wolen, Boka, Chicago Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic (D.C., DE, MD, NJ, PA, VA) Amy Brandwein, Centrolina, Washington, D.C. Nicholas Elmi, Laurel, Philadelphia Rich Landau, Vedge, Philadelphia Cristina Martinez, South Philly Barbacoa, Philadelphia Jon Sybert, Tail Up Goat, Washington, D.C. Cindy Wolf, Charleston, Baltimore Best Chef: Midwest (IA, KS, MN, MO, NE, ND, SD, WI) Steven Brown, Tilia, Minneapolis Michael Corvino, Corvino Supper Club & Tasting Room, Kansas City, MO Michael Gallina, Vicia, St. Louis Jamie Malone, Grand Café, Minneapolis Christina Nguyen, Hai Hai, Minneapolis Best Chef: Mountain (CO, ID, MT, UT, WY) Carrie Baird, Bar Dough, Denver Jen Castle and Blake Spalding, Hell’s Backbone Grill & Farm, Boulder, UT Jeff Drew, Snake River Grill, Jackson, WY Caroline Glover, Annette, Aurora, CO Dana Rodriguez, Super Mega Bien, Denver Kelly Whitaker, The Wolf’s Tailor, Denver Best Chef: New York State Sean Gray, Momofuku Ko, NYC Brooks Headley, Superiority Burger, NYC Junghyun Park, Atomix, NYC Daniela Soto-Innes, ATLA, NYC Alex Stupak, Empellón, NYC Best Chef: Northeast (CT, MA, ME, NH, RI, VT) Vien Dobui, CÔNG TỬ BỘT, Portland, ME Ben Jackson, Drifters Wife, Portland, ME Tiffani Faison, Orfano, Boston Krista Kern Desjarlais, The Purple House, North Yarmouth, ME Greg Mitchell and Chad Conley, Palace Diner, Biddeford, ME Cassie Piuma, Sarma, Somerville, MA Best Chef: Northwest & Pacific (AK, HI, OR, WA) Peter Cho, Han Oak, Portland, OR Gregory Gourdet, Departure, Portland, OR Chris Kajioka and Anthony Rush, Senia, Honolulu Katy Millard, Coquine, Portland, OR Kristen Murray, MÅURICE, Portland, OR Rachel Yang and Seif Chirchi, Joule, Seattle Best Chef: South (AL, AR, Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, FL, LA, MS) Jose Enrique, Jose Enrique, San Juan, PR Kristen Essig and Michael Stoltzfus, Coquette, New Orleans Michael Gulotta, Maypop, New Orleans Mason Hereford, Turkey and the Wolf, New Orleans Isaac Toups, Toups’ Meatery, New Orleans Best Chef: Southeast (GA, KY, NC, SC, TN, WV) Katie Button, Cúrate, Asheville, NC Cassidee Dabney, The Barn at Blackberry Farm, Walland, TN Cheetie Kumar, Garland, Raleigh, NC Andy Ticer and Michael Hudman, Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen, Memphis, TN Julia Sullivan, Henrietta Red, Nashville Best Chef: Southwest (AZ, NM, NV, OK) Dan Krohmer, Other Mama, Las Vegas Jonathan Perno, Campo at Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm, Los Ranchos de Albuquerque, NM Chrysa Robertson, Rancho Pinot, Scottsdale, AZ Silvana Salcido Esparza, Barrio Café Gran Reserva, Phoenix Jeff Smedstad, Elote Cafe, Sedona, AZ James Trees, Esther’s Kitchen, Las Vegas Best Chef: Texas Kevin Fink, Emmer & Rye, Austin Michael Fojtasek, Olamaie, Austin Anita Jaisinghani, Pondicheri, Houston Steve McHugh, Cured, San Antonio Trong Nguyen, Crawfish & Noodles, Houston America’s Classics Awards Previously announced El Taco de Mexico, Denver, Colorado Lassis Inn, Little Rock, Arkansas Oriental Mart, Seattle, Washington Puritan Backroom, Manchester, New Hampshire Vera’s Backyard Bar-B-Que, Brownsville, Texas Zehnder’s of Frankenmuth, Frankenmouth, Michigan Humanitarian of the Year: Jessica B. Harris Leadership Awards: Phillip and Dorathy E. Barker, Operations Spring Plant Rosalinda Guillen, Community to Community Development (C2C) Abiodun Henderson, The Come Up Project Mark and Kerry Marhefka of Abundant Seafood Caleb Zigas, La Cocina James Beard Restaurant Design Awards Design Icon Chez Panisse Outstanding Restaurant Design, 75 Seats and Under: SIMPLICITY for HALL by o.d.o Heliotrope Architects for Rupee Vermillion Architects, LLC for Spoonbill Watering Hole and Restaurant Outstanding Restaurant Design, 76 Seats and Over: Hacin + Associates for Shore Leave; Ken Fulk, Inc for Swan & Bar Bevy Klein Agency and ORA for Auburn 2020 James Beard Foundation Book Awards For cookbooks and other non-fiction food- or beverage-related books that were published in the U.S. in 2019. Winners, including the Book of the Year Award and the Cookbook Hall of Fame inductee will be announced on Wednesday, May 27, 2020. American Books with recipes focused on the cooking or foodways of regions or communities in the United States. Cook Like a Local: Flavors That Can Change How You Cook and See the World; Chris Shepherd and Kaitlyn Goalen, (Clarkson Potter) Jubilee: Recipes from Two Centuries of African American Cooking; Toni Tipton-Martin, (Clarkson Potter) South: Essential Recipes and New Explorations; Sean Brock, (Artisan Books) Baking and Desserts Books with recipes focused on breads, pastries, desserts, and other treats. Dappled: Baking Recipes for Fruit Lovers; Nicole Rucker, (Avery) Living Bread: Tradition and Innovation in Artisan Bread Making; Daniel Leader and Lauren Chattman, (Avery) Pastry Love: A Baker’s Journal of Favorite Recipes; Joanne Chang, (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) Beverage with Recipes Books focused on recipes for how to make beverages. Last Call: Bartenders on Their Final Drink and the Wisdom and Rituals of Closing Time; Brad Thomas Parsons, (Ten Speed Press) The Martini Cocktail: A Meditation on the World’s Greatest Drink, with Recipes; Robert Simonson, (Ten Speed Press) The NoMad Cocktail Book; Leo Robitschek, (Ten Speed Press) Beverage without Recipes Beverage-focused books and guides that either don’t contain recipes or that may have minimal recipes but aren’t recipe-centric. The Complete Guide to Japanese Drinks: Sake, Shochu, Japanese Whisky, Beer, Wine, Cocktails and Other Beverages; Stephen Lyman and Chris Bunting, (Tuttle Publishing) Red & White: An Unquenchable Thirst for Wine; Oz Clarke, (Little, Brown Book Group) World Atlas of Wine 8th Edition; Hugh Johnson and Jancis Robinson, (Mitchell Beazley) General Books with recipes that address a broad scope of cooking, not just a single topic, technique or region. All About Dinner: Simple Meals, Expert Advice; Molly Stevens, (W. W. Norton & Company) Milk Street: The New Rules: Recipes That Will Change the Way You Cook; Christopher Kimball, (Voracious) Where Cooking Begins: Uncomplicated Recipes to Make You a Great Cook; Carla Lalli Music, (Clarkson Potter) Health and Special Diets Books with recipes related to health and nutrition, or that address specific health issues, such as allergies or diabetes. The Beauty Chef Gut Guide: With 90+ Delicious Recipes and Weekly Meal Plans; Carla Oates, (Hardie Grant Books) Cannelle et Vanille: Nourishing, Gluten-Free Recipes for Every Meal and Mood; Aran Goyoaga, (Sasquatch Books) Gluten-Free Baking at Home: 102 Foolproof Recipes for Delicious Breads, Cakes, Cookies, and More; Jeffrey Larsen, (Ten Speed Press) International Books with recipes focused on food and cooking traditions of countries or regions outside of the United States. Black Sea: Dispatches and Recipes – Through Darkness and Light; Caroline Eden, (Quadrille Publishing) Ethiopia: Recipes and Traditions from the Horn of Africa; Yohanis Gebreyesus, (Interlink Publishing) The Food of Sichuan; Fuchsia Dunlop, (W. W. Norton & Company) Photography American Sfoglino: A Master Class in Handmade Pasta; Eric Wolfinger, (Chronicle Books) Le Corbuffet: Edible Art and Design Classics; Esther Choi, (Prestel) Oaxaca: Home Cooking from the Heart of Mexico; Quentin Bacon, (Abrams Books) Reference, History, and Scholarship Includes manuals, guides, encyclopedias, and books that present research related to food or foodways. Gandhi’s Search for the Perfect Diet: Eating with the World in Mind; Nico Slate, (University of Washington Press) A South You Never Ate: Savoring Flavors and Stories from the Eastern Shore of Virginia; Bernard L. Herman, (The University of North Carolina Press) The Whole Okra: A Seed to Stem Celebration; Chris Smith, (Chelsea Green Publishing) Restaurant and Professional Books written by a culinary professional or restaurant chef with recipes that may include advanced cooking techniques, use specialty ingredients, and require professional equipment. This includes culinary arts textbooks. Dishoom: From Bombay with Love; Shamil Thakrar, Kavi Thakrar, and Naved Nasir, (Bloomsbury Publishing) Eleven Madison Park: The Next Chapter, Revised and Unlimited Edition; Daniel Humm, (Ten Speed Press) The Whole Fish Cookbook: New Ways to Cook, Eat and Think; Josh Niland, (Hardie Grant Books) Single Subject Books with recipes focused on a single or category of ingredients, a dish, or a method of cooking – such as lobster, seafood, grains, pasta, burgers, or canning. Exceptions: baking and desserts books, vegetable-focused books, health and special diets books, restaurant and professional books, and beverage books should be entered in those respective categories. From the Oven to the Table: Simple Dishes That Look After Themselves; Diana Henry, (Mitchell Beazley) Pasta Grannies: The Official Cookbook: The Secrets of Italy’s Best Home Cooks; Vicky Bennison, (Hardie Grant Books) Sour: The Magical Element That Will Transform Your Cooking; Mark Diacono, (Quadrille Publishing) Vegetable-Focused Cooking Books that feature recipes for how to prepare and serve vegetables and plant-based ingredients. Books may be vegetarian, vegan, or vegetable-focused with minimal reference to meats. Ruffage: A Practical Guide to Vegetables; Abra Berens, (Chronicle Books) Vegetables Illustrated: An Inspiring Guide with 700+ Kitchen-Tested Recipes; Editors at America’s Test Kitchen, (America’s Test Kitchen) Whole Food Cooking Every Day: Transform the Way You Eat with 250 Vegetarian Recipes Free of Gluten, Dairy, and Refined Sugar; Amy Chaplin, (Artisan Books) Writing Narrative nonfiction books, including memoirs, culinary tourism, investigative journalism, food advocacy, and critical analysis of food and foodways for a general audience. Eat Like a Fish: My Adventures as a Fisherman Turned Restorative Ocean Farmer; Bren Smith, (Knopf) Notes from a Young Black Chef: A Memoir; Kwame Onwuachi with Joshua David Stein, (Knopf) Women on Food: Charlotte Druckman and 115 Writers, Chefs, Critics, Television Stars, and Eaters; Charlotte Druckman, (Abrams Press) 2020 James Beard Foundation Broadcast Media Awards For radio, television broadcasts, podcasts, webcasts, and documentaries appearing in 2019. Winners will be announced on Wednesday, May 27, 2020. Audio Program The Food Programme – The Search for Esiah’s Seeds; Airs on: BBC Radio 4 and BBC Sounds It Burns: The Scandal-Plagued Race to Breed the World’s Hottest Chili; Airs on: Audible The Sporkful – When White People Say Plantation; Airs on: iTunes, Sporkful, Spotify, and Stitcher Audio Reporting California Foodways – The Curious Second Life of a Prather Ranch Cow: Biomedical Research; Trans Man Finds – and Creates – Refuge in His Family’s Small-Town Cafe; Legalizing Cannabis Impacts Food, Farming in Humboldt; Reporter: Lisa Morehouse; Airs on: KQED, California Foodways, iTunes, Google Play, Radio Public, SoundCloud, and Stitcher Food Actually – Junk Food Actually; Reporter: Tamar Adler; Airs on: Luminary Gravy – Mahalia Jackson’s Glori-Fried Chicken; Reporter: Betsy Shepherd; Airs on: southernfoodways.org and iTunes Documentary Harvest Season; Airs on: PBS Nothing Fancy: Diana Kennedy; Airs on: Premiered at SXSW in March 2019 That’s My Jazz; Airs on: Vimeo Online Video, Fixed Location and/or Instructional Chef Studio: The Crumby Bits – Cricket Macarons; Airs on: YouTube Grace Young – Wok Therapist; Airs on: GraceYoung.com and YouTube Ready Jet Cook - How to Make Pad Thai with Jet Tila; Airs on: FoodNetwork.com and YouTube Online Video, on Location Eat, Drink, Share, Puerto Rico Food – El Burén de Lula; Airs on: YouTube Handmade – How Knives Are Made for New York’s Best Restaurants; How a Ceramics Master Makes Plates for Michelin-Starred Restaurants; Airs on: Eater and YouTube In Real Life – Why Eating This Fish Could Save Coral Reefs; Airs on: YouTube and AJ+ Outstanding Personality/Host Alton Brown, Good Eats: The Return; Airs on: Food Network David Chang, Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner; Airs on: Netflix Roy Choi; Broken Bread with Roy Choi; Airs on: Tastemade and KCET Television Program, in Studio or Fixed Location Good Eats: The Return – American Classic: Chicken Parm; Airs on: Food Network Lidia’s Kitchen – Trattoria Favorites; Airs on: PBS Pati’s Mexican Table – A Local’s Tour of Culiacán; Airs on: WETA; distributed nationally by American Public Television Television Program, on Location Chef’s Table – Asma Khan; Airs on: Netflix Las Crónicas del Taco (Taco Chronicles) – Canasta; Airs on: Netflix Street Food – Bangkok, Thailand; Airs on: Netflix Visual and Audio Technical Excellence Chef’s Table; Adam Bricker, Chloe Weaver, and Will Basanta; Airs on: Netflix Street Food; Alexander D. Paul, Matthew Chavez, and Shane Reed; Airs on: Netflix The Taste of Place – Wild Rice; Jesse Roesler and Kevin Russell; Airs on: Vimeo Visual Reporting (on TV or Online) Fork the System – Moro Food of Muslim Mindanao: This is Filipino, Too; Reporters: Joi Lee and HyoJin Park; Airs on: Al Jazeera English Digital, YouTube, and Facebook In Real Life– Why This $300 Clam Is so Important to Native Americans and China; Reporters: AJ+ Staff; Airs on: YouTube and AJ+ Rotten – The Avocado War; Reporters: Christine Haughney, Erin Cauchi, and Gretchen Goetz; Airs on: Netflix 2020 James Beard Foundation Journalism Awards Finalists For articles published in English in 2019. Winners, including the Emerging Voice Award, will be announced on Wednesday, May 27, 2020. Columns What She’s Having: “Popeyes’ Fried Chicken Sandwich: A Delicious Distraction, a Cultural Lesson”; “Every Season Is Soup Season”; “Why a Somali Nook in East Boston Is One of the Country’s Best New Restaurants” — Devra First, The Boston Globe Power Rankings: “The Official Fast Food French Fry Power Rankings”; “The Official Spicy Snack Power Rankings”; “The Official Domestic Beer Power Rankings” — Lucas Kwan Peterson, Los Angeles Times Rooted in Place: “In Service”; “Hair, Food, and Hustle”; “The Best That We’ve Got” — Rosalind Bentley, Gravy Craig Claiborne Distinguished Restaurant Review Award “Le Colonial Is an Orientalist Specter”; “The Ultimate Chaat Truck Crawl”; “The Fantasy — and Reality — of Dining at Chez Panisse” — Soleil Ho, San Francisco Chronicle “NYC’s Buzziest New Sushi Parlors Are Transcendent, If You Can Handle the Bros”; “Wall Street’s Underground Russian Spa Is a Dining Destination for the Soul”; “Estiatorio Milos Is One of the Last Big Restaurant Scams in New York” —Ryan Sutton Eater New York “Peter Luger Used to Sizzle. Now It Sputters.”; “The 20 Most Delicious Things at Mercado Little Spain”; “Benno, Proudly Out of Step With the Age” Pete Wells The New York Times Dining and Travel “In Pursuit of the Perfect Pizza” Matt Goulding Airbnb Magazine “Interview With the Vampiro” Dylan James Ho Taste “These Are the World’s Best Restaurants: North America, South America, Africa and Middle East” Besha Rodell Travel + Leisure and Food & Wine Feature Reporting America’s farmers in crisis during Trump’s trade wars: “Left Behind: Farmers Fight to Save Their Land in Rural Minnesota as Trade War Intensifies”; “’I’m Gonna Lose Everything’: A Farm Family Struggles to Recover after Rising Debt Pushes a Husband to Suicide”; “In Trump Country, a Season of Need on Family Farms” Annie Gowen The Washington Post “The Great Land Robbery” Vann R. Newkirk II The Atlantic “Value Meal” Tad Friend The New Yorker Food Coverage in a General Interest Publication The Bitter Southerner Gastro Obscura The New Yorker Foodways “An Indigenous Community in Mexico Finds Its Voice — and Strength — in Wild Mushrooms” Michael Snyder Los Angeles Times “On Hawaii, the Fight for Taro’s Revival” Ligaya Mishan T: The New York Times Style Magazine “A Real Hot Mess: How Grits Got Weaponized Against Cheating Men” Cynthia R. Greenlee MUNCHIES | Food by VICE Health and Wellness “The AGEs Puzzle: How We Cook Food Is Killing Us. Scientists in SC Know Why.”; “9 Easy Ways to Eat Fewer AGEs: A Stress-Free Guide” Tony Bartelme The Post and Courier (Charleston, SC) “How Washington Keeps America Sick and Fat”; “Meet the Silicon Valley Investor Who Wants Washington to Figure Out What You Should Eat” Catherine Boudreau and Helena Bottemiller Evich Politico “Protein Nation” Shaun Dreisbach EatingWell Home Cooking “6 Holiday Cookies That Will Win You the Cookie Swap” Hilary Cadigan and Rick Martinez Bon Appétit “Fry Time” Nancy Singleton Hachisu Saveur “In Praise of Schmaltz” Rachel Handler Grub Street Innovative Storytelling “Best New Restaurants 2019” Kevin Alexander, Nicole A. Taylor, and Adriana Velez Thrillist “Food and Loathing on the Campaign Trail” Gary He, Matt Buchanan, and Meghan McCarron Eater “Made in America” Tim Carman and Shelly Tan The Washington Post Investigative Reporting “How USDA Distorted Data to Conceal Decades of Discrimination Against Black Farmers” Nathan Rosenberg and Bryce Wilson Stucki The Counter “‘The Man Who Attacked Me Works in Your Kitchen’: Victim of Serial Groper Took Justice into Her Own Hands” Amy Brittain and Maura Judkis The Washington Post “The Young Hands That Feed Us” Karen Coates and Valeria Fernández Pacific Standard Jonathan Gold Local Voice Award “Forget Democratic Votes. Which Presidential Hopeful Will Eat 16 Iconic SC Foods First?”; “A James Island Meat-and-Two Secretly Switched to Carolina Gold Rice. Here’s What Happened.”; “In Prisons Across South Carolina, It’s Not a Birthday Without Cake Made by a Fellow Inmate” Hanna Raskin The Post and Courier (Charleston, SC) “In Search of Hot Beef”; “Chef Jack Riebel Is in the Fight of His Life”; “Harry Singh on the Perfect Roti, Trinidad, and Life in the Kitchen” Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl Mpls.St.Paul Magazine “In a Wheelchair and Hungry”; “Where to Eat Regionally Inspired Mexican Food in New York City”; “How Sichuan Became NYC’s Dominant Chinese Cuisine” Robert Sietsema Eater New York M.F.K. Fisher Distinguished Writing Award “A Mind to Stay Here” Rosalind Bentley Gravy “My Mother’s Catfish Stew” John T. Edge Oxford American “An Undeserved Gift” Shane Mitchell The Bitter Southerner Personal Essay, Long Form “The Dysfunction of Food” Kim Foster Kim-Foster.com “Love, Peace, and Taco Grease: How I Left My Abusive Husband and Found Guy Fieri” Rax King Catapult “Seeking Jewish Identity at the Sabra Hummus Factory” Orr Shtuhl The Forward Personal Essay, Short Form “For 20 Years, happy hour has seen us through work — and life” M. Carrie Allan The Washington Post “How the Starbucks Macchiato Ruined My Indie Coffee Shop Experiences” Nicole A. Taylor Thrillist “In Memoriam of Hominy Grill, the Restaurant That Defined Charleston” Ali Rosen Plate Profile “First Course” Zoe Tennant Granta “The Fruit Saver” Tejal Rao Women on Food (Abrams Press) “The Provocations of Chef Tunde Wey” Brett Martin GQ Magazine Wine, Spirits, and Other Beverages “How Climate Change Impacts Wine” Eric Asimov The New York Times “May I Help You With That Wine List?” Ray Isle Food & Wine “Seltzer Is Over. Mineral Water Is Forever.” Jordan Michelman PUNCH Disclosure: Some Vox Media staff members are part of the voting body for the James Beard Foundation Awards. from Eater - All https://ift.tt/2YFiewV
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