FOOD & DRINK
Hasbrouck Heights Land Use Board Provides Update on Starbucks/Shake Shack Lawsuit
HASBROUCK HEIGHTS, NJ – The news coming out of the May 1 Hasbrouck Heights Land Use Board meeting was not on the agenda but from items that were announced at the meeting. Land Use Board Chairman Henry Doobelaar announced that Gino Tessaro, the Borough’s Building Department official, had accepted another job, and would be leaving the Board. His replacement will be determined at a later date.CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE FREE TAPINTO.NET NEWSLETTER Also, Land USe Board Attorney Joseph Rotolo provided an update on the 211 Route 17 South LLC (Starbucks) vs. Borough of Hasbrouck Heights Planning Board/Land Use...
Brooklyn Fare Kitchen & Market opens largest location on Lower East Side
It’s been nearly three years since we first reported the lease signing, but Brooklyn Fare Kitchen & Market finally opened last week at Extell’s One Manhattan Square condo tower on the Lower East Side. Park Avenue vacancy rate lower than before pandemic after recent large deals New York City apartment evictions in 2023 not as bad as media say it is The 25,500 square-foot market with the official address of 277 Cherry St. is the largest of three Brooklyn Fares in Manhattan founded by Moe Issa and the only one on the East Side. CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR MORNING REPORT NEWSLETTER With its high-end specialty and international foods, it’s a far cry from the PathMark supermarket that once stood at the site in the days when the New York Post was based next door at 210 South St. For top headlines, breaking news and more, visit nypost.com.
Times Square’s giant hot dog is apparently a meat manifesto about toxic masculinity
One of the gravest mistakes a person can make is overthinking a hot dog. Just accept that the frankfurter, which has been sitting all day in cloudy water, is delicious, slather it in mustard and don’t ask too many questions. But blissful ignorance is not the mindset of the Brooklyn-based artists behind the new 65-foot, giant hot dog sculpture that landed in Times Square this week. Buckle up. Because these sculptors, Jen Catron and Paul Outlaw, have delivered a meat manifesto. Their titanic sausage is apparently meant to “examine consumption, capitalism, class and contemporary culture,” Times Square Arts’ website amazingly reads. A kooky press release...
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