But to be a journalist at The Paper Of Record is to wield an unholy power over the restaurant industry, which is why they recently put together a list of the restaurants they wished would open in New York City. (Okay, it was under the guise of adding a fantasy wish list to Florence Fabricant’s annual list of notable restaurant openings, but a successful restaurateur reads between the lines.)
Why, with some even stronger words and a few more inches of copy, FloFab could probably get Laurent Gras to “[get] his act together and [open] a restaurant in New York,” or Joel Robuchon to “reopen L’Atelier
Heck, Glenn Collins’s dream project of a “destination-location chopped-pork barbecue establishment that is faithful to the epistemology of Eastern North Carolina” could be feasible, if she were even more blatantly obvious about it:
It should be a weathered, rickety roadside shack with nonexistent signage, a gravel parking lot and no name.The menu is necessarily limited. We are talking juicy, fatty chopped barbecue only — pit-fired from hard wood — from a pork shoulder or whole hog. It is to be served on a paper plate awash in a bath of cider vinegar with a bit of salt and red-pepper flakes. There must be hush puppies on the plate, yielding a crispy, corny, buttermilk taste. The fresh, cool coleslaw should be moist, but not runny enough to transgress upon the hush-puppy domain.The plate should be alarmingly flimsy, and it must rest on a faded vinyl checked tablecloth. The forks and knives should be made of white plastic and stingily supplied, as if they are about to run out at any minute. The odd-lot tables should be rickety enough to defy any stabilization from strategically placed matchbooks. A greasy bottle of house-made hot
sauce will keep the barbecue fundamentally honest.
We’re pretty sure this means Collins is kidnapping a member of the Fatback Collective after Meatopia.
[NYT]