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Year in Food & Music

The Year in Food & Music

JOSH MODELL

December 4, 2014 Colby Mancasola
josh-modell

Josh Modell is Editor In Chief of The A.V. Club.

What was the food highlight of your year?

This is a damn hard question, but I think it's gotta be incredible meals at Next and Alinea that were four days apart. The Next menu (it changes three times a year) was "best of Trio," which is the restaurant Grant Achatz cooked at before he started Alinea. The preparations were considerably simpler than what he's doing at Alinea now, but just so incredibly tasty and balanced. But then going to Alinea four days later... I hadn't been in five years, and the menu was completely different and fun and slightly less stuffy than I remembered it. Highlight I think was this corn preparation that was basically like the best elotes you've ever had x1000, served in a husk whose silk had just been on fire. The aroma and the taste together were amazing.

What was the music highlight of your year?

I can't even remember what happened last month, man! Let's see... This sounds like a cop out, but we put on a really fun festival this year, so I got to see Death Cab For Cutie with Chris Walla one last time, along with other oldies like The Dismemberment Plan. Oh, and Jack White--who I haven't been all that interested in in recent years--put on a blazing live show.

Was there a moment when food and music came together in a memorable way?

There's this guy who makes Ćevapčići, which are these crazy amazing Serbian kebabs, and basically only sells them at music festivals (as far as I know)... I was sad that he wasn't at Pitchfork Fest this year, but he was at Riot Fest, which was honestly kind of a highlight. (I'm getting too old for hanging around 50k 15-year-olds.) So I popped in for one afternoon, saw Superchunk, Naked Raygun, and Hot Snakes, got a yummy sausage and went home!

@joshmodell

In 2014 Tags josh modell, the onion, a/v club, next, alinea, grant achatz, death cab for cutie, dismemberment plan, jack white, pitchfork music festival, riot fest, superchunk, naked raygun, hot snakes
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ERIK BRUNER-YANG

January 6, 2014 Colby Mancasola
2013 IN FOOD & MUSIC - ERIK BRUNER-YANG 
Erik Bruner-Yang is chef/owner of Toki Underground and Maketto in Washington D.C.
What was the Food Highlight of Your Year?
2013 was the first year I participated in Capital Food Fight, which is DC Centra…

Erik Bruner-Yang is chef/owner of Toki Underground and Maketto in Washington D.C.

What was the Food Highlight of Your Year?

2013 was the first year I participated in Capital Food Fight, which is DC Central Kitchen’s largest yearly fundraiser. It was the first time I have ever done any type of competitive food competition and it was just an amazing experience. The food fight was the first time I have been on stage since I stopped playing in bands back in 2009. It brought back all the nerves and excitement that I haven’t felt in a long time.

But the best part wasn’t actually the battle but it was getting to meet the students and the mentors involved with the program. DC Central Kitchen really just does some amazing things and that was really inspiring. 

What was the music highlight of your year (and why)?

Hands down the Dismemberment Plan reunion. My favorite band of all time. The first mix tape I ever got had only two bands on it. Side A was Ice of Boston EP and half of “!”. Side B was the Pharcyde. 

To me, The Dismemberment Plan is easily one of the most important indie bands of all time and a band at their age should keep on keeping on.

Was there a moment when food and music came together in a memorable way? 

I love making playlists for the restaurant. I would say 75% of the atmosphere at Toki is the music. But the best way music and food comes together for me every year is when we participate as a food component for Sweetlife Festival hosted by Sweetgreen. Since I don’t go to shows as much as I used to, I really seize the opportunity at this festival to get a year’s worth of music knowledge. I discovered Twin Shadows at Sweetlife 2012 and Haim there in 2013. 

This year Toki Underground/Maketto went ham at Sweetlife festival. We collabed with Chef Spike Gjerde and his whole Woodberry Kitchen crew and just did the craziest street dishes. We had a ramen shop, an izakaya, a shaved ice shop, and that was only half of the setup. 

tokiunderground

In 2013 Tags erik bruner-yang, toki underground, maketto, capital food fight, dismemberment plan, sweetgreen, twin shadows, haim, woodberry kitchen, spike gjerde, sweet life festival
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MATT COHEN

December 15, 2013 Colby Mancasola

Matt Cohen is Associate Editor at DCist and a columnist at The Week.

What was the food highlight of your year?

There’s this ramen restaurant in D.C. called Toki Underground that’s arguably one of the most popular, highly regarded restaurants in the city. It’s got a reputation not only for serving the best ramen (again, arguably), but also for being impossible to get a table at. The restaurant, situated above one of my favorite dive bars in Northeast D.C. is a tiny space (the entire place seats maybe 20-30 people), doesn’t take reservations and there’s always at least an hour wait. I’ve lived in D.C. for four years and have tried to go to this place many different times, only to find that the wait was almost two hours every time. I finally managed to eat at Toki Underground this year, and it was glorious. An exceptional ramen place that’s easy on the wallet and surpasses its reputation. If you’re ever in D.C., make it a point to go here (my advice is to put your name on the list, then go drink at the bar below, The Pug).

What was the music highlight of your year?

Oh man, there are many to choose from, but I’ll try to keep it to three: 1) I’m always skeptical of band reunions, but I thought the show I caught of Texas Is The Reason’s reunion tour at the Black Cat in D.C. was particularly memorable, if only because it felt like such a warranted, welcomed reunion. So many bands reunite and tour for the wrong reasons, but theirs felt so natural and organic, and created such an energy between the band onstage. 2)  I’m not a huge festival person, but I went to Pitchfork Festival for the first time and really enjoyed it. So many great bands—The Breeders, Swans, Bjork, Waxahatchee, Yo La Tengo, El-P and Killer Mike, Pissed Jeans, Wire—all in one place. It’s hard for anything to top that. 3) Reviewing albums for year-end lists last week, I had the revelation that friend’s bands made some of my favorite albums of the year. I couldn’t be more excited for them. 

Was there a moment when food and music came together in a memorable way? 

There’s a legendary free summer concert series in D.C. at a park called Fort Reno that’s been going on for decades. Over the years, many of D.C.’s finest have played it regularly—Fugazi, The Dismemberment Plan, Q and Not U, Teen Idles, Ted Leo, etc.—and its become a summer staple for me. I can think of no better moment of when food and music came together than packing up a homemade picnic with friends and trekking over to Fort Reno to eat and catching some of the best local bands play. 

@matt_d_cohen

Tags matt cohen, dcist, the week, Toki Underground, pitchfork music festival, fort reno, breeders, waxahatchee, yo la tengo, pissed jeans, fugazi, dismemberment plan, ted leo
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MAT DIABLO

December 11, 2013 Colby Mancasola
  

Mat Diablo is Sr. Program Manager at Slacker Radio.

What was the food highlight of your year?

My food highlight of the year doesn’t change much from year to year. It’s going home for the holidays and eating family-style Basque food at the JT Basque Bar & Dining Room in my hometown of Gardnerville, NV. They make a traditional cocktail called a Picon Punch that is the perfect accompaniment to tongue stew, cabbage soup, and lamb chops. That, and the fried oysters at Ranch 616 in Austin.

What was the music highlight of your year?

This was a year of finally getting to see bands that I loved as a kid but was either too young or too remote to have seen the first time around. This included, but was not limited to:

RFTC’s first show back at Bar Pink in SD, and then again on Halloween and at Riot Fest

The Dismemberment Plan, Superchunk, and Chuck Regan at Riot Fest Denver

The Ocean Blue at SXSW and Satellite in LA

The Residents at the Belly Up

And of course- the almighty Knapsack at The Void in SD.

Also, I flew to Reno for one night to see The Bronx play some shitty tweeker bar, I won $2500 at the casino across the street, and The Bronx killed everybody (as usual).

Honorable mention goes to Melt Banana and Retox at the Casbah, Parquet Courts at ACL, Twin Shadow at Casbah, and Speedy Ortiz at Soda Bar in SD.

Was there a moment when food and music came together in a memorable way?

A traditional sushi restaurant called Sushi Tadokoro opened up near the Casbah, and they’ve got the freshest sashimi, nicest chefs, and best omakase in town. It’s nice to have a… lighter alternative to La Posta, Dos Brasas, or El Zarape on show nights.

@matdiablo

Tags mat bates, mat diablo, slacker radio, jt basque, rocket from the crypt, dismemberment plan, superchunk, chuck regan, riot fest, knapsack, the bronx, sushi tadokoro
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