Friday, November 30, 2018

10 Tips That Entrepreneurs Can Learn About Management From Running A Restaurant Kitchen - Forbes

There are many common pitfalls that strike managers across all professions: micromanaging, dealing incorrectly with problem employees and losing focus. A restaurant kitchen, with its mix of personalities and dangerous equipment, is an interesting microcosm of the entire entrepreneurial experience — including the move from front lines to managing your former peers and the next generation, as well as handling day to day disasters and long term administrative challenges.

Toronto chef Steve Gonzalez has spent 30 years in kitchens, starting from slinging buns and fries at Canadian chain St. Hubert at the age of 13 to his current multi-storey restaurant, snack bar and event space Baro. From his early experiences with Hilton hotels, golf clubs and banquet/wedding spaces at The Old Mill in Toronto, Gonzalez learned the institutional side of cooking and management. He worked for local celebrity chef Claudio Aprile periodically for 15 years, first at molecular gastronomy temple Colborne Lane, then Aprile’s back to basics Origin. He has a three year stint at ownership with Valdez, which ultimately closed down and relocated, transforming into Baro. In between, Gonzalez kept the brand moving with a food truck, pop ups, and even appearing as a contestant on Top Chef Canada. During a recent phone interview, he shared some of the hard won tips he’s learned along the way about management from the school of the restaurant kitchen.

Chef Steve Gonzales offers up management tips from a restaurant chef's perspective.Photo courtesy of Baro.

1. Don’t be sentimental

Restaurant margins are often razor thin, and with rising prices in food and labor, it’s important to separate budgetary concerns from any sense of nostalgia. “You’ve got to hit your numbers, or you're not going to survive,” says Gonzalez. “And when it comes to labour costs and food costs, it sucks. Emotionally, you grow attached to people and products and dishes, and sometimes you've got to make decisions for the better of the business and it can't be personal.”

2. Forget about the dream space

Similar to shopping for a house, falling in love with a restaurant space can be a risky, as well as expensive, mistake. Gonzalez looked for the perfect spot for Baro for three years, finding nothing but disappointment along the way. “You can have one in your hands and you're ready to sign the deal, and something just doesn't seem right — listen to that feeling,” he says. “You can't get emotional over a space and say ‘This is my dream, it's got to happen.’ Your restaurant space has to make sense, financially and physically, because if you buy a fixer upper, how much work can you realistically do?”

3. Show up to work

The life of a chef often means celebrating other people’s milestones while ignoring your own. Major holidays, birthdays and anniversaries are spent in the kitchen making sure that someone else’s night goes perfectly — and that often means sacrifice. “No matter what  you've got going on in your life, you need to show up for work,” says Gonzalez. “For thirty years, that was my life as a cook.”

4. Being hands off is a hard lesson to learn

One thing managers often miss is the hands on component of their work — overseeing someone else’s achievements is not as tactile as accomplishing the task on your own. As a manager, Gonzalez still misses the elements of service, and has had to come to an understanding with his kitchen staff. “I'm not allowed to do prep: I change the recipes, and I cut something different, and someone else will get in trouble for it,” he says. “I made a rule with my sous chef, that forbids me from prep, but I’ll do service for however long it’s needed.”

5. Communicate

As a head chef, running the kitchen is a natural extension of your skill set, much like the move to middle management in the business world. As an owner, however, suddenly the chef is overseeing not only the kitchen crew but also the front of house staff and other areas that they may be out of their realm of comfort. Gonzalez stresses the need for upper managers to take a step back and think about how they are going to talk to people without getting emotional. “Don’t get me wrong.  I've had my moments where I just wanted to fucking kill somebody. I've come kind of close, and I've learned,” he says. Among the procedures that Baro has in place is communication via apps: the team uses the Slack app for sous chefs to communicate and Push for a managers-only channel.

6. Handling team conflict

Kitchens are small spaces, and in confined areas, tempers can flare. Rooting out the problem and creating solutions is a learning process for any manager. “Don’t just wait for all the answers — find them. In our weekly chef meetings, sometimes we have conflicts. And I ask, ‘You're actually becoming more of a problem right now. If you want to come bitch at me, I want you to have solutions.  What can you do to make this better?’ says Gonzalez. “And it's worked.  Now I just sign off on stuff and just let the team do what they do best.  That's why I hired them.”

7. Always think big

Some of the corporate rules that Baro has in place may seem out of the question for independently owned restaurants, but Gonzalez thinks that it’s worth considering. “I think, in order for them to sustain business, they've kind of got to look at these things.  Because, you know, I came from small, freestanding restaurants, some without systems where you got trained as you went along,” he says. “And we had to figure a lot of things out because that recipe book may be missing pages and it was broken telephone between the chef who says two cups of onions and the kitchen preps two liters. It may have made us better cooks, but we're in a different world now.”

8. Consider work-life balance

Gonzalez has either worked out the perfect system or ultimate nightmare for keeping an eye on his restaurant: he lives across the street from Baro. Although it means that he can pop into the restaurant at any time to fix a problem, the key is setting boundaries (and leaving once the issue is fixed). “My guys know now, if I don't need to be here, I'm not coming. But if shit does go down, call me, and I can be there,” he says. “But don't be the boy that cried wolf. One of the greatest things I learned from working for two years at a Hilton in Fort Lauderdale and getting to tier three in their management system was coaching for empowerment.”

9. Be ready to make the investment

Running a restaurant is hard, but owning a restaurant, it could be argued, is even harder. Not only is it difficult physically and emotionally, but especially in the beginning, restaurants are often financially challenging. “The return on investment is probably not as fast as some people think it is,” says Gonzalez. “I don't know how many conversations I've had with people saying, ‘I think I'm going to open a restaurant, and make some quick money.’ I figure out how much experience they have, and if they have none, I say ‘Listen, why don't you give me 100 grand. I'll piss it away, and we'll call it a day, and you go back to your desk job'."

10. Know when to walk away

Although Gonzalez is only 43, he is already considering life beyond the line. “I've been blessed, being a cook for the last thirty years, and I'm just looking to build this brand, make some money, and retire,” he says. “Would I totally retire from the game, from the hospitality industry?  I don't think so: I'll always have my foot in it somehow.  But to be a chef or a cook, I probably have maybe, I don't know, ten years.” The physicality of a kitchen can take its toll on a chef’s knees (or, as Gonzalez puts it, “My everything.  My knees, my elbows, my fingers, my ribs, my back, my neck, my soul”) which he tries to combat with yoga and stretching. As a manager, he’s keeping an eye on the future and practicing self care now. “My original idea was to open a small restaurant, be able to touch everything, be able to do everything, but... this is me now.  Now, I have a team that does everything, and I can just be creative and go through my process and create menus and mentor, and teach some techniques to different cooks. It’s been a learned life experience, and you know, I get to see sunsets again. I got a dog, we go for walks,” he says. “But there’s been so much to learn. That whole evolution took me years, and I'm still learning.”

For more on how the team at Baro manages the logistics of a three-storey restaurant with a main dining room, snack bar and event space, read “Behind The Scenes Of A Busy Restaurant From A Chef’s Perspective.”

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https://www.forbes.com/sites/lesliewu/2018/11/30/10-tips-that-entrepreneurs-can-learn-about-management-from-running-a-restaurant-kitchen/ 2018-12-01 03:08:00Z
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Want to eat at a 3-star Michelin restaurant? Here’s what it will cost you - The Mercury News

An abalone course is plated at a Michelin-starred Bay Area restaurant. (Jim Gensheimer/Staff archives)

So you’re caught up in the big Michelin news. San Francisco’s Dominique Crenn just became the first female chef in the country to garner three stars for her restaurant. And the Bay Area tops New York in the number of three-star honorees; we’ve got eight and they’ve got five.

Your next question may be … what’s this going to cost me?

The adage “if you have to ask …” may apply here. Or not. Maybe you won’t be surprised by the prices of high-end dining if you’ve already been paying $50 for steaks, $18 for burgers with fries and $13 for cocktails in Bay Area restaurants.

Here is the prix fixe range (that’s French for fixed-price menu) for the Bay Area’s big star-holders. A prix fixe menu at a high-end Michelin restaurant will include several courses, from appetizer to dessert. Wine pairings are extra.

Luxe ingredients may also cost more. For example, at The French Laundry, the surcharge for a caviar appetizer on the $325 tasting menu is $60; for a terrine made with foie gras, $30; and if you want shavings of those rare white truffles from Italy’s Alba region with risotto or cavatelli, that supplement is $175.

Want to pay a bit less? A few of these offer cheaper fixed-price menus in the bar. Or check out a Michelin one-star or two-star restaurant.

Or pay a lot less? Head straight for Michelin’s list of Bib Gourmand restaurants, which offer what the Michelin inspectors rate as very good food at affordable prices.

Also remember: Advance reservations are mandatory. Many of these restaurants fully book weeks in advance. Also, you will likely be required to pay the full cost or a non-refundable deposit when making your reservation. (As SingleThread reminds diners: “Just like a sporting event, concert, or theater booking, all bookings are final and cannot be canceled or rescheduled.”)

ATELIER CRENN: $335 for the tasting menu.  Chef Dominique Crenn’s restaurant is located in San Francisco’s Cow Hollow neighborhood, 3127 Fillmore St. Reservations: www.ateliercrenn.com

BENU: $295 for the tasting menu. Chef Corey Lee’s flagship restaurant is located at 22 Hawthorne St., San Francisco. Reservations: www.benufsf.com

THE FRENCH LAUNDRY: $325 for the tasting menu. Chef Thomas Keller’s restaurant is located at 6640 Washington St. in Yountville. Reservations: www.thomaskeller.com

MANRESA: $275 for the tasting menu. David Kinch’s restaurant is located at 320 Village Lane, Los Gatos. Reservations: www.manresarestaurant.com 

QUINCE: $275 for the tasting menu. Chef Michael Tusk’s restaurant is at 470 Pacific Ave., San Francisco. Reservations: www.quincerestaurant.com 

THE RESTAURANT AT MEADOWOOD: $285 for the tasting menu. (A lighter three-course menu is available in the bar for $125.) Chef Christopher Kostow’s restaurant is at 900 Meadowood Lane, St. Helena. Restaurants: www.therestaurantatmeadowood.com

SAISON: $298 for the tasting menu. (A smaller five-course menu is available in the bar for $148.) Chef Joshua Skenes’ restaurant is located at 178 Twonsend St., San Francisco. Reservations: www.saisonsf.com

SINGLETHREAD: $275 for the tasting menu. The Connaughtons’ restaurant (chef Kyle and farmer Katina) is located at 131 North St., Healdsburg.  www.singlethreadfarms.com 

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https://www.mercurynews.com/2018/11/30/want-to-eat-at-a-3-star-michelin-restaurant-heres-what-it-will-cost-you/ 2018-11-30 23:31:00Z
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Restaurant Ratings Most Violations: November 19 to November 21 - WFLA

TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) - The following Tampa Bay area restaurants received the most violations during inspections conducted Nov. 19 to Nov. 21.

Suncoast Bar & Grill at 10350 W. Yulee Dr. in Homosassa, 27 violations

  • The walk-in cooler floor was severely soiled.
  • Food was opened and held more than 24 hours and not properly date marked after opening. This included corned beef, roast beef and ham removed from the original packaging.
  • The interior of the microwave was soiled with encrusted food debris.

Chick-Fil-A at 7020 HWY 19 N. in Pinellas Park, 20 violations

  • The cutting board has deep cut marks and is no longer cleanable.
  • Frying oil was found stored on floor.
  • A Stop Sale was issued on potentially hazardous food due to temperature abuse. This included fried chicken cooked yesterday and stored at 47°F.

Steak N Shake #314 at 2490 SR 580 in Clearwater, 19 violations

  • Food was found with mold-like growth. A Stop Sale was issued on turkey slices.
  • Potentially hazardous cold food was held at greater than 41 degrees Fahrenheit. This included: chicken 54°F, coleslaw 53°F, butter 55°F, turkey 51°F, taco meat 49°F, chili 51°F and cooked onions 51°F.
  • An accumulation of food debris and grease was found on food-contact surfaces, inside the fryers, on areas of the grill, the interior of the freezer at the cook line and the interior of microwave.

Taqueria El Flako at 2324 W. Cypress St. in Tampa, 18 violations

  • Dead roaches were found on premises. Approximately 20 were found by the hand-sink.
  • Hot water was not provided at the employee hand-wash sink.
  • There was no probe thermometer provided to measure temperature of food products.

Suncoast Bar & Grill at 10350 W. Yulee Dr. in Homosassa, 57 violations

  • Potentially hazardous cold foods were held at greater than 41 degrees Fahrenheit. This included: pasta salad 52°F, chicken 56°F, crab meat 52°F, eggs 58°F, fish dip 52°F, fish 61°F, cheese 52°F, tuna 55°F, cooked potatoes 56°F, sour cream 54°F, hush puppy mix 54°F, coleslaw 56°F, potato salad 54°F, Tsiki sauce 54°F, shrimp 46°F and sausage 46°F.
  • Rodent activity was present as evidenced by rodent droppings found. At least 20 dry droppings were found on top of the freezer in the hallway.
  • The men’s bathroom facility was not clean.

Origami Sushi at 3615 W. Hillsborough Ave. in Tampa, 19 violations

  • Raw fish was stored over ready-to-eat avocados and raw shell eggs were stored over cut cabbage.
  • Potentially hazardous cold food was held at greater than 41 degrees Fahrenheit. This included: milk 48°F, krab stick 50°F and raw salmon 47°F.
  • Beverages were stored on the floor in the dry storage area.

Beef O Brady's at 14136 7 St. in Dade City, 18 violations

  • The walls were soiled with accumulated grease, food debris, and dust.
  • The interior of the reach-in cooler was soiled with an accumulation of food residue on the cook line.
  • The women's restroom was in disrepair.

The Lure at 661 Central Ave. Unit A in St. Petersburg, 21 violations

  • Raw pork and raw beef was stored over ready-to-eat fries in the reach-in freezer.
  • Rodent activity was present as evidenced by rodent droppings found. Approximately 20 rodent droppings were found near the back door, 8 droppings under the dish machine, 15 droppings under the storage shelf, 4 on back of a booth in the dining room and approximately 50 rodent droppings were found behind the bar. The droppings ranged from soft to hard.
  • Raw beef was stored above unwashed carrots.

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https://www.wfla.com/8-on-your-side/restaurant-ratings/restaurant-ratings-most-violations-november-19-to-november-21/1629535595 2018-11-30 22:36:00Z
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Hot Pot Continues to Dominate San Gabriel Valley’s Restaurant Scene - Eater LA

Welcome to Meanwhile in the SGV, a regular update of San Gabriel Valley updates from Eater’s roving reporter, Jim Thurman.

San Gabriel— A new residential and commercial development is home to a couple of new eateries, one of them being Oni Hot Pot. The restaurant serves Taiwanese-style hot pot, including a “surf and turf” combo option. Two house noodle dishes and two house special offal dishes (tripe, intestine) round out the menu. 416 E. Las Tunas Dr., Unit A

Arcadia— A hot pot and grill place, appropriately named My Grill’n Pot, has opened in a new space. The novel approach features a tabletop half hot pot/half griddle, which allows for a simultaneously cooked combo order. A full-size hot pot can be ordered as well. Most interesting among the hot pot flavors is milk beef, featuring a creamy broth base. 55 E. Duarte Rd.

Maio Miao Xian Chongqing Wrapped Grilled Fish in Rowland Heights

Rowland Heights— A cartoon cat with a fish in its mouth announces Miao Miao Xian Chongqing Wrapped Grilled Fish. A fairly compact, yet wide-ranging menu features paper wrapped fish and grilled whole fish, with a couple of fish choices out of the norm. Also featured are some Instagram-worthy items, such as dumplings in striped wrappers, cactus macaron (in a pot of oreo crumbs) and other insanely colorful desserts. 18888 Labin Ct., Suite B-109.

El Monte— The SGV now has two restaurants serving food from the Indonesian portion of the island of Borneo (Kalimantan). Singkawang Café features a small menu of Kalimantan, Indonesian and Thai dishes. It replaces Rice + Tea in a plaza in front of a badminton club, which is always a good place to look for Indonesian food. 10404 Valley Blvd.

San Gabriel— In a bizarre situation, New Taiwanese Cuisine opened and apparently closed in just a matter of days. Located in the space previously occupied by Gochome Japanese Restaurant, an eviction notice dated November 7, is posted on the door. Oddly, that’s the date of its’ sole Yelp review. The restaurant served Taiwanese favorites such as three cup chicken, pork chop rice and lu rou fan (stewed pork over rice). 708 E. Las Tunas Dr., Unit C

Rowland Heights— Hole-in-the-walls seem to be making a bit of comeback. Another example has arrived with Qing Feng Bao Food. Despite the name, only seven of the 33 item menu are baos. The rest of the menu features congees, noodle soups and snacks. It replaces Chongqing Noodles & Thai Ice Cream, which was a one-man effort that served Chongqing-style street noodles. 18472 Colima Rd., Suite 100

Hacienda Heights— After more than eight years of operation, the “first” San Gabriel Valley branch of Chinese chain Little Sheep Mongolian Hot Pot has closed. Official corporate history aside, there were earlier Little Sheep locations of varying degrees of legitimacy around the SGV. Little Sheep retains an area presence with their Focus Plaza location. 1655 S. Azusa Ave., Suite E.

Rosemead— One skewer joint replaces another, as Mr. Dong has replaced BBQ Power. In addition to the traditional skewered meat, crawfish, and vegetable items, it serves oysters on the half shell, scallops, and appetizers. 8450 E. Valley Blvd., Suite 116

San Gabriel— Adjacent to the above mentioned Oni Hot Pot is Feel Recipes. The main focus is on skewers, but the restaurant serves more than a typical skewer joint. Most notable among those are fish with corn cakes, and dan bing, a Taiwanese egg crepe wrap filled with items that can include a hot dog and Chinese donut stick (you tiao). For now, the menu is solely in Chinese. Let’s see, new plaza: hot pot, check; skewer place, check; stylish tea house, check. 416 E. Las Tunas Dr., Unit B

Nice to Meet You Chuan Chuan Hot Pot in Rowland Heights

Rowland Heights— New to the plaza Colima & Fullerton is Nice To Meet You Chuan Chuan Hot Pot, a name that doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue in English. The unique concept here is the option of selecting skewered items to cook in hot pots (the chuan chuan, at 38 cents apiece). Otherwise, prices are based on size of color coded plates or bowls. It replaces Little Highness Fishpot, which opened last year. Little Highness Bun, continues on in the tiny adjacent space. 18331 Colima Rd.

El Monte— Crawplay opened last month in Midway Plaza. In addition to four different “flavors” of pan-roasted crawfish, the restaurant has a small, yet fairly far reaching menu of other shellfish and non-shellfish options. It replaces Yang’s Dining Room which opened in December 2015 and served Sichuan fare. 10502 Lower Azusa Rd.

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https://la.eater.com/2018/11/30/18119980/hot-pot-restaurants-sgv-los-angeles 2018-11-30 19:10:02Z
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Former Trump White House lawyer emerges as a contender for attorney general - CNN

Delrahim is one of several people under consideration for the job, and has close ties to the Trump White House. As a deputy to then-White House counsel Don McGahn, Delrahim helped shepherd the confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch, which Trump has touted as one of his signature accomplishments.
Two months after joining the Justice Department in September 2017 as chief of the antitrust division, Delrahim led the government's suit to block AT&T's takeover of Time Warner Inc., a move that puzzled a number of legal experts and contradicted Delrahim's own prior stance.
CNN, which was part of Time Warner and is now owned by AT&T, is a frequent target of the President, who promised to block the deal during the campaign in 2016. Delrahim has denied he ever received direct orders from Trump to stop the acquisition. A district judge approved the deal in June. Delrahim's anti-trust division has appealed.
A source familiar with the process tells CNN that the White House likes Delrahim's diverse background (he was born in Iran) and the fact that he's already been confirmed, which would make it harder to justify rejecting him should he come up for confirmation as attorney general. Asked why the White House would like Delrahim, a former White House official said, "He was our guy."

Trump in no rush

Still, White House officials say the President is in no rush to nominate a permanent successor to Jeff Sessions, who he fired Nov. 7. Instead, Trump has told confidantes he is happy to leave the man he named acting attorney general, Matthew Whitaker, in place while he mulls his choices.
Whitaker is a former US attorney from Iowa, who had been serving as Sessions' chief of staff, but was never confirmed by the Senate for that position.
Now, he faces a number of legal challenges to his appointment. The latest salvo comes in a petition filed with the Supreme Court Thursday morning. A lawyer already challenging the constitutionality of Whitaker's appointment told the Supreme Court justices that Whitaker's appointment places the country is in a moment of "constitutional crisis" and that they should respond to a "power grab designed to protect the President personally by evading the authority and responsibility of the Senate and this Court under the Constitution."
Though there is a debate over the validity of his appointment, under federal rules Whitaker can remain in his acting role for 210 days, which would take him into June. Once a nominee is selected, Whitaker can stay through the confirmation process. If that nominee fails to get confirmed, then the clock on Whitaker would restart at 210 days.
Whitaker's selection was met by a torrent of stories that dug into his public criticism of the Mueller probe, which he now oversees. Notably, a source familiar with the process says Whitaker was informed of former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen's plea ahead of time. Whitaker has also drawn fire for his links to a patenting company shut down by the government this year over allegations of fraud.
But rather than being put off by it, officials say the President actually took satisfaction from the outcry, believing the consternation from television pundits and Democrats meant he chose well.
As of now though, sources say Trump doesn't plan on naming Whitaker to the job permanently, believing he has a chance to name someone of a more elevated stature who will act as a supportive voice within the administration.

Other candidates

That's provided an opening for allies of the President, and potential picks themselves, to lobby for the job. As is his custom, Trump has polled friends and advisers about potential selections, according to people familiar with the conversations.
"A lot of people want that job. It's a great job, if you're into the world," Trump said Monday at a roundtable rally in Mississippi. "We have a lot of good people ... we have no dearth of talent, I can tell you that."
Along with Delrahim, CNN has previously reported that the President is considering former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Florida's Republican Attorney General Pamela Bondi for the job.
Many Trump allies like Bondi, who appears frequently on Fox News, and she has long enjoyed a good relationship with the President.
"I'd consider Pam Bondi for anything," Trump said earlier this month.
Still, she could face a difficult confirmation given the $25,000 contribution her political action committee received from Trump's foundation during her 2014 re-election bid.
The donation came around the time Bondi's office was reviewing complaints about Trump University and Democrats leveled allegations of impropriety after her office declined to pursue an investigation into Trump University fraud allegations.
A Florida ethics panel cleared Bondi of wrongdoing last year.
Current labor secretary Alex Acosta has also been under consideration, but a recent report from the Miami Herald likely jeopardizes that. On Tuesday, the Herald reported that in 2007 Acosta, then a US attorney in Florida, offered a plea deal to millionaire hedge fund manager Jeffrey Epstein, despite substantial evidence that he had engaged in an extensive sex trafficking scheme involving underage girls that could have landed him a life sentence in prison under federal law.
Instead, Epstein pleaded guilty to two state prostitution charges, and served only 13 months. The agreement made by Acosta, the Herald said, "essentially shut down an ongoing FBI probe" and further granted immunity to "any potential co-conspirators" in the case.
Eric Holland, a spokesperson for the Department of Labor, said in an emailed response to the report that "this matter has been publicly addressed previously, including during confirmation hearings." At his confirmation hearing, Acosta defended his decision, saying there was broad consensus in his office.
A senior Trump administration official told CNN on Wednesday that Acosta's chances to become attorney general are in serious doubt. Another source familiar with the attorney general process said Thursday Acosta had been ruled out.
Other names that have been floated as possible replacements for Sessions include Rep. John Ratcliffe of Texas, a former federal prosecutor, as well John Michael Luttig, a former US Court of Appeals judge and Justice Department official, and current general counsel at Boeing. One former White House official said Luttig is a strong possibility, though he has not met with the President. A second source close to Luttig says that he was considered for the role of FBI director after James Comey was fired.
Sources familiar with the matter say that William "Bill" Barr, a veteran Washington lawyer who served as US attorney general under President George H.W. Bush, has also been mentioned as a potential candidate. It's not clear however if either Barr or Luttig would accept the nomination if offered.

Special Counsel

One person likely not under consideration is Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who remains on the job despite continued speculation that he will resign or get fired. Rosenstein's face was among those included in an image the President retweeted Wednesday showing prominent Democrats and Trump critics behind bars. Asked by the New York Post why he felt Rosenstein should be behind bars, Trump answered, "He should have never picked a special counsel."
After Sessions recused himself from the Russia investigation, Rosenstein selected Robert Mueller as special counsel. With Whitaker at the helm, Rosenstein no longer technically oversees the Mueller investigation, but his office still manages it day-to-day. Sources tell CNN that the White House no longer views Rosenstein as a threat, and it's widely expected he'll stay on until the next attorney general is confirmed.
People familiar with the matter say part of the reason that the President is in no rush to nominate a permanent attorney general is that he doesn't want to leave too much time until hearings can commence when a new Congress convenes in January. That gap could allow opposition groups to unearth damaging details that could hamper a confirmation process that's already expected to be contentious.
Also contributing to the slow pace is the current transition underway in the White House counsel's office, which would traditionally shepherd an attorney general nomination from the selection process through to Senate confirmation. Incoming counsel Pat Cipollone has not yet formally started in the post; his predecessor Don McGahn departed in October.

Whitaker under fire

Meanwhile, Whitaker has faced a drumbeat of criticism.
A Justice Department spokesperson told CNN earlier this month Whitaker is "fully committed to following all appropriate processes and procedures," including "consulting with senior ethics officials on his oversight responsibilities and matters that may warrant recusal."
But Whitaker has refused to explain whether he has, in fact, engaged career ethics officials at DOJ to review whether he needs to step aside from oversight of the Mueller investigation. After meeting with Whitaker on Capitol Hill, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham told reporters that Whitaker conveyed that "he believed he did not have a reason to recuse himself legally or factually."
At a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting the week before Thanksgiving, Senate Democrats took shots at Whitaker, questioning the constitutionality of his appointment and his history of public antagonism towards the Russia probe.
Scrutiny continued on Tuesday when the head of the Federal Trade Commission offered to brief senators on a case the agency had litigated against a Florida company connected to Whitaker that they called a "scam" in court.
In May, World Patent Marketing, which Whitaker sat on the advisory board of, agreed to pay a nearly $26 million judgment as part of a settlement agreement. A judge has partially suspended that payment. Legal filings from the FTC in the case revealed Whitaker himself once sent a threatening email to a disgruntled customer, accusing them of extortion.
Justice Department spokesperson Kerri Kupec said in a statement, earlier this month, that Whitaker "has said he was not aware of any fraudulent activity. Any stories suggesting otherwise are false."
Staff from the FTC are expected to brief lawmakers on the case on Friday, according to a Democratic aide.
For his part, Whitaker has settled into his position as the acting chief law enforcement officer, meeting this week with leading national police groups at the Justice Department and law enforcement officials in Tennessee and Ohio.
Addressing the Memphis US attorney on Wednesday in front of a crowd of prosecutors there, Whitaker drew laughs with an apparent wink to his situation.
"I continue to believe that the United States attorney job is the best job that anybody could ever have. So you're lucky to have it. Just be careful what you volunteer for next," Whitaker said.

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https://www.cnn.com/2018/11/29/politics/trump-ag/index.html 2018-11-30 15:17:00Z
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Vote For Dallas’s Casual Restaurant of the Year in the 2018 Eater Awards - Eater Dallas

It’s the last day of voting in the 2018 Eater Awards, an annual celebration of Dallas’s finest restaurants and most talented culinary professionals. Readers have already voted in the Chef of the Year, Restaurant of the Year, Design of the Year, and Bar of the Year categories, and now it’s time to determine the year’s best new casual restaurant.

Here’s how it works: All 24 Eater cities and our big sister Eater.com will award prizes in multiple categories, including Chef of the Year, Bar of the Year, and Restaurant of the Year. In each category, Eater staff will choose an editor’s choice winner, and readers will vote for a reader’s choice winner. Editor’s choice winners will receive one of Eater’s iconic tomato can trophies, and reader’s choice winners will score a lifetime of bragging rights.

This year, four laid-back eateries are up for Casual Restaurant of the Year, including Oak Lawn’s Malibu Poke, Zoli’s NY Pizza in Addison, Laotian eatery Zaap Kitchen on Lower Greenville, and hand roll spot Namo in the West Village.

Without further ado, cast your final ballot in the 2018 Eater Awards. The polls will be opened for 24 hours, and are strictly monitored to prevent any voting irregularities.

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https://dallas.eater.com/2018/11/30/18117161/dallas-best-casual-new-restaurant-eater-awards-2018-vote 2018-11-30 16:00:02Z
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Thursday, November 29, 2018

'You will be wiped out': Video shows woman launch into racist rant at Phoenix restaurant - USA TODAY

PHOENIX – Lennys Bermudez Molina was looking for a place to sit at a Wildflower Bread Co. restaurant last week when she received a shocking response.

Bermudez told The Republic she asked a customer whether she could sit at the table next to her. The woman responded: "Do I have a choice?"

Bermudez, a Phoenix resident of Puerto Rican descent, began recording the encounter, in which the unidentified woman says she would prefer "the whole freaking nation to be white.”

"You know that's never gonna happen right?" Bermudez counters.

"It's gonna happen," the customer responds. "You will be wiped out.”

The video has been viewed more than 583,000 times and shared more than 3,200 times on Facebook.

Bermudez said she has never experienced an incident like this in her 35 years of living in the area but blamed the current political climate. She said her family and friends were stunned, describing herself as typically polite and courteous.

"It was really hard for us to explain to (the kids) but, it's a good lesson for them to learn," Molina said. "If it could happen to me it could happen to anybody. Racism isn't a particular color."

The outpouring of support she's received since posting the video has been overwhelming, with people reaching out to her from around the world, she said.

"I really just want to thank everyone," Bermudez said. "Thank them for all of their messages and kind words."

"We were made aware that a guest made some inflammatory remarks to another guest on the basis of race in one of our restaurants," the restaurant company said in a statement following the encounter. "Wildflower does not condone racism or discrimination of any kind."

A company spokesman said the woman who berated Bermudez left on her own. The company also confirmed that the restaurant's manager escorted Bermudez to her car after the incident.

"This particular incident was highly sensitive and highly charged," Louis Basile, Wildflower's founder, said in the statement. "But we’re always concerned about our guests' experience."

Follow Lorraine Longhi on Twitter: @lolonghi

More: Ryanair passenger accused of tirade apologizes, says 'I'm not a racist person'

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https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2018/11/29/woman-fires-off-racist-rant-customer-phoenix-restaurant/2158732002/ 2018-11-30 03:31:00Z
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Pink and black residue on this week’s Restaurant Ratings - WHNT News 19

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Pink and black residue on this week’s Restaurant Ratings  WHNT News 19

Madison County Hardee's 8827 Madison Blvd, Madison, AL 35758 Score: 83 Ice machine has pink and black residue inside of it. Follow Up: The ice machine ...

https://whnt.com/2018/11/29/pink-and-black-residue-on-this-weeks-restaurant-ratings/ 2018-11-30 02:36:00Z
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Makan Delrahim: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know - Heavy.com

Makan Delrahim

Official photo Makan Delrahim

Makan Delrahim, who has emerged as a possible U.S. Attorney General pick for President Donald Trump, is an Iranian-born lawyer who is an Assistant Attorney General supervising the Antitrust Division.

He is an immigrant to the U.S. “My life experience reaffirms that we live in the greatest country in the world,” he said in a speech at a naturalization ceremony in which he described his background. You can read the full questionnaire that Delrahim filled out when he went through a previous confirmation process here; it describes all of his work assignments and gives some biographical information.

Delrahim has close ties to the White House and Trump administration. He served as deputy assistant to the president and deputy counsel to the president from January 2017 until becoming assistant AG. He was a volunteer attorney for the Trump-Pence transition team from December 2016 to January 2017. His name emerged November 29, 2018, as a possible replacement for ousted Attorney General Jeff Sessions. You can see his previous confirmation hearing transcript here.

Here’s what you need to know:


1. Delrahim Became an U.S. Citizen in 1992 & Was Born in Tehran, Iran to an Iranian-Jewish Family

Delrahim described his background in a speech he gave at a naturalization ceremony in 2018 in Washington D.C. “I became a citizen in 1992 when I was in law school here in Washington, D.C.,” he revealed in that speech.

“I was born in Tehran, Iran. Although anti-Semitism was a fact of life for my Iranian-Jewish family, my life changed forever when the Shah was deposed and a hostile revolution caused my family to flee.”

The Delrahim family settled in Los Angeles, California. “We began anew in Los Angeles in 1979,” he said in the speech. “As many of you know, Los Angeles is a diverse place that is home to people of different religions, ethnicities, nationalities, and ideologies. Los Angeles will always be home and I am forever grateful to the community that embraced me and my family. I still visit my elementary school and take my kids to that small town where I grew up.”

His confirmation questionnaire says that Delrahim attended the UCLA School of Theater, Film, and Television; received an M.S. in biotechnology from John Hopkins University; received a law degree from George Washington University School of Law; attended American University for a year; and received a B.S. in Kinesiology from UCLA. He has been a member of the Republican Jewish Coalition.

He is married. In 2009, The Jewish Journal reported, “A small group of local Jewish and non-Jewish supporters of Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Penn.) attended a cocktail fundraiser at the Malibu home of Iranian Jewish couple Makan and Michelle Delrahim.”


2. Delrahim Worked at His Father’s Gas Station Growing Up & Praised Anti-Government Protests in Iran

Soon after arriving in the United States, Delrahim says, he “learned English and my family embraced American life.”

His father ran a gas station after coming to America. “Some of my fondest memories of our early years in the United States include working at my dad’s gas station. I pumped gas, changed oil, tuned up cars, and sold tires. Those experiences taught me a lot more than just how to work on a car,” Delrahim said in the speech. He told Recode that he considers the time in Los Angeles to be his “formative” years.

“My father, and others in my family who worked hard to feed their families, embodied the American entrepreneurial spirit and I am grateful that my father made the American dream possible for myself and my sisters,” Delrahim said in the speech. “He taught me the value of hard work, resilience, and dedication. He went through much hardship, but persevered. Like many of you, I strive to teach my three children these lessons each day.”

In January 2018, Delrahim described anti-government protests in Iran as “heartening” in an interview with the Voice of America. In that interview, he criticized the Iranian government for blocking its people from using technology.

“I think any country that tries to limit people’s access to technologies that improve their lives, does that to their own ultimate disadvantage,” he told VOA.

The story reported that he came to America when he was 10, and quoted him as saying, “As somebody who has a desire to go back and experience the culture and history of the country once again,” he said, “it is an exciting time to watch [Iran’s latest anti-government protests].”


3. Makan Delrahim Supervises the Department of Justice Antitrust Division, Produced a Film & Once Optioned a Reality TV Show

makan Delrahim

Makan Delrahim

In his confirmation questionnaire, Delrahim said that he is an executive producer of and investor in a feature film called Trash Fire through the entity Trash Fire, LLC. The IMDB page for the movie describes it this way: “When Owen is forced to confront the past he’s been running from his whole adult life, he and his girlfriend, Isabel, become entangled in a horrifying web of lies, deceit and murder.” It starred Adrian Grenier.
Daily Variety called the film “an aggressively unpleasant black comedy with modest horror flourishes.” The trade magazine added, “Gunning for cult status, the pic may find a small following among those who prefer their dialogue exclusively delivered in the form of insults, put-downs and offensive outbursts.”

He co-founded a technology company called Preconcile LLC, which sought to “provide easier access to litigants of small claims who may not get resolution due to legal fees or inconvenience.”

He also said that he was creator of a television concept he optioned to Pilgrim Films, a “producer of reality television shows.” The show was tentatively titled “Ultimate Justice” and was called “a legal reality concept.”

He has been involved with the Aleph Institute in Los Angeles providing free assistance “to the imprisoned in providing religious relief during high holidays to Jewish (as well as some non-Jewish) prisoners.” He was also providing pro bono legal assistance to seek the reversal of the conviction of “a religious prisoner” in the case of U.S. v. Sholom Rubashkin.

According to his U.S. Department of Justice biography, Makan Delrahim was confirmed on September 27, 2017, “as Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division.” When he was chosen for the position, The New York Times wrote that he “will help shape the corporate competition landscape for the next few years.” The fact he’s already won confirmation may appeal to Trump because it could make Delrahim’s confirmation as AG an easier prospect.

The Times says his views contrast with the Obama administration, which “took a more aggressive approach in antitrust toward protecting innovation, especially in the technology industry.”

However, according to VOA, under his supervision, a federal lawsuit was filed “to try to block U.S. telecom giant AT&T’s proposed takeover of American media conglomerate Time Warner.” A September 2018 article in Recode said the government “lost that attempt, but is appealing the ruling.” CNN reports that the move “puzzled a number of legal experts and contradicted Delrahim’s own prior stance.”

In a speech, Delrahim explained his antitrust philosophy, saying, “We don’t pick winners and losers at the Antitrust Division, but protect competition on the merits and enforce the laws equally. Hard nose competition ensures lower prices, increased innovation, higher quality goods and services, and improved opportunities for entrepreneurs to succeed.”

Delrahim’s “rich antitrust background covers the full range of industries, issues, and institutions touched upon by the work of the Antitrust Division,” continues the DOJ biography. “He is a former partner in the Los Angeles office of a national law firm. He served in the Antitrust Division from 2003 to 2005 as a Deputy Assistant Attorney General, overseeing the Appellate, Foreign Commerce, and Legal Policy sections.”

The bio continues: “During that time, he played an integral role in building the Antitrust Division’s engagement with its international counterparts and was involved in civil and criminal matters. He has served on the Attorney General’s Task Force on Intellectual Property and as Chairman of the Merger Working Group of the International Competition Network.” Delrahim was also a Commissioner on the Antitrust Modernization Commission from 2004 to 2007.


4. Delrahim Once Worked for Google & Urged People to Vote for Donald Trump to Save the U.S. Supreme Court

In March 2016, Delrahim wrote an op-ed in the New York Post urging people to vote for Donald Trump. The opinion piece was titled, “To save the Supreme Court, vote Trump over Clinton.” In it, he argued against never Trumpers, writing, “Key Republicans say they won’t back Donald Trump if he’s the GOP nominee. That may make them feel good — and seem principled. But from a practical standpoint, it makes no sense. Not when the next president will choose one or possibly more justices for the Supreme Court.”

He said that Trump was not his favorite candidate, but he urged Republicans to support Trump if Trump became the nominee, writing, “There’s no glory in handing the Supreme Court to a Democratic president. But if we write off Trump, that’s what will happen.”

He later worked as a deputy to the then White House counsel Don McGahn.

Delrahim has ties to another Republican president: George W. Bush.

“Delrahim worked on antitrust issues for former President George W. Bush’s administration, and spent time in corporate law as an attorney for several major technology companies including Google,” the VOA profile on him reports.

He has spoken about the power of innovation, saying at a 2018 speech at Haifa, Israel: “Innovation is a topic that is near and dear to me. As a former patent lawyer, I have seen up close the dynamic power of innovation and the importance of providing the right incentives to those who create. America’s longstanding appreciation for innovation led it to protect patent holders in the United States Constitution, which was ratified in 1789.”

He referenced the big tech companies in that speech, saying, “With creativity and a little chutzpah, a start-up can radically change the competitive landscape in digital markets. Google leapfrogged over several incumbent search engines, and Facebook overtook MySpace. The iPhone surpassed Blackberry, Motorola and others. Netflix vaulted over Blockbuster and brought important competition to our video landscape.”

However, he added, “The cycle of dynamic competition and disruptive innovation undoubtedly benefits consumers. Innovation brings new goods and services to the market, reduces costs, increases efficiency, and fuels economic growth. The question, then, is how can antitrust policy best encourage and protect this beneficial innovation?” He concluded, “We should take action only with credible evidence of harm to competition and not harm to just competitors. We must balance the goals to protect the very incentives to innovate, but at the same time be prepared to intervene when anticompetitive conduct distorts the free market.”

According to his DOJ bio, Delrahim “previously served as Deputy Assistant to the President and Deputy White House Counsel.

His confirmation questionnaire lists the following jobs: He was a partner at Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, LLP; co-founded the LLC called Preconcile in Baltimore, Maryland; was an adjunct law professor at Pepperdine University; was a member of the Trademark Public Advisory Committee for the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office; was a deputy Assistant AG for the U.S. Department of Justice Antitrust Division; was a commissioner for the U.S. Antitrust Modernization Commission; was staff director and chief counsel to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee; was an associate attorney for Patton Boggs, LLP; was a technology licensing analyst at the National Institutes of Health; was deputy director of Intellectual Property Rights for the Office of the United States Trade Representative. Back in 1991, he worked as a restaurant host and chef for Mom’s Grill Restaurant in Port Hueneme, California, and was a fitness trainer in Agoura Hills, California.


5. Delrahim Described His Values as Conservative & Was a Lawyer for the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee

In a 2017 interview with The New York Times, Delrahim described his values as conservative. “I came to realize that my values identified with the conservative viewpoints of personal responsibility, hard work, respect for individual rights and appreciation of a limited role of government,” he told the newspaper.

However, the New York Times reports that he “has a reputation for forging bipartisan relationships. His wife was a Democrat when they met and has voted for Democrats.” He was also on the volunteer legal policy advisory team in 2016 for Marco Rubio for President and in 2015 for Scott Walker for president. He was a volunteer in 2007 for Young Professionals for Mitt.

Earlier in his career, according to his DOJ bio, Delrahim “served as antitrust counsel, and later as the Staff Director and Chief Counsel of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee.” The New York Times says he worked at the latter for “Senator Orrin G. Hatch, Republican of Utah.”

Hatch released a statement after news broke that Delrahim was being considered as AG, writing, “Makan would be an outstanding choice. He’s one of the finest lawyers and most capable administrators I know.”

The Times also describes him as a lobbyist, reporting that, over the years, he was “the lawyer or federal lobbyist for clients including Ultimate Fighting Championship, Comcast, Google, Johnson & Johnson, and Blue Cross and Blue Shield.” He helped shepherd the Neil Gorsuch nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court, the Times reports.

He’s also served on the board of directors for the World Poker Tour Foundation, Chrysalis, and on committees for the American Bar Association.

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https://heavy.com/news/2018/11/makan-delrahim/ 2018-11-30 02:52:00Z
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