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Michelin’s Return to Vegas Is Huge for the Southwest

February 19, 2026
A print copy of the 2009 Michelin guidebook to Las Vegas.
Books on display at the Michelin 2009 Las Vegas guide launch party at the Wynn Resort & Casino in Las Vegas. | Chris Farina/Corbis via Getty Images

There’s arguably no more intense and fascinating restaurant city than Las Vegas. In terms of pure volume of sales, it has no equal, perhaps anywhere in the world. The city also knows how to put on a show, offering culinary spectacle at some of the nation’s greatest restaurants. This combination of money and glitz is ripe for awards-conferring organizations like Michelin. 

The last time the tire company awarded stars in the city, Bobby Flay’s Mesa Grill and Nobu inside the now-closed Hard Rock Casino held stars. That was in 2009. Then the guide left Sin City and didn’t return for 17 years. Michelin’s new Southwest guide — to be released later this year — will correct that long, notable absence.

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This story was inspired by my newsletter, where I shared my predictions for which Southwest restaurants will get Michelin stars in 2026. Sign up here to get my latest intel and insights.

“The Michelin Guide launched in Las Vegas in 2008, in the wake of the global economic crisis,” a Michelin spokesperson said this week. “As a result, the Guide chose to remove the city from its list of destinations. This year, the time proved to be right to launch a regional edition for the Southwest, inclusive of Las Vegas.”

Michelin could change the dynamic on the Strip by reinforcing the biggest names in town like José Andrés and the late Joël Robuchon. It could also create competition among the mega resorts, as they compete for the most stars. You can imagine the pylons touting that “Caesars Palace has six Michelin-starred restaurants” or that “The Venetian has the most Michelin-starred restaurants in Vegas.”

 

Customers at a chef’s counter.

It could also allow restaurants other than steakhouses to compete for the big, expense-account dinners that surround any major convention. (Nothing says “balling out” to clients better than dinner at a Michelin-starred omakase.) Whether they end up earning stars or not, placement in the guide could also lift off-Strip restaurants like Sparrow + Wolf — a reasonably priced, polished fine dining restaurant in Chinatown — cementing the greater city as a regional destination.

“[This] is a huge win for all of us here,” says chef Brian Howard, who owns Sparrow + Wolf. “I’m really excited for the city and to show that our culinary scene has matured over the years. When you peel the onion back, there’s some real serious cooking happening in this town.”

What do you think?

How will Michelin stars impact Vegas? Is the Michelin guide’s business model ethical? Let me know your thoughts by sending a message directly to kangtown@eater.com.

But Michelin’s return to Vegas isn’t just important for the city. It also marks the near-completion of the guide’s expansion across the U.S. and the total success of its pay-to-play model.

After leaving Vegas (and LA) in the late 2000s, Michelin started to expand again in 2017, adding a guide to D.C. alongside its bases in Chicago, San Francisco, and New York. Since then, it’s spread across the lower 48 states. Including guides to Canada and Mexico, North America is now about as well-covered as Michelin’s home base of Europe.

Michelin’s expansion has been driven by destination marketing organizations. Destination Marketing Organizations (DMOs), essentially tourism boards and visitors bureaus, use public money from hotel and local taxes in an effort to spur economic development. It’s typically a good trade-off. Alongside other projects, these organizations pay to attract Michelin guides; for instance, in Florida, DMOs from Miami, Orlando, and Tampa pooled an estimated $1.5 million for guides between 2022 and 2024. In Texas, Fort Worth, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, and Austin cobbled together $2.7 million for guides in 2024. Along with publicity for a city’s food scene, Michelin collaborates on award reveal ceremonies, food festivals, and other events that bring tourism revenue to a city and participating restaurants.

“[That] revenue contributes to financial or editorial investment, which is quite huge,” Gwendal Poullennec, formerly international director of the Michelin guide and now senior vice president of lifestyle at the company, told Bon Appétit in 2024. “In terms of full-time employees, paying the bills, salaries, travel expenses, and cars — my editorial expenses are bigger than some of the largest newspapers in the world.” 

Chefs and partners pose with the Michelin man at the Michelin Guide ceremony in California in 2019.

The guide’s return to Vegas could be read as a huge validation of impressive restaurants, evidence of an aggressive expansion strategy by Michelin, the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority (the local DMO) increasingly relying on high-end culinary tourism to bring in visitors, or all of the above.

That pay-to-play model hasn’t turned off diners or restaurant owners. Michelin has won the global competition for fungible credibility, evidenced by the hundreds of shiny red placards hanging in restaurants (and the hundreds of thousands of page views garnered on Eater stories about Michelin over the years). In the same interview, Poullennec insisted the guide maintains its independence, not allowing deals with DMOs to influence its awards. 

Why has the Michelin guide become so successful in America? It’s given out lots of accolades. Michelin has mostly shed its myopic focus on a handful of cuisines (expensive, European or Japanese-inflected). Bib Gourmand awards (for affordable dining) and the guide’s “inclusion” system (previously called Plates) for non-starred restaurants (which still get placards) have expanded the type and number of restaurants that might qualify in some way. Even stars seem a bit more accessible, as places like Mexican seafood stand Holbox in Los Angeles; casual pasta-and-wine spot Boia De in Miami; and San Francisco’s relatively affordable State Bird Provisions nab them. 

The Michelin Guide adapted to America, and America adapted to the Michelin Guide. It’s a happy marriage, for now.

“The Michelin Guide’s priority is to establish where there is culinary potential and where there is a demand in terms of traffic, tourism, and all that,” Poullennec said in the same interview. “So between the Destination Marketing Organization and the Michelin Guide, I think the road map is pretty much aligned.” The Michelin Guide adapted to America, and America adapted to the Michelin Guide. It’s a fairly happy marriage, for now.

That doesn’t mean the guide will end up in every corner of the country. This week, a spokesperson said the guide team looks for new areas to cover based on “destinations matching our demanding criteria.” Guide inspectors may not think every city or region that pays for a guide is worthy of tons of stars, while DMOs that represent areas outside of culinary centers like New York City, Chicago, and Washington D.C. may not be satisfied with a handful of winners. 

Markets for guides may also fluctuate over time. The Michelin organization tends to start in new areas by awarding a few noteworthy restaurants that people would expect to receive stars; then, every year or so, it makes a splashy recognition, like three stars for Somni and Providence in LA last year or stars for three barbecue spots in Texas in 2024. Multiyear contracts for guide coverage allow cities to secure some guaranteed publicity while allowing Michelin room to renegotiate for more investment periodically. 

A full Las Vegas dining room with people at tables and the bar.

The timing of Michelin’s Southwest guide is interesting. It arrives just as news reports everywhere declare the city’s dramatic drop in tourism — not unlike the fallout of the economic crisis in 2008 that originally pushed Michelin out of the city. It’s unclear what kind of deal Las Vegas’s well-financed tourism board may have negotiated now — neither Michelin nor the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority commented on that aspect.  

The guide may not dramatically transform Las Vegas’s economic fate and change the underlying issue of sky-high costs. However, it’s also becoming clear that the “downturn” may be more of a snap back to expected growth after rabid post-pandemic spending. Still, any momentum around one of Vegas’s true strengths — its dining scene — will count as a win for the city’s DMO. 

Though the bulk of Howard’s menu at Sparrow + Wolf is a la carte, he does offer a $142, five-course chef’s tasting menu that falls in line with what Michelin likes to recognize. But he’s not chasing the star. “The Michelin Guide doesn’t define us. We’re consistently busy, and I’m happy my seats are full every night,” says Howard. “The accolades are nice and an honor, but we’re not going to change our direction.” He still thinks Sparrow + Wolf will get a star.



from Eater https://ift.tt/TVJ1p3U
Michelin’s Return to Vegas Is Huge for the Southwest Michelin’s Return to Vegas Is Huge for the Southwest Reviewed by Unknown on February 19, 2026 Rating: 5

The Eater x Fortessa Edit Brings Restaurant-Worthy Dinnerware to Your Table

February 18, 2026
Give every meal its shine with beautiful plates from Eater x Zwiesel Fortessa

Tablescaping helps set the tone for how we eat and live, which is why Eater partnered with Fortessa to curate a selection of its glassware, flatware, and dinnerware worthy of everything from your best breakfasts to your secret-recipe Bolognese. If you’re new to the brand, U.S.-based Fortessa has been a hospitality industry go-to since it debuted in the 1990s, now providing an impressive 80 percent of high-end hotels in North America with its beautiful plates, glasses, and bowls. When it merged with the heritage Black Forest-based crystal glassmakers at Zwiesel in 2022, the union only strengthened and diversified Fortessa’s savoir faire with an even more robust range of wine and spirit glassware, making it a tablescaping powerhouse on a global scale. When selecting items for the Eater x Fortessa edit, our team had the brand’s signature functionality and versatility top of mind. 

Our team’s passion for dining out means we’re always having conversations about the best glassware and tableware we’re seeing in both classic and buzzy new restaurants (and the sets we want to use at home). As such, in our collection you’ll find a translucent pale green glass Seraphina dishware set that begs for an heirloom tomato salad; ceramic dishware that will make your friends think you once built an envy-inducing Earthship in Taos; and the Parasol bone china set that should be used to serve Ina Garten a slice of coconut cake. 

Eater x Zwiesel Fortessa Foss Stoneware (12 Piece Dinnerware Set)

Eater x Fortessa edit

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Eater x Zwiesel Fortessa Folly Crystal Glass, 6 Ounce Cocktail (Set of 6)

Eater x Zwiesel Fortessa Folly Crystal Glass, 6 Ounce Cocktail (Set of 6), Clear

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Eater x Zwiesel Fortessa Seraphina Glass (12 Piece Dinnerware Set)

Eater x Zwiesel Fortessa Seraphina Glass, 12 Piece Dinnerware Set (Service for 4), Verde Green

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A plate, after all, is not just a plate; it’s a canvas for spicy spinach gomiti wedge salad, or perfect pancakes. And while we’re not immune to the occasional charms of decor microtrends, there’s something to be said about the aesthetic staying power of classic Burgundy wine glasses and a matching, party-worthy set of knives, forks, and spoons. In the Eater x Fortessa edit, expect volcanic finish stoneware dinner plates, thoughtfully designed wine glasses, and minimalist flatware that looks almost too good to store in a drawer. 

Don’t just think of it as setting the table. Think of it as building out the tableware version of a capsule wardrobe.  

Shop the entire Eater x Fortessa edit on Amazon



from Eater https://ift.tt/KHi2ZAE
The Eater x Fortessa Edit Brings Restaurant-Worthy Dinnerware to Your Table The Eater x Fortessa Edit Brings Restaurant-Worthy Dinnerware to Your Table Reviewed by Unknown on February 18, 2026 Rating: 5

Half a Pig is Broken Down Weekly for This Brooklyn Restaurant’s Lunar New Year Menu

February 17, 2026

Lunar New Year is a busy time for Leland Eating and Drinking House in Prospect Heights, when the restaurant deals with about 1,500 covers a night. Chef and partner Delfin Jaranilla and head butcher Gary Little gave us a special look at this year’s holiday menu, including pork and shrimp shu mai, char sui pork, and dan dan noodles, and how they try to integrate sustainable practices into these dishes.

Jaranilla and Little start by breaking down half a Tamworth pig; each cut will be integrated into a different dish and even turned into stock for a Filipino soup that they eat for staff meal. For the char sui, pork shoulder is cured in five spice, salt, and pepper before being marinated in hoisin, garlic, and spices for one day. The next day, the shoulder is seared until it’s charred and caramelized on the outside, then it’s baked and covered in more sauce before being served.

Noodles are important menu items for Lunar New Year (they symbolize longevity), so dan dan noodles are made from scratch. The meat sauce is made with ground pork from the same Tamworth pig, which is cooked down with Sichuan pepper, chili oil, tamari, and cooking wine before adding aromatics and tahini. The fresh noodles are added to the sauce, and are plated with a poached egg and a pickled relish.

Finally, shu mai are made with pork and shrimp, which are seasoned, mixed with a mushroom medley, and finally mixed with tapioca starch to help bind the filling. The dumplings are shaped like a coin purse, a symbol of wealth and prosperity during the new year.

Jaranilla is proud of the produce and meats they source at Leland, joking “I can guarantee you that happy pigs taste better.”

Watch the latest episode of Experts to see Jaranilla’s process for making thoughtful Lunar New Year dishes at Leland Eating and Drinking House.



from Eater https://ift.tt/xkG8P7h
Half a Pig is Broken Down Weekly for This Brooklyn Restaurant’s Lunar New Year Menu Half a Pig is Broken Down Weekly for This Brooklyn Restaurant’s Lunar New Year Menu Reviewed by Unknown on February 17, 2026 Rating: 5

29 Valentine’s Day Gifts for the Food Lover in Your Life

February 13, 2026
29 Cool Valentine’s Day Gifts for the Food Lover in Your Life

Is there a greater love language than food? You could buy my heart with Ina Garten’s coconut cake, some king crab legs, or a heaping tower of chocolate-covered honeycomb. But there are also plenty of food-related gifts — a farfalle-shaped candle! A rhinestone chocolate chip cookie necklace! — that would make a food- or drink-obsessed person really happy this Valentine’s Day.  

It’s easy to please a food-lover on such a famously indulgent holiday. (No one ever turned up their nose at caviar and Champagne), but we’d like to offer a few more alternatives for the person who has already done many a lobster dinner, and whose pantry shelves overflow with heart-shaped Le Creuset cookware. They’re the person who orders for the table (whether you agree or not), and they know how to make an elaborate layer cake. You can’t give them something expected, like an Instant Pot. It’s safe to assume they already own every mug ever made or sold at Anthropologie. And don’t even think about getting them a Dutch oven: They already have one in a signature color. These are the gifts they won’t see coming, but will adore — dare we say, savor. Many, if not all of the Valentine’s Day gifts below are also able to be shipped to your loving arms in a matter of days, and given that capitalism’s most cherubic holiday is just around the corner, the time to order really is now. 

Below, we’ve rounded up food-related Valentine’s gifts for everyone on your list, from your pasta-loving partner to cast-iron snobs, wannabe wine experts, and everyone in-between. (If this list still doesn’t cut it, get them a good old-fashioned gift certificate to Williams Sonoma, which will cover all the bases.)


For the bucatini enthusiasts

The Sfoglini Pasta Club (One-Year Subscription)

Love carbs? Invigorated with bottomless curiosity about obscure pasta shapes? A subscription to Sfoglini’s Pasta Club is a slam-dunk gift that includes four quarterly shipments full of fun surprises, but each one is guaranteed to feature six bronze-die cut, slow dried pastas (classics and specialty varieties) as well as six accompanying recipes. Saffron malloreddus in a killer ragu may well be in the future for your lucky recipient.
Sfoglini pasta club many boxes of pasta

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For the amaro nerd

Matchbook Daytrip Strawberry Amaro

Matchbook Drop Shop produces this unique amaro, made with leftover strawberries from the Mattituck Lions Strawberry Festival, them combines them with nettle, quassia, jasmine, rose, and nutmeg fruit for a bright, complex, and fruity aperitif. It makes an affordable but exciting gift for those who love a spritz or a bitter sipper before or after a meal.

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A little something for the person you just started seeing

Chocolate sardines are trop chic right now, and are the perfect small, slips-in-your-bag gift for cheekily impressing a food lover — tinned-fish and chocolate-craving folks alike.

Simon Coll Milk Chocolate Sardines

Simon Coll milk chocolate sardines

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Sardines en Chocolat au Lait

milk chocolate sardines

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For the person who swears you can only get decent pizza in New York

Di Fara Pizza Classic Neapolitan Pizza (2 Pies)

Nothing says “I love you” like the best Neapolitan pie in the five boroughs.
A pizza

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For the situationship with a serious sweet tooth

Saigon Cinnamon Roll Phone Case

OK, but how fun is this hyperrealistic cinnamon roll phone case, which looks iced to perfection and swirling with brown sugar? The only downside is that every time you take a mirror selfie, you’re guaranteed to get a craving for Cinnabon.

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For the person with whom you eat takeout four nights a week

PeachCAUS Korean premium spoon and chopsticks set

Listen, we all respect the Drawer O’ Leftover Takeout Chopsticks, and we honor the classic wooden variety for its reliable service. That being said, high-quality utensils really can make even a humble DoorDash meal feel more romantic. Grab two sets so that you can both scarf in style — or all four if you’re feeling fancy.
PeachCAUS korean spoon and chopstick set in cute colors

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If their love of food is rivaled only by their love of the Criterion collection

A24 Films’ Scrounging: A Cookbook

Did the 12-scoop ice cream sundae in Home Alone rewire their brain? Do they squint at the screen with intense concentration during the breakfast spaghetti scene in Elf? This super-fun cookbook from A24 Films collects and catalogs all of those bizarre pantry recipes from modern movies — think The Breakfast Club’s Pixy Stix sandwich and Kramer vs. Kramer’s “divorced dad French toast” — plus features an introduction by Matty Matheson.
Scrounging A24 cookbook

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For the person who drinks four cups of coffee a day

Bestinnkits Smart Coffee Cup and Warmer

Next to fancy olive oil and local bakery gift cards, smart, self-warming coffee mugs can be such a fail-proof present for boyfriends, girlfriends, they-themfriends, in-laws, emotionally remote uncles, and anyone who drinks hot beverages. As writers who are always glued to their desks, we sure would appreciate the gift of consistently hot coffee without the need to make repeat trips to the microwave.
Black Bestinnkits Smart Coffee Cup and Warmer.

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For the person who dreams of competing on The Great British Bake Off

Dessert Person: Recipes and Guidance for Baking with Confidence

Claire Saffitz’s Dessert Person is for the baker who toggles between chocolate chip cookies and 18-tier croquembouche (if you know, you know). The photographs beam off the pages, so even a baking novice will want to show off this cookbook on the coffee table.
Claire Saffitz Cookbook - Dessert Person

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For the person who can never decide what they want for dinner

STUNFASSOO Food Decider

Six o’clock rolls around, and you start discussing what you should have for dinner. Is it taco night? Or do salmon hand rolls sound better? What about Sichuan? Oh wait, but then there’s Italian… The next thing you know it’s 8:51 PM, you still haven’t made any progress, and you’re losing options by the second. Never again with this handy dice. It’s a cheeky way of helping an indecisive partner be a better dinner companion.
Food decider dice gift

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If you forgot to make a reservation, it’s three days before Valentine’s Day, everywhere is booked, and you’re panicking

Veselka Complete Ukrainian Dinner (4 People)

If you haven’t booked a restaurant for the big day, don’t sweat it. What your crush really wants is to be spoon-fed some of New York City’s best borscht on a (faux) bearskin rug at your place. Veselka has been a Ukrainian staple in the East Village 1954 (the new-ish location in Williamsburg is also delightful), and you can order a smorgasbord of pierogi, borscht, stroganoff, and more right to your door. 
Veselka Complete Ukrainian Dinner (4 People).

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Or, if you’re willing to pay a fortune to score the ultimate dinner reservation…

Noma LA Dinner Reservation

Get on the waitlist and pray that you’ll score the privilege of paying $1,500 per person for bragging rights that you ate at the West Coast iteration of the best restaurant in the world.

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If they live to eat (fancy tropical fruit)

Rincon Tropics Seasonal Mixed Fruit Box (Medium)

This 4-5-pound box of seasonal fresh fruit is tailored to what’s in season — right now it might be passionfruit, blood oranges, Eureka lemons, limes, cherimoya, Meyer lemons, and mandarins. Your morning yogurt bowl or smoothie is about to get epic.

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If they are happily in the cult of hardcore martini-lovers

Maison Balzac Black Bow Coupes (Set of 2)

You see the pure bliss on their face when they take the first sip of an ice-cold Belvedere ’tini. Here’s an idea: why not learn how to make your partner’s favorite cocktail, and serve it up in this set of these too-perfect, bow-embellished glass coupes from the comfort of your home? 
Maison Balzac Black Bow Coupes (Set of 2).

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So they can sear a ribeye in style

Smithey Cast-Iron Skillet

Gifting someone personalized, engraved cast iron feels like the cookware equivalent of getting matching tattoos. Perhaps it’s the hardiness and enduring nature of the gift in question — treat your cast iron well, and it can last for generations — but it would make for such a strong declaration of love. Smithey will engrave its cast-iron cookware with the name or message of your choice, and the No. 12 (12-inch) skillet is perfect for the occasion.
Smithey 12-inch skillet in cast iron

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If they’re all in on the pistachio mania

DS & Durga Pistachio Eau de Parfum

It’s 2025 and pistachio’s reign in the current cool-flavor hierarchy remains strong. For the food-lover who wants to smell like a scrumptious artisanal pastry, DS & Durga’s cult-fave Pistachio perfume is just the ticket. While it is, naturally, very pistachio-forward, it’s a complex and nuanced gourmand fragrance with notes of cardamom, patchouli, almond, and vanilla — and yet feels grown-up, bearing no resemblance to a saccharine Bath & Body Works spray. A warning, though: Sniffing your wrist can be addictive when you’re wearing this scent.
DS & durga pistachio perfume

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Valentine’s Day chocolate that’s a little something different

Vosges Haut-Chocolat Chocolate Forest Mushroom

Definitely one of the groovier chocolate creations we’ve ever seen.
Vosges Chocolate Forest Mushroom

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For the baker with quirky-chic taste

Puppets and Puppets Cookie Claddagh Ring

Not a day goes by when I don’t think of Puppets and Puppets’ chocolate chip cookie-themed jewelry collection. If you’re someone who loves a baker, this eccentric yet chic take on a classic Claddagh ring is perfect. The gold-plated conversation piece features black rhinestone “chips.”
Puppets and Puppets Cookie Claddagh Ring.

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A trompe l’oeil that delights the senses

Gohar World Biscuit Tin Candles

Food-shaped candles have never looked cooler, and the Italian family-run company Gohar World, which operates out of Milan, has been leading the pack with its realistic and romantic creations, including this faux-tin of a dozen mini cookie candles.
Gohar World Biscuit Tin Candles.

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For the hot sauce addict

Momofuku Chili Crunch Sampler

Tell someone you think they’re hot stuff with some hot stuff — more specifically, this five-pack of Momofuku’s cult-fave chile crunch, which includes hot honey, black truffle-infused, extra-garlicky, and extra-hot versions of the now-classic condiment.
Momofuku chili crunch variety pack

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For the cute gardener

The Magnolia Company Meyer Lemon Gift Tree

This baby Meyer lemon tree may be small nowm but will grow into a mature tree up to 10 feet tall, blossoming in the spring and producing sweet Meyer lemons in its very first year. It includes growing instructions, and (hopefully) like your love, will yield its own gifts for years to come.
Meyer lemon gift tree

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For the wine snob who loves to lounge

Kolo Willer Cord Faux Fur House Shoes

Are they so clearly wine-related? Maybe not to the naked eye. Look, if you want some novelty wine slippers that say “Wine Time,” they’re out there—knock yourselves out! These are just really good-looking, super-comfortable house shoes from Kolo, and they pair perfectly with a pét-nat enjoyed while loitering over the kitchen island or kicking back on the patio, watching the sunset. Comfy clothes are true romance, baby. (Bonus: They’re unisex.)
Kolo Willer Cord Faux Fur House Shoes

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For the coffee lover who already has the fancy machine

Stumptown Hair Bender Coffee (5-Lb. Bag)

The gift of nice coffee is classic, but how about the gift of five pounds of coffee all at once? A pillow-sized 5-pounder of Stumptown’s crowd-pleasing Hair Bender costs $90, lasts about a month in a two-person coffee-loving household, and is most likely fresher than what you find at grocery stores.
stumptown hair bender coffee

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For the messy chef

Hedley & Bennett Minimalist Apron

Every home cook needs a reliable apron, and this minimalist version from Hedley & Bennett has everything you need: pockets and a lifetime guarantee. The aprons are made in America from 100-percent cotton and come in chic, muted shades of green, blue, black, and more.
Dark blue apron laying flat.

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For the aesthete

Eat Nunchi 6” Jelly Cheesecake With Letters

You’ve probably spotted Lexie Park’s cakes all over Instagram. The jiggly pastel-hued confections are made with flavors like peach, lychee, and persimmon. They’re only available for local pickup in Los Angeles and tend to sell out fast — keep a close eye on her Instagram account.
Eat nunchi jelly cheesecake

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For the teetotaler with fab taste

Ghia Le Spritz (16 Pack)

Described as a “nonalcoholic aperitif,” Ghia is definitely for grown-ups. The brand’s canned option, Le Spritz, is available in a slew of interesting flavors, including sumac & chili and lime with salt. The classic Ghia soda is a balanced and nuanced combination of flavors like elderflower, lemon balm extract, and riesling grape juice, and the ginger kicks things up with a hint of spicy zing.
Ghia Le Spritz (12 Pack).

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The pizza oven that will make your summer cookouts extra-special

Ooni Karu 12 Pizza Oven

Ooni’s pizza ovens are wildly popular for so many reasons — mainly, how quickly they whip up tasty pizzas and flatbreads — but best of all, they’re easy to set up, so they’re ready in minutes to host a pizza party for two, 20, or however big your crew is. These sleek workhorses are multi-fuel so that you can get cooking quickly with wood, charcoal, or gas (and they kind of look like spaceships, too).
Ooni pizza oven outdoors.

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And while you’re at it, make everything else taste like pizza

Brightland Pizza Oil

It’s a best-seller for a reason: Brightland’s Pizza Oil is a zesty, herby condiment made with oregano, jalapeño, and green pepper for pizza-fying anything your heart desires.
Brightland Pizza Oil

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For the tinned fish fan

The Original Tinned Fish Candle

The packaging makes this charming little candle look like an actual tin of fish, while the vanilla aroma makes it smell, well, a lot better than sardines. 
Tinned fish can.

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For the person who appreciates little luxuries

Sophie Lou Jacobsen Everything Nice Butter Dish

French-American designer Sophie Lou Jacobsen is known for her head-turning cocktail glasses and home decor (her nickel-plated spiral coasters have been in my favorites tab for ages). Unsurprisingly, her take on a butter dish is fanciful yet functional. 
Sophie Lou Jacobsen Everything Nice Butter Dish.

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For the food-lover who looks up the menu before you dine out

TASCHEN Menu Design in Europe Book

This fun, visually pleasing book makes a great conversation piece but is also encyclopedic in terms of its depth. (It’s 448 pages!) This TASCHEN behemoth is where a love of food intersects with intriguing design and waves of nostalgia for restaurants where we may never get to eat now, but we can at least pretend we’re just trying to pick our entrée.
Menu Design in Europe book

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from Eater https://ift.tt/NLWTdzk
29 Valentine’s Day Gifts for the Food Lover in Your Life 29 Valentine’s Day Gifts for the Food Lover in Your Life Reviewed by Unknown on February 13, 2026 Rating: 5

We Asked: How Do You Run a Restaurant With Your Partner?

February 13, 2026

This excerpt was originally published in Pre Shift, our newsletter for the hospitality industry. Subscribe for more first-person accounts, advice, and interviews.

Running independent bars and restaurants takes a special kind of passion. This is the first in a three-part series, in partnership with Verizon Business, sharing how the people behind some of our favorite small businesses make it work. From February 9-22, join Verizon for Small Business Days to see how they’re sharing the love.


This week, we’ve covered how one restaurant couple overcame a tumultuous opening day and what it’s like to run a small business with your spouse—in your own home.

For the final installment of this series, we gathered expert tips for effective partnership (in life and business) from some of our favorite restaurants across the country. Read on for that advice.

You have to divvy up the work

“They say if two people in any partnership agree all the time then one person is not needed. Our advice would be to find strength in your differences.” —Tiffani Ortiz and Andy Doubrava, chefs at The Catbird Seat in Nashville

“[My husband] Ulysses is the one who creates the magic in the kitchen. I am the creative force behind our online presence and the guest experience that keeps people coming back. I don’t pretend to be an expert in cooking or menu decisions, and Ulysses doesn’t interfere with my vision for how we want Campo to be seen.” —Adriana Alvarez, co-founder of Campo é Carbón in La Puenta, California

Similarly: “[My husband] Michael and I have two kids and a lot competing for our attention both personally and professionally. We’ve found things work best when responsibilities are divided based on strengths. For example, Michael leads on design and creative vision for KNEAD’s restaurants, while I focus more on operations and execution. This structure and clarity helps avoid overlap and makes decision making efficient, while still allowing us to collaborate with each other at the end of the day.” —Jason Berry, co-founder of Knead Hospitality + Design in Washington, D.C.

“I think the more you can avoid looking over your partner‘s shoulder and trying to micromanage, the healthier your relationship will be.” —Sam Wood, co-owner of Adventure Time Bar in Denver

“Our biggest tip is to treat each other as equals. Sure, we each have our own strengths, but trusting each other makes everything flow smoother and happier than if one person starts bossing the other around.” —Dani Gaede and Rowan Jetté Knox, owners of Understory in Toronto

It sounds cliche, but communication really is key

“Some things may be hard to say or hard to hear, but a constant line of honest communication ensures everybody is on the same page and resentment doesn’t build. You can always work on things when you say them out loud, but keeping things to yourself, especially in a work environment, always manifests itself in unhealthy ways.” —Ham El-Waylly, executive chef at Strange Delight in New York City

“Humor can fix just about anything, so we use it to move past potential arguments. Also, we never talk about work in bed. Protecting our home as a safe space for life and not work is a good way to keep our core friendship and love alive.” —Sarah Welch, co-owner of Mink in Detroit

On the flip side: “One thing we’ve learned is that saying ‘Don’t talk about business during quality time’ isn’t always realistic. Our work is our life—it’s what we’re passionate about, what excites us, and a huge part of how we connect with each other. Trying to separate it completely can feel forced and, honestly, unnecessary. A tip we’d instead share is: Don’t treat each other like business partners; treat each other like partners who happen to run a business together. Use the deep knowledge you have of one another—the way your partner communicates, what stresses them out, how they receive feedback, what motivates them—to navigate business situations. When challenges come up, approach them with the same care, empathy, and respect you bring to your relationship. That perspective changes everything.” —Sofía Ostos and Fidel Caballero, owners of Corima and Vato

“Apologize when you were in the wrong. Disagreements and mistakes happen, but how you own up to them will define how you grow from them.” —Alex Jump, co-owner of The Peach Crease Club in Denver

“Don’t waste time or energy talking about [issues] that happen less than 3 percent of the time.” —Kasie Curiel, co-owner of Fonda Fina Hospitality in Denver

Finally, take some time away

“Book a staycation every month or two. Take yourselves out for a meal on your days off and treat yourself while also supporting the industry. We treat our ‘weekend’ like it is a vacation so that we can continue to get to know each other, even [after] 17 years [of being together].” —Claire Wadsworth and Nikki Hill, owners of La Copine in Flamingo Heights, California

“Before we started Nixta, I told [my husband and co-owner] Edgar that a nonnegotiable for me is a long vacation. I’m not talking about a long weekend; I’m talking about a month. So, every January, we go abroad somewhere and daydream for a while. Taking this time allows you to actually rest, think outside the four walls of your business, get reinspired, give the management team the opportunity to navigate their way without us ‘coming to the rescue,’ and to also show your team that there’s more to life than just work.”—Sara Mardanbigi, co-owner of Nixta Taqueria in Austin



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We Asked: How Do You Run a Restaurant With Your Partner? We Asked: How Do You Run a Restaurant With Your Partner? Reviewed by Unknown on February 13, 2026 Rating: 5

Meet the ‘It’ Candle of NYC Restaurant Bathrooms

February 13, 2026
Keap Wood Cabin candle
Keap’s Wood Cabin candle has found a following in an unexpected place: New York City’s restaurant bathrooms.

A version of this post originally appeared in Eater Today, which spotlights the freshest news and stories from across the food world every day. Subscribe now.

It’s in the bathroom at Smithereens, and it’s in rotation at Cervo’s, Eel Bar, Hart’s, and the Fly. It’s at June Wine Bar and Rhodora. I knew Schmuck smelled familiar — and then, yep, there it was. I swear I’ve sniffed it at Tatiana, though my email asking for confirmation went unanswered. An Eater colleague clocked it at Elsa, and immediately bought one of her own (and then received another as a Christmas gift).

Sophisticated but not overwhelming, recognizably branded but not flashy, it’s the Wood Cabin candle from Keap, and in New York City restaurants, it’s become a modern classic as far as bathroom candles go. 

Keap Wood Cabin Candle, popular in restaurant bathrooms

Both Nick Tamburo of Smithereens and Moe Aljaff of Schmuck wanted Wood Cabin after smelling it at other restaurants. For Aljaff, that was, specifically, Cervo’s, he said in an email: “I remember walking into their bathroom and thinking it smelled unusually good, which is not a thought you normally have in a restaurant bathroom.” With notes of cedar, palo santo, and fireside embers, it offers a “romantic, transportive quality” that pairs well the “the small, cloistered, and intimate rooms” of his subterranean restaurant, according to Tamburo.

Wood Cabin, which was launched in 2015, is Keap’s most popular scent. The owners of June Wine Bar have been fans of the company since its days as a small, Brooklyn-founded brand (it’s now based in the Hudson Valley town of Kingston) and have used the candle since June opened. It’s the first restaurant where Keap owner Harry Doull smelled his candles in the wild. 

“Our work with restaurants started organically and that’s still the case for the most part,” wrote Doull in an email. Hospitality clients, including restaurants, make up just shy of 10 percent of the company’s sales, though for some businesses “we offer bulk pricing and have developed ways to be better partners over time,” he explained. Doull, who grew up in a restaurant family, thinks the places that use Keap tend to share similar values around hospitality, artisanal production, and sustainability; restaurants can send back their empty glass vessels for Keap to reuse.

In NYC, there’s a referential quality to stocking your bathroom with a candle as commonplace as Wood Cabin; for some people, that’s actually part of the draw. “I’m skeptical of originality,” Aljaff wrote. “Most places that claim to be original are usually just louder about it. What we do is create a room made by what we’ve been inspired by and various details we like — from restaurants, bars, films, music, art, conversations, bathrooms — and put them together in a way that feels coherent.”

Keap calls its candles “natural luxury.” At $54.50 for a single candle, that luxury is a little easier to stomach than even bougier options like, say, Le Labo or Diptyque — especially when, as June continues to experience, diners still occasionally steal the candle.

Keap Wood Cabin candle

Where to Buy:

If woody’s not your thing, here’s some candle inspiration from other NYC restaurants:



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Meet the ‘It’ Candle of NYC Restaurant Bathrooms Meet the ‘It’ Candle of NYC Restaurant Bathrooms Reviewed by Unknown on February 13, 2026 Rating: 5

We Turned Our Home Into One of LA’s Buzziest Coffee Shops

February 11, 2026

This excerpt was originally published in Pre Shift, our newsletter for the hospitality industry. Subscribe for more first-person accounts, advice, and interviews.

Running independent bars and restaurants takes a special kind of passion. This is the first in a three-part series, in partnership with Verizon Business, sharing how the people behind some of our favorite small businesses make it work. From February 9-22, join Verizon for Small Business Days to see how they’re sharing the love.


In early January, Sydney Wayser and Isaac Watters—partners in both business and life—opened one of Los Angeles’s buzziest new coffee shops, Granada. What makes Granada so unconventional is the fact that it’s located on the lower level of their actual home, a situation enabled by LA County’s relatively new Microenterprise Home Kitchen Operation (also known as MEHKO) permit. The permit allows Wayser and Watters to legally serve coffee and food out of their house, with limitations on the number of staff and total annual earnings. In their Angelino Heights backyard, eager visitors sip cortados and eat pastries sourced from baker Sasha Piligian—and it’s been a quick hit. Here, Wayser explains how she and Watters make the setup work.

On opening the cafe

[We were] feeling isolated for so long, post-COVID, and then we had a daughter right after. There was a big chunk of time when we felt we were really missing community and we watched some of our favorite bars, restaurants, and coffee shops close. When we heard about the MEHKO permit, it felt like maybe we could make a community space. Having someone come over and have tea and a pastry in your house—that’s the coziest entry point to community space.

It’s about bringing people together and sharing art, ideas, and culture, like the older idea of a salon—to get together and to be people, not even in a networking capacity. My husband and I were feeling this so strongly, but everyone that walks in the door is feeling it, and they’re just like, I’ve been looking for this.

On creative and life partnership

I’m a musician and Isaac is as well. He also works in film and TV in set design, production design, and architecture. We do some interior design together; we built and designed our house that we live in. We’ve been a creative couple, collaborating since we started dating to being married to having a child, so [Granada] feels like another version of the same thing. 

On operating out of a home

When we designed our [house], we knew we wanted to have parties and events here, so we designed it—not knowing then—to be a perfect coffee shop, with a big, open floor plan and indoor-outdoor space with the garden. We made the public space downstairs, private space upstairs. 

But this is the house that we live in; the big thing that we have to do all the time is clean and maintain it so that it’s ready for people to come in. We have a 3-year-old, so she comes home after the coffee shop closes, runs around the house, and makes a pillow fort out of all the cushions on the sofa. We reset it in the morning before anyone comes in. Our hours are limited: When we decided to do this, we felt that if we’re going to share our home, we need to do it in a way that doesn’t disrupt our family time, so we’re only open when our daughter’s at school.

On managing disagreements

We agree most of the time and disagree sometimes, too, but we manage to really talk through [disagreements] and be mindful of each other. We try to lean into the idea that there’s no wrong answer; it’s just picking an avenue of how we want to proceed. It’s finding compromise and being open about feelings in the process. 

We love and respect each other so much that if I were to say “Let’s do this” and Isaac said “I don’t know about that,” I would also feel like, Well, I really like his ideas, so I’m sure what he’s saying is [right, too]. We both feel seen by the other person and like we can do what we think we are good at. Isaac gets to shine in some things, and I get to shine in others, and then together, we make a strong team.

This conversation has been edited and condensed.



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We Turned Our Home Into One of LA’s Buzziest Coffee Shops We Turned Our Home Into One of LA’s Buzziest Coffee Shops Reviewed by Unknown on February 11, 2026 Rating: 5
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