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Popular Flushing Rice Roll Stand Is Heading Into Brooklyn

Popular Flushing Rice Roll Stand Is Heading Into Brooklyn

Eater6 hours ago
is a born-and-raised New Yorker who is an editor for Eater's Northeast region and Eater New York, was the former Eater Austin editor for 10 years, and often writes about food and pop culture.
Joe's Steam Rice Roll, the popular Flushing rice roll stand, is expanding with its third location, to Sunset Park at 774 58th Street, near Eighth Avenue. No opening date has been announced yet, but an Instagram post on July 30 states that it is 'coming soon.' Eater has reached out for more information.
Owner Joe Rong is known for his Cantonese chang fen, where the rice cakes are produced with an electric-powered stone mill from China. The filling menu is simple with five options ranging from curry fish balls to pork, plus additions like corn and scallions. He first opened Joe's in Flushing in 2017, followed by Canal Street in 2018. There had been an outpost on St. Marks Place, but that closed. There's an Uptown location on the Upper West Side that opened in 2020. The new location appears to be taking over the sole New York location of Los Angeles Taiwanese tea shop chain Yi Fang Taiwan Fruit Tea.
Very new Manhattan restaurant changes its name
One of summer's hot new dining destinations in the city has already changed its name after less than a month in service. Haymarket, the modern European restaurant with Caribbean flair in Chelsea, is now called Markette.
A rep tells Eater this is because there are similarly named businesses in the area. Within a two-block radius, there's gastropub Haymaker Bar, condo building Haymarket, and the Haymarket Media company. Co-owners chef India Doris and Alex Pfaffenbach had originally chosen the name Haymarket to honor a 19th-century dance hall in the borough and the famous London district.
Longtime Manhattan bakery up for sale
A longtime Tribeca bakery is up for sale now. Owner Madeline Laciani is looking to sell her 33-year-old Duane Park Patisserie because she wants to retire, as reported by Tribeca Citizen. Laciani had been baking in New York for some time, per the publication. She had opened her first bakery in 1997 with her then-husband, Patisserie Lanciani, and ran two locations of it after they got divorced until it closed. Then she opened Duane Park in 1992, becoming known for its cakes and cupcakes.
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