Displaying all articles tagged:

Tysonwongophaso

  1. Closings
    Buzzkill: Tyson Bees Calls It QuitsWith little explanation, the truck announced via Facebook that it was closing up shop.
  2. Truckin’
    Tyson Bees Is Out of CommissionThe truck has been sidelined and a return to the streets could be a long way away.
  3. Truckin’
    Tyson Bees Finally Makes its DebutTyson Wong Ophaso rolls out his long awaited food truck.
  4. Truckin’
    Tyson Bees Gets PrimpedThe truck is getting closer to rolling out.
  5. Truckin’
    Tyson Bees Still GroundedThe new truck is almost ready to roll, but won’t make it to the rescheduled Nightmarket.
  6. Truckin’
    Silver Linings: Tyson Bees Will Debut at the Rescheduled NightmarketDespite previous setbacks, the new food truck will be present for the market’s rain date.
  7. Truckin’
    Tyson Bees Truck’s Debut Is Temporarily StalledMinor setbacks will keep the truck off the streets temporarily.
  8. Truckin’
    Truck Watch: Tyson Bees Prepares For Maiden Voyage; Guapos Tacos Rolls Out AgainTwo new tucks are gearing up to hit the streets.
  9. Truckin’
    Bee Innovation Will Buzz Drexel and Penn This FallThe truck gets its name from the swarms of bees that were its previous tenant.
  10. Back of the House
    West Coast Restaurant Pulls a Single White Female on Chinatown BrasserieWhen former Chinatown Brasserie chef Tyson Wong caught the last train for the coast, we knew that his new employers wanted to draw on his experience. But from the look of Red Pearl Restaurant’s menu, they’re doing everything to replicate Chinatown Brasserie but cloning the waiters and cooks from pirated stem cells. This has to be one of the most naked ripoffs since David Coverdale decided to make a career of imitating Robert Plant.
  11. NewsFeed
    Tyson Wong Ophaso Heads for the West CoastTyson Wong Ophaso, who you may remember as the chef at Chinatown Brasserie whom was beat up by three drunks in front of his own restaurant last year, had some good news to tell us when we ran into him the other night: Six months after leaving the Brasserie, he’s been hired as corporate chef by Domaine Restaurant Group, which owns Dakota and 25 Degrees in the Hollywood’s Roosevelt Hotel, as well as two Red Pearls, a kind of California version of Spice Market with “fresh, clean, and lean versions of Asian street food,” as Ophaso tells us.
  12. Back of the House
    Tyson Wong Ophaso Leaving Chinatown Brasserie for Bangkok FamilyTyson Wong Ophaso, until yesterday executive chef at Chinatown Brasserie, says he just needs a break. “I haven’t seen my family in fifteen years,” the Bangkok native tells us. “And they’re getting old, man. I’m the only son.” Ophaso, whose career has taken him from Thailand to France and had him running the La Cote Basque kitchen at age 26, most certainly deserves some time off. (Especially after the brazen — and bizarre — assault that he suffered outside of the restaurant in September.) We wish him all the best.
  13. NewsFeed
    Show Them the Money: New York Chefs Make New Year’s Resolutions Being typical office drones, our New Year’s resolutions were fairly predictable: lose weight, use our time better, quit freebasing Lipitor. Thankfully, a few of the city’s chefs have shared some of theirs with us.
  14. What to Eat This Week
    Chinatown Brasserie Presents Peking Turkey!Tyson Ophaso and Joe Ng, the chefs at Chinatown Brasserie, are also on the Thanksgiving bandwagon, and will be cooking turkeys in the restaurant’s custom-built Perking-duck oven. Expect crisp, laquered skin like you’ve never seen on your family table. The birds will be accompanied by the restaurant’s delicate, supple steamed Mandarin pancakes, cranberry-ginger chutney, and hoisin sauce. On top of that, Ng will also be preparing turkey spring rolls, baked turkey buns, and other Thanksgiving-inspired dim sum items. The menu will be available all weekend.
  15. NewsFeed
    Executive Chef Assaulted at Chinatown BrasserieWe’ve heard of people having it out with management, but this is ridiculous. Around midnight on Wednesday, an exchange of words between three men who had just had an hours-long dinner at Chinatown Brasserie and maître d’ Robert Banat devolved into the trio yelling at Banat and shoving him. Executive chef Tyson Wong Ophaso tells us that when he stepped in to separate the men from his maître d’, the biggest and youngest of the three threw Ophaso on his back. (Ophaso is five foot, six inches, 130 pounds.) Cursing loudly, the man then dragged the hapless chef by his feet onto the sidewalk and proceeded to beat him up, despite the best efforts of Brasserie staff — but no other onlookers — to protect him. The men fled before police arrived, but one of them left behind his credit-card information, and all three were captured on the restaurant’s cameras. They’ve all been identified, and Ophaso is pressing charges. Meanwhile, what kind of town is this that a chef is beaten by three goons, and no strangers come to his aid? Any man that cooks orange beef like Ophaso deserves the utmost protection against bruisers.
  16. User’s Guide
    The Go-Go Gourmet You have to hand it to David Burke. The frequently mulletted meat-and-lobster whiz has done it all: He pulled off an experimental gastronomy restaurant in a neighborhood populated mostly by septuagenarians and rethought the hamburger inside a department store. Now, in his crowning glory, he has created a menu for bikini bar Hawaiian Tropic Zone on Seventh Avenue.