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Enjoy Spicy Noodles and Natural Wines at Mian in West Adams The still-expanding Sichuan specialist, which is part of the Chengdu Taste group, opens for dinner service this week Noodle dishes at Mian If there’s one thing that Angelenos of all stripes can get behind, it’s a bowl of spicy noodles. Los Angeles loves the stuff in all its forms, which is at least in part what has helped to make Mian such a sensation across the Southland. The star restaurant, an offshoot of the Chengdu Taste empire run by Tony Xu and Sean Xie, began in the San Gabriel Valley but has now expanded its footprint to include Artesia, Las Vegas, and beyond. Next up: West Adams. ....
Great meals forged in chaos, from finessed fine dining to a double dose of bagels. Meesha s menu draws from multiple regions of India. Restaurants have now spent a year jolting over the potholes of our pandemic dining protocols. And a small but battle-tested new guard has never known any other type of existence. Over the past six months, we welcomed some long-anticipated spots, plus others that sprang into existence as an unintended upside to last springâs shutdown chaos. A few currently offer adapted versions of their original vision, like a gorgeous Capitol Hill wine bar that sits empty while the kitchen puts out creative lunchtime pizza. (Fear not, Seattleâs newcomer pizza game remains strong, and more varied by the day.) ....
As Diners Return, Restaurants Face a New Hurdle: Finding Workers nytimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nytimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Shutterstock Could artificial intelligence help restaurants reopen in a safer way? Seattle-based RealNetworks hopes so. The 26-year-old tech company has recently launched an app called MaskCheck that can detect whether someone is wearing a face covering properly through AI and encourages compliance via audible feedback. Though the app is generally intended for use in heavily trafficked venues, such as schools and public transportation, restaurants may find it useful as well, particularly once restrictions on indoor dining lift again. The free app available nationwide for Android and iOS uses a tablet’s camera to determine full coverage for masks over a person’s nose and mouth, without using facial recognition or collecting any personally identifiable information. It then produces an audio message depending on whether someone is “good to go” or needs to make adjustments to the mask. The app can also send alerts to a manager of the venue if someone is detected wi ....