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Pork ramen from New York restaurant Momofuku Noodle Bar. Momofuku is a culinary brand established by chef David Chang in 2004 with the opening of Momofuku Noodle Bar. It includes restaurants in New York City, Toronto (defunct), [1] Las Vegas, and Los Angeles (Noodle Bar, Ssäm Bar, Ko, Má Pêche (defunct), [2] Seiōbo, Noodle Bar Toronto, Kōjin, Fuku, Fuku+, CCDC, Nishi, Ando, Las Vegas ...
Milk Bar (originally Momofuku Milk Bar) [3] is a chain of dessert and bakery restaurants in the United States, founded by chef Christina Tosi. As of 2024, the chain has branches in New York City; Los Angeles; Washington, D.C.; Las Vegas; Bellevue and Chicago. [4] Tosi began and as of 2018 still owns the chain along with investors.
David Chang (Korean: 장석호; Chang Seok-ho; born August 5, 1977) [3] is an American celebrity chef, restaurateur, author, podcaster, and television personality.He is the founder of the Momofuku restaurant group.
Momofuku (ISBN 030745195X) is a cookbook by the American chef David Chang, the New York Times food writer Peter Meehan, and Chris Ying, who was the editor-in-chief of the food quarterly Lucky Peach. It was published in 2009.
Momofuku Ando (Japanese: 安藤 百福, Hepburn: Andō Momofuku, March 5, 1910 – January 5, 2007), born Go Pek-Hok (Chinese: 吳百福; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Gô͘ Pek-hok), was a Taiwanese-born Japanese inventor and businessman who founded Nissin Food Products Co., Ltd. [4] He is known as the inventor of Nissin Chikin Ramen (instant noodles) and the creator of the brands Top Ramen and Cup Noodles.
Momofuku may refer to: Momofuku Ando (1910–2007), Taiwanese-Japanese businessman who founded Nissin Food Products and invented instant noodles;
Tosi's Momofuku Milk Bar (2011), a cookbook containing recipes from the restaurant, was published by Clarkson Potter. [26] Susan Chang in The Washington Post called it "a hard-core baking book, dense with text, full of sub-recipes", [27] recipes which are ingredients for the main recipe and need to be prepared prior to preparing the main recipe.
Momofuku lawyers demanded the company, and others it contacted, stop using the term “chili crunch” within 90 days. According to the letter, seen by NBC News, Homiah’s use of the term ...