Restaurants Shutter Nationwide Friday in Support of General Strike

Plus, food influencers protest ICE, Trump threatens tariffs against French wine, and more.
A protest in MN with signs and American flags soaring in the air.
Star Tribune via Getty Images

Welcome to Deep Dish, a weekly roundup of food and entertainment news. Last time we discussed Prue Leith’s exit from Bake Off.

Food is political. It’s been said so often that it feels trite, nevertheless it’s perhaps truer now than ever. Take a look at Minnesota, where almost 100 food shelves in the state have signed an open letter calling for an end to the surge in federal immigration agents in the state. Or look at the network of food-based mutual aid that’s sprung up across the state. Or the many restaurants refusing to serve ICE agents.

Today, restaurants across the country are participating in a widespread general strike in an effort to protest ICE activity. In this week’s Deep Dish, we speak to two restaurant owners on why they’ve chosen to close down for the day, and what message they’re hoping to send by striking. Also this week: Your favorite food influencer may have tried to post about ICE, only to find themselves censored, tariffs on wine are causing problems, and, among all of this, Noma begins its residency in LA—someone get me something fermented, STAT.Sam Stone, staff writer

Restaurants Strike Across the Country Against ICE

Closing unexpectedly on a day of service is no small burden on a restaurant, where bottom lines rely heavily on regular hours and full tables. Many food establishments around the country nonetheless deemed the sacrifice worthwhile today, joining a nationwide strike against ICE’s mass deportations and violence against protesters in Minneapolis and across the country.

Evan Hanczor, chef-owner of Little Egg in Brooklyn, NY, grappled this week with how best to support the effort, weighing the impact on their staff and finances. “But earlier this week a couple of our servers asked if we'd be closing on Friday and offered their willingness to forego their shifts in solidarity with the strike,” he wrote to Bon Appétit, prompting a team-wide discussion and ultimate consensus to close in solidarity with the movement. He’s been heartened to see the chain reaction of other restaurants following suit. “It’s not a choice every small business can make, but I think seeing it happen to the degree it has has led more folks to act and speak publicly in some way,” he said. “We all need permission structures and community support to allow us to find our way toward action and I think we’re seeing folks find that in the actions of others here.”

Over on the opposite coast in Los Angeles, local café Sqirl similarly closed in solidarity with their community, one of the first impacted by ICE activity, they wrote in a statement to Bon Appétit. “The raids that followed caused real harm to our staff, our neighbors, and the broader restaurant community,” they said. “When that happened, people across the country showed up in solidarity and spoke out in support, and it meant a lot to us as Angelenos.”

“At its core, our industry is about bringing families and communities together, not ripping them apart,” Sqirl wrote in their note. “We’re participating in this collective action to make that point crystal clear, and we are proud to stand alongside the workers, families, and communities who have made the same decision to honor those principles.

For his part, Hanczor hopes the collective action, and Little Egg’s own participation in it, “will be received as a small jolt of realization and encouragement for our community and customers,” he says. “When we were considering closing, I thought, This national strike call is cool, I wish it could really reach the level it needs to to work. And then I had the thought, Oh, I (and the restaurant) [are] decisive in that happening, each of us are.”

The Salt Cure Restaurant Recovery Fund is collecting donations to support Minnesota-based restaurants facing safety issues and financial stressors. —Li Goldstein, associate newsletter editor

A sign on a Mexican restaurant in Forest Lake Minnesota can be seen advising customers that they have temporarily closed...
Well wishers have left good will messages at the front door of the restaurant in the small city near Minneapolis, Minnesota.Photo by ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP via Getty Images

Food Influencers Protest ICE Activity

Many in food media have taken a public position on ICE. Martha Stewart posted to Instagram, at the apparent urging of her granddaughter. Zoë François, @zoebakes on Instagram, has shared posts covering protests as well. Across the internet, influencers have dedicated videos, posts, and stories to protesting ICE activity.

But those posts haven’t always reached their intended audience. Justine Doiron, @justine_snacks on TikTok, posted a recipe video of her banana bread cinnamon buns—delicious. In the voice-over, she expressed criticism of ICE activity in Minnesota. Then something strange happened: Even though she has nearly 2.5 million followers, the video hovered around 800 views. Something was off. She took down the video, and reposted it with a different voice-over—one in which she found clever ways to circumvent mentioning ICE or Minnesota directly. Views were back to normal.

Doiron wasn’t the only person to experience what seemed like cut and dry censorship on the platform. Actress Meg Stalter claimed something similar happened to her. And other users reported similar throttling of their views. Some claim this happened soon after TikTok was sold to new conservative American owners. For its part, TikTok has said the issues stem from technical problems that they’re working to resolve. —S.S.

Noma’s LA Residency Sells Out in Minutes

Dinner for two at Noma will cost an eye watering $3,000, but that price tag was no barrier to the hordes of hopefuls that reserved every single table available the minute (literally) reservations opened. We’ve got the behind the scenes details on what exactly the $1,500-per-person dinner will include—and we’ve got some ideas why it might cost that much. Hint: Noma is reportedly paying for all of its chef’s kids to attend LA-area private schools. Also: specialty beverages, bespoke brews, little-known ingredients foraged from the area—all the exquisite details you’ve come to expect out of a Noma dinner. — S.S.

Trump “Blackmails” France With Wine Tariffs

President Trump last week threatened French President Emmanuel Macron with 200% tariffs on French wine and Champagne, in apparent retaliation for France’s intentions to not join an international Board of Peace for Gaza charged by Trump. It’s far from the first time Trump has weaponized such bargaining tactics, particularly with tariffs. France’s minister of agriculture, Annie Genevard, characterized Trump’s inflammatory threats as “blackmail.” —L.G.