Coverbild der Sendung Industry Night with Nycci Nellis

Industry Night with Nycci Nellis

Podcast von Nycci Nellis

Englisch

Kultur & Freizeit

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Mehr Industry Night with Nycci Nellis

Industry Night is the long-talk format radio show and podcast that brings you up close and personal with the trends and trendsetters across today’s diverse food, wine, spirits, brews and hospitality landscape. For in-depth insights and insider tips, join your host, Nycci Nellis, cohost of Foodie and the Beast, the DC area’s one and only food and wine variety show, and all the locally, nationally and globally renowned chefs, restaurateurs, cookbook authors, mixologists, somms, distillers, brewmasters, pit-masters and more that you’ll hear from on Industry Night.

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Episode DAVID NAYFELD HAS THE ANSWER TO, DAD? WHAT’S FOR DINNER? Cover

DAVID NAYFELD HAS THE ANSWER TO, DAD? WHAT’S FOR DINNER?

Host Nycci Nellis talks with Chef David Nayfield — James Beard semifinalist, founder of Che Fico, and author of Dad, What's for Dinner? — about fatherhood, kitchen intensity, Jewish-Italian cuisine, and the family meals that turn dinner into a team effort. About the Guest Chef David Nayfield trained at Aqua, Joel Robuchon, and Eleven Madison Park before returning to San Francisco to build Back Home Hospitality — home to Che Fico, Bubola, and Via Aurelia. "Don't be a martyr. Don't be the one dying at the stove washing everything, cooking everything yourself. Get everyone involved. Make it a team sport — and you'll connect with the people you love the most."Chef David Nayfield "What I love about David is that he can talk about Michelin-level precision and a weeknight chicken nugget with the same seriousness. That tells you everything about who he is." - Nycci Nellis The Book: Dad, What's for Dinner? Dad, What's for Dinner? is built around real parenting moments — meltdowns, weeknights, celebrations — with a simple philosophy: cook with your kids, not just for them. Nayfield wrote much of it during a custody dispute, turning limited time with his daughter into intentional kitchen rituals. The book argues that a meal does not have to be perfect to matter. Hand a child a spoon, share a task, and dinner becomes something you make together. From Picky Eater to World-Class Chef Nayfield was born in the United States to Jewish refugees from Belarus who traveled through Rome before settling in California. As a kid, he rejected the heavy dishes of his heritage and gravitated toward the food in his friends' homes. The turning point came when a relative's American boyfriend made fried chicken from scratch. Nayfield realized great food could happen at home, in ordinary life, and still feel revelatory. "I thought you had to go to a restaurant to eat food that you liked. And then someone made it at home — and I was like, this is incredible. How did that happen?" - Chef David Nayfield That early curiosity became a career defined by rigor, curiosity, and the search for his own voice. The Year in Europe After leaving Eleven Madison Park, Nayfield staged across Europe at Mirazur, with a chocolatier in Paris, in Barcelona, and in Swiss Michelin kitchens. By the end, he realized the food he was making still looked too much like someone else’s. The breakthrough came when he admitted how consistently he was drawn back to Italian food — and a trip to Rome’s Jewish ghetto clarified why. Jewish-Italian Cuisine and Che Fico In Rome’s Jewish ghetto, Nayfield encountered cucina ebraica — artichokes fried in olive oil, dishes shaped by necessity, and flavors woven into everyday Italian cooking. At Che Fico, he marked dishes with Jewish stars to honor those roots, from carciofi alla giudia to ribollita and suppli al telefono. For him, the point is honesty: show the lineage clearly and respectfully. On Kitchen Intensity Nayfield has lived through the worst of kitchen culture, and he separates discipline from abuse. Intensity, urgency, and focus can build excellence; humiliation and harm cannot be excused as part of the job. "If your ambition is a Michelin star, it is going to take grit that only comes from years in environments where people put the product in front of comfort." - Chef David Nayfield His argument is simple: ambition and environment have to match, and the choice to enter that world should be conscious. Via Aurelia: Fine Dining on His Own Terms Nayfield's newest restaurant, Via Aurelia, is modern Tuscan by design — a framework rooted in Tuscany’s history, coastline, Jewish communities, and ingredient evolution. It offers tasting menu and à la carte service, with hand-painted plateware, ceramic lighting, and art from local artists. It is fine dining, but on his own terms: beautiful, technical, and collaborative rather than precious. "We are participating as one of the artists. The goal is to take something and turn it into something beautiful — not just to procure incredible product and step back." - Chef David Nayfield Quick Takes Most underrated pantry ingredient: Oil-cured anchovies. Put them in anything. They dissolve into a dish and add a depth most people can't quite identify but always want more of. Ideal Sunday supper: Ribeye on the grill, Jimmy Nardello peppers and summer squash alongside, maybe a baked sweet potato. Simple, seasonal, no agenda. What home cooks overcomplicate: Measuring everything that isn't baking. Stop worrying if your onion is large or medium. Cut it up and throw it in. Taste as you go. Don't fear salt. Don't fear acid. That's what makes restaurant food taste like restaurant food. Where to Find Chef Nayfield Follow Chef Nayfield at @davidnayfield and the restaurants at @chefico, @viaaurelia, and @bubola. Dad, What's for Dinner? is available wherever books are sold. It makes a thoughtful gift for Father's Day, high school graduates, college move-ins, or anyone cooking for themselves for the first time. Follow, subscribe, and share Industry Night with Nycci Nellis — and find Nycci on all platforms at @nyccinelis.

21. Mai 2026 - 1 h 10 min
Episode Whiskey, Wellness & the Future of Drinking With Ari Sussman on Industry Night Cover

Whiskey, Wellness & the Future of Drinking With Ari Sussman on Industry Night

On this episode of Industry Night, host Nycci Nellis sits down with Ari Sussman — 2024 Whiskey Maker of the Year — for a wide-ranging conversation about the science, culture, and future of distilled spirits. From winemaking in France to founding Michigan State's artisan distilling program, Ari brings a rare blend of academic rigor and bartender instincts to one of the most fascinating conversations in the drinks world right now. The result is a show notes episode that moves from grain to glass, from tradition to experimentation, and from old assumptions to a very different future for whiskey. "I've interviewed a lot of people in the drinks world, but Ari Sussman is genuinely one of the most fascinating minds I've ever sat across from. He doesn't just make whiskey — he rethinks it from the ground up." — Nycci Nellis, Host of Industry Night Ari's path into spirits is anything but conventional. He began as a policy analyst, took a one-way ticket to France, and found himself immersed in winemaking before eventually building distilleries across the United States. That winding trajectory gives him a perspective that feels both deeply technical and refreshingly practical. In this conversation, he explains how those early experiences shaped the way he thinks about flavor, process, and what makes a spirit truly memorable. Much of the episode turns on the science behind grain and flavor. Ari talks about how American whiskey has long leaned wood-forward, and why more expressive grain varietals can open the door to a more layered, nuanced drinking experience. He also discusses how Prohibition disrupted grain diversity and how distillers today are working to bring those flavors back into the conversation. It is part history lesson, part sensory deep dive, and part argument for why the category still has room to evolve. The episode also gets at one of the most interesting tensions in spirits: the transparency gap between producer and consumer. Ari argues that the usual questions wine drinkers ask do not always translate to whiskey, because the industry has historically placed a marketing curtain between the maker and the drinker. That idea runs through the whole conversation, especially as the hosts consider how younger consumers are discovering spirits today — often on their phones, through influencers, and with different expectations about access and authenticity. That broader shift raises bigger questions about the future of American whiskey. Ari makes the case that longevity in the category depends on more than just technical quality; it also depends on whether a brand connects with people and stands for something meaningful. He shares how he approaches that balance through his work with Whiskey Gypsy, including the Explorer expression and the importance of Appalachian oak in shaping the final product. The conversation makes clear that innovation in whiskey is not just about novelty — it is about building something that can last. "If you apply normal wine enthusiast questions to the spirits industry, it doesn't really lead you anywhere. There's a big curtain between the consumer and the producer, and marketing is supposed to fill that gap — but it wasn't." — Ari Sussman What's Inside This Episode * How Ari went from policy analyst to buying a one-way ticket to France — and ended up building distilleries across America * Why vodka is actually harder to make than bourbon * The "flying monkeys" of Michigan State's pioneering distilling program * How grain varietals got lost to Prohibition and are finally making a comeback * The wood-as-teabag technique Ari stole from winemakers * Why price and quality have zero correlation in blind tastings * What's inside Whiskey Gypsy's Explorer expression — and why Appalachian oak matters About the Guests Ari Sussman is a winemaker-turned-master-distiller whose career spans French vineyards, Michigan State University's pioneering Artisan Distilling Program, and distillery builds across the country. Named 2024 Whiskey Maker of the Year, he is currently the lead whiskey developer behind Whiskey Gypsy — a brand co-founded by country star Eric Church and entrepreneur Raj Elva that's quietly rewriting the rules of American bourbon. Nycci Nellis is the host of Industry Night and co-host of Foodie and the Beast. A longtime fixture in food and beverage media, she brings sharp questions and genuine curiosity to every conversation — whether the topic is Michelin-starred kitchens or the grain science behind a six-year bourbon. Find Ari Sussman's work and the Whiskey Gypsy Explorer expression at whiskeygypsy.com (spelled W-H-I-S-K-E-Y-G-Y-P-S-I). For more of Ari's published research and grain varietal studies, follow him on LinkedIn. Follow Nycci Nellis across platforms @nyccinellis for more Industry Night episodes and food and drink adventures.

14. Mai 2026 - 45 min
Episode Cocktails, Caviar & the Perfect Martini at RPM Italian Cover

Cocktails, Caviar & the Perfect Martini at RPM Italian

When Ben Lieppman, Beverage Director at RPM Italian, is in town from Chicago, you sit down, grab a cocktail, and start asking questions. That's exactly what host Nycci Nellis did — pulling up a stool at one of DC's most buzzed-about bars to talk aperitivo culture, the martini renaissance, and what truly great hospitality looks like from behind the stick. "How you want to drink it is how I'm going to serve it. If you want a really expensive American whiskey with Coke — I'm going to give it to you. However you want to enjoy it is how we'd like to serve it." — Ben Lieppman About the Guest Ben Lieppman is a 16-year industry veteran who went from dishwasher to culinary school graduate to craft cocktail bars in Chicago — and now runs one of DC's most respected bar programs at RPM Italian. Follow him on Instagram at @benlieppman and on LinkedIn. Find RPM Italian DC at rpmrestaurants.com. About Your Host Nycci Nellis is the force behind Industry Night and The List — DC's go-to voice for food, drink, and hospitality culture. Find her everywhere @nyccinellis. "Money is money. Whether they're male, female, or non-binary — someone wants a drink, you make it for them." — Nycci Nellis What's Inside This Episode The RPM Ethos Quality ingredients, no shortcuts, and classic Italian spirit translated behind the bar — fresh pasta philosophy meets craft cocktail culture. Aperitivo Hour Monday through Friday, 4–6 PM. $8 cocktails and $8 bites from a curated menu — intentionally approachable in a city of $25 pours. The Martini Renaissance From the iconic RPM Dirty Martini — served with chips and caviar instead of olives — to the resurgent Cosmo, martini culture is back and unapologetic. Single Barrels & Spirit Picks Ben breaks down his favorite bottles: Weller bourbon, Sazerac rye, and agave gems like Fortaleza and G4 — and why great spirits work both neat and in cocktails. Cocktails Ben Made On Camera The Paparazzi Hendrick's gin, Cocchi Americano, house-made berry and bergamot cordial, fresh lemon juice, topped with Fever-Tree cucumber soda and crushed ice. Light, effervescent, and built for a long aperitivo hour. The Seasonal Old Fashioned Sazerac rye, demerara syrup, Angostura bitters, and Miletti Amaro — an Italian-leaning riff on a classic, served table-side with a hand-stamped RPM ice cube and an orange rosette pour. What People Are Drinking Right Now Ben sees a clear shift in how guests approach drinking — driven by cost, wellness awareness, and a broader cultural moment. Low-ABV and non-alcoholic options now require the same intention and craft as any spirit-forward cocktail. The aperitivo category is growing fast, and it fits naturally into RPM's Italian DNA. Low-ABV Spritzes, Negronis, and aperitivo-style cocktails that hit sweet, bitter, and effervescent notes without the heavy pour. Mocktails Crafted with the same intention as their spirit-forward counterparts — balance and flavor come first, ABV is secondary. Martinis A full resurgence — from classic gin martinis with Cocchi Americano to the upscale RPM Dirty Martini with chips and caviar. Cosmos & Throwbacks Once dismissed, now celebrated. Crushable, fun, and beautiful — the nostalgia wave is real and RPM is here for it. Find Ben Lieppman & RPM Italian Instagram - @benlieppman LinkedIn - Ben Lieppman RPM Italian DC - rpmrestaurants.com

7. Mai 2026 - 21 min
Episode Amy Brandwein on Leadership, Kitchen Culture & Running Restaurants Today Cover

Amy Brandwein on Leadership, Kitchen Culture & Running Restaurants Today

Welcome to Industry Night with Nycci Nellis, and we are back at City Ridge, this time in the absolutely gorgeous, amphitheater-style setting at The Botanica. I love being here. Last time I was in the neighborhood, I was over at Equinox in Wisconsin chatting with powerhouse pastry chef Susan Bae, and today, I’m sitting down with another true force in the industry: Award-winning chef and restaurateur Amy Brandwein. Amy and I go way back, like, way back. I first met her in Roberto Donna’s kitchen at Galileo, in the Laboratorio days, when http://TheListAreYouOnIt.com [http://thelistareyouonit.com] was just getting off the ground, and she was one of the only women in that kitchen. Fast forward, and she is now the chef and owner of Centrolina and Piccolina, a multi–James Beard nominee, and one of the most respected voices in the DC dining scene. But this conversation? We go deeper. We talk about her unconventional path — from politics to pasta — the realities of building and running a restaurant, and what leadership in the kitchen really looks like today. We did get a little dark and a little teary. Amy shares stories from earlier in her career, moments that were incredibly difficult at the time, and how those experiences ultimately shaped her into the leader she is today: stronger and deeply committed to creating a healthier, more sustainable environment for her team. We also dig into kitchen culture, labor models, mentorship, and what it means to be a woman leading in today’s restaurant industry. It’s honest, it’s real, and it’s a conversation that feels especially important right now. You think you know, but you don’t know. Chapters 00:00 - Introduction 00:14 - Intro and Botanica location 05:00 - Rediscovering cooking after college 07:45 - A unique lunch experience 11:16 - Intense kitchen work experience 13:58 - Growing up playing soccer 16:09 - Balancing culinary school and life 21:08 - Starting a restaurant concept 24:57 - Talking about citrus salad 25:43 - Describing the perfect lunch 30:52 - Turning to exercise for healing 34:10 - Coping with personal loss 35:52 - Realizing personal growth over time 40:22 - Running a respectful kitchen 42:13 - Leading by example in business 46:57 - Media accountability and responsibility 49:40 - Chef confrontation over leaked info 51:50 - Advice on sustainable growth 57:02 - Reflecting on Amy Brandwine's journey 57:50 - Hosting at City Ridge location 59:31 - Outro Key Takeaways From Politics to Pasta: The Power of Reinvention Building a Restaurant, Building a Community Kitchen Culture: Then vs. Now Personal Evolution Fuels Team Transformation Women at the Helm: Breaking Barriers Media Myths and Realities: Owning Your Narrative Sage Advice for Aspiring Restaurateurs Quotes "Build your own business plan, do your own numbers, and whatever you don’t know—please learn it before you start a restaurant with somebody else. You have to know what you’re doing." - Amy Brandwein "When I look at that menu, I'm like, this is how I want to eat—bright, seasonal, and no one's going to judge you. It's about creating an environment where the food is the experience." - Nycci Nellis Filming location:https://www.cityridgedc.com/living/botanica/ [https://www.cityridgedc.com/living/botanica/] Amy’s Social Media Links: Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/chefamybdc/ [https://www.instagram.com/chefamybdc/] Website: https://www.centrolinadc.com/?utm_source=ig&utm_medium=social&utm_content=link_in_bio&fbclid=PAZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAc3J0YwZhcHBfaWQMMjU2MjgxMDQwNTU4AAGn__SEUEZIFhB_R-u5jF-PryAvtWZdPJBlhpRUxuA0qdQXNvQU3i2-tUm6ShM_aem_vAvtkuEUNoraAW1YldmSgwhttps://www.centrolinadc.com/ [https://www.centrolinadc.com/] https://www.centrolinadc.com/?utm_source=ig&utm_medium=social&utm_content=link_in_bio&fbclid=PAZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAc3J0YwZhcHBfaWQMMjU2MjgxMDQwNTU4AAGn__SEUEZIFhB_R-u5jF-PryAvtWZdPJBlhpRUxuA0qdQXNvQU3i2-tUm6ShM_aem_vAvtkuEUNoraAW1YldmSgw https://www.piccolinadc.com/ [https://www.piccolinadc.com/] Featuring Nycci Nellis Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nyccinellis/ [https://www.instagram.com/nyccinellis/?hl=en] Website: https://www.thelistareyouonit.com/ [https://www.thelistareyouonit.com/] Produced by Heartcast Media:http://www.heartcastmedia.com [http://www.heartcastmedia.com]

16. Apr. 2026 - 59 min
Episode Can Restaurants Put People First? Jon Murray of Noko Hospitality Thinks So Cover

Can Restaurants Put People First? Jon Murray of Noko Hospitality Thinks So

Welcome to Industry Night with Nycci Nellis, where we go deep with the people shaping hospitality right now. This episode comes at a moment when the industry is taking a hard look at itself. From conversations around René Redzepi and Noma to Pete Wells examining the brigade system, the question is clear: what does the future of restaurant culture look like? My guest, Jon Murray of Noko Hospitality, is building a real answer. Behind Noko and Kase x Noko, Jon is redefining hospitality with a people-first model—four-day workweeks, healthcare, therapy, and real work-life balance. He calls it, People Over Profits. This is a conversation about leadership, culture, and what it takes to build restaurants that actually work for the people inside them. Also, just don’t be a …. Jerk. Chapters 00:00 - Introduction 01:20 - Discussing hospitality leadership and culture 04:24 - Focusing on employees first 07:06 - Reevaluating restaurant industry values 10:38 - Improving restaurant staff benefits 14:15 - Sticking to their principles 18:55 - Building a dedicated restaurant team 20:03 - How we hire our team 22:57 - Giving and receiving feedback 26:20 - Rethinking kitchen culture 30:05 - Community and local impact 34:21 - Prioritizing people in hospitality 35:41 - Outro Key Takeaways Redefining Success: People Over Profit Rethinking Old-School Restaurant Culture Hiring for Heart and Humanity Leadership by Example: Don’t Be a Dick Success with Heart: “If We Go Out of Business, At Least We Tried” Community Commitment: Giving Back Isn’t Optional A Challenge to the Industry: Think Beyond the Bottom Line Quotes Nycci Nellis: "At the end of the day, hospitality is about people—both the ones we serve and the ones who are doing the serving. If we don’t take care of people inside our restaurants, the whole thing doesn’t work." Jon Murray: "If you lead with heart and you lead from the right place and you work your ass off, things happen the way they’re supposed to happen." Follow Industry Night: https://www.thelistareyouonit.com [https://www.thelistareyouonit.com/] Follow Nycci Nellis: Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/nyccinellis [https://www.instagram.com/nyccinellis] Website: https://www.thelistareyouonit.com/ [https://www.thelistareyouonit.com/] Produced by Heartcast Media:http://www.heartcastmedia.com [http://www.heartcastmedia.com]

9. Apr. 2026 - 36 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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