Food52 Life

Looking Back: All the Places Food52 Has Called Home

by:
July  5, 2015

Did you hear the news? Food52 has a brand new office and we can't wait to share it with you—check back for the full tour tomorrow!

Today: Before the big office reveal, join us for a skip down Memory Lane, as we recap all the places we've called home through the years. Might want to pack a snack.

Food52 Office Amanda Hesser's House

Shop the Story

It was early in the summer of 2009 that the very first posts, recipes, and contests began popping up on Food52. (Do you remember?!) We were a tiny team back then, and looking through all the pictures of our old offices has been the best reminder of how we've truly grown inch by inch. It also brought back a lot of good memories. Read on for a look at all the places Food52 has called home.

Amanda's House in Brooklyn

Where do you start a start-up? At home. 

In the beginning, there was the windowsill photoshoot. It started in a real kitchen (Amanda Hesser's, then decked out in cherry wood cabinets), where our first photographer, Sarah Shatz, would have jerry-rigged a few lights and taken process shots.

Food52's First Office Amanda Hesser's Home

After that, the finished dish was carefully plated and styled on a surface right by the window so it could be photographed in natural light. Our visual style was born and it's been evolving ever since.   

Food52 First Office Amanda Hesser's Home  Amanda Hesser's Home Food52 photoshoot
Left: Amanda and Merrill Stubbs style Barbacoa Beef Cheek Tacos (recognize them?); right: There are ways to make do even when the sun goes down.

We didn't limit our photoshoots to the windowsill, instead taking the liberty of perching food in all kinds of places in Amanda's home.

Food52 James Ransom Photography  Food52 Office Amanda Hesser's Kitchen
Left: James Ransom, glued to the viewfinder of his camera; right: Kristen Miglore, our first official hire and now our Executive Editor, plays chef in Amanda's kitchen.

Unfortunately for Amanda and her husband, some of the best light was in their bedroom. Her kids, Addison and Walker, didn't seem to mind. 

Food52 Photoshoot

The same went for Merrill's daughter, Clara, shown here taking center stage at a photo shoot in Amanda's bedroom. 

Clara in Amanda Hesser's

Many of our early recipes were shot right there in Amanda's bedroom. 

The Early Years at Food52 Kristen Miglore James Ransom   Food52 Amanda Hesser's House  Food52 Amanda Hesser's House
From left: Kristen in her signature topknot making Alice Medrich's Genius Macaroons, Merrill drizzling toffee on a sticky toffee pudding for our style-off during the Summer Food Fights, and Kristen vaccuming up lentils from the very first Dinner vs. Child post. 

Even after Amanda renovated her kitchen and Walker and Addie grew a few inches, some things never changed.

Food52 Amanda Hesser's House  Food52 Amanda Hesser's House

Cherry wood was replaced with gleaming white open shelves and cool blue-grey interiors; the kitchen was much brighter, which made it easier to get well-lit process (and glamour) shots no matter what was happening behind the scenes.

Food52 Amanda Hesser's House
Kenzi Wilburour Managing Editor, is pictured here working on a dough of some sort while Amanda's washer and dryer are repaired—the show goes on!

We took it upon ourselves to explore some other parts of the house. That's Kenzi sniffing out a good wine from Amanda's collection (housed in her bedroom), a roast chicken getting some work done on Amanda's desk, and James, ever camera-ready, at the oven.

Food52 Amanda Hesser's Home  Amanda Hesser's House Food52  Food52 Amanda Hesser's Home

The dining room, adjacent to the kitchen, was unofficially taken over as desk space—much to the likely dismay (but great patience) of Amanda's family. The tripe lady, a team mascot of sorts—a photo by Pinar Yolacan of a woman whose shirt sleeves are made of tripe—watched over us all the while. 

Food52 AManda Hesser's Kitchen

 

Dogpatch Labs

Food52 Dogpatch Labs
Fun fact: Food52 was the first team to work at Dogpatch whose lot included women. 

In September of 2010, our team was invited to work at Dogpatch Labs, a co-working space run by Polaris Ventures—a huge step in our company growth, since this meant six months of free work space.

Food52 Dogpatch Labs

As Amanda remembers it, Dogpatch had a "1990s downtown loft feel—black leather sofas, splashes of red, wood floors, brick walls, an industrial-style kitchen, and black toilets that we could never quite adjust to (and the occasional beer keg—see above)". To make it feel homier, we spread a blue windowpane blanket across our table, topped it with a real lamp (with a real lightbulb!), pictured below, and set to work. 

Food52 Dogpatch Labs

At Dogpatch, we spent a lot of time networking with fellow start-ups in the common spaces and at their tech events. We met Christina DiLaura (now our VP of Commerce Operations), Bridget Williams (Food52's COO), and two of our investors during our six months there. 

 

General Assembly

General Assembly Food52
A Julia Child chalk drawing covered one of the walls at General Assembly.

After our stint at Dogpatch, we moved on to General Assembly in January of 2011, where we stayed for 2 years. Our first workspace there was an office that was vacated when its prior tenant was raided by federal agents. The space was quiet and "a little Being John Malkovich-y," according to Amanda.

Food52 at General Assembly

In order to have a meeting, we just swiveled our chairs around to face the center of our M-shaped desk. And this office is where Genius Recipes was born! The shared space also had conference and event rooms for meetings, which we took full advantage of.

Food52 General Assembly
An editorial meeting takes place on the community couches. 

Food52 General Assembly
We used the conference rooms at GA for meetings of all kinds, including the ones involving liquid cheer.

Food52 General Assembly
Our third annual Piglet party took place at General Assembly. Joe Beef was the winner, as determined by Alice Waters. 

There were also unusual yet inviting, tall-walled "sofa pods" (see below), used for meetings, naps, quiet work, and, as Amanda remembers, "hanky panky by some other start-ups."

General Assembly Food52 Office Space

Food52 Meeting Pods at GA  Food52 GA Sofa PodsBlack, greys, and stripes were our unofficial uniform during those years. 

Eventually, we moved from our tucked-away upstairs office to sit with the regular population. There, we were seated next to what Amanda describes as a "rowdy gambling company, who spent a lot of time flirting with Brette Warshaw, now Digital Editor at Lucky Peach—she barely looked up from her screen."

Food52 General Assembly

These were formative years—we grew to a dozen employees during our time at General Assembly, including Michael Hoffman, Karl RosaenRyan Hamilton, Lauren Locke, and Kenzi Wilbur.

Food52 General Assembly

We also cooked—wherever we could. (Don't act surprised.)

Food52 at General Assembly

And we fought off sad desk lunches with ham (sometimes whole legs of Iberico), snacks, cake, and cocktails in our trusty Chemex.

Food52 General Assembly  Food52 General Assembly

Food52 General Assembly  Food52 Drinks in a Chemex

And we made it feel as much as possible like a home. 

Food52 at General Assembly  Merrill Food52 General Assembly
Left: Decor included large prints of Sarah's photography; right: Merrill, 8 1/2 months pregnant, was still working at 11pm the night before we relaunched the site.

Food52 General Assembly

During our time at General Assembly, Merrill met Brad Sherman, the eventual designer of our future offices, rather fortuitously. He was working there as an office manager and when she cut her finger and asked him for a Band-Aid, Brad mentioned he was an interior designer, specializing in office spaces. It didn't take long for Food52 office plans to get underway.

 

West 30th Street

Food52's First Real Office in NYC

From General Assembly, our team landed half the floor of an office building on 30th Street in Chelsea (well, very north Chelsea, but more like Penn Station adjacent), where Brad installed the now-iconic raw wood shelves, salvaged from a barn in Kentucky, above a backsplash of gleaming white subway tile in the kitchen. We like a kitchen that feels personal and practical. It was time: "We moved our entire "office" with a Zipcar minivan—in one trip!," Amanda said.

Food52 West 30th Street  Food52 West 30th Street
Left: Ryan Hamilton and company help Brad (in the red hat) with the move; right: Kenzi, Kristen, and Marian Bull worked on the floor in our new office before we got desk chairs. 

Food52 West 30th Street
Everyone chipped in to paint our IKEA sawhorse table legs a nice, crisp white, and then to assemble them. 

We enjoyed the luxury of a small outdoor patio (accessed through a window), plus a little extra room to store all kinds of surfaces for photography and props—many of which came straight from Amanda's kitchen to ours on loan.

Food52 Patio West 30th Street  Food52 West 30th Street

We finally got to decorate our own space—including the kitchen of our dreams

Food52 West 30th StreetCompany Snack Time, where we gather as a whole team over food and drinks every month or so, flourished at the West 30th Street office. 

Food52 West 30th Street
Our little coffee table corner had a peg-board wall decorated with old kitchen tools—in honor of Julia Child—and shelves holding some of our favorite cookbooks and gizmos. 

Food52 West 30th Street
Decorating this space, we quickly recognized in ourselves a fondness for combining old and new. 

From the office at West 30th Street, we launched our e-commerce site called the Food52 Shop—though back then, as you might recall, it was named Provisions.

Food52 West 30th Street

At first, the office felt so roomy we couldn't believe it. 

Food52 West 30th Street
Karl Rosaen, our VP of Product, conducts a meeting in the coffee table nook. 

But we grew up pretty fast. 

Food5 West 30th Street

Okay, maybe a little faster than we'd planned for. In our office at West 30th Street, Food52 grew to nearly 40 employees—a few more than we'd ever expected to house there. For the last few months in this office, we were packed in like sardines. It's a good thing we like each other's company!

Food52 West 30th Street  Food52 West 30th Street
Left: As we started to run out of room, the Product Team resorted to having meetings in the studio and sitting on James's apple boxes! Right: Through it all, we found ways to make sure the office felt cozy rather than cramped.

Now, we're a little over 50—and the new, larger office on West 26th Street has been a revelation for the team. Looking back, we wouldn't have gotten here any other way.

Don't forget to check back tomorrow for a photo tour of the new office! 

See what other Food52 readers are saying.

  • Melina Hammer
    Melina Hammer
  • Kate
    Kate
  • Tara
    Tara
  • Leslie Stephens
    Leslie Stephens
  • Brette Warshaw
    Brette Warshaw
Food52 (we cook 52 weeks a year, get it?) is a food and home brand, here to help you eat thoughtfully and live joyfully.

11 Comments

Melina H. August 16, 2015
ah-mazing. kudos a million times over. i love, LOVE that you all are seemingly a family, even through all those growing pains! here's to more delicious good times, keep taking photos of it all. :)
 
Kate July 12, 2015
I love this sneek inside the helm of Food 52 and the story the photos tell of your evolution as a company. As someone just starting their own food business from home, struggling with window sill photo shoots and more recently alfresco shots since we've had scaffolding up. this is so inspiring and fantastic to see how you got started from humble beginnings too!
 
Tara July 12, 2015
Thanks for the behind-the-scenes look. Very interesting!
 
Leslie S. July 8, 2015
Loved reading this!!
 
Brette W. July 7, 2015
SO MANY MEMORIES. What an amazing bunch of people.
 
mcs3000 July 7, 2015
Love this.
 
mcs3000 July 7, 2015
OMG.
 
laurenlocally July 7, 2015
Love this recap.
 
tamater S. July 7, 2015
Wow. Thanks for the generous look back down memory lane. It made me wish I could have worked at any one of those places. Lovely.
 
jvcooks July 5, 2015
I agree with nzle - so many great memories -- especially back in Amanda's house in Brooklyn. Special times!!

 
Nozlee S. July 5, 2015
Ahh, so many memories! I love these photos -- many of the ones I'm in I'd never seen before!