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A Quick Bite with Local Food Influencers

Foodie Girls - Cristina Martinez (@Worcester_Eats), Angelica Martinez (@PharmdFoodie), Jessica Dao (@ImDatingFood)

Like Anthony Bourdain said on his 2016 Hunger Tour, “I want you to want what I am eating. When I post a picture of my food, I want you to be jealous and I want you to wish you were eating the same thing.” But Bourdain isn’t the only badass making people salivate with every photo swipe. The food industry is changing and if you want to get real about it, you must make room at the table for those who know how to entice your inner cravings.

With a combined audience of 47,000 followers, Angelica Martinez, Jessica Dao and Cristina Martinez are taking a seat at the chef’s table and turning their social media platforms into powerful branding machines. Carrying the heavy weight title of Influencer – a newly sprung term describing the persuasive skills of an Instagrammer – these three women are taking the local food scene by storm and leaving their tag at every turn.

“I guess you can say, I’m eating my way to the top,” says Angelica Martinez, known to her followers as @PharmDfoodie. The top, being her Instagram brand, is quickly growing and has become one of the most well-known names in the local food market. The rapidly changing food hub of Worcester, prompted a new outlet for food lovers and critics, alike, and there’s no way around it. Martinez, a graduate student at Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Science and a lover of her mom’s panela and cheese jalapeño tamales, understands her position as an Influencer and knows that the industry leans on the those who can make people salivate. “We help support someone’s small business and when we support small business, we support big dreams,” she says. Martinez, among millions of other Influencers and social media users, is all about bringing back some honesty to the food game and helping the average business owner.

“Food is about community. It is about caring and sharing ideas, stories and culture. It is something I implement into my brand when I post,” says Martinez. “Food brings people together. My “go-to” food experience is going with a group of friends to share tapas, hot pot, Korean BBQ and any other food style that brings shared food.” With community and sharing as the pivotal point of the @PharmDfoodie brand, Martinez knows that a good story about a restaurant goes a long way. “My social media audience reacts depending on the content. If I post something like coffee or a salad, I will get a “YAY” in the comment box but if I post a burger, cheesy pizza or a noodle pull, people go crazy,” she says. People want the money shot. It’s that simple. The Instagram audience wants the exclusivity that lacks on every restaurant website.

“Menu tastings and blogger events are the best way to enjoy a meal. Going out with other foodies is really an experience,” says Christina Martinez, also known as @Worcester_Eats. “We take our time before we actually eat with photos and we spend more time talking about what we like about a dish.” The Holy Grail of food critiques, the New York Times, rules the term “make or break” with their honest and raw impression of new restaurants, often setting the stage for customers to indulge or avoid said restaurants. Their words weigh so heavily on potential food goers, that most reviews do not include photos. Now with the takeover of social media platforms like Instagram, Influencers can carry the same significance and back it by the phrase, “a picture is worth a thousand words.” (Or likes, for that matter). “People love to see pictures of good food, especially when it is a new dish. The reactions are always good,” says Martinez. Millennials are at the top of the chain for Influencer audiences and Martinez provides a direct outlet for restaurants to connect with the untamable millennial population. Black Tap Burgers in New York’s Soho is a prime example of the feeding frenzy caused by Influencers. After a wave of Instagram posts about their Crazy Shakes – over-the-top milkshakes adorned with all kinds of sweetness – Black Top Burgers was featured on Buzzfeed and on ABC’s The Chew. Award winning local chefs like Chef Candace Murphy of Figs & Pigs, have opened their doors to Influencers with menu and beer tasting events as well as social media takeovers, often giving influencers free tastings of a new dish in return for a slot on their Instagram food grid.

“Being a foodie means taking a lot of photos before eating so it helps when you can be a foodie with those that understand what you do,” says Jessica Anh Dao, the creator of @ImDatingFood. “Foodies understand each other and we help each other when we need a hand model and understand the patience it takes to grab the right shot.” While many join this food blogging business to enjoy the adventures of culinary cuisine, others do it for the love of photography. “I am in love with photography,” says Dao. “It made me look at food in a different way. I realized that it was not just a cure for my hunger but also, an art. I don’t want to just show something I ate, but I want to capture all the ingredients in that dish and make it look good because its art.” Her art has soared her Instagram influence to a mass following of 32.1K, leaving followers with an appreciation of her photo quality. “I was able to turn my art into a brand and the quality of every photo has people falling in love with my account.”

Influencers deeply impact today’s culture, whether it be food, fashion or travel, and it must be considered in the marketing efforts of emerging new businesses. While The New York Times will always be the crème de la crème of food reviews, social media Influencers are nudging their way into the spotlight of credibility. As @PharmDfoodie says, “The camera eats first.”

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A Quick Bite With Jessica Walsh

Jessica Walsh from Worcester Wares sitting down with Mass Foodies for "A Quick Bite" at deadhorse hill.

They say the most important meal of the day is breakfast, but for Jessica Walsh, only one meal really makes her happy and that’s dinner. “I grew up in an Italian household where dinner was a big deal every night. My father asked my mother, every morning over a cup of coffee, ‘what’s for dinner tonight?’ and I’ve learned to think the same,” she says.

When you think of Italian food, the closest association is the thought of an endless bowl of fettucine alfredo or a hearty slice of pizza, but the culinary history of Italy is far deeper than that your average slice of faux-authentic pizza. Walsh, owner of the new Worcester loving retail space, Worcester Wares, stays true to her roots when playing capocuco in the kitchen. Prepping dinner for six close friends at the Walsh house is like walking into Rome and asking the chef to make you the best dish they have. “Making food for friends would entail making the traditional Italian dish, braciole – think steak rolled up with prosciutto, garlic, parmesan cheese and simmered in a deliciously rich tomato sauce,” says Walsh. “I’d serve it over penne – because, why not – and I would even start the dinner with a tomato and mozzarella salad and end it with a raspberry chocolate tart for dessert.” If eating with Walsh is like this for her closest of friends, we need to be part of this circle.

Jessica Walsh from Worcester Wares sitting down with Mass Foodies for "A Quick Bite" at deadhorse hill.
Jessica Walsh from Worcester Wares sitting down with Mass Foodies for “A Quick Bite” at deadhorse hill.

While growing up Italian instilled a culinary trait at the heart of Walsh’s personality, it also created a lover and admirer of all foods. “My dining room table and kitchen counter is where I’ve had some of my most favorite and meaningful conversations of my life – over the exchange of food – but I love dining out too. Especially in Worcester,” smiles Walsh.

Standing tall for her love of Worcester and as a supporter of the Renaissance movement circling every corner of the city, Walsh can’t help but dive into some of the latest additions to the local food hub. “I frequent many places in Worcester – including Figs & Pigs, Wooberry, Lock 50, Dalat, BirchTree Bread Company and deadhorse hill, to name a few and the best part of dining out in the local food scene is that I always run into someone I know. People I may only see in a professional capacity, I can see out of the job and in a real setting. Food is a great equalizer.”

“As much as I would want to have great food at any dining experience – it would be just as important to me to have great company to share the meal with,” she says.  “Everything tastes better when you eat it with the people you love and I know its cliché but it’s true. Throughout my life, food was always part of the moment we all stopped to connect. It provided a break from the rest of the day and stress. I’m just happiest when eating with friends and loved ones – whether it is around my kitchen table or out at a local place.”

Living without food is like living without air and we can all attest to this. Whether you are eating for necessity or pure enjoyment, there is nothing like biting into your favorite dish after a long day and for Walsh, that means tacos at El Patron. “It’s all about those carnitas and green sauce,” says Walsh. “I love my mom’s ‘party cake’ – a coconut, pineapple cake with homemade cream cheese frosting and her meatballs and I love my mother-in-law’s pork pies which she serves with pickled beets and gherkins but anyone who knows me, knows that I am the absolute happiest when I’m eating tacos.” We can’t find a way to disagree with her. The tacos at El Patron are authentic and the serving portion is large, so after a long day of supporting the “Love Worcester” movement, sitting down at El Patron with a tequila drink, a taco and some close friends, is the ideal way to spend a Wednesday evening.