Extract Pull Quotes
Forward any article, blog post, or document. Get back 3-7 expertly selected pull quote candidates with context on why each one works.
Draft an email
Subject
FWD: Feature Draft - Urban Rooftop Gardens Transform City Dining
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Sarah Chen <s.chen@cityfood.com>
Date: Thu, Nov 16, 2023 at 2:15 PM
Subject: Feature Draft - Urban Rooftop Gardens Transform City Dining
To: Editorial Team <editorial@cityfood.com>
Hey team,
Attached is the final draft of the rooftop garden feature for next month's issue. The piece came together really well - Marcus interviewed three restaurant owners who've transformed their spaces, and the photography is stunning.
I need to pull 3-4 compelling quotes for the magazine layout callouts, plus identify snippets that would work well for our social promotion. The article is dense with great material but I'm having trouble narrowing down what will have the most visual impact.
Can someone take a look and suggest the strongest pull quote candidates? Deadline for layout is tomorrow morning.
Thanks!
Sarah
---
THE VERTICAL HARVEST
How Three Restaurants Turned Rooftops Into Culinary Gold
By Marcus Rodriguez
Chef Isabella Fernandez never intended to become an urban farmer. When she opened Meridian Bistro in 2019, the building's 800-square-foot rooftop was just dead space - a concrete slab that collected rain and hosted the occasional staff smoke break.
Today, that same rooftop produces 60% of the restaurant's herbs and vegetables. Basil towers stretch toward downtown skyscrapers while cherry tomatoes cascade from vertical planters. The transformation happened gradually, then suddenly, like most revolutions.
"People think rooftop farming is some Instagram fantasy," Fernandez says, pulling a handful of perfectly ripe arugula from a raised bed. "But this feeds real people. Yesterday's salad was growing up here this morning."
The economics are compelling. Meridian's rooftop garden saves roughly $3,200 monthly on produce costs while providing ingredients that would be impossible to source locally otherwise. More importantly, it's become the restaurant's signature - diners book months ahead specifically to experience what Fernandez calls "vertical terroir."
"The soil is different up here. The sun hits differently. Even the rain tastes different when it's been filtered through twenty stories of city air," she explains. "Our tomatoes don't taste like anyone else's tomatoes because they can't. They're growing in their own microclimate."
This hyperlocal approach is spreading across the city. Three blocks away, Chef David Park has converted the entire roof of Canopy Kitchen into what he calls "the world's smallest farm." His 600-square-foot space produces ingredients for a menu that changes daily based on what's ready to harvest.
"Traditional restaurants are slaves to supply chains," Park says, standing among rows of purple kale that will become tonight's special. "We're slaves to the weather. It's terrifying and liberating in equal measure."
From: Sarah Chen <s.chen@cityfood.com>
Date: Thu, Nov 16, 2023 at 2:15 PM
Subject: Feature Draft - Urban Rooftop Gardens Transform City Dining
To: Editorial Team <editorial@cityfood.com>
Hey team,
Attached is the final draft of the rooftop garden feature for next month's issue. The piece came together really well - Marcus interviewed three restaurant owners who've transformed their spaces, and the photography is stunning.
I need to pull 3-4 compelling quotes for the magazine layout callouts, plus identify snippets that would work well for our social promotion. The article is dense with great material but I'm having trouble narrowing down what will have the most visual impact.
Can someone take a look and suggest the strongest pull quote candidates? Deadline for layout is tomorrow morning.
Thanks!
Sarah
---
THE VERTICAL HARVEST
How Three Restaurants Turned Rooftops Into Culinary Gold
By Marcus Rodriguez
Chef Isabella Fernandez never intended to become an urban farmer. When she opened Meridian Bistro in 2019, the building's 800-square-foot rooftop was just dead space - a concrete slab that collected rain and hosted the occasional staff smoke break.
Today, that same rooftop produces 60% of the restaurant's herbs and vegetables. Basil towers stretch toward downtown skyscrapers while cherry tomatoes cascade from vertical planters. The transformation happened gradually, then suddenly, like most revolutions.
"People think rooftop farming is some Instagram fantasy," Fernandez says, pulling a handful of perfectly ripe arugula from a raised bed. "But this feeds real people. Yesterday's salad was growing up here this morning."
The economics are compelling. Meridian's rooftop garden saves roughly $3,200 monthly on produce costs while providing ingredients that would be impossible to source locally otherwise. More importantly, it's become the restaurant's signature - diners book months ahead specifically to experience what Fernandez calls "vertical terroir."
"The soil is different up here. The sun hits differently. Even the rain tastes different when it's been filtered through twenty stories of city air," she explains. "Our tomatoes don't taste like anyone else's tomatoes because they can't. They're growing in their own microclimate."
This hyperlocal approach is spreading across the city. Three blocks away, Chef David Park has converted the entire roof of Canopy Kitchen into what he calls "the world's smallest farm." His 600-square-foot space produces ingredients for a menu that changes daily based on what's ready to harvest.
"Traditional restaurants are slaves to supply chains," Park says, standing among rows of purple kale that will become tonight's special. "We're slaves to the weather. It's terrifying and liberating in equal measure."
What is via.email?
AI agents that each lives at an email address. Just send an email to get work done. No apps. No downloads.
How to use?
Send or forward emails to agents and get results replied. Try it without registrations. Join to get free credits.
Is it safe?
Absolutely, your emails will be encrypted, deleted after processing, and never be used to train AI models.
More power?
Upgrade to get more credits, add email attachments, create custom agents, and access advanced features.