
Guests, including Rachael Ray, Bobby Flay, and Emeril Lagasse, entered the event by walking down a long hallway dubbed the “Hall of Masters,” which was lined with 36 blown-up portraits of the network’s biggest stars.
Photo: Courtesy of Food Network

Once inside the party space, guests were met by a towering birthday “cake” composed of more than 40 whitewashed vintage TVs playing old Food Network clips. Two days later, the design was repurposed for the New York City Wine & Food Festival’s Tacos & Tequila bash, with the televisions playing clips from event sponsor NY1.
Photo: Marion Curtis/StarPix

To create the atmosphere of an art museum, producers designed the lounge areas that ran down the center of the room in an all-white palette, helping the surrounding vignettes pop. Glass display cases held memorabilia and props from Food Network and Cooking Channel shows.
Photo: Marion Curtis/StarPix

Stone Dog Studios constructed a 10- by 10-foot wall displaying the Food Network logo in its Brooklyn studio. Once it was delivered to Pier 92, the wall was planted with fresh basil and rosemary and installed behind one of the bars, allowing bartenders to add fresh herbs to the evening’s signature cocktails.
Photo: Marion Curtis/StarPix

One food station played off the idea that when viewers watch the Food Network, they wish the food could be served directly through their TV sets. Embedded with working televisions playing cooking show clips from the network’s early years, an automat-style wall had chefs handing small plates to guests through a row of televisions with the screens removed.
Photo: Marion Curtis/StarPix

Local artist Clare Herron recreated the Cooking Channel’s logo using kitchen items such as salt shakers, spatulas, and plastic straws.
Photo: Marion Curtis/StarPix

Staffers offered guests caviar and oysters from an ice bar that had brightly colored plastic sea creatures frozen inside.
Photo: Marion Curtis/StarPix

To represent the Food Network magazine, artist Clare Herron spent the event inside an 8- by 8-foot Plexiglas cube with stacks of back issues and a pair of scissors. Throughout the evening, she created a collage by taping magazine cutouts to the walls. “By the end of the night, it was one big art piece,” Blatter said.
Photo: Courtesy of Food Network

Dynamic Productions designed a diner-style food station as a nod to the popularity of shows like Guy Fieri’s Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives that highlight America’s regional cuisine. The station served Maine lobster rolls, Bronx meatball parms, Texas barbecue pork sliders, and Carolina corn spoon bread.
Photo: Amanda Schwab/StarPix

Stone Dog Studios crafted dozens of fake macarons from Styrofoam and rigged them to create a 10-foot-tall chandelier that hung over a dessert station serving real macarons in flavors including birthday cake, pumpkin, and pistachio.
Photo: Amanda Schwab/StarPix

Rory Mulholland Scenery created custom marquee signs for each of the Food Network’s current shows.
Photo: Amanda Schwab/StarPix