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Like>>54512said, EV compensation or spot metering on the brighter parts. Good technique and gets you a good exposure with no parts too much blown out, only thing is that the other parts of the image won't get as exposed, but this is something you can easily fix in post.
If you're shooting RAW then there's another neat tool for this, too. I see you're using Nikon, so I'm not sure over how manipulatable the RAW images are, but in RAW images taken with a Canon body (at least CR2 images), you can adjust the exposure a lot afterwards to the extent of even recovering lost details from overexposed areas. Naturally, the tool is called 'Recovery', and can be found in the RAW Import dialog in Photoshop, or alternatively, in Lightroom.
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