At the #1 bridal & wedding services expo, you’ll find everything you need to have the perfect wedding day! Whether you envision a formal black-tie affair or a casual barefoot ceremony on the beach, our carefully selected experts are ready to offer advice in creating timeless memories for your perfect wedding.
Congratulations on your engagement! Now the whirlwind of wedding planning begins.
It’s okay to feel a little overwhelmed. All brides-to-be dream about “The Big Day,” but many don’t know where, when and how to start.
That’s where the Bridal & Wedding Expo comes in!
Attendees of our previous Bridal & Wedding Expos have called our one-of-a-kind event their “pre-wedding shower,” the “party before the party,” and “the best decision they ever made!”
Fashion shows and live music.
Spectacular bridal fashion shows and live DJ and band demos take place throughout the day:
Our show is a unique, interactive event, with food to taste, dresses to see, flowers to enjoy, music to dance to and fun to be had. Bring your friends and family and enjoy a day filled with laughter, ideas and inspiration at the Bridal & Wedding Expo!
The Ard Godfrey House is Minneapolis’ oldest surviving wood frame house, built in 1849, and located at the corner of University and Central Avenues SE in Chute Square Park in Minneapolis.
Dandelion Day celebrates Harriet Godfrey’s introduction of dandelion seeds to the St. Anthony Falls area. Participants can learn how to make dandelion necklaces, bracelets, and crowns, just as Harriet Godfrey did as a child. Participants can also take home a complimentary recipe booklet which includes recipes for dandelion tea and salad. There are free Godfrey House buttons for the kids, and everyone can enjooy a guided tour of the charming Godfrey House led by docents dressed in 1850’s period costume.
Event
Sunday, May 15th 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Admission is free but donations are welcome!
Reservations are necessary, and available at eventbrite.com
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About
The Woman’s Club oversees the maintenance of the interior of the house, and its members also serve as volunteers and guides. The Club offers events and guided tours throughout the year. Visitors can admire the artifacts that characterize the time period when Ard Godfrey and his family still occupied this house.
History
Ard Godfrey came to Minneapolis in 1847 to supervise the first commercial dam and lumber mill at St. Anthony Falls. He built this 1 1/2-story wood frame house in 1848, where he and his family lived until 1853. After they moved out, various other families occupied the house until 1905 when it was sold to the Hennepin County Territorial Pioneers Association.
The Association moved the building to its current location on Chute Square in 1909 and gave it to the City of Minneapolis. It served as a museum of historical artifacts until 1943. As a gift to the city of Minneapolis in honor of its bicentennial, The Woman’s Club of Minneapolis undertook the renovation of the Ard Godfrey House in 1976. The Club opened the house to the public in 1979 and remains as the oldest wood frame house in Minneapolis.
Activities
One of the events held at the site in May is Dandelion Day. Visitors learn how Harriet Godfrey first brought dandelion seeds to the St. Anthony Falls area in 1849. Also, visitors can find out how to make dandelion coffee and tea. The house proudly displays the Godfrey children’s walnut cradle and the family’s Chickering Rosewood piano.
The annual Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival is back in person this year in the newly renovated space that previously housed the St. Anthony Main Theater. As one of the largest and longest-running international film festivals in the country, MSPIFF will be showing more than 250 films, from over 70 countries.
Founded in 1962, The Film Society of Minneapolis St. Paul (MSP Film) is Minnesota’s foremost film exhibition organization, and a 501(c)(3) non-profit. We bring the best of international and independent cinema to Minnesota audiences through the Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival, numerous niche film festivals and series, and daily programming 365-days a year.
We promote the art of film as a medium that fosters cross-cultural understanding, education, entertainment, and exploration. We offer audiences unique opportunities to experience the wealth of international cinema, to engage with and learn from visiting international filmmakers, and to come together and share these experiences as a community.
Our programming serves a growing membership base and diversifying audiences of 85,000+ annually.
MSP Film is best known for the annual centerpiece, the Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival (MSPIFF). Presented every April, MSPIFF is the largest international arts event in the region, exhibiting more than 250+ films from some 70 countries each year and drawing growing audiences of nearly 50,000 in 2016.
All films are presented in their original language with English subtitles for non-English dialogue.
The Mission of MSP Film is to foster a knowledgeable and vibrant appreciation of the art of film and its power to unite, inform and transform individuals and communities.
Our mission is accomplished through a commitment to exhibiting the very best of new and classic local, domestic and international independent cinema. These notable award-winning films represent many perspectives and experiences and are, for the most part, simply not otherwise available to audiences in the region. And so, through the power of great cinema, we expose our audiences, in a unique way, to a rare mix of cultures, ideas, current affairs and notable filmmaking from around the world.
Our mission is carried out through the annual Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival, regular special themed series, and daily screenings of new releases and classics from around the globe.
Massive caramel rolls, steak omelets, dim sum, and more notable brunches around the Cities
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Twin CIties Eater: Fluffy ricotta short stacks, chicken fried steaks, and tender dim sum dumplings: there’s no better meal than brunch for the perpetually late, the always-hungry, and the slightly hungover. If you’re on the hunt for an Easter brunch this weekend, the Twin Cities have more than a few notable spots to explore: try soul food fried in an egg roll wrapper, eat a bacon cheddar biscuit at a drag show, or sample pistachio cream croissants in an elegant dining hall. Here’s a trail of some of the Twin Cities’ most essential brunch spots.
On Glenwood Avenue in Minneapolis’s Near North neighborhood, chef Wendy Puckett serves her much-loved soul rolls: portions of soul food like greens, fried chicken, and mac and cheese rolled up into an egg roll wrapper and fried. Favorites are the aforementioned Nanny, the 9AM with eggs, turkey sausage, and Wendey’s Hot Mess sauce, or the Trell, made with French fries, gravy, and jalapeño. Wendy’s also serves other brunch options like chicken and waffles, caramel cakes, and the “Broadway Special” — smothered chicken over rice and gravy.
This intimate French bistro from chef Steven Brown serves a delicate omelet du jour on its focused and elegant brunch menu. Try the shrimp toast on Bakersfield sourdough with trout roe, the shakshouka en cocotte with lamb bacon and harissa, or the French toast with pork belly and chai whipped cream. For drinks, Saint Genevieve offers Vietnamese coffee, French press, mimosas, and bloody marys. Brunch hours are Saturday and Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. — make a reservation ahead of time if you can.
The Lynhall’s brunch offerings are divided into separate breakfast and lunch menus (9 a.m. to 11 a.m. and 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.) at both its original Lyn-Lake location and its newer Edina spot. The restaurant serves salmon tartines, rye crepes, shakshouka, and refined omelets (try the duck confit with caramelized red onions) in its sunny dining hall, plus a selection of cocktails, sparklings, and wines. But the real standouts are the pastries — lavender and pistachio croissants the size of small loaves of bread, stuffed with rich pastry creams.
Find one of the Cities’ best dim sum brunches at Mandarin Kitchen in Bloomington. This restaurant located in a strip mall on Lyndale Avenue: on weekends, it’s packed with families, and the line often wraps out the door. Build your brunch off the voluminous menu: start with small dishes like pan-fried turnip cakes, and add pillowy steamed chicken buns, crispy egg custards, steamed pork dumplings, and chao zhou fun gor, a kind of steamed dumpling. At peak meal times, small parties of diners can expect to share tables — which only adds to Mandarin Kitchen’s bustling, convivial atmosphere.
This classic south Minneapolis restaurant has been serving Cuban favorites and classics for more than 20 years. Order the Basque stew — eggs with a Creole stew of Spanish chorizo, ham, and vegetables — or the slow-cooked ropa vieja with eggs and plantains. Victor’s has a great coffee menu, too: try a cafe con leche sweetened with a house sugar paste, and pick it up at the little sliding glass window out front. Its cozy, newly renovated dining room and tropical-themed patio are now open for breakfast and lunch, Wednesday to Sunday from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. — Victor’s doesn’t take reservations.
Soul Bowl started as a hit soul food pop-up on Lowry Avenue in north Minneapolis — after opening their restaurant at Graze food hall in the North Loop, chef Gerard Klass and co-owner Brittney Alice Klass expanded to a new location on Chicago Avenue in Richfield. Their menu is well-suited for brunch: build a bowl with bases like yellow rice or mac and cheese, then add plantains, yams, and black-eyed peas, and meats like jerk chicken and cajun salmon. Otherwise, try the fried chicken and waffles, or cheesecake with peach cobbler. Note that Soul Bowl is closed on Saturdays.
Hola Arepa’s fluffy masa cakes are a beautiful canvas for slow-stewed meats, beans, queso fresco, sauces like chimichurri and tangy aioli verde, and vegetables. A vegetarian favorite is the braised jackfruit arepa, with radish, citrus crema, and fresh oregano. Hola Arepa also serves rice bowls, small plates, sweets like mango chia seed pudding, and an intriguing cocktail menu — its “Heat of the Moment” cocktail, made with Mezcal, passionfruit, and cinnamon has a customizable spice level. Dine-in, takeaway, and patio seating are all available.
Employee-owned since 2020, this quirky downtown Minneapolis icon serves infamous lemon ricotta pancakes (sell-your-soul-to-the-devil amazing, reviewers attest), dense sausage bread made with dates and black currants, and walleye hash and eggs. If you’re looking for a hearty brunch choice, Hell’s Kitchen also offers a bison flank steak benedict, served with a poached egg and tangerine-jalapeño hollandaise. Make a reservation ahead of time if you can.
After abruptly closing during the summer of 2020, Lush’s beloved drag brunch has returned under new ownership. This time around, it’s welcomed local biscuit favorite Betty and Earl’s into the kitchen: for brunch, try the lemon and blueberry biscuit, the baked French toast with cinnamon cream cheese, or the bacon cheddar biscuit brushed with garlic butter. Bottomless mimosas are on the menu too. Drag brunch runs every Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Shows tend to sell out a few weeks in advance, so plan ahead — and dress up, if you want: Saturday night’s outfits are welcome at Sunday morning’s Lush.
Betty and Earl’s biscuits at Lush. Lush Lounge & Theater
Ideal Diner, built in 1949, is one of the oldest establishments on the Central Avenue food corridor in Northeast Minneapolis (look for its neon sign near 14th Street). Historically, the diner served Northeast’s working class communities — today, it’s one of the few spots in the Cities you can get a cup of coffee for $1.75. Brunch dishes are served all day: try the “Polish Man” breakfast of two eggs, Polish sausage, and hash browns, or the Nordeast omelet with steak and caramelized onions. The buttermilk short stacks are remarkably fluffy, too. Groups should note that Ideal Diner has just 14 stools, and one counter.
A local favorite for tacos and chile relleno tortas, Maya Cuisine in Northeast offers a brunch buffet every Sunday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The buffet varies week to week, but expect classic menu items like tamales, mole dishes, and pozole, plus pancakes, French toast, and desserts. Recent specials include shrimp fajitas, buttered codfish, and sopa de mariscos. Maya Cuisine’s buffet has returned from its pandemic hiatus after an outpouring of support from customers — reservations in advance are recommended.
It’s all in the crust at Hot Hands. For brunch, choose from the savory pie selections — veggie pot pie, buffalo pot pie, or chicken pot pie (folklorically known as one of Minnesota’s best) — or sweet pies like caramelized vanilla with an oatmeal cookie crust, raspberry hazelnut with brown butter streusel, or banana cream, topped with a mascarpone that looks like fluffy ski moguls. Also on the menu are a variety of biscuit pairings, a breakfast sausage roll, and other pastries. Dine-in, takeout and delivery are all available.
An excellent spot for breakfast carbs, Colossal Cafe serves giant caramel rolls, crumbly biscuits, and yeast-based pancakes that rise to impressive heights. Try the simple short stack with maple syrup, or the signature topping of honey-brown sugar syrup, apples, walnuts, and slices of brie cheese. Other classics like omelets, frittatas, and breakfast sandwiches are available as well. Colossal also sells take-and-bake options that can be ordered in advance. Open for dine-in and takeaway.
Step into chef Justin Sutherland’s Handsome Hog for a smoky, southern-style weekend brunch menu. Try the rock shrimp and grits, the ham-brined chop with eggs, or the house benedict with apple butter and Cajun hollandaise. (Sutherland serves southern cooking that’s hard to find elsewhere in the Twin Cities.) For drinks, try a bacon Old Fashioned or a bourbon bloody mary. Make a reservation ahead for dining inside or on the patio (weather permitting).
Hope Breakfast bar has an extensive menu of savory plates for brunch. Bourbon smoked salmon toast, stuffed poblano with fried eggs and tortillas, and chicken fried steak and eggs are favorites. For something sweet, try the piña colada French toast, the fried pickle waffle, or the carrot cake pancakes, made with real cake batter. Hope donates 3 percent of its profits to neighborhood causes through its nonprofit Give Hope. Make a reservation ahead of time at its St. Paul or St. Louis Park location.
(Health experts consider dining out to be a high-risk activity for the unvaccinated; it may pose a risk for the vaccinated, especially in areas with substantial COVID transmission.)
Minneapolis Craft Market is heading to one of our favorite venues in town, Machine Shop! The Machine Shop is a historic and unique event venue in the heart of the St. Anthony neighborhood of Minneapolis. Steps from the Mississippi River, Machine Shop is the perfect venue for a market with its open, bright and airy space.
We’ll have two full floors of handmade goods for Mother’s Day shopping. Bring mom out for a day of shopping local, cocktails and handmade goods by emerging artists and new design talent of the North with 50+ Minnesota Makers!
Organizer of Old St. Anthony Mother’s Day Market – Shopping Pass
With a rotating selection of designers and makers, Minneapolis Craft Market is the best place to discover emerging artists and new design talent of the North.
Our markets are held at venues throughout the Twin Cities throughout the year. Once you are an approved trader, you may sign up for as many market days as you wish.