Sea Salt Eatery Opens for the Season – Minnehaha Regional Park, Minneapolis

Sea Salt Eatery Opens for the Season – Minnehaha Regional Park, Minneapolis

“Super excited to see @seasalteatery is now open! Great spot to take the fam or your besties for a walk, see the Falls, and munch on some yummy seafood! “High on my personal list of Best Things To Do on a Sunny Summer Day: Find a sprawling patio to perch on with a good friend, and enjoy good food and conversation until you’re pleasantly full.”

Unlike last year, you can order at the counter and most of their menu items are back including the Shrimp Po Boy, which wasn’t on the menu due to a shrimp shortage. The eatery is open seven days a week from 11am to 8pm.

Sea Salt Eatery: Serving extraordinary fresh seafood, wine & beer daily April through October. We are a casual restaurant in Minnehaha Park adjacent to Minnehaha Falls. See our website for menu, location & other details!
Sea Salt Eatery logo

Walker Art Center: This Spring, the Popular Program Mn Artists Presents is Going Virtual!

Walker Art Center: This Spring, the Popular Program Mn Artists Presents is Going Virtual!

Clockwise from top left: Maia Maiden, photo: @digiemadephoto@RooseveltMansfield (DJ Digie), photo: DigieMade Photography; Tish Jones @thetishjones, photo: DigieMade Photography; Herb Johnson III, photo: @Juiceedope; Desdamona @desdamonarox, photo: @Brian_Grenz; Neil Taylor, photo courtesy the artist.⁠

Walker Art Center: This spring, the popular program Mn Artists Presents is going virtual! Guest curator Maia Maiden joins forces with filmmaker Sherine Onukwuwe to spotlight the Minnesota hip-hop community. In a film shot on-site at the Walker, five local luminaries explore how the elements of freestyle, hook, and repeat drive innovation across art forms. The presentation combines deejay (DJ), emcee (MC), dance, graffiti, fashion, and knowledge in a conversation on the global impact of hip-hop.

 

Watch the film right here for free beginning Thursday, May 6, at 6 pm (CDT). The film will remain online through May 31.

Virtual Mn Artists Presents: Maia Maiden

@MnArtists Presents. Five local artists explore how the elements of freestyle, hook, and repeat drive innovation across deejay (DJ), emcee (MC), dance, graffiti, fashion and knowledge in a conversation on the global impact of hip-hop.⁠

 

Walker Art Center: Multidisciplinary contemporary art center presenting exhibitions; dance, theater, and music performances; and film screenings. #WalkerArtCenter

Black Chef Offers Food for Thought in Rural Minnesota Community

Black Chef Offers Food for Thought in Rural Minnesota Community

Credit: Chad Nelson, KARE
Mateo Mackbee, owner and chef at Krewe restaurant in St. Joseph, Minnesota

Kare11: ST JOSEPH, Minn. — St. Joseph is a town of towering steeples and 6,500, mostly, white people.

Mateo Mackbee is a notable exception.

“This is the barbequed shrimp,” Mateo says as he works the grill at Krewe, the New Orleans style restaurant he opened last May with his girlfriend Erin Lucas.

“Our mission is to make this be successful,” Mateo says. “Black entrepreneur in an absolutely almost all white rural town.”

While cooking at Edina’s former Mozza Mia restaurant, he met Erin who was working as a server.

She now runs Flour & Flower, the bakery she opened in a small, historic, wood frame building just behind Krewe.

“Carbs are my love language,” the Orono native says.

The couple was lured to St. Joseph by the owner of the building in which they opened their restaurant and now live on the second floor.

 

Credit: Chad Nelson, KARE
Erin Lucas opened Flour & Flower bakery in St. Joseph, Minnesota

On a recent Friday, Erin frosted a lemon cake, while a few yards away, across the alley, Mateo cut onions to caramelize for smothered catfish and a variety other Cajun and Creole dishes featured on the Krewe menu.

“Some of these are family recipes passed down from my grandfather,” Mateo says. “In Louisiana cooking, they call it the holy trinity: green bell pepper, white or yellow onion and celery.”

After years of restaurant experience, Mateo and Erin knew the food would be the easy part of their move from the city to rural Minnesota.

“I didn’t know what to expect,” says Erin, who is white but worries about Mateo. “It was scary.”

Two years before moving to St. Joseph, the couple started another restaurant in, even smaller, New London.

“We had people who wouldn’t come into the restaurant in New London because I was an owner there,” Mateo confides.

The couple made friends, but there was also no mistaking the “snarky” comments occasionally directed their way at the bowling alley.

Erin says Mateo more easily brushed such things aside. “He would have to hold me back and not the other way around,” she says.

Mateo concedes, “Those things sting a little bit.”

 

Credit: Chad Nelson, KARE
Chef Mateo Mackbee in the kitchen at Krewe restaurant in St. Joseph, Minnesota

Still, the experience taught the restaurateurs they could thrive outside the city.

Mateo took advantage of the rural setting to realize a dream: growing his own ingredients on a farm and busing in school children to learn about the origins of their food.

But nothing could have prepared Mateo and Erin for what happened four days before the opening of their St. Joseph restaurant, when George Floyd died under the knee of a Minneapolis police officer, followed by rioting, arson fires and looting in neighborhoods familiar to Erin and Mateo back home.

“Our first instinct was to try to rush to the city to try to find ways we could help,” Mateo says.

 

Credit: Chad Nelson, KARE
Mateo Mackbee and Erin Lucas opened Krewe New Orleans style restaurant in St. Joseph, Minnesota in four days after the death of George Floyd.

Instead, Mateo and Erin asked for help from their new community, hosting a food drive for hard hit neighborhoods in Minneapolis and St. Paul.

“The response was insane,” Erin says. “We had lines circling the building. We were brand new to the area. It was just shock and joy of people wanting to help.”

Erin and Mateo delivered two trailers of food to the Twin Cities, while feeling newly assured they had chosen the right community in which to open their new restaurant.

“It showed that the compassion we feel collectively was also here in the community,” Mateo says.

Those feelings have only been strengthened as their customer base has grown.

“The food is phenomenal,” says Bob Johnson, who drove from St. Cloud for lunch at Krewe with his family.

The Johnsons have paid at least half-a-dozen visits as they work their way through Mateo and Erin’s menu.

“I hope they stay,” Bob says.

 

Credit: Chad Nelson, KARE
Erin Lucas displays a card given to her by her boyfriend Mateo Mackbee upon the opening of their restaurant and bakery

Business has been brisk at the bakery too, with more than 100 cake and pie orders filled for Easter.

“I think it’s the most perfect fit for what we’re trying to accomplish,” Erin says.

What they’re trying to accomplish played out in the Krewe dining room on a recent Friday, when Jesse Ross, who is Black, drove with his wife from Minneapolis to have lunch at Krewe.

Jesse, an old friend of Mateo’s, says he’s used to keeping his guard up when he drives into rural Minnesota. “I don’t know where I’m going, if I’m welcome, who I’m going to run into and being able to walk into a place like this – this is home,” he says.

“Never in my wildest dreams did I think that this dream of mine, this restaurant, would ever be in a community this small, this white, this Catholic, this Lutheran,” Mateo laughs. “But these people told us they wanted this, so that’s why we’re here.”

 

 Boyd Huppert

Kare11

Preferred Concept for Bde Maka Ska Pavilion Site – Minneapolis, MN

Preferred Concept for Bde Maka Ska Pavilion Site – Minneapolis, MN

The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board (MPRB) published a single preferred site concept to replace the Bde Maka Ska pavilion that burned down in 2019. Visit link to view the concept: Bde Maka Ska Pavilion Site Concept

The preferred concept published represents many design features from previously published concept options and is responsive to significant public feedback received over the last several months. Read the “Background” header below for more details on the design process.

Public Hearing

A public hearing on the concept is scheduled Wednesday, May 5, 2021 at 6:30 pm. To minimize the risk of exposure to or potential spread of COVID-19, the MPRB added options to submit comments for its virtual public meetings and hearings, authorized under Minn. Stat. Section 13D.02.

Most Commissioners call in to Board meetings, which are broadcast live via webcast and TV and also posted on YouTube.

There are two options to submit Public Hearing comments:

Phone (recommended)

  • To sign up, complete the Virtual Speaker Sign Up Form by 12 pm on May 5.
  • Speakers will receive a conference call-in number and ID one hour before the meeting
  • Use the number and ID to call into the meeting at its the scheduled time
  • After you enter the meeting, the committee chair will provide guidance for commenting
  • Speakers can watch the live meeting broadcast
  • Be aware there is a 20- to 30-second lag between the call and the broadcast
  • When you are called on to speak, please remember turn off the sound from the broadcast

Email

Send your comment to OpenTime@minneapolisparks.org by 12 pm on May 5.

Background

The former Bde Maka Ska concessions pavilion, also called a “refectory,” was built in 1930. It was engulfed in flames on May 16, 2019 and torn down 12 days later. The MPRB paved over the site to provide a temporary gathering space at the popular northeastern corner of the lake and installed electrical hookups for pavilion vendor Lola’s to operate food trucks.

The Bde Maka Ska-Harriet Master Plan, approved in 2017, provided guidance for the pavilion site improvements. The concepts were designed by a team led by Cuningham after working with MPRB staff and numerous stakeholders over the past several months.

Two concepts were published for public comment on March 11, 2021. Public feedback was taken via online survey, email and social media through April 1, 2021. In addition, MPRB staff held three public online Open House events in March. Follow the link below to read questions and answers from the Open Houses:

Open House Notes

Timeline and Funding

MPRB Commissioners on the Planning Committee will consider the concept after the public hearing on May 5. If the concept is approved by the Planning Committee, it will be up for consideration by the full Board of Commissioners at a future meeting, likely at the next scheduled Board meeting May 19. Construction is expected in 2022 with concessions resuming for the 2023 season.

The cost estimate and proposed funding sources for the concept published today will be presented to the Planning Committee on May 5. Potential funding sources include insurance compensation, regional park improvement funding and additional options being explored by MPRB staff. Please visit the Bde Maka Ska Refectory Rebuild project page and enter you email address into the box under “Subscribe to Email Updates” to stay informed and up-to-date on this project. Also, share the project page with anyone who may be interested using the link minneapolisparks.org/bmsrebuild.

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