James Beard Awards Announces Finalists for 2020 – Twin Cities

James Beard Awards Announces Finalists for 2020 – Twin Cities

It’s been a weird year, but the awards will carry on in some form!

After a delay thanks to the coronavirus pandemic disruption, today the James Beard Foundation announced its 2020 finalists. Today, the Foundation revealed that the Restaurant and Chef Awards Gala will take place in late September, and the Media Awards will take place in late May.

The nominees include several Twin Cities based chefs. Past chef winners include Ann KimGavin KaysenTim McKeeAlex Roberts and Isaac Becker.

Here is the full list of all of the nominees.

The restaurants and chefs recognized are:

Best New Restaurant

Demi

Outstanding Pastry Chef

Diane Yang, Spoon and Stable

Best Chef Midwest

Steven Brown, Tilia

Jamie Malone, Grand Cafe

Christina Nguyen, Hai Hai

 

by

Eater file photo/James Beard Foundation

twincities.eater.com

JAMES BEARD FOUNDATION AWARDS

 

 

Must Link & Read: The Age of Instagram Face

Must Link & Read: The Age of Instagram Face

Minnesota Landscape Arboretum: Mother’s Day Drive

Minnesota Landscape Arboretum: Mother’s Day Drive

Minnesota Landscape Arboretum: The tulips are gorgeous! What an amazing design, Duane Otto, learn about this wonderful garden designer here. Plus, the deer fence is gone making photos so much better. Video by Kent Withington. Come out and see them for yourself! Everyone must register then have your receipt with barcode ready on your phone or printed out for the gatehouse: http://arb.umn.edu/

The tulips are gorgeous! What an amazing design, Duane Otto (learn about this wonderful garden designer here: https://arboretumnaturenotes.wordpress.com/2020/05/06/growing-with-duane-otto/). Plus, the deer fence is gone making photos so much better. Video by Kent Withington. Come out and see them for yourself! Everyone must register then have your receipt with barcode ready on your phone or printed out for the gatehouse: http://arb.umn.edu/

Posted by Minnesota Landscape Arboretum on Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Minnesota Landscape Arboretum

Minnevangelist: Reasons to Love Minnesota No.159 – Mankato, MN

Minnevangelist: Reasons to Love Minnesota No.159 – Mankato, MN

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Reasons to Love Minnesota No. 159: A cluster of grain silos in Mankato is now one of the biggest, most ambitious art canvases in the state. ⁣ ⁣ The 135-foot-tall Ardent Mills towers can be seen for miles along the Minnesota River and Highways 14 and 169. But it wasn’t until Australian artist @guidovanhelten started painting them that they demanded a double take. ⁣ ⁣ Van Helten’s photorealistic murals decorate buildings as far away as Tehran, Kiev, and Mumbai. “I’m interested in bringing this art form, which is already popular in big cities, to smaller places,” van Helten told the @dmregister in 2018, “particularly to the Midwest, which isn’t looked at as a creative place.” ⁣ ⁣ True to his word, van Helten has taken on several projects in rural America, depicting small-town community members in breathtakingly grand scale. This includes a 360-degree mural wrapped around a 110-foot grain silo in Fort Dodge, Iowa and a stunning new piece on an old grain elevator in Faulkton, South Dakota. ⁣ ⁣ The Silo Art Project in Mankato was commissioned by @cityartmankato and @twinriversarts, and funded with $250,000 in private donations. Van Helten first visited Mankato in 2018. He met with community members and sought their approval on his final design, which is based largely on a photograph he took during Education Day at the annual Mahkato Wacipi, a traditional pow wow to honor the 38 Dakota men who were publicly hanged in Mankato on December 26, 1862. (The incident remains the largest mass execution in U.S. history.)⁣ ⁣ According to a statement released by Twin Rivers Arts, the new mural celebrates “the shared ideals of community, diversity, and inclusion; and it pays respect to history while encouraging a positive dialogue on the future identity of the Mankato area.”⁣ ⁣ Van Helten started the piece in late 2019 and continues to work on it. To check up on his progress, tune into the 24/7 Livestream at twinriversarts.org or download a map of the mural’s best viewing spots at cityartmankato.com. #silowhilesiloed

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About: Minnevangelist

Hello from 3,000 feet above Minnesota! We’re Ashlea Halpern and Andrew Parks, two ex-NYC travel writers who relocated to Minneapolis in February 2018 following an exhaustive 16-month, 40-state, 229-city search for a new hometown.
In the end, the Twin Cities won us over not because we have work or family here (we don’t), but because of its beautiful parks and lakes, bountiful bike paths and ski trails, ace cocktail bars, indie cinemas, overflowing farmers markets, edgy galleries, sterling museums, hip boutiques, excellent restaurants, superlative craft breweries, old-school bowling alleys, eccentric festivals, offbeat bookstores, gut-busting comedy clubs, first-class music venues, ethnic diversity, walkable neighborhoods, and—above all—kind and welcoming locals.
So if you love Minnesota and the rest of the North as much as we do, give us a follow on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram for an obsessive homage to everything that makes the Upper Midwest great.

 

 

Restaurants once sourced from local farms, what are those farmers doing now?

Restaurants once sourced from local farms, what are those farmers doing now?

Iron Shoe Farm sold mangalitsa hogs, muscovy duck, edible flowers, and microgreens to 25-50 restaurants in the Twin Cities, depending on the year. Megan Dobratz / Native Sustainability

 

When we met Carla Mertz at the end of February, business was great. The Iron Shoe Farm owner sold mangalitsa hogs, Hereford beef, Muscovy duck, cooperatively farmed local rabbit, edible flowers, and microgreens to 25 restaurants in the Twin Cities. Her clients included some of the metro’s top, chef-driven destinations: Tilia, the Bungalow Club, Young Joni, the Woman’s Club of Minneapolis, and Fhima’s, to name a few. Iron Shoe also had two hogs bound for this year’s Minneapolis stop of Cochon555, and was set to debut a new dinner on the farm series this month. The first three events had already sold out.

 

“Then COVID-19 hit and we immediately lost 90 percent of our business model. We were watching the news and they said restaurants are closed until, you know, that first date, and my stomach sank. And I had the thought process of ‘I think I’m going to throw up.’”

“We really had to learn how to adapt and shift really quickly,” she says, now. “In a matter of, like, two hours the crap hit the fan.”

With her restaurant clients on life support (if they were operational at all), Cochon555 postponed indefinitely, and those dinner on the farm events tentatively pushed until May, Mertz was staring at 100 hungry hogs that needed to go somewhere, and tens of thousands of dollars worth of microgreens – the farm’s tiny cash crop, which sell by the hundreds each week at summer’s peak – spoiling quickly.

Contrasting dire reports of farmers across Minnesota smashing eggs, killing off livestock prematurely, and dumping produce due to lack of demand, Mertz kept a cool head.

“With microgreens, they’re perishable; we can’t just let them keep growing,” explained Mertz. “We could’ve given them to our chickens, but they’re a food source, so instead I dropped them off at Hope Breakfast Bar… [and] to Justin Sutherland at Public Kitchen when they were doing their community open door pantry. We lost $16,000 worth of that product category alone.”

Beyond the shock of change itself, seeing such large figures go poof is scary no matter the industry. Mertz has just come up on the seven-year anniversary of purchasing the farm 50 miles north of Minneapolis, after a professional departure from 20 years in high-end luxury design. Those seemingly disparate professional worlds, the first-generation farmer says, both depend on human connection and a willingness to network.

With her spring plans devastated, Mertz hustled to set up an online store on Iron Shoe’s website. Building this “pantry” involved securing a bevy of licenses from the state, all so she could act almost like a digital general store. Products range from flour, syrup, and cheeses, to proteins like rabbits, lamb, duck, and more – drawn from a waiting list of 50 Minnesota farms deep, all in situations like her own. There’s even a “Buy a Pack Give a Pack” option available in customizable sizes, that lets buyers take home half a CSA share’s worth of consumables, while the other portion is sent to Sherburne County’s Caer Food Shelf.

Spent grain from Lupulin Brewing feeds Iron Shoe's livestock.

Spent grain from Lupulin Brewing feeds Iron Shoe’s livestock.Megan Dobratz / Native Sustainability

 

The quick pivot to online proved mutually beneficial. Mertz was able to recoup what would have otherwise been losses for Iron Shoe, including those Cochon hogs, while providing neighboring farms a platform to sell their products, too.

Mertz is quick to recognize how precarious people are feeling right now, especially related to food. “You see people posting about what’s going on with some of the larger Smithfields and Cargills now closing, and it causes a sense of panic because it’s like, ‘These big places are closing, how are we going to get our food?’”

She says she issues the same advice as always to those folks: Buy local.

“I look at it as: If you’re in Minnesota, do the best you can to buy products that are from our state. It’s going to help so many people. There’s wealth in neighborhood.”

And if you’re entirely lost, she says Minnesota Grown is a fantastic resource for those interested in buying from ‘local farmers’ in theory, but who may not know how to do it. For 2020, their online directory has 81 CSA members and 994 browseable listings, which makes buying local more approachable from a digital distance than ever before.

“A key tool Minnesota Grown has been able to offer in helping customers connect statewide is our map of farms/markets with products available direct-to-the customer, as well as a CSA-specific map with pick-up location filter,” said the org’s member service coordinator Karen Lanthier.

“These maps are able to be filtered by location, so people can narrow-in on the farms/markets nearest them, and we’ve been sharing our ’What’s In Season’ guide so customers know when different types of fruits and vegetables will be becoming ready.”

With the growing season ramping up, and many farms already at CSA capacity based on last year’s sales, Lanthier told City Pages she’s also seeing a turn toward smaller, local-based purchasing from consumers. “We’ve heard anecdotally from other producers – with items like eggs, meat, dried beans, grains/flour, and seeds – who are seeing a greater-than-usual interest and sales this year compared to last year at this time.”

As Iron Shoe’s new online pantry comes into its own, connecting shoppers with precisely the products Lanthier mentioned, and the restaurant world reboots itself, Mertz is finding her legs in a new field – one that’s even more interwoven with the farming community.

“I think [the store] gives other farmers hope that there’s a module out there that they can learn from.”

Ruby chard microgreens

Ruby chard microgreens                                                                                           Bob Johndrow

Browse Iron Shoe Farm’s pantry – products direct from 50 Minnesota farms and counting – here.

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