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Shirley Kittleson has unwanted guests – Sherburn, MN

Shirley Kittleson has unwanted guests – Sherburn, MN

by doitinnorth | Jan 17, 2020 | people/passions

 

Shirley Kittleson has unwanted guests. They eat too much and they won’t go home, but Kittleson’s guests aren’t holiday visitors. They’re miniature horses — a herd of 72 that was dumped on her after Humane Society officials took them from a farm where they were being mistreated. The small-town Minnesota veterinarian has housed the horses for 18 months, but no one will pay the $325,000 she spent on their care. To donate, search “Shirley Kittleson” on the GoFundMe site, her fundraiser will appear.

startribune 

 

 

Passionate Producers & Purveyors of Chocolate: Legacy Chocolates – St. Paul, MN

Passionate Producers & Purveyors of Chocolate: Legacy Chocolates – St. Paul, MN

by doitinnorth | Jan 17, 2020 | shop/share

Legacy Chocolates is dedicated to restoring the fine craft of real chocolate wherever discerning mouths are found. We are committed to the production of fresh, handmade, nutritious, high quality chocolate at affordable prices. Our intent is to have everyone know about, and fall in love with the earth’s most perfect food – REAL chocolate. Stop in and meet the owners, Mark & Lorraine Dixon, who are passionate producers and purveyors of chocolate. They designed the St. Paul store in a fashion that enables customers and passersby to view all the products from being made from start to finish – including all beverages, baking, and chocolate. Liberate your taste buds! They don’t know what they’ve been missing.

legacy chocolates

Dan Raphael: Art is a Race Against Complacency – Minneapolis, MN

Dan Raphael: Art is a Race Against Complacency – Minneapolis, MN

by doitinnorth | Jan 17, 2020 | art/design

Dan Raphael Minneapolis Artist

Dan Raphael is a Minnesota born artist, oil painter and writer. His background is in recovering a sense of self and making sense of the world around him. He currently lives and works in Minneapolis, Minnesota while staying involved in frequent travel for inspiration and promotions.

He has been featured in ARTFUL LIVING Magazine, Lake of the Isles Magazine, Lake Society Magazine, and The Hamptons Press.  His work has been shown in juried shows and exhibits in Los Angeles, Chicago, Palm Springs, Provincetown, Santa Fe,  Puerto Vallarta, New York City and the Hamptons.

Visit, Dan Raphael and check out his new children’s book “Francois The Barber” on Amazon.

 

 

Most sea creatures don’t mind a little rain – NEW BRIGHTON, MN

Most sea creatures don’t mind a little rain – NEW BRIGHTON, MN

by doitinnorth | Jan 11, 2020 | events/locations

 

Dick Bartz, of East Bethel, grins Saturday, Jan. 4, 2020, as he pushes a remote control button activating a smoke machine in the head of a whale snow sculpture, making it look like a blow hole. Bartz is the self-proclaimed “crazy uncle” of the Bartz brothers — Austin, 25, Trevor, 24, and Connor, 21 — who build huge sea-themed snow sculptures in their family’s front yard in New Brighton every year. The brothers hope to raise $50,000 for clean water in third world countries. This is their ninth sculpture. The whale is available to view for free through Feb. 6. (Deanna Weniger / Pioneer Press)

 

Most sea creatures don’t mind a little rain.  But Walvis the Whale, a 22-foot-tall snow sculpture in New Brighton, nearly became Walvis the minnow during the after-Christmas storm that brought ice and rain to the metro for several days. “We had 24 hours of just wasted work,” said Austin Bartz, 25. He and his brothers, Trevor, 24, and Connor, 21, unveiled their ninth annual creation Saturday, a few days later than their planned New Year’s Day reveal.

 

Less than a week before the grand opening, the brothers and their friends were frantically working to cover the giant whale with tarps to try to protect it from the rain. But the 40-degree temps did damage too, turning the hard pack to fluff and giving the guys another day of work rebuilding the whale.

Guests visiting on Saturday were none the wiser to the brothers’ behind-the-scenes struggles.

“It’s just amazing what they do,” said Andy Tretter of Woodbury. His daughter Samantha, 11, had softball practice nearby, so they decided to finally come see the snow sculptures they’d been hearing about.

The brothers, who began gathering snow shortly after Thanksgiving, keep their fans updated with regular posts and videos on Facebook and even sell Bartz Bros. merchandise. This year they are partnering with One Day’s Wages to raise $50,000 toward creating access to clean water for 1,350 people in the remote districts of Niger and Uganda.

Donations can be made online or on-site; $25 gets a guest a photo with the whale’s blow-hole spouting what looks like steam from the top of its head. The effect is made with a smoke machine and operated remotely by Dick Bartz, the brothers’ self-proclaimed “crazy uncle.” On Saturday he was dressed in a tall red and white striped hat engaging guests like a street hawker, pointing them to the donation box.

“Last year they made $10,000 more than they expected to,” he said, laughing. The 2019 sea snail brought in $30,824. “That’s because their crazy uncle was down here working the crowds.”

Fans on Facebook following the 900 plus hours of labor put into building the whale got an education in snow sculpting.

Once the snow is collected, the guys piled most of it into a tall wooden frame which was later removed once the snow settled. For detail work, such as the rectangular baleen for the whale’s mouth, they haul snow into their garage which is heated to about 80 degrees. This turns the icy snow into packable snow which is then put into handmade forms to create shapes.

In addition to the whale, they built a walled path fit with lights and signs touting information about whales. They even created their own tools out of wood and chicken wire to smooth out the whale’s exterior. The tools were on display for the curious.

The sculptures, which started with a puffer fish in 2012, were inspired by a trip to Florida. All of them, which include a walrus, shark, turtle, octopus, fish and lobster, have been creatures of the sea.

Crowds to the free event have increased over the years, and the brothers believe the Ice Castles event, which opens Sunday at 1500 Old Highway 8 and draws about 75,000 visitors, may bring even more this year.

Walvis will be available for public viewing through Feb. 6 at 2777 16th St. N.W. in New Brighton.

Deanna Weniger / St. Paul Pioneer Press

One of Minneapolis’ best cocktail bars has a new focus: Cutting out alcohol

One of Minneapolis’ best cocktail bars has a new focus: Cutting out alcohol

by doitinnorth | Jan 11, 2020 | eat/drink

At Marvel Bar, the subterranean North Loop speakeasy that also happens to be one of the best places to get a cocktail in the Twin Cities, the staff is always experimenting. Last spring, it was an exploration into gin; they shifted focus to foraging over the summer. Most recently, they embarked on a four-month deep-dive into brandy.a short hiatus, it’ll be with a new theme unlike any of those alcohol endeavors.

But when the bar reopens after a short hiatus, it’ll be with a new theme unlike any of those alcohol endeavors.

From January to April, Marvel’s going dry.

“What that means right off the bat is a menu dedicated to new cocktails that don’t contain alcohol,” says Peder Schweigert, general manager at the Bachelor Farmer’s basement neighbor. “And we’re in the process of minimizing alcohol’s visible impact in the space as well.”

We’ve reported on the Twin Cities’ growing temperance movement a lot lately, from the non-alcoholic spirit Seedlip to the most inventive and refreshing NA drinks available around town. Shoot, the movement is becoming so widespread that we added a mocktails category to our Best Of issue last year, an honor that went to the sophisticated boozeless beverages at Eat Street Social.

But for a bar bar, a speakeasy—a place where the only food you can order is Cheetos—to cut back on the alcohol? That’s a little different.

Schweigert and co. are willing to bet that people will be interested, and so far it looks like they’re right. The Instagram post announcing the new menu has collected more likes and comments than just about any photo Marvel Bar has posted to date—“almost all for the positive. It’s definitely resonated with people,” he says.

This is an area of particular interest to Schweigert, who—like Marvel Bar co-owner Eric Dayton—doesn’t drink. It’s a creative exercise for the rest of the staff, too: If you don’t have alcohol to lean on, what’s the best way to achieve the depth and complexity a fermented drink brings? (Expect to see some of the stuff from last summer’s foraging-focused menu—milkweed flowers preserved with sugar and rice vinegar, fermented honey, savory-funky mushrooms—in this new menu.)

“We’re totally a bar, and that’s what we plan on being for ever,” Schweigert says, noting that there are no plans to stop serving alcohol during this four-month experience or after. “But we’re a community space, we’re a space that is customer-facing, and we want to make sure that anybody walking through here is as comfortable as possible.”

His hope is that by pushing the bar to the extreme, when they dial it back in April they’ll be even more equipped to meet the needs of everyone who comes through.

“We’re not just about the alcohol,” Schweigert adds. “We’re there for weddings, for birthdays, for celebrations—for those moments in your life that are more important than just alcohol.”

by Emily Cassel in Food & Drink

citypages.com

Image Facebook: Marvel Bar

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