Alma has been welcoming guests with authentic hospitality and diverse, contemporary American cooking for nearly two decades. We offer a casual, comfortable environment worthy of both celebrations and everyday visits, 7 days a week.
.
Alma now offers two distinct dining experiences: The Cafe and Restaurant. The Cafe is an all-day, a la carte, walk-in setting with bakery counter, bar and table service. The restaurant features 3-course fixed price menu for dinner only.
.
We also offer seven guestrooms for overnight stay. Our comfortable, well appointed domestic spaces will be appreciated by travelers looking for a vibrant urban location as well as locals looking for an convenient getaway.
.
Opened in 1999 by Chef / Restaurateur Alex Roberts in a historic firehouse & adjacent speedboat factory, the spaces were reimagined and designed by James Dayton Design and Talin Spring in 2016.
.
Our approach towards the operation of Alma is truly collaborative, and we believe that every single member of our team is integral to our success. We are committed to creating a learning environment where all staff can thrive.
Minnesota’s many restaurants provide endless opportunities to grab a good bite to eat. Whether you’re craving pizza, burgers, steak, or something else entirely, you’ll find it here. But sometimes, you just don’t know what you crave. That’s when it’s a great idea to go to a restaurant that is known for one famous dish. It takes the guesswork out of perusing the menu, and you’re guaranteed an amazing meal. The nine restaurants below are each known for a single menu item. When you visit the restaurants, we advise that you try their famous item at least once!
Matt’s Bar might just be one of the most famous places to grab a bite in Minnesota. Their famous Jucy Lucy – a delicious, melted cheese-filled burger – is one of the only items on their small menu. It’s so good that this spot often has a line going out the door!
Lindey’s is a longstanding spot known for its delicious prime rib. In fact, it’s one of the only things on the menu! A prime steak platter also comes with hash browned potatoes, garlic bread, salad, and pickled watermelon rind. It’s seriously delicious.
Small town Grandy, Minnesota, is home to Brass Rail, an unassuming spot with a surprisingly big following. People come for miles for the mouthwatering broasted chicken. Served with coleslaw, toast, and your choice of potato, this perfectly crisp chicken is a meal you won’t soon forget.
Minnesota may be about as far from the ocean as you can get, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t amazing seafood to be had here! There are plenty of amazing options here, but one standout favorite is the lobster roll. Chilled lobster salad is served with cucumber and tarragon on griddled milk bread alongside a pile of Cajun fries. Trust us, this is a meal you won’t soon forget.
There are many pizza chains in the Twin Cities – and in Minnesota s a whole – but few make a Minnesota-style pizza quite as good as the one at Red’s Savoy. The dough is cracker-thin and spread with sauce, plenty of cheese, and loads of toppings. Once baked, the pizza is cut into squares. It’s a uniquely Minnesotan pizza style, and it’s absolutely delicious.
Time and again, Tavern on Grand has been recognized for its amazing walleye sandwiches. You can get yours blackened, grilled, or deep-fried. All are topped with lettuce, tomato, and tartar and served on a toasted ciabatta bun. As soon as you take a bite, you’ll understand why so many flock to this restaurant.
Did you know that the Twin Cities is a hotbed of amazing Vietnamese food? There are many outstanding restaurants that serve up amazing banh mi, pho, and more. One favorite of many is the longstanding Quang Restaurant. This unassuming spot is especially known for its pho. You can load your broth with beef, chicken, seafood, or veggies – or all of the above. It makes for a hearty, warm, perfectly slurpable meal that you’ll keep coming back for.
Way up on northern Minnesota’s Gunflint Trail, you may expect fish to be the big-ticket item for nearby restaurants. And it’s true that many do serve up amazing seafood. But the Trail Center Lodge is most known for its enormous, bigger-than-your-plate pancakes. Stop in and see if you can come close to finishing this behemoth breakfast.
Wild rice soup is a state favorite, and you can find an amazing example of it at Cornerstone Cafe in Monticello. This flavorful, creamy soup has been recognized as the best in the state by local media! If you’re craving hot, delicious Minnesota comfort food, this is the place.
Check the website for apple availability, visit and enjoy:
Apple Barn
Bakery & Gift Shop
Meet the 🐐 🐐
Sip Hard Cider
…
About Aamodt’s
Harry S. Truman was president. The average American family earned $2,950 a year. Gas cost 16 cents a gallon. Just a few years post-World War II, young families were filled with optimism and ambition. It was a great time to start something new. For Thor and Lucille Aamodt, the America Dream meant starting their own family-run apple orchard. They purchased a pretty piece of land near Stillwater, Minnesota, that seemed to have just the right soil and climate for growing crisp, juicy apples. And even then it was just a short, scenic drive from Minneapolis and St. Paul.
Thor and Lucille put everything they had into the apple farm. With some seedling apple trees, a well-thought-out plan for planting, help from young son Tom, and a lot of prayers, Aamodt’s Apple Farm was born.
A few decades down the road, Tom and his wife, JoAnn, expanded the farm to include over 6,000 apple trees covering more than 50 acres.
Today, the apple farm is run by the third and fourth generations of Aamodt apple growers.
Tom’s son, Chris Aamodt, now runs the orchard, along with his wife Billi Jo, sons Andreas, Christopher, Geoffrey, Ian and daughters Laura and Audrey.
At MILLION’S CRAB, we strive to serve the freshest and tastiest seafood in town while ensuring guests enjoy themselves!
We provide different kinds of seafood and sauce with different spicy levels.
We prefer to call it the magic of seafood with fresh seafood!
…
…
About
MILLION’S CRAB is created from the people that created the Juicy Seafood and Naked Crab franchises with over ten years of experience and restaurants in Ohio, Indiana, Chicago, WIsconsin and Minnesota. The combined experience, MILLIONS CRAB brings and authentic cajun seafood restaurant, with seafood boils and American flair. MILLION’S CRAB serves uniquily flavored seafood dishes with seasonings from all over the world with traditional southern style of cooking.
“In the Lao language, it’s a simple translation meaning “please” but it comes from the Buddhist teaching which means compassion”
The patterns embedded around the border of our logo were designed by Chicago-based Laotian artist Chantala Kommanivanh. The Lao Sinh is a traditional skirt that symbolizes the Laotian culture and ethnicity, which was the inspiration for the border.
Khâluna has a resort atmosphere that will transport you to across the ocean with it’s colorful array of food that will satisfy all of your vacation cravings. It is Chef Ann’s goal to have a little something for everyone in the neighborhood, with Khâluna and The Shop at Khâluna acting as a bridge between Minneapolis and the regions of Southeast Asia.
Chef Ann believes in fair trade, and it is her goal fill her shop with curated goods from her home country of Laos, highlighting and supporting artisans by procuring market goods at a fair, viable wage-supporting price. In addition to housing hand-crafted goods, The Shop will also be used as a Private Dining Space and features a state-of-the-art cooking studio in which Chef Ann will lead cooking classes and demonstrations.
Chef Ann is excited to embark upon this journey and hopes to have the opportunity to take you along with her!
Owamni by The Sioux Chef brings North American indigenous dishes to Minneapolis.
…
Welcome back to the Eater Twin Cities Heatmap, a collection of exciting new restaurants that have opened or re-opened recently. Despite the trying pandemic, Minneapolis and St. Paul’s resilient hospitality community continues to find creative ways to introduce diners to fantastic food in fresh environments. These are the restaurants of the moment, some brand new and some old favorites that have finally returned.
Northeast Minneapolis’s new neighborhood destination for affordable American classics and cocktails made with Minnesota spirits comes from Morrissey Hospitality, the local group behind The Bad Waitress, St. Paul Grill. Executive chef John Henkels’s menu opens with sharable starters like pickle-brined fried chicken skewers, flatbreads, truffle fries, and grilled oysters, followed by three burger options, wraps, a BLT, and fried chicken sandwich. Mains like a whole trout dressed with chimichurri, fettuccini, bourbon-glazed pork chop, and scallops are all $21 and under — even high-brow wagyu, served with a mushroom demi-glace. — Tierney Plumb
Central N.E./official phjoto
Central N.E. Eat & Drink’s color-soaked look pays homage to its artsy neighborhood.
Sidebar at Surdyk’s opened briefly last fall before the weather and pandemic took a turn for the worse. The modern bar and brasserie recently made a comeback, ready to impress northeast diners under its tenured chef Randall Prudden. The alum of Spoon and Stable and Chicago’s three Michelin-starred Alinea has put together a fun and easy-to-explore menu full of seasonal ingredients. Don’t miss the bright and light crudo or the tartare.
Sean Sherman’s paean to Native American cuisine is seven years in the making, when he first started The Sioux chef as a catering and food education business for the Twin Cities community. The venture spans much longer (300 years) if one counts the indigenous land on which Sherman’s namesake restaurant now sits. Now he’s reclaiming an important piece of history with dishes made from decolonized ingredients — wheat, flour, cane sugar and dairy are out of the picture and replaced by a mix of Indigenous game, fish, birds, and insects along with wild plants, Native American heirloom farm varieties, and locally grown produce. Think local lake fish, dandelions made from pesto, or corn bread served with wojape, a sauce made from native chokecherries.
Owamni/Facebook
Owamni by The Sioux Chef introduces Minneapolis diners to Native American food that’s free of Euro-centric ingredients.
To call The Butcher’s Tale a barbecue joint or a mere steakhouse would be a disservice to the painstaking lengths chef Peter Botcher has taken to ensure that everything on his menu — from the vaunted 14-hour smoked beef long rib to the double-cut pork chop and the sausages — is fine-tuned and wildly delicious. As are the desserts by pastry wunderkind Elsbeth Young-Haug, whose pistachio cream puffs are now iconic. A lively and hopping beer garden adds extra bonus points.
The weekends crowds at the Malcolm Yards food hall are barely a month old and are already a sight to behold. No surprise, given the globetrotting lineup of vendors and prospect of cobbling a meal that stretches from Malaysia and Nepal to Italy. Pro tip: share an order of airy, shatteringly crisp Korean fried chicken at Abang Yoli; a warming serving of Rashmi Bhattachan’s ethereally light momos at Momo Dosa; a Detroit-style pie at Wrecktangle Pizza (Elote is recommended); and finally, end with the dizzyingly rich ice creams at Bebe Zito.
Nelson Hill for The Market at Malcolm Yards
Abang Yoli brings Korean-style fried chicken to The Market at Malcolm Yards.…
Followers of Daniel Del Prado rarely know what to expect next. Sicilian pizza? New American meets Argentinian? A take on Japanese-Italian fusion? Check all of the above (Rosalia, Martina and Sanjusan, respectively). Middle Eastern cuisine comes next at Cardamom, with a menu influenced by the bounty of the Aegean and Mediterranean seas. The seasoned chef has partnered with pastry chef Shawn McKenzie to set up shop at the Walker Art Center and is churning out subversive riffs on Mediterranean staples, like “Cacio e Pepe” dumplings, raw ahi tuna tabbouleh, and Turkish coffee pot au creme.
It’s been a long time coming, but Karyn Tomlinson has finally opened her chic, bistro-style restaurant in St. Paul’s Highland Park. The dining room got a subdued makeover that sets the stage for dishes like an omelet made with eggs from a nearby farm, creamy on the inside with an herb garnish. More substantial plates include a short-crusted pastry stuffed with caramelized leeks in a deeply savory sauce. Open for dinner only, though brunch is on the horizon.
Mendota Heights’s new catch-all cafe and bar from the team behind The Green Mill and Crooked Pint kicks off the day at 7 a.m. with breakfast staples like pancakes, oatmeal, and egg sandwiches served until 3 p.m. At night, the versatile venture flips into an after-work hotspot with $5 Roku and tonic cocktails and bar bites like calamari and brie and cranberry bruschetta. Dinner entrees all $20 and under include flank steak, wild rice stuffed chicken, a lightly breaded walleye sandwich, and sizable “Mac Daddy” burger. The 145-seat setup with a big patio also houses a grab-and-go deli stocked with fresh macaroons, pastas, potato salad, and quiche. — T.P.