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Night Out in North Loop: Cozy Cooking – Minneapolis, MN

Night Out in North Loop: Cozy Cooking – Minneapolis, MN

  Cooks of Crocus Hill

Menu: Bitter Greens Salad with Calamansi Vinaigrette and Toasted Hazelnuts; Quick Lamb Ragoût; Fresh Linguini;

Red Wine Poached Pears with Crème Anglaise.

Date Night. A night out with your best friend, your significant other, a fellow foodie or a group of friends who want to celebrate and explore new food experiences. Our hands-on Date Night classes are led by a trained chef who will create an experience that’s fun and engaging, and where everyone learns a few tips and tricks to take home. All participants are divided into small groups to prepare a dish. The evening comes to an end with a celebration feast of all the fruits of combined labor. Delicious!

Chef: Lorelei McInerny

Class Type: Participation
Location: Minneapolis
Date + Time: Friday, March 26, 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM
Link for tickets: $90.00 (per student) One glass of wine or beer is provided per student, so 21 and up only, please.

We’re committed to the health and safety of our students and team. We request that all attendees wear a mask and arrive a few minutes early to complete a temperature check and fill out a COVID-19 pre-screening questionnaire. Check out what to expect when joining us for a class….

 

Our Story: COOKS OF CROCUS HILL

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In 1973, Martha Kaemmer and her sister Mary Rice thought that the time was ripe for a culinary awakening. Cooks was born in a 1,500-square-foot storefront at the intersection of Grand Avenue and Lexington Parkway, in St. Paul. There were four employees and approximately 250 different items for sale. Mary left a year later to pursue a new culinary journey in Bayfield, WI. Martha carried the company forward for more than 30 years.

We’ve moved twice. Added 4 more locations – closed two. We had 15 shops inside Marshall Fields (Dayton’s) – we gave them up when Macy’s took over. We’ve grown – we’ve contracted. Like all small businesses we’ve been on an interesting adventure.

Currently, we have three locations all with state-of-the-art cooking schools. Our experiences are second to none, we have a growing presence on the web and we are constantly working to improve our offering.

We employ 65 people and our schools rely on the services of another 50. Our inventory has grown to include more than 6,000 innovative culinary items. We offer a huge assortment of instruction and educational opportunities and we’re always trying to help people with their culinary journey. Though she remained an active member of our Board, Martha retired in December of 2007. She passed away in 2018, and we miss her warm and embracing spirit every single day. We remain committed to her desire for Cooks’ to be a welcoming place for sharing discoveries about food.

So, that’s where we are today, 5 kids, a big standard poodle, a large extended “family” and one well used kitchen. Sharing discoveries at every turn. We don’t just say that “Life happens in the Kitchen” – we live it.
– Karl and Marie

EatDrinkDishMpls: Smack Shack – North Loop, Minneapolis, MN

EatDrinkDishMpls: Smack Shack – North Loop, Minneapolis, MN

Smack Shack

@eatdrinkdishmpls

Northloop Minneapolis: Denise Houser Design

Northloop Minneapolis: Denise Houser Design

-With the juxtaposition of globally-sourced rustic and elegant elements, my designs uniquely express the personality of each person who wears them-
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About: HOUSER is a jewelry design company based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Founded by designer Denise Houser and represented by fine boutiques, Houser is deeply committed to our values and design aesthetic.
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Values: We are deeply committed to ethical, fair-trade practices and working with local artisans to create great jewelry while improving the lives of otherwise disadvantaged and oppressed people. Our goal as a business is to be as successful as possible in order to give back even more.
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Aesthetic: Each piece I create is inspired by the power of contradiction. Leather becomes sculptural when knit.  A rustic element becomes new in an elegant setting. Asymmetrical arrangements strike a balance. Discover pieces that contradict everything but your fiercely independent spirit.    —  Denise Houser.

 

HOUSER

North Loop Neighborhood: Loop Back Mars Candy – Minneapolis, MN

North Loop Neighborhood: Loop Back Mars Candy – Minneapolis, MN

Mars Incorporated, a company that’s now a global business empire, got its start in Minneapolis. And the treat that launched its astronomical success, the Milky Way bar, was born at 718 Washington Avenue North in the North Loop, in the same facility used by Johnson NutFrank C. Mars moved his fledgling candy company into the building in 1922 while having modest success producing the Mar-O-Bar—a treat that was essentially chocolate-covered whipped cream.

Mars, a Minnesota native, had been fascinated with candy-making from the time he was a child. He had a mild case of polio, his mother home-schooled him. And among her lessons in the kitchen: hand-dipping chocolates.

As a young man in his early 20s, he tried selling candies for a living while married to a Minnesota schoolteacher, but the business—and the marriage—failed. He moved to Tacoma, Washington with his second wife in 1911 and again tried selling candy as a wholesaler. And again, he failed. But when they moved back to Minnesota in 1920, their fortunes would change spectacularly.

The new Milky Way candy bar, introduced in 1923 with its creamy nougat of whipped egg whites, sugar syrup, malted flavoring and air, was lighter and cheaper to produce than solid chocolates—and it was an instant hit. In its first year, the Milky Way reportedly grossed $800,000 in sales—the equivalent of about $11 million today. Mars was buying raw chocolate from a competitor, the Hershey Company in Pennsylvania, to make the Milky Ways.

By the way, with a family name like Mars, you’d think that Milky Way was named after the galaxy. But the company says the name was really inspired by the malted milk shakes that were so popular at the time. And the bars were advertised as “a double malted milk in a candy bar.”

Frank Mars’ son from his first marriage, Forrest, claimed he was the one who came up with the idea for the Milky Way as he and his dad talked over milk shakes at a soda fountain. The two had a rocky relationship, but each ended up hugely successful in different divisions of the company. Forest ran operations in Europe.

It quickly became apparent that Mars was outgrowing its space in the North Loop.  In 1929, the company moved to an opulent new production facility in a suburb of Chicago, and it’s there that it would introduce Snickers, M&Ms and many other treats.

Frank Mars, his son Forrest, and his second wife Edith, are all entombed in Minneapolis, at Lakewood Cemetery

And the candy bar that first came out of a factory on Washington Avenue North is another sweet story we can tell about the North Loop.

By Mike Binkley, North Loop Neighborhood Association
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

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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