ICYMI: “Minneapolis pizzeria is best in the U.S., according to ‘Good Morning America’

ICYMI: “Minneapolis pizzeria is best in the U.S., according to ‘Good Morning America’

ABC/PAULA LOBO

Wrecktangle beat out pizzerias from New York and Chicago in “Good Morning America’s” United States of Pizza contest!

EAT & DRINK: A Minneapolis pizza spot was named the “ultimate pizzeria” in the United States on “Good Morning America” on Friday. The title went to Wrecktangle, which slings Detroit-style pies from three locations in Minneapolis.

“It’s a whirlwind, it’s surreal, it’s crazy,” said Wrecktangle co-owner Breanna Evans. “We don’t really know how to process this between like jumping and screaming and crying.”

Wrecktangle advanced to the final round earlier this week in the show’s “United States of Pizza” competition, edging out south Minneapolis’ Red Wagon Pizza Co. to land in the finals.

For the last showdown, Wrecktangle faced pizzerias from four other cities, two of which (New York and Chicago) are considered some of the best pizza cities in the country.

But Minneapolis had Wrecktangle’s crispy and cheese-caramelized square slices going for it, plus an unusual topping combination that won over two of the four judges.

Wrecktangle chef and co-owner Jeff Rogers introduced the pizzeria’s signature Very Nice Breakfast Pizza. “It is very early,” Rogers explained on the morning show about his breakfast-themed entry.

The pie is topped with pork sausage gravy, soft scrambled eggs, bacon jam, seven kinds of cheese and fried sage leaves.

The judges were impressed.

“This Wrecktangle pizza should not work. This is not the pizza I would order,” said cooking show host Aarti Sequeira. “I freaking love it.”

Sequeira was wooed by the gravy and the cheese, “and then just the texture of the pizza itself — that is delicious.”

Other judges included former NFL player Tiki Barber and the owners of New York’s Artichoke Pizza, Sal Basille and Francis Garcia.

Garcia also selected Wrecktangle as his pick for the top pie. With two votes, Wrecktangle took home the title — and a giant check for $10,000.

“It was an honor to be a part of it in some sort of semblance, and it’s insane that we took home the victory,” Rogers told the Star Tribune a few hours after the show. “Still cannot believe it. Truly shell-shocked.”

The other competitors were Unregular Pizza from New York City, Phew’s Pies from Atlanta, Milly’s Pizza in the Pan from Chicago, and Pizza Jawn from Philadelphia.

Afterward, Rogers and Evans walked around the city holding their giant check and getting some funny looks from passersby. They are planning to spend the weekend in New York before returning to Minneapolis to celebrate.

The post-win relief was especially sweet after challenges the Wrecktangle team — Rogers, Evans and Alex Rogers — went through to get their pizza to New York City. They had shipped all the ingredients to the “GMA” studio, but the box had been returned to sender. Luckily, they’d packed a second set of ingredients in a cooler and checked it for the flight.

Early Friday morning, Rogers and the other competitors cooked the pizza in an Ooni portable pizza oven on the plaza outside the studio.

“It was a blast,” Evans said.

Want to try the winning pie for yourself? It’s available at Wrecktangle‘s three locations: its flagship at 703 W. Lake St., Mpls.; in the Market at Malcolm Yards, 501 30th Av. SE., Mpls.; and its original location at the North Loop Galley, 729 N. Washington Av., Mpls.

By noon Friday, there was already a record number of orders. “Everyone was prepared,” Rogers said. “We’ve been stocking up.”

A Doctor-Turned-Chef is Taking Fine Dining Lakeside at Minnesota Winery

A Doctor-Turned-Chef is Taking Fine Dining Lakeside at Minnesota Winery

Photo: Renee Jones Schneider, Star Tribune

Gallery: Chef Jo Seddon walks through Gia at the Lake. Jo Seddon was a doctor in London before switching careers to follow her passion for cooking. Now based in Minnesota, the chef is leading the new Gia at the Lake, a seasonal Italian restaurant overlooking Lake Waconia and the vines at Sovereign Winery.

Now seven years into her second career, Seddon is still navigating work-life balance in a demanding, physical profession. But with the new restaurant Gia at the Lake, she may be onto something.

An outdoor-only venue overlooking Lake Waconia and Sovereign Estate’s tranquil vineyard, Gia at the Lake brings seasonal, farm-fresh Italian fare to a venue that only had pizza and cheese plates. With Seddon aboard, it has a cosmopolitan chef who trained at the famed River Cafe in her native London and was on the opening team of Gavin Kaysen’s Bellecour in Wayzata.

“It’s an amazing little project,” she said of the new spot, which requires her to prep everything in a commercial space in south Minneapolis and haul it to Waconia to finish in a makeshift outdoor kitchen. “We’re sort of in a camping environment here.”

With service only three nights a week, and only until early fall, Gia at the Lake might be Seddon’s ticket to reimagining the chef’s life as a family-friendly one.

Seddon, 42, went into medicine in her 20s, specializing in infectious diseases. (“When COVID happened, I was like, oh, thank goodness I’m not a doctor right now,” she said.)

But as much as she loved her specialty, something was missing. “I just kept on thinking that I’m trying so hard and I’m applying for jobs that I don’t even want.”

She always enjoyed cooking, and after having her second child in 2015, Seddon made the radical choice to leave medicine and enroll at Leiths School of Food and Wine in London.

“Suddenly, when I left medicine, it felt like it unleashed a part of my brain that I had suppressed,” Seddon said. “I didn’t realize I was a creative person.”

“It was really unfussy food,” she said. “Very ingredient-led. We used to write the menu twice a day. We’d just see what came into the fridge.” The supportive environment also disproved everything she’d heard about kitchen dynamics.

“It taught me that kitchens did not need to be like they were portrayed in all the documentaries and films, with abusive, shouting male egos,” she said. “It taught me how a kitchen can behave, and also ignited my passion to cook Italian food.”

Seddon also did a culinary internship at Daniel Boulud’s London restaurant, a connection that proved fateful a year later when her husband’s job in health care brought her family to Minneapolis. Her restaurant contacts introduced her to the city’s own Boulud protégé, Gavin Kaysen, and Seddon scored a job as a line cook when Kaysen opened Bellecour.

Kaysen noted the way Seddon’s experience working in hospitals was evident in the kitchen.

After taking a break from restaurants to have her third child, Seddon decided to make another change. She reduced her hours to part-time and leased a commercial kitchen — just before the pandemic hit.

“I was already in my mind leaving restaurants, and I was so lucky I got that space, because once everyone was furloughed, it was impossible,” she said.

Throughout the pandemic she catered small private events and sold meal kits to families. “It was a successful little business,” she said. “But once things opened up, I just felt like I didn’t really want to put food in boxes anymore.”

She needed to start networking to figure out her next move, and last summer went to an event of Les Dames Escoffier, a professional society for women in food and hospitality. The event was at Sovereign Estate.

“On my way, I was thinking, the food will be good but the wine’s gonna be rubbish,” she recalled. “But I arrived here and I was like, hang on, the wine is really good.”

She found the venue on Lake Waconia’s shores delightful and kept coming back, wishing for a restaurant to open there. Finally, she contacted the winery’s owner, Terri Savaryn, and suggested she add another food option for winery guests.

Savaryn agreed — and hired Seddon to lead it.

“We both understood this was mutually beneficial,” said Savaryn, herself a chef who caters events at the winery. “Having a dining experience is going to be the best way to introduce people to the wine industry in Minnesota.”

You can still get a cheese plate to pair with wine in a cabana or on the main patio. Musicians often play, and picnic tables spread out toward the vines.

But keep walking past a grove of trees and you’ll spot the Marquette Pavilion, a graceful event space with a curved overhang. Tables are set underneath that arched awning, between the pavilion and a field that slopes toward the water. The lake breeze keeps the summer’s oppressive heat waves almost bearable.

“I just think, I get to come work here?” Seddon said. “At the end of the evening when we pack down, the light and the lake, it’s just a really magical space.”

A fresh focus

Italy’s regional food culture plays a role, too. Braised kale and white beans hail from Tuscany, fried artichokes from Rome. (Seddon took her team on a tasting tour in Italy earlier this year.)

The children’s menu is just as thoughtful, with an appetizer of hummus and crudité served before a vibrant spaghetti and sauce.

The through-line is freshness. “It’s gently evolving with the seasons,” Seddon said. “The way I like to eat is the way I like to cook.”

The most challenging part is preparing all the food beforehand and bringing it to the winery to finish on the grill — “toing and froing,” as Seddon calls it. She churns ice cream on site because it’ll melt on the long drive.

An outdoors-only restaurant also puts an unfortunate time limit on Gia at the Lake, and on Seddon’s next career move.

“Once the weather turns cold, that kind of closes us down,” she said.

Savaryn has high hopes for the future of dining at Sovereign Estate, with plans to build out a permanent kitchen by next spring. “My goal would be to have a restaurant that would be the French Laundry of Minnesota,” she said, referring to the three-Michelin-starred restaurant in Napa Valley. “We’d call it the Minnesota Laundromat.”

In the meantime, Seddon hopes to find a space for a residency this winter. But opening a full brick-and-mortar restaurant is “such a big commitment in these uncertain times.”

Gia at the Lake

Events now through the end of September at Sovereign Estate!

 9950 N. Shore Road, Waconia, MN

 sovereignestatewine.com

By Sharyn Jackson Star Tribune
Let My Building Burn: Ruhl Islam – Minneapolis MN

Let My Building Burn: Ruhl Islam – Minneapolis MN

Gandhi Mahal caught fire amid overnight unrest. ‘Let my building burn’: Minneapolis restaurant owner responds to protests and violence.

 

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“Let my building burn. Justice needs to be served,” said Ruhel Islam the morning after his restaurant Gandhi Mahal burned down in late May. The fire was ignited in the riots following #GeorgeFloyd’s killing by a white Minneapolis police officer. Islam, pictured above, quickly went viral for his response. Now, a month later, he stands by his statement. Careful to emphasize that he does not condone violence, Islam said, “Our buildings have burned. Why should we blame the protesters for this? We should blame our decision-makers for this. It’s been hundreds of years. All these years, nobody has listened.” Islam had been a student demonstrator in Bangladesh before moving to Minneapolis, where he learned “what has happened with our black brothers and sisters,” he said. Steve Krause, the third-generation owner of Minnehaha Lake Wine & Spirits, echoed Islam’s feelings, saying “there are bigger issues in society … if this is a sacrifice to accomplish a greater good, so be it.” Others whose small businesses have been destroyed or damaged expressed frustrations, both at rioters and the forces that failed to protect them. “Where’s the police? Where’s the city? Every year I pay taxes. Where are the police?” said Bao Huang, owner of the restaurant Hop Wong near the corner of Lake Street and S. Chicago Avenue. Starting the journey to rebuild, small business owners are veering from grief to hope and reconciling how the destruction of their businesses brought the world’s attention to George Floyd’s death and the cause of racial injustice. Although it might take three or four years, Islam plans to rebuild on the same block. Krause, whose liquor store had been the first business to feel the rage of the crowd, said that his insurance will be adequate enough to rebuild bigger than before, with a few units of affordable housing above it. “I’m looking for energy to rebuild and turn a bad experience for our community, and for me personally, into something positive,” Krause said. Check out the link in our bio to read more. 📸: @rtsongphoto

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Gandhi Mahal, at 3009 27th Av. S. in Minneapolis, caught fire overnight. The restaurant is located near the same corner as several other food businesses, including the Town Talk Diner and Gastropub, El Nuevo Rodeo and Addis Ababa, that appear to have been heavily damaged by fire. The restaurant is about a block away from the Minneapolis Third Police Precinct.

Owner Ruhel Islam’s daughter, Hafsa, wrote the post Friday morning. Here is an excerpt:

“Thank you to everyone for checking in. Sadly Gandhi Mahal has caught fire and has been damaged. We won’t loose hope though, I am so greatful for our neighbors who did their best to stand guard and protect Gandhi Mahal, Youre efforts won’t go unrecognized. Don’t worry about us, we will rebuild and we will recover.”

As she wrote the post, Hafsa said she overheard her father on the phone, saying “let my building burn, Justice needs to be served, put those officers in jail.”

The post goes on: “Gandhi Mahal May have felt the flames last night, but our firey drive to help protect and stand with our community will never die! Peace be with everyone. #JusticeforGeorgeFloyd #BLM”

It has been shared widely across social media.

“I’m going to start small and show that we can really do it,” Islam said in a 2015 Star Tribune article. “That’s very important toward food security.”

By  Star Tribune

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