dining

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Taste of Lake Street is on Saturday, September 13th, at the corner of East Lake St and Elliot. Tickets are $25, and food vendors include Pizza Luce, Maria’s Cafe, Town Talk Diner, Hamdi Restaurant, Los Andes, El Nuevo Rodeo, and a lot more. There will also be live entertainment by local artists, but the lineup hasn’t been announced - my guess is that it will be a wide variety of world music.

There will also be beer and wine tastings, and all proceeds go to Minneapolis food shelves

Anyone that knows me knows that Lake Street is my favorite Street in all of Minnesota. I love everything about it, from the “hip and trendy” in Uptown to the immigrant communities near Midtown to my neighborhood hear the Mississippi River - it has it all. And this event looks to be a wonderful celebration of that. (via)

On Saturday night, Tricia and went to the Common Roots Cafe for dinner to try the newest competetor to the Jucy Lucy universe. The Rootsy Lucy is made with thousand hills beef stuffed with 12 month aged cheddar on foccacia with heirloom tomatoes, lettuce and aioli. I’ll have to try it again soon, but I’d have to say this was the best Jucy Lucy I’ve had, both because of the quality of the beef, but also because the cheese didn’t burn my mouth. It was quality cheese and for the most part, it stayed in the burger

Common Roots: We make everything on our menu from scratch, and we strive to use as many local, organic, and fair-trade ingredients as possible. Our menu changes constantly, allowing us to make frequent use of local ingredients. In 2007, 80% of our food and beverage purchases were local, organic, or fair-trade!

For drinks, I had the newest Surly beer, Surly Hell, a Munich Helles, and a beer that I could easily see becoming a top seller for Surly. It was very easy to drink and a perfect beer for a late summer evening. The beer selection is all local (mainly Surly, but also Brau Bros and Point), and the wine selection is all fair trade or local (yes, we make wine here!).

I’d highly recommend stopping in for a Rootsy Lucy before it’s gone!

Rootsy Lucy at Common Roots Cafe

I just want to say that the Bella (roasted portabella, crispy prosciutto, red onion, goat cheese chive spread) at the Bulldog NE is the best burger in town. I’ve had it three times now, and am amazed every time. Yes, the beer usually helps, but it’s just so dang good. The bun, the burger, the toppings - it’s all amazing.

Bella Burger - Bulldog NE

Andrew Zimmern: Here’s a question, what’s the best available turnkey location for a new restaurant in the Twin Cities, and what’s the best space currently occupied that could become available any day now?

The comments section is a nice read of available spots in Minneapolis and St. Paul, including a few in Longfellow…

- The addition to the house just south of the Riverview Theater - this used to be Kee Mee Chow Mein, and another commenter suggested an Izzy’s or another ice cream parlor. This was also one of the possible locations for my walk-up Sloppy Joe restaurant called Sloppy Moe’s.

- The old Armstrong’s space on 42nd ave and 34th st - I think a few years ago, tLMC and I talked about opening a craft beer bar here, but he noted there are some parking and liquor license issues with this location.

But the big news is that Thom Pham (of Azia) has announced that he will be moving forward with Mix in the old Molly Quinns on East Lake. Sweet.

Snack Foods That Sound Like Sex Acts (via)

Tricia’s brother and sister were in town this weekend and we brought them to Sea Salt at Minnehaha Park on Saturday afternoon, along with our friends Sam and Nicole. We’ve been there a bunch of times, as it’s one of our favorite restaurants, as well as within walking distance to our house. But this time we ordered stuff we hadn’t had before, and might have found some new favorites.

First, we all split the Oil Pan - 18 Shrimp, 12 Oysters and pickled herring on ice with a pitcher of Surly Cynic. The Oysters were huge and excellent, as good as any others I’ve had in town. And for $50, it’s a good deal and a perfect thing to split with a group.

Tricia and I also split the grilled scallop tacos, which sounded awesome, but wasn’t as good as we wanted it to be. I’m not sure what happened, but our order had the typical onions and cilantro, while Sam and Nicole’s order had corn and a creamy salsa. I’ve had the catfish po’boy before and I thought it was good, but this time I had it grilled, instead of fried, and it was awesome, and probably my new favorite item.

We also ended up splitting three pitchers of Cynic, which was perfect for a warm and sunny day at the park, and made tossing the frisbee a lot more fun!

Had dinner last night at Pizza Biga, the wood fired pizza place next to the Turtle Bread Co on 48th and Chicago. I’ve wanted to try it for a long time, as my brother loves the place, but we just haven’t been. Tricia and I split the caesar salad and the pizza biga. I’m not sure what it was about the salad, but I just didn’t like it. It didn’t have a whole lot of flavor. The pizza on the other hand was awesome. I can’t find a menu online, and I can’t remember what it all had on it, but I’d highly recommend it. Our friends had the beet and asparagus salad which they really liked, and the margherita pizza that we didn’t like.

For dessert, we stopped in at Pumphouse Creamery which is right next door for some ice cream. I had the sweet cream and homemade oatmeal cookie. It was a little expensive at $4 for a one scoop cone, but it was damn good, and might be my new favorite ice cream shop in Mpls.

Carmen’s Cafe in Kansas City

While in Kansas City this past weekend for my wife’s family reunion, we had dinner at Carmen’s Cafe in the Brookside neighborhood of Kansas City. Carmen’s describes itself as having Italian cuisine served with Latin flair, with a menu of tapas, pasta, and other meat and fish based Italian dishes. And judging by our meal, and seeing what other people were eating, it seemed like a place you could keep going back to.

Tricia and I split the Paella Valencia and a tapas order of Shrimp ala Ajillo. The shrimp was good and fairly simple, but the paella was outstanding. I have fond memories of sitting at a street cafe in Madrid, sharing a huge plate of paella with a bunch of HS classmates. I’ll never forget what seemed like an endless supply of the best seafood I’d ever had.

The paella in KC was nowhere near as good, but it was the best I’ve had since then. The plate was packed with beef, chicken, chorizo, and a variety of seafood (clams, mussels, squid, scallops, salmon). By the end, I was so stuffed I couldn’t even think of dessert, even though I really wanted to try their Tiramisu or Spanish Flan.

Jun 18, 2008 | No comments

Scenes From A New Restaurant: Neighborhood Lady: Well, I think that’s rude. The whole neighborhood thinks it’s rude that you’re not open yet.

Crowdsourcing the Citizen Cafe: Wanna be a restaurant critic? Wanna be a citizen journalist? Let’s try an experiment. The Citizen Café is opening tomorrow, at 24th Ave.and 38th St. in south Minneapolis. Instead of just me writing a review (which I will do eventually), how about all of you readers out there visiting the restaurant and sending me your impressions. You can either post them online as comments on this post, or send them to me as emails, to Iggers@rakemag.com.

Jun 11, 2008 | 1 comment

Finding the Hits, Avoiding the Errors: A culinary scorecard for all 30 major league baseball stadiums.

At the Metrodome, they say to get the carved turkey sandwich, and avoid the Papa John’s Pizza. I say just get a Dome Dog and a helmet sundae. Definitely read the entry for the Chicago White Sox though.

Grinders Kansas City

As some of you know, Tricia and I are in KC this weekend and today we, along with her brother, had lunch at Grinder’s in the Crossroads District of downtown. Grinder’s is one of my favorite bars here, they have good food, a great beer selection, and interesting decor. I think it’s owned by an artist, so the place is packed with interesting sculptures and art work. Unfortunately, I didn’t have my camera with, so camera phone pics will have to do.

Grinders Kansas City

The three of us split a pizza and a Philly Cheese Steak sandwich, and both were excellent. I haven’t had many Philly Cheese Steaks, but this was exactly how I imagine the good ones are. Good beef, cheese wiz, onions, and all in a tasty bun.

Grinders Menu Grinders Pizza

Grinder’s is also known for their pizza, especially the option of adding tots to any pizza, which is part of what made them famous on the Food Network. We opted against the tots, instead ordered The Hippie pizza with red sauce, green peppers, black olives, spinach, tomatoes, artichoke hearts, & almonds. I don’t think I’ve ever had almonds on a pizza, but they were a nice touch. I think I’d rather have kalamata olives instead of black olives, but it was still a great pizza.

For beers I went with an Avery Salvation and the O’Fallon 5 Day IPA, while Tricia had an Avery White Rascal, all on tap.

Grinders is one of my favorite, non BBQ, places in all of Kansas City, so if you’re ever in town, stop in.

After working in the yard for a few hours this morning, my parents and I went to Sea Salt for lunch. I really like the place, but this wasn’t our best experience.

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