They can help shuttered places open again and also save new concepts money. Author: Doug Trattner Updated: 9:59 PM EST March 5, 2021
CLEVELAND The restaurant industry was flattened last year thanks to COVID-19, but coming in to jump-start some spots? The pop-up.
It s not a new idea, but something the three pop-up starters we talked to say it s exploding in popularity because it saves money they d otherwise spend on just running a kitchen, along with breathing life into other shops recently forced to close. I think a lot of people are seeing opportunity to get in where places that have been here a long time are closing and creating new space for people who are younger or who have new ideas. says Leanne Leanne Kubiez, one half of the Debauchery pop-up in Bar Oni in the old Ushabu restaurant in Tremont.
Editor s Note: As part of its commitment to cover the intersection of race and business, The Dispatch will feature one Black-owned business a week throughout February. That s in addition to continued examination of the barriers faced by Black businessowners.
Gourmet soul food meals are being produced in a 20,000-square foot warehouse in Milo-Grogan.
Tuesday through Sunday, gig economy drivers pick up to-go bowls ranging from pan-seared salmon fettuccine pasta to buttermilk fried chicken breast with mac and cheese, greens and sweet potatoes.
These “soul bowls” are the brainchild of Chef Will Hightower, who partnered with his brother, Kevin Hightower, to launch the Soul 2 Go restaurant in January. The business is one of about 35
Lowe Mill Arts: An Art Pilgrimage in Huntsville, Alabama
Back in sepia-toned times, it began as a textile mill and was later a shoe factory. Since 2001, this cavernous brick building has been home to a tech town’s arts/culture heartbeat. Nineteen years later, organizers tout
Lowe Mill as The South’s largest privately owned arts center. It’s located in a soulful working class neighborhood, on the west side of Huntsville, a North Alabama city known for aerospace engineering that helped NASA put men on the moon with 1969’s Apollo 11 mission. Huntsville is also famously home to Space Camp, where generations of kids, including those of celebs like Tom Hanks and Bruce Springsteen, come to indulge astronaut daydreams. The past several years, Huntsville has attracted bold font endeavors like the FBI, Blue Origin and Facebook to locate here. The city is about about an hour’s drive from Muscle Shoals, and the fertile recording studio scene that birthed classics by the likes of Ar