Every Opening and Closing This Week: Ted’s Montana Grill Is Out on Larimer Square
Call Your Mother, a new option for bagels, and bakery/plant store GetRight’s both debuted.
Call Your Mother, a new option for bagels, and bakery/plant store GetRight’s both debuted.
“What we’re making here, and what’s being made at other cideries in the United States, are really the next wave of things.”
Using modified versions of her Japanese grandmother’s recipes, Madeline Dunhoff is bringing authentic mochi, onigiri and curry to the metro area.
The D.C.-based business makes its Colorado debut on May 19, with two more local outposts slated to open this year.
The new neighborhood eatery opening May 19 is former Vesta chef Nicholas Kayser’s first brick-and-mortar.
“It’s a really perfect metaphor for transformation, and what it takes to re-emerge reborn. It’s provided a lot of hope for me,” says poet Katie Mason.
Projects like this are rare in the spirits world, but you can score one of the limited-release bottles that benefits local nonprofits this week.
The neighborhood, which has long been a food desert, is changing, and this restaurant that started as a food truck is a bright spot.
The store has been open since at least 1948, and it even made an appearance in a video shot by Paul McCartney in the 1960s.
It’s also opening a brick-and-mortar in Park Hill this summer in collaboration with Yuan Wonton and Sweets and Sourdough.
The first location of the cafe and bakery chain in the state opened in Parker in March, and now a second is slated to debut in Aurora in July.
Odyssey Beerworks is celebrating its tenth anniversary next weekend, and children are not allowed.
While four spots shuttered, four others debuted, including a new Snarf’s and a milkshake bar on the 16th Street Mall.
The multi-level BurnDown is set to open on May 20 and the rooftop view is just one of the highlights.
It serves comfort food like pulled pork sandwiches and garlic Parmesan chicken po’boys with a side of sass.
Owners Kim and Mark Albrecht have dubbed themselves “cheese curd ambassadors.”
Owner Matt Dulin plans to do a rooftop dinner series this summer and start a farmers’ market in the parking lot next door.
These $20 shakes are fully loaded with toppings, drizzles and mountains of whipped cream.
After a four-year hiatus (thanks COVID), this seriously fun fundraiser is back.
There will be over sixty mobile food businesses at the free-to-attend event serving everything from barbecue to Tibetan cuisine.
The team is rallying together to reopen the restaurant for Mother’s Day weekend.
The brewery will celebrate its tenth anniversary the weekend of May 19, and your children are not invited.