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Critic’s Notebook

What Do Tom Douglas and Matt Dillon Have in Common?

More than shiny new James Beard hardware, it turns out.

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Hats off.

A week ago tonight the James Beard Foundation handed out the awards widely heralded as the Oscars of the restaurant world. Matt Dillon (Sitka and Spruce, Bar Ferdn’and, Corson Building) won Best Northwest Chef; after years of nominations, Tom Douglas (Dahlia Lounge, Ting Momo, and 13 joints in between) finally took home Outstanding Restaurateur—which, in Oscar parlance, is as prestigious as Best Director.

I’ve been a judge in this contest for years and I’ve seen a lot of worthy superstars win the Best Northwest Chef prize, among them Maria Hines (Tilth, Golden Beetle) in 2009 and Jason Wilson (Crush) in 2010. Those winners gratified me. This year’s thrill me.

Why? Because they reward the right thing—vision.

Admittedly, at first glance the upstart idealist Dillon and the savvy magnate Douglas would seem to have little in common. Dillon was the first chef around here to enshrine the “Un-Restaurant” concept; the idea that a restaurant’s highest value derives from its support of responsible food sourcing and a communitarian, share-food-around-the-table ethos. Both Sitka (which Dillon conceived as a “food salon”) and Corson (which he conceived as a food-based community center) rocked restaurant conventions from the get-go, pioneering such then-shockers as shared tables, no reservations, family-style dining, and prix-fixe nights.

Douglas, by contrast, has made a perfectly-oiled machine of restaurant conventions—then ridden it to stardom as Seattle’s most prolific restaurateur and food personality. Since the Dahlia opened in 1989 his restaurants have set the bar for authentic, hospitable, empowered service; his business models have become the envy of entrepreneurs across the food world. He has grown his empire to 15 food businesses within the space of one square mile of downtown real estate. A chart illustrating the tentacles of his influence and mentorship to other chefs in the region would stretch the limits of a magazine foldout.

Both the hugely creative acts of hugely creative men.

As both of their stars rise, it’s easy to forget the culinary gifts that started it all for them—but they are both, first and foremost, chefs. Dillon, a culinary savant, appears to layer flavors and textures in obedience to some unseen muse; what he can do with nutty fried paneer, a perfect steaky Northwest tomato slice, cumin-bright greens, and pine nut butter transcends not only the sum of the parts—it transcends every expectation you’ve ever brought to those ingredients. Matt Dillon is an artist.

So, for his part, is Tom Douglas—the visionary who first brought Seattle such now-standards as Asian fusion and gourmet burgers. Since then he has sophisticated the pizza, globalized the dumpling, and given Seattle its first taste of biscuit sandwiches. And that’s just South Lake Union.

These guys are deserving—an accolade even their peers would agree on, having voted both Dillon and Douglas the Most Admired Local Chef title in our Chefs Bite Back poll last year. (They tied.)

I love it when James Beard gets it right. Here’s to ya, gents.

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Tags: Tom Douglas, James Beard Awards, Sitka and Spruce, Matt Dillon, Dahlia Lounge, The Corson Building

Serious Beard Winner

Tom Douglas Named James Beard Outstanding Restaurateur

It’s perhaps the most significant accomplishment in T-Doug’s already impressive career.

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Eric Tanaka accepts Tom Douglas’s James Beard award from Daniel Boulud. Image via James Beard Foundation.

Okay, everyone can put away all those Susan Lucci jokes now. Last night, always-a-Beardsmaid chef Tom Douglas won the James Beard award for Outstanding Restaurateur. As we reported earlier in the evening, chef Matt Dillon nabbed the Best Chef Northwest honor, but Douglas’s long-awaited win was undoubtedly Seattle’s big news of the night.

According to the Seattle Times, Douglas had been nominated three times previously, and was in New York, but didn’t actually attend the ceremony. Hence the jocular Eric Tanaka, the executive chef for Tom Douglas Restaurants, tuxedoed up and accepted the award on his friend and partner’s behalf. Lest there be any confusion as he trundled to the podium, Tanaka explained that T-Doug is “bigger, fatter, heftier. I’m good looking. We can see that.” Tanaka also thanked T-Doug “for being delicious,” and recognized Douglas’s wife Jackie, and the company’s staff.

Douglas won Best Chef Northwest in 1994, and Tanaka himself nabbed that same award a decade later. This is the first time a Seattleite has won the Outstanding Restaurateur category, one of the uberprestigious overall, nonregional honors. We’d like to think it was news of his forthcoming falafel king status that tipped the scales in Douglas’s favor. Big congratulations all around. You can watch chefs Thomas Keller and Daniel Boulud present the award right over here, at the 03:00:00 mark, and the full list of last night’s winners is here.

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Tags: Awards and Accolades, Tom Douglas, James Beard Awards, Eric Tanaka

Awards and Accolades

Matt Dillon Brings Home a James Beard Award

The renowned local chef proclaimed Best Chef Northwest.

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Image courtesy of the James Beard Foundation.

Hooray! Chef Matt Dillon of Sitka and Spruce and The Corson Building is now James Beard–winning chef Matt Dillon, after receiving a James Beard award for Best Chef Northwest at the Academy Awards–wannabe ceremony in New York today. The nattily attired Dillon thanked his co-chef, Emily Crawford, and took a moment to pay tribute to Nettletown chef Christina Choi, who passed away suddenly in December. “She knew hunger and she knew how to feed people,” said Dillon of his friend. Dillon, Canlis chef Jason Franey, and Portland chefs Chris Israel, Naomi Pomeroy, and Cathy Whims, were nominated in this category. Per the Beards’ semiawkward award show narration, in 25 years, Dillon “hopes to spend his time hunting, shrimping, and starting a second career in social justice or ski patrol.” Yep, that seems about right.

Tom Douglas was nominated, once again, for Outstanding Restaurateur; we will update this post with the results in the morning.

Host Alton Brown fired off some clunky jokes about shrimp, though perhaps the highlight of the evening was Tory Miller of Madison restaurant L’Etoile, who won the Best Chef Midwest, and thanked the late James Beard for being “such a weird old dude” who did so much to support the culinary community. It’s only a matter of time before this awards ceremony graduates from live web stream to being aired on the Bravo network. See the full list of Monday night winners here as it unfolds.

Seattle was, at least, well represented in Friday’s first round of James Beard awards, given out for books and journalism. Bellevue-based cookbook behemoth Modernist Cuisine won Cookbook of the Year, as well as the Best Cookbook: Cooking from a Professional Point of View" category. That win wasn’t exactly a surprise; in advance of the award we asked local chefs and food nerds who own this massive, groundbreaking tome, where, exactly, they keep it. Seattle Times reporter Maureen O’Hagan won an award for her “Feeling the Weight: The Emotional Battle to Control Kids Diets,” while author Brad Parsons took the beverage book category for his Bitters: A Spirited History of a Classic Cure-All. While Parsons is now based out of New York, he previously lived in Seattle, and wrote an excellent piece in Seattle Met’s March 2009 issue on this very subject. Congratulations all around.

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Tags: Awards and Accolades, Tom Douglas, James Beard Awards, Jason Franey, Matt Dillon

Food News Roundup

Neighborhood Food News: Seattle’s James Beard Finalists, Restaurant Week Is around the Corner

Plus: A pho-mapping quest, calzones in Magnolia, and more.

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Serious Eats doesn’t hate them…

BRYANT
Grand masters of chanoyu, the Japanese tea ceremony, will be leading a spring tea gathering on March 24. Beginners are welcome, but a kimono is recommended.

DOWNTOWN
Serious Eats just reviewed Seattle soda company Jones Soda’s Au Naturel drinks—their verdict: “not terrible.” The team also took a crack at Starbucks’ new Evolution Fresh juices, though not in the new Bellevue store.

MAGNOLIA
Neapolitan joint Queen Margherita is now folding pizzas in half and offering calzones. Also new (to Margherita, not to the world): Caesar and panzanella salads.

RENTON
A little bit of a trek, but this Friday, March 23, a traditional Swedish Easter smorgasbord is going down at Ikea. It costs $10, starts at 5:30, and involves many kinds of salmon and, of course, meatballs.

MULTIPLE LOCATIONS
Seattle Restaurant Week begins April 8, with more than 150 restaurants participating in the three-course, $28 meal deal this year. There are some exciting new additions to the lineup, as well as a QR code contest, Eat and Seek, with opportunities to win gift cards and hotel stays and the like.

Seattle Weekly has teamed up with the Seattle Pho-natics to create the Pho File, a list of all the city’s many pho spots, complete with a overviews of the restaurants’ offerings and atmosphere. And they need help. Contact Hanna Raskin for an assignment, aka a new pho place to try and dish on.

The pared-down list of James Beard Award nominees is finally out, and two out of five of the Best Chef: Northwest nominees are from our city: Matt Dillon of Sitka and Spruce and Jason Franey of Canlis. And Tom Douglas too, in the Outstanding Restaurateur category. Again. Some local food writers got nods too.

It’s Hunger Action Week, a week dedicated to raising awareness about hunger in King County. There are various ways to take part: donate, volunteer, host a dinner party, or go see a fruit ninja contest at the Microsoft Store.

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Tags: Pizza, Tom Douglas, Food News, Food News Roundup, James Beard Awards, Neighborhood Food News Roundup, Canlis, Sitka and Spruce

Food News Roundup

Neighborhood Food News: Tutta Bella Serves Presidential Pie, Belle Clementine Offers Meal Series Subscriptions

Plus: Grant Achatz seeks Seattle dining advice, Woodland Park Zoo teams up with Caffe Vita to save tree kangaroos and bring us coffee, and more.

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Hot Cakes’ molten take-n-bake chocolate cakes are now available online. Photo courtesy of the Hot Cakes website.

BALLARD
Belle Clementine, the communal supper club, will be making subscriptions to its Seasonal Meal Series available today, the 22nd. Sign up in advance for a spot at one of the shared tables for multiple springtime meals and make yourself a Clementine regular.

MULTIPLE LOCATIONS
Tutta Bella was lucky enough to make a pie for President Obama when he was in town last week. They crafted a spicy pizza topped with local peppers and sausage, appropriately titled “Il Presidente.” It’ll be on sale at all Tutta Bella locations this week, reports the Seattle Times.

Autumn Martin’s Hot Cakes are now available nationwide via her website. She’s opening a shop on Ballard Ave this spring, but to hold you over till then, her take-and-bake cakes, sauces, and cookies are all available online.

Grant Achatz, internationally lauded chef of Chicago’s molecular gastronomy mecca Alinea, is coming our way this weekend and Twitterland is full of suggestions about where he should eat. Tilth? Canlis? Walrus and the Carpenter? Chime in.

It’s James Beard season, and Seattle’s food folk have earned a lot of nominations. Shining Northwest stars from places like Cafe Juanita, Spinasse, Boat Street Café, and more are up for awards. Canlis took home three nominations, including Best Chef Northwest for Jason Franey, the first year the chef was eligible.

Woodland Park Zoo and Caffe Vita have teamed up to bring the first ever coffee from the isolated Yopono Uruwa Som forests of Papua New Guinea to Seattle. After the forested region became a protected conservation area, Woodland Park’s Tree Kangaroo Conservation program and the coffee company stepped in to help farmers create a sustainable, profitable coffee crop. The tasty and sustainable coffee is available at all Caffe Vita locations and Woodland Park ZooStores.

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Tags: Pizza, Food News, Food News Roundup, James Beard Awards, Neighborhood Food News Roundup, Woodland Park Zoo, Belle Clementine

Awards and Accolades

Seattle’s James Beard Award Semifinalists

The long list is in for America’s top culinary honor. How did our region fare?

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James Beard was a Portland native, but hopefully some Seattle chefs will walk away with one of these bad boys. Photo via James Beard Foundation.

I’ve never been big on NCAA basketball brackets, and I’ve only seen three of the nine contenders for Best Picture at the Academy Awards. But this, my friends—this is my season: The James Beard Awards.

Today the James Beard Foundation announced its long list of semifinalists from whence it will bestow the highest culinary honor in the land. On March 19, this group will be narrowed down to five nominees for each category. That’s when we begin parsing the odds of a Seattle versus Portland win in the Best Chef Northwest category.

This year the Foundation has added an award for Outstanding Bar Program and we rang in with just one entry, Zig Zag. Perhaps the biggest surprise (nay, thrill) was seeing Altura on the long list for Best New Restaurant, alongside the likes of Grant Achatz’s Next in Chicago.

The winning chefs and restaurants will be announced May 7 at the usual gala New York blowout, an affair that often invites Seattle chefs to cook. Without further ado, here’s the list of Seattle and Washington contenders.

Best New Restaurant
Altura

Outstanding Chef
Holly Smith, Cafe Juanita

Outstanding Restaurateur
Tom Douglas

Outstanding Restaurant
Canlis

Rising Star Chef of the Year
Blaine Wetzel, Willows Inn

Outstanding Wine Program
Canlis

Best Chef Northwest
Chris Ainsworth, Saffron Mediterranean Kitchen (Walla Walla)
Matt Costello, The Inn at Langley (Whidbey Island)
Matt Dillon, Sitka and Spruce
Renee Erickson, Boat Street Cafe
Jason Franey, Canlis
Ethan Stowell, Staple and Fancy
Jason Stratton, Spinasse
Rachel Yang & Seif Chirchi, Joule

Outstanding Bar Program
Zig Zag Cafe

Outstanding Wine and Spirits Professional
Alex Golitzin, Quilceda Creek Vintners (Snohomish)

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Tags: Awards and Accolades, James Beard Awards

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Nosh Pit’s Top Food Tweets of the Week: James Beard Edition

José Andrés retweets too hard, props for Rachel Yang, and the best photo snapped at this year’s #JBFA.

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The Feast NY’s sentiments exactly.

This week brought us the James Beard Awards, and it was a pretty dismal year for Seattle.

Tom Douglas, the Canlis family, Ethan Stowell, and Matt Dillon were all up for awards but didn’t win. Our one victor was quite a worthy one, however. Farestart was awarded Humanitarian of the Year.

And despite the disappointments, there was much #JBFA-related entertainment to be enjoyed on Twitter.

Coming in at number 5 is the adorable Iberian José Andrés. He walked away with this year’s Outstanding Chef award, an awesome honor. His tweeting skills, however, could use some sharpening.

Twitter lit up with accolades for the DC-based chef after his award was announced, and Andrés retweeted them all. For this breach of Twitter etiquette, he received many virtual spanks. But it wasn’t until after Andrés retweeted the following, from someone called Web Barr, that he realized his mistake. An apology followed.

Now that @chefjoseandres has won the James Beard Award for Excellence, can we anoint him King of @Humblebrag? #lotsofretweets

4. Seattlest’s Lorraine Goldberg, responding to the announcement that Best Chef Northwest was Portland’s Andy Ricker—and not, as we’d all assumed it would be, Ethan Stowell—tweeted:

Portland-1 Seattle-0. Bummer

3. The ever-mysterious Ruth Bourdain had some funny things to say about the Beard awards (and won one!), but this is our favorite tweet of hers this week.

I hate the way men look at me when I walk down the street eating a geoduck clam.

Okay, that wasn’t a James Beard tweet at all. Hmm. Moving on.

2. Revel and Joule chef Rachel Yang cooked at the James Beard Awards this year and received high praise from the always lovely Marcus Samuelsson.

Best food tonight from revel[’s] rachel yang. http://yfrog.com/gyspkknjj

1. But the best James Beard Award tweet by far came from The Feast New York, who snapped the photo you see above, with the following caption.

Our sentiments exactly.

Better luck next year, Seattle chefs! And happy weekend.

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs, Ethan Stowell, Farestart, James Beard Awards, Food Tweets of the Week, Geoduck

James Beard Awards

Andy Ricker Wins 2011 James Beard Foundation Award for Best Chef Northwest

And we have photos of his condo!

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A Beard award and a cool house?! Andy Ricker at home in Portland.

Or, okay, our sister magazine in Portland has photos of his condo.

Those are here.

Andy Ricker of Pok Pok, Ping, Whiskey Soda Lounge, and, most recently, Pok Pok Noi took home the award this evening, beating out Ethan Stowell (Staple and Fancy) and Matt Dillon (Sitka and Spruce) of Seattle, along with Portland’s Christopher Israel (Gruner) and Cathy Whims (Nostrana).

Jason Wilson of Crush won last year, Maria Hines (Tilth, Golden Beetle) won the year before that.

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Tags: Chefs, James Beard Awards

Dining Culture

What Happens (and Doesn’t) When a Chef Wins a James Beard Award?

We asked Crush’s Jason Wilson, who won Best Chef Northwest last year.

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Jason Wilson

You hear a lot about the James Beard awards—who is nominated, who wins, etc. But what does it mean, really? Given the hushed sense of awe surrounding those awards, you’d think that it changes a chef’s life to win one.

But does it?

I asked Jason Wilson—the chef and owner (with wife Nicole) of Crush —who won Best Chef Northwest in 2010. This is what he had to say.

1. You get to go on all-expense-paid trips to amazing places.
A luxury cruise around the Caribbean on a ginormous yacht and the the Pebble Beach Food and Wine festival are two places that Jason Wilson has been invited to cook this year. Owning a restaurant is a low-margin, highly laborious affair, of course. And Wilson is pretty frank about the fact that he’s not making much money doing it. These food and wine events are a free vacation for his family, and he gets to cook with his heroes.

2. Your restaurant is not suddenly packed every night of the week.
Wilson said that, particularly in the months following last year’s awards, people assumed securing a table at Crush was well-nigh impossible. Nope. “It doesn’t put butts in seats,” he told me. Especially when you’re a fine-dining restaurant and there’s a massive recession going down.

3. You do get more respect from your culinary students…but you can’t tell them dirty jokes anymore.
Wilson teaches classes on sous-vide cooking to culinary students at SCCC. He says he’s noticed a shift in perception, culinary students take him more seriously when they hear about the award. But he says he used to joke around with them a lot, and now he feels like he needs to act more professionally—in a manner befitting a Beard winner. (From what I’ve witnessed of Mario Batali, not all Beard winners feel this way.)

4. In some ways, it’s bad to win.
Or, I should say, in some ways it’s better to get nominated and then not win. You only get to be Best Chef Northwest the one time. But you can be nominated year after year so long as you lose. And when you are nominated, you get lots of press and attention from your peers. It’s basically the best free PR ever. Once you win, you have to make your own noise.

5. You will not immediately open another restaurant unless you were going to anyway.
Wilson has one restaurant and a catering business (in addition to consulting gigs). Ethan Stowell, who is nominated this year, has four restaurants. Maria Hines, who won in 2009, has two. At the time she had one. Matt Dillon, Stowell’s competition this year, has two. The point is, having a Best Chef Northwest award (or not having one) is unrelated, directly at least, to your business growth. It may make you more attractive to investors, but doesn’t necessarily mean they’re lining up outside your door, fists stuffed with large bills.

6. You get to vote.
Did you know this? Beard award winners get to vote for who wins in subsequent years. That would be fun. Not as fun as a packed house every night of the week, but fun.

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Tags: Chefs, Seattle Chefs, James Beard Awards

James Beard Awards

James Beard 2011 Finalists Announced

Here are Seattle’s culinary contenders.

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Who will be Best Chef Northwest this year? Ethan Stowell and Matt Dillon are up against three cooks from Portland.

Photo courtesy: webrestaurantstore.com

On Monday, March 21 beginning at 11:30 am, the James Beard Foundation (Twitter feed here) announced the finalists for the 2011 awards from Portland, Oregon.

These are, of course, the most important honors in the dining universe. (The journalism awards are pretty darn important too).

The awards will be announced at ceremonies on May 6 (journalism) and May 9 (restaurants and chefs). Both events are in New York City.

An early award announced last week: Seattle’s own FareStart is James Beard’s 2011 Humanitarian of the Year.

Below is the list of locals who made it to the final round.

MEDIA AND JOURNALISM FINALISTS
Cooking, Recipes, or Instruction
Local writer and Saveur contributor Sara Dickerman is a finalist, sharing the nomination with Harris Salat and Lonnée Hamilton.

RESTAURANT AND CHEF FINALISTS
Best Chef Northwest
Matt Dillon (Sitka and Spruce)
Ethan Stowell (Staple and Fancy Mercantile)
Christopher Israel (Gruner in Portland)
Andy Ricker (Pok Pok in Portland)
Cathy Whims (Nostrana in Portland)

Outstanding Restaurateur
Tom Douglas

Outstanding Service
Canlis

Local candidates were semifinalists in the categories of Best New Restaurant, Rising Star Chef of the Year, Best Wine Service, Outstanding Chef, and Outstanding Restaurant but did not make the cut to the finalist round this year. See the full list of local semifinalists here.

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs, Restaurant News, Awards and Accolades, James Beard Awards

Awards

James Beard Semifinalists Announced

Here’s how your local chefs fared.

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Staple and Fancy in Ballard is a James Beard semi-finalist for the best new restaurant award. Chef/owner Ethan Stowell is up best chef Northwest (again).

The James Beard Foundation announced its semi-finalists today. (The JBF website appears to be struggling under the weight of the news, I think this happened last year too. Huffington Post has the full list.)

Finalists will be announced on March 21.

Here’s the list of Seattle contenders—no big surprises, a number of repeats—and their categories:

Best New Restaurant
Staple and Fancy Mercantile

Outstanding Chef
Jerry Traunfeld, Poppy
Holly Smith, Cafe Juanita

Outstanding Restaurateur
Tom Douglas

Outstanding Restaurant
Cafe Juanita

Outstanding Service
Canlis

Outstanding Wine Service
Canlis

Best Chef Northwest
Seif Chirchi and Rachel Yang, Joule
Matt Dillon, Sitka & Spruce
Mark Fuller, Spring Hill
Ethan Stowell, Staple and Fancy Mercantile
Jason Stratton, Spinasse

Blaine Wetzel of Lummi Island’s The Willows Inn is up for Rising Star Chef of the Year.

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Tags: New Seattle Restaurants, Seattle Restaurants, Seattle Chefs, James Beard Awards

Awww!

Cupcake Love

Trophy Cupcakes honors Wallingford’s favorite award-winning chef

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In honor of her James Beard award this week for Best Chef in the Northwest, Trophy Cupcake and Party has declared this Maria Hines Day.

Hines’ Tilth Restaurant is Trophy’s Wallingford neighbor, and Hines a frequent customer.

(She told me once she’d go to Trophy every single day…if she let herself.)

“She looooves her peanut butter and strawberry,” says a Hines spokesperson. So Trophy will be serving up lemon strawberry minis and chocolate peanut butter minis in her honor ($1.25 each).

Today only. So…what’re you still reading for?

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Tags: Maria Hines, James Beard Awards, Trophy Cupcakes

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