Cleveland, OH
FIRST LOOK: Chef Doug Katz prepares to open ‘Amba’ in Ohio City | Doug Trattner reports
Amba is the totally realized model of Katz’s ghost kitchen of the identical identify.
CLEVELAND — A bit greater than a yr in the past, I interviewed chef Doug Katz within the constructing that was to turn into Amba in Ohio Metropolis. Again then, the house was a uncooked, industrial shell.
Upon return, I found a very remodeled house that can quickly welcome its first dinner visitors.
“It was a printing store, actually, with inexperienced partitions and concrete flooring and industrial ceilings,” Katz recollects. “I am fortunate as a chef that we’re getting ready meals and we get to eat it, as nicely, however the atmosphere that you simply’re consuming in—the service, the views—every little thing about it ought to make you’re feeling such as you’re having the very best time of your life.”
As he did at Zhug in Cleveland Heights, Katz labored intently with designer Kelly Shaffer to create a compelling and cohesive house that can transport diners. The deliberately darkish inside sparkles with candlelight and shadows solid from glowing lighting fixtures.
Above our heads is a twisted-rope ceiling and outsized rattan pendant lights. The bar consists of burnished metal.
The 5,000-square-foot property is comprised of two separate-but-connected areas: the primary eating room and Bar Amba, a cocktail lounge. There’s room for 80 visitors in the primary space and one other 40 within the barroom.
“You stroll by way of a double door space, and that’s Bar Amba,” Katz says. “It truly has its personal entrance. You are capable of get the identical meals, you are capable of eat it in there, nevertheless it’s a unique bar expertise.”
When Amba opens on Could 24, it is going to accomplish that with an Indian-themed menu of small plates that vary from crispy samosas to composed meat and fish dishes. Lots of the objects have roots not solely within the now-closed ghost kitchen of the identical identify, however again to Hearth Meals and Drink as nicely.
“So at Hearth, our focus was a tandoor oven,” Katz defined. “I beloved getting ready dishes in a tandoor oven, however we actually targeted on regional American meals.”
Two years in the past, Katz shuttered his 20-year-old restaurant Hearth as a result of that fashion of nice eating not labored, in his opinion. However now, he’s on the cusp of opening his second sizzling, new restaurant in lower than three years.
“I really feel like by way of the pandemic, by way of the unhappy occasions we had, this has been such an inspiration for me and our group,” he stated. “I believe it is going to carry me and our group into the longer term. Will probably be such a vivid spot for everybody in Cleveland, as nicely, and should you’ve been at Hearth and type of skilled that with your loved ones, that is actually the following step for us, and we wish to carry individuals together with us.”
Amba is situated at 1340 W twenty eighth St. in Cleveland. Opening day is Could 24, and you’ll comply with alongside on their web site.
Cleveland, OH
Should Ohio taxpayers give Jimmy Haslam $600 million for a new Cleveland Browns stadium? • Ohio Capital Journal
It’s budget season, so the lobbyists are out in full swing.
Tennessee Billionaire and Gas Station Tycoon Jimmy Haslam, known up here as the owner of the Cleveland Browns, is purportedly drumming up support among lawmakers for a $600 million subsidy for a new Browns stadium and that money could be proposed as soon as the Governor’s budget request.
For comparison, this is about as much as the state allocated for highway maintenance across the entire state in 2025. It’s a chunk of change.
So what will we get for this investment? Will the Browns be able to scrounge up more than three wins by a combined 13 points and a three-way tie for last in the league if we throw hundreds of millions of dollars at them?
To be fair, there have been no public promises that Haslam and Company will produce a team that avoids embarrassing the state if they get this subsidy. Public arguments have been pretty threadbare: the City of Cleveland has been hostile to the idea of a new stadium. This seems to have shifted Haslam’s eyes down I-71 to see what kind of success he can have under the dome in Columbus getting help to pay for the project.
So far, the reception has been tepid. New Senate President Rob McColley said he was opposed to a “handout” to the Browns when he heard about the proposal. Some policymakers are kicking around backing the project with state bonds, bumping the cost up to $3 billion and using some of that money to develop nearby hotels, restaurants, and housing.
So let’s get back to the meat of the issue: why would we do this? What is it about football stadiums that makes a businessman or a lobbyist think he can credibly waltz into a lawmaker’s office and shamelessly ask for hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars? I mean, these aren’t utility companies we’re talking about.
The case lobbyists make for stadium subsidies is fundamentally economic. With a professional football team, your state will get on television. People will travel from far away to visit your city, they will stay at your hotels, they will eat at restaurants, and you will become a destination.
The consensus among economists is that this story is a fantasy. Yes, economic activity will increase around a football stadium: it can be an anchor for a flurry of economic activity once a week twenty times a year. But where does this money come from?
Entertainment budgets are not flexible. If someone didn’t go to a stadium, they would probably go to a bar, restaurant, movie, play, or live performance somewhere else in the city. So new economic activity is not created, it simply is shifted from one part of the city to another.
A study published in the Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis just a few months ago underscores this economic consensus. For a professional sports team or stadium to be anything other than a net negative on the local economy, it needs to (a) attract visitors from other cities, and (b) get its owner and players to spend a significant share of their income in the area.
So if legislators are going to take this seriously, they need evidence of three things. First, they need to see that this new stadium will bring significant numbers of new visitors to Ohio. Second, they need to see that Jimmy and his team are spending a lot of their own money in Ohio. And third, they need to see that this is a better investment than transportation infrastructure, education, broadband, and the many other priorities they will have to put aside to give Jimmy a new place for his team to play.
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Cleveland, OH
NBA Insider Believes Cavaliers ‘Will Listen’ To Possible Trade Offers
The Cleveland Cavaliers face a dilemma as the deadline approaches: to make a trade or not to make a trade.
With their current roster, the Wine and Gold are undoubtedly capable of reaching and winning the Finals this year. However, adding one or two more players could make them favorites to win it all among the NBA’s top teams.
Perhaps the front office is satisfied with what they’ve built.
However, NBA insider Brian Windhorst believes that the Cavaliers will at least listen to other teams’ offers for the valuable and moveable pieces.
“I think they definitely will listen to potential offers. I think they owe it to this team,” said the insider and analyst.
Cleveland’s front office would be unwise to not at least entertain a possible trade. You never know what’s out there until you pick up the phone and listen.
However, as Windhorst eventually says, the Cavaliers don’t need to make a trade.
He continued, “They are not under pressure to do anything,” continued Windhorst, “They, by all rights, can watch this team play in the postseason and see if they can get it done. They don’t have to take a risk with a trade right now. That said, I do think that they should and will have conversations.”
Windhorst reiterated a point he made a few weeks back that the three main pieces opposing teams could find value in are Caris LeVert, Jaylon Tyson, and their 2031 first-round pick.
Are these three pieces enough for the Cavaliers to get a true difference-maker through a trade? We’ll see.
Cleveland’s decision should come down to whether a trade truly solidifies them as a championship favorite.
There’s no reason to make a lateral move when it could impact the team’s current special chemistry or disrupt their near-flawless game plan.
Cleveland, OH
Cleveland police investigate double homicide in Slavic Village
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – Two men were fatally shot in the city’s Slavic Village neighborhood early Tuesday morning.
Cleveland police and EMS were called out to Warner Road and Jeffries Avenue around 1 a.m. for a report of a car hitting a pole.
When they arrived, they found two men suffering from gunshot wounds.
Both victims were pronounced dead at the scene. Their names have not been released.
At this time, there are no arrests.
Copyright 2025 WOIO. All rights reserved.
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