Minneapolis, MN
For Diane Moua, her Minneapolis restaurant is about ‘two worlds clashing’
“We don’t have a country, but there are certain dishes that are ours,” Moua said.
She is now making those dishes at Diane’s Place, which she opened this past spring as a breakfast and lunch cafe, and more recently added dinner, slowly revealing her capabilities to a city that knew her best through her exceptional pastries.
Hmong pulled pork is one of the dishes on the dinner menu that is most special to her. She’s eaten it in countless Hmong homes, but had never encountered it on a restaurant menu.
Customers who try it for the first time gain a peek into Hmong kitchens and are introduced, in a way, to the girls and women keeping them running. Others know the dish well, but here, they get to see it in an entirely new light, in the context of fine dining.
“All the ladies that come in, they’re like, ‘We’re so happy to be here,’ and I’m like, ‘Ladies, this is for all of us,’” Moua said. “You know, you can’t get that sisterhood anywhere else. Like, you go to a funeral and you don’t know anybody? Just go in the kitchen, and they’re like, ‘Hey, chop these onions, wash this, do this.’ That’s how you make friends.”
At Diane’s Place, where her children, now 24 and 19, work with her, we all get to become Moua’s friend for a delicious moment.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis house fire displaces 3 people, 1 dog
Minneapolis fire crews said a house is uninhabitable after a fire burned a two-story residential home Friday afternoon.
Minneapolis fire crews said a house is uninhabitable after a fire burned a two-story residential home Friday afternoon.
According to the Minneapolis Fire Department, the fire was located on the 3700 block of Fremont Avenue North around 5:55 p.m., where heavy smoke was coming out of the second floor.
Fire crews were told that everyone inside the home had made it outside and began putting out the fire, which was located in a second-floor bedroom.
Despite what they had been told, fire crews said they found a resident on the second floor, who they were able to safely escort outside. No injuries were reported.
After evaluating the damages made by the fire, it was determined the house was uninhabitable.
The Red Cross was called to assist three adults and one dog; the cause of the fire is still under investigation.
Minneapolis, MN
Helmet safety for outdoor winter sports
Gifting a sled this Christmas? If so, there are some important safety reminders that Minneapolis’ only level 1 pediatric trauma center urges parents to keep in mind. Studies show sledders often travel between 14-25 mph, making head protection critically important. One of the medical directors at Children’s Minnesota, Liz Placzek, has tips to make sure the proper helmet fits. More info can be found here: https://www.childrensmn.org/blog/sledding-safety-protect-head/
Minneapolis, MN
Ramstad: It’s not easy building affordable apartments in the Twin Cities. These developers got it done.
Willy Boulay and Mike Hudson have a grand vision for building affordable apartments for people with below-median incomes that are as nice as market-rate properties.
Their first buildings, one in Minneapolis that opened in May and another about to open in St. Paul, live up to their plans. Both have fitness centers, balconies on most units, roof decks, solar arrays, EV chargers, community rooms, even indoor playgrounds they tested themselves.
“The slide will support guys over 30,” Boulay said as he and Hudson took me through Canvas, their 161-unit project in northeast Minneapolis. It gets its name from all the original paintings purchased from neighborhood artists to fill halls and other common areas.
The seven-story building cost $71 million and is open to renters of all ages who make 60% of average market income, a level sometimes known as workforce housing. Hennepin County and the city of Minneapolis provided subsidies in the form of tax-exempt bonds and tax credits that will discount rents for 40 years. It’s a typical form of financing for affordable housing to help cover the difference between it and market-rate homes.
As of last week, Canvas had just two vacancies. Well, plus one big one on the ground floor.
To get the project approved, their firm, Broadway Street Development, had to comply with the desires of City Council members for buildings in a so-called “production” district, designated to create employment-focused developments.
As a result, the ground floor was built with 18-foot ceilings and about half of it, around 23,000 square feet, was set aside for commercial use. Perhaps a microbrewery with a taproom will lease it, or a commercial production studio, or a small industrial business that isn’t too disruptive to the hundreds of residents above.
Boulay and Hudson are confident they will get the space filled. They noted, however, that projects coming after them haven’t required as much space set aside. Which leads me to remind readers that, when my now-retired colleague Neal St. Anthony wrote about Canvas as construction was getting underway two years ago, he focused on the years of work Boulay, Hudson and partner Sterling Black of LS Black Constructors had already put in to get it financed.
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