Nationally acclaimed dining destination Portland, Maine, is about two hours from Boston, whether you take Amtrak’s Downeaster from North Station, the Concord Coach bus from South Station, or drive, making it the ideal getaway for a food-packed weekend. If you only have a weekend to spend in Portland, the following itinerary serves to complement our list of essential restaurants, providing a choose-your-own-adventure insider’s guide to painting the town lobster red.
Northeast
Trump and Harris on Keystone collision course as campaigns pick up the pace

Labor Day – which is traditionally the starting gun for the final stretch in a presidential election – is now in the rearview mirror.
“Sixty-four days until the most important election of our lives, and probably one of the most important in the life of our nation,” Vice President Kamala Harris emphasized as she spoke to supporters at a union gathering in Pittsburgh on Monday.
Tuesday marks nine weeks until Election Day 2024, when Harris and former President Donald Trump face off with the White House at stake.
However, in reality, the election gets underway well before Nov. 5.
ELECTION SEASON STARTS A LOT EARLIER THAN YOU THINK
Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump speaks during a rally in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, on Friday, Aug. 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Rebecca Droke)
In a slew of states, the election actually kicks off this month.
In swing state North Carolina, absentee ballots are mailed out starting on Friday. Early voting begins on Sept. 16 in Pennsylvania and Sept. 26 in Michigan, two other crucial electoral battlegrounds.
Next Tuesday, Harris and Trump are scheduled to meet for their first and potentially only presidential debate, a primetime showdown taking place in Philadelphia.
NEW FOX NEWS POLL NUMBERS IN 4 KEY BATTLEGROUND STATES
Pennsylvania, the biggest of the seven crucial battlegrounds that decided the 2020 election between Trump and President Biden, is getting plenty of attention this week.
Harris returns to Pittsburgh on Thursday, her second trip this week to western Pennsylvania’s largest city and union stronghold, and her 10th stop this year in the Keystone State.

Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris and President Biden arrive at a campaign event at the IBEW Local Union #5 union hall in Pittsburgh on Labor Day on Monday, Sept. 2, 2024. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
Trump, who has also made numerous trips to Pennsylvania this year, returns on Wednesday to headline a Fox News town hall hosted by Sean Hannity in Harrisburg.
Most of the latest national surveys show Harris with a slight single-digit edge over Trump, but the presidential election is not a national popular vote contest. It is a battle for the individual states and their electoral votes.
The latest surveys in the seven key swing states indicate a margin-of-error race. Among those polls are a batch from Fox News that made headlines last week.
FOX NEWS’ HANNITY TO HOST TOWN HALL WITH TRUMP ON WEDNESDAY
Trump argues he has the momentum.
“We’re leading in the polls now,” the former president said in an interview Friday with Fox News’ Bryan Llenas.
Minutes later, at a rally in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, Trump touted that “our poll numbers are starting to skyrocket.”

Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamalas Harris. (Getty Images)
Harris is urging her supporters not to pay too much attention to the polls because, as she reiterated on Labor Day, “we are the underdog in this race.”
Last week, at a rally in Savannah, Georgia, the vice president predicted that “this is going to be a tight race until the very end.”
The current state of the race is a big change from earlier this summer when Biden was still running.
Biden’s disastrous performance against Trump in their late June debate turned up the volume of existing doubts from Americans that the 81-year-old president would have the physical and mental stamina to handle another four years in the White House. It also sparked a rising chorus of calls from top Democratic Party allies and elected officials for Biden to drop out of the race.
National and battleground state polls conducted in July indicated Trump had opened up a small but significant lead over Biden.
The president dropped his re-election bid on July 21 and endorsed his vice president, and Democrats immediately coalesced around Harris, who quickly enjoyed a boost in her poll numbers and in fundraising.
Still, pollsters and political analysts stress that the Harris-Trump contest remains a coin-flip at this point.
However, Trump’s team likes the current poll position, as they point out that the former president has a history of outperforming public opinion surveys.
“At this point in the race in 2016, Donald Trump was down to Hillary Clinton by an average of 5.9 points. At this point in the race in 2020, it was 6.9 to Joe Biden,” senior adviser Corey Lewandowski noted this weekend in an interview on “Fox News Sunday.”
Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.
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Maine
How to Spend a Food-Filled Weekend in Portland, Maine

11 a.m.: Begin with brunch
Portland’s brunch game has never been stronger, making it the perfect meal to start a weekend of ambitious eating. At Ocotillo, the West End sibling to the East End’s popular barbecue spot, Terlingua, find solace on the quiet back patio or grab a comfy circular booth upholstered with rust red velvet. Ocotillo channels Tex-Mex into brunch standouts like a smoked brisket hash with poached eggs and house hollandaise and buttermilk-masa pancakes decked with caramelized pineapple syrup, hibiscus sugar, and maple sea salt butter served alongside refreshing morning beverages like the bright green, herbaceous Verdita-rita. As you move on, grab something for the road from James Beard Award-winning Zu Bakery next door.
Alternative: Start your day at Dutch’s, whose cafeteria-like space belies the quality of crispy hash browns and housemade baked goods that elevate hits like chicken thigh biscuits smothered in sausage gravy and bluebarb pie doughnuts.
Once you’re temporarily sated, it’s time for some culture. Head to the Maine Historical Society and the Wadsworth-Longfellow House for thoughtful exhibitions like Stitches, an exploration of 19th-century Maine quilting traditions; the Victoria Mansion for a tour of an elaborate pre-civil war home; or the Portland Museum of Art for the state’s oldest and largest public art collection, including works by American landscape artist and former Maine resident Winslow Homer.
Along the walk, shop for art and vintage finds at dozens of local storefronts like Weekend Vintage, the Merchant Company, and Soleil, a gift shop that houses a vending machine for collectible $1 mini food prints by Portland’s Anastasia Inciardi.
4 p.m.: Take a lobster break
If you come to Maine, you’ve got to eat lobster. Dive into a new favorite like Highroller Lobster Co.’s Lobby Pop TM — a cornbread-battered lobster tail on a stick — or chef Mimi Weissenborn’s rich yet airy lobster popover at Sur Lie. If you’re in the mood for a more traditional lobster roll experience on the working waterfront, head to Luke’s Lobster for rolls with a captivating view, or have a seat at low-key institution Becky’s Diner for a fresh-shucked quarter-pounder — there’s nothin’ finah, as the local saying goes.
6 p.m.: Get a pre-dinner drink
At Jewel Box, bartender and owner Nathanial “Nan’l” Meiklejohn creates an atmosphere of comfort and delight that attracts a crowd of artists, queer folks, and bon vivants — people with open minds and good taste. Amid curated grandma-core and a dreamy wall mural, the creative cocktails and playlists always hit. Order a drink like the Lovers, a blend of fenugreek and coconut rums, lime juice, cane sugar syrup, and Bluet, Maine blueberry sparkling wine.
Alternative: Hit up Cuties, a new all-day spot from the cunning minds behind renowned high-low cocktail dive Room for Improvement. Cuties focuses on low-intervention wines by the glass or in some cases as a sidecar, like the pet-nat that accompanies the Pornstar Martinez, a clarified passionfruit number featuring Old Tom gin and vermouths.
Portland’s bakery and brunch darling Bread & Friends is now a winner for dinner as well. Expect a tight menu with seasonal dishes like grilled radicchio with black vinegar XO sauce and Bayley Hazen blue cheese on housemade marble rye crostini, consommé with collard greens and mascarpone tortellini decked in country ham and peas, and dry-aged duck with plum chutney. End the meal with a dreamy orange creamsicle soda made in-house, or a glass of A7 Americano, an aromatized wild Maine blueberry wine infused with herbs and fortified with brandy, from R.A.S.
Alternative: Opt for an evening of pizza and natural wine at cool, casual Friends & Family. Start the night with a jamón tower for the table, of course.
9 p.m.: Post-dinner games
After dinner, it’s free to enter Arcadia National Bar’s Skee-Ball tournament, or you can pump quarters into retro pinball and arcade cabinets while enjoying late-night bites like mushroom-topped pizza and beers from Oxbow and Sacred Profane. The cocktails here, crafted by co-owner Nicole Costas-Rosa, are some of the city’s sleeper hits — try the mezcal- and watermelon-forward Pink Pony Club.
Alternative: Have a nightcap at the Scandinavian-style cocktail bar that helped launch Portland’s cocktail scene in the mid-2010s: Portland Hunt + Alpine Club. The spicy, smoky Bone Crusher is a perennial favorite.
9:30 a.m.: Grab a bite before the farmers market
All-day cafe Smalls is a charming spot to eat white bean toast with a jammy egg, shop for adorable home goods and sundries, and devour a slice of gorgeous, seasonally inspired cake from Siblings first thing in the morning before heading over to Deering Oaks Park for Saturday’s Portland Farmers Market. There, you’ll find treasures like earthy Haymaker English-style cheddar from Balfour Farm, jars of well-aged fermented onions from Gracie’s Garden, and wild blueberries from Lost & Found Farm.
11:30 a.m.: Get out on Casco Bay
One of the easiest, most cost-effective ways to get off the Portland peninsula and out on the water is with the Mailboat ferry, a scenic ride to the islands of Casco Bay. Get off at Peaks Island for BYOB wood-fired Neapolitan-style pizza served al fresco at Il Leone, or head to Great Diamond Island’s Crown Jewel, a bright and airy bistro that nods to the tropics with dishes like corn agnolotti featuring Maine crab and seared whitefish with salsa verde.
Alternative: Board the 74-foot-tall ship Frances, a historic replica built and captained by Megan Jones, for a Wine Wise Wine Sail with curated tastings led by gregarious sommelier Erica Archer.
3 p.m.: Shop the waterfront and have a little treat
Portland’s bustling Commercial Street is full of enticing shops for food lovers, like LeRoux Kitchen and Browne Trading Co. Treat yourself to a wicked-fresh raw seafood snack like scallops from revered fishmonger Harbor Fish Market or sea urchin from uni processor ISF Trading’s warehouse, followed by a sweet pastry at Standard Baking Co. or a frozen treat from Gorgeous Gelato or Mount Desert Island Ice Cream.
5 p.m.: Break for happy hour
At Papi on Exchange Street, the cocktail and food menus sing with Puerto Rican flavors. For a late afternoon pick-me-up, try the Carajillo — Licor 43 and Italian espresso shaken over ice — and don’t miss food specials like the jibarito, a panko-crusted chicken cutlet dressed and sandwiched between fried green plantains.
Alternative: Head to the intimate, 20-seat Argentine Bodegón-influenced Franciska Wine Bar, whose menu highlights small-grower South American producers.
On Congress Street, check out Benny’s, the buzzy new restaurant from Josh Sobel of Philadelphia-style sandwich shop Ramona’s. Here, Sobel again wins hearts and stomachs with his homage to Philly’s Italian American heritage, from the portraits of celebrities like Sylvester Stallone on the wall above the long banquet to menu classics like eggplant parm, cheesesteak, and linguini and clams with long hot peppers alongside cocktails like the Balboa, featuring bourbon, amaretto, and citrus topped with a pink Lambrusco-Scotch foam.
Alternative: Go for well-seasoned garlic greens and dry-aged pork katsu sandos stuffed with fried Brussels sprouts and slathered in charred scallion mayo at family-owned izakaya Mami.
Stop into Speckled Ax Wood Coffee Roasters for an Early Riser medium roast. Try it with a Grand Trunk breakfast sandwich stacked with housemade hash browns, green tomato chutney, kewpie mayo, Gruyère cheese, and an egg on a Portuguese muffin made by chef Carlos Duarte, previously of Prentice Hospitality.
Alternative: Grab an olive oil brioche sticky bun swirled with brown butter and cinnamon and glazed with orange cream alongside an iced malt cold brew at Tandem Coffee.
11 a.m.: Check out the East End
The East End used to be a quiet area populated largely by under-the-radar neighborhood spots like pupusería Tu Casa and old-school Italian goods purveyor Micucci Grocery Co. That changed in the 2010s with the arrival of food and beverage perfectionists like Rising Tide and other craft breweries in East Bayside, Maine & Loire, a pioneering natural wine shop on Washington Avenue, and the Portland Food Co-op on Congress Street for largely local groceries and snacks.
Now, you could spend all day bopping from one banger to another without breaking a sweat: Onggi Ferments for all things aged and preserved; Root Wild for unbeatable kombucha; Rabelais for antique food books; Oxbow for funky beer and fries via Duckfat Frites Shack; Anoche for hard cider; Sissle and Daughters for cheese, wine, and everything else you’d serve for girl dinner; and the list goes on.
1:30 p.m.: Slip over to South Portland
Formerly an underwhelming collection of strip malls, Knightville has finally glowed up into one of Portland’s buzziest neighborhoods. (Okay, it’s technically in South Portland across the Casco Bay Bridge, but regardless, it’s a Portland-area hot spot.) Stop here on your way back south for Japanese-style bar fare and beers from a Maine Brewing Co. alum at the Send Brewing Co., impeccable breads from Night Moves, a glass of Maine’s own Oyster River Winegrowers Morphos pet-nat with views of Portland proper from across the water at Lambs, and some of the country’s best seafood at SoPo Seafood market and raw bar.
Get a good night’s sleep at the 48-room Longfellow Hotel, Portland’s first independently owned full-service hotel in decades. Longfellow highlights neighborhood contributors such as Ugly Duckling for pastries, and Siobhán and Mike Sindoni of Wayside Tavern run the bar program.
Alternatively, check into the 135-room, six-story Canopy by Hilton Portland Waterfront, home to Luna, the city’s only indoor/outdoor rooftop bar and restaurant overlooking Casco Bay. Make sure to enjoy the view while sipping a slushy cocktail featuring housemade granita and Prosecco.
If you want to spend extra time on the islands, stay at the Inn at Diamond Cove. This charming, family-friendly escape offers 42 rooms and suites in the former Fort McKinley military complex for easy access to the tranquil, car-light island with a semi-secret beach rich with seaglass.
Massachusetts
Keller: Why has investment dried up for tech companies in Massachusetts?

The opinions expressed below are Jon Keller’s, not those of WBZ, CBS News or Paramount Global.
These are tough times for venture capital, the funding source relied on by many tech startup companies. And one of the biggest slumps has hit one of the best startup states of past years – Massachusetts.
The state’s promotional videos tout Massachusetts as “a leader in energy efficiency, science and technology, and our economy is the most innovative in the nation.” All that used to make us one of the top draws for venture capital investment in new companies.
But not anymore.
Why is venture capital shrinking in Massachusetts?
Recent research by the National Venture Capital Association analyzed by the Boston Globe tells the story of VC funding shriveling for local startups even as it blossoms in other states like California.
What’s driving it away from here, we asked Peter Cohan of Babson College, an author and startup investor himself? “The success of the companies out there,” he said, the bulk of the venture capital investments these days are going to AI startups out west in part because while the big-idea creators might go to college here, they too often don’t want to stay here. “Talented people want to be where all the other talented people are, that’s the fundamental issue.”
And the bets government and local investors have made on biotech and clean energy technology haven’t always paid off that well. “In Boston, I think investors really like high-tech solutions to difficult societal problems,” said Cohan. “Sometimes those solutions also find a market, and sometimes they really don’t.”
Federal cuts in local research funding are bad news for local startups, a problem that can’t be papered over with cultural spin. While those promotional videos promote arts, culture and cool coffeehouses, that doesn’t speak to the core issue, says Cohan: “It’s nonsense. That’s sleeping, they’re just dozing away, they’ve got their head in the sand.”
How does Massachusetts recover?
Meanwhile, states like Pennsylvania, Washington and California are raking in venture capital funding. What do we need to do to get back in the game?
As Cohan suggests, an end to the war between the White House and higher ed would help. Quantum computing and nuclear fusion are two promising areas where local researchers have a strong presence.
But in the long run it may come down to those researchers coming up with a great idea and deciding to stay here to develop and market it.
Maybe we need a new slogan to get through to them – don’t be a Zuckerberg.
New Hampshire
New Hampshire’s New Booze Law Will Hamstring the State’s Brewpubs
The rationale behind New Hampshire’s new brewpub regulation is more headache-inducing than the beer.
On Friday, New Hampshire Gov. Kelly Ayotte (R) signed House Bill 242 into law. The bill, sponsored by state Rep. John Hunt (R–Rindge), will take effect in August and limits brewpubs in the state to self-distributing their beer to only one additional restaurant or business outside their premises. The bill is a follow-up to H.B. 1380, also sponsored by Hunt in 2024, which limited the amount of beer or cider a brewpub could sell to 2,500 barrels a year and permitted licensed brewpub owners to obtain licenses to sell their product on their premises in bars and at off-premise locations like grocery stores, so long as they didn’t have a manufacturing license.
If the law sounds like it will keep brewpubs small, that’s because it’s intended to do so. “This is what we call a very inside baseball bill,” Hunt told the New Hampshire Bulletin.
Hunt said that H.B. 242 was designed to preserve the state’s current regulatory system, describing New Hampshire as a “three-tier state,” where businesses operate as either beverage manufacturers, distributors, or retailers. By restricting brewpubs from becoming a one-stop shop that acts as a “bottler…distributor” and “retailer,” Hunt said the bill is intended to safeguard the “monopoly” held by beer distributors in the middle tier of this system.”Frankly, I think the relationship between the distributors and the licensees (retailers) is pretty sacred, and it works well, and there’s no reason to upset them.”
The bill was supported by the state’s restaurant and lodging trade group. “You have to understand, in order for one of these brewpubs to make enough beer to self distribute to more than one additional location, they would have to make an enormous amount of beer…and frankly, most of them didn’t think they could make enough beer to even distribute to another location,” Mike Somers, president and CEO of the New Hampshire Lodging and Restaurant Association, told the New Hampshire Bulletin. “Most of the folks in the industry that I’ve talked to didn’t really feel that the restriction was much of a restriction, because they could now own multiple brewpubs and restaurants.”
Rather than having the freedom to ramp up production and distribution, Somers contends that brewpub owners would rather start new brands and businesses from scratch.
This wasn’t the only booze-related bill that passed the governor’s desk: Ayotte also signed H.B. 467 and let H.B. 81 become law without her signature. H.B. 467 allows municipalities to create designated “social districts” where people can legally consume alcohol outdoors. These areas must be clearly marked with signs indicating the permitted times and boundaries, and all alcohol must be purchased from businesses within the district. Separately, H.B. 81 permits restaurant patrons to bring their drinks with them to the restroom.
While both laws ease some restrictions on consumer alcohol use, they stop short of meaningfully reducing the state’s overall control of alcoholic beverages. And now, New Hampshire’s brewpubs will face more hurdles to scaling up the production and distribution of their beer.
In keeping with that spirit, the state would be better served by promoting policies that encourage innovation, rather than anticompetitive laws like H.B. 242 that restrict consumer choice and unfairly penalize brewpubs for their market success.
The post New Hampshire’s New Booze Law Will Hamstring the State’s Brewpubs appeared first on Reason.com.
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