Atlanta, GA
The verdict on 3 new Atlanta restaurants: Palo Santo, Mambo Zombi, and the Bite of Korea
Palo Santo
Palo santo (the wooden from the tree, burned for perfume) wafts via the eating room of Palo Santo (the brand new, upscale modern-Mexican restaurant on Marietta Road), the place ice cubes within the cocktails are stamped with PALO SANTO: This looks like a capital-p Manufacturing, from the second you hand your keys to the valet (the one parking choice) and enter via the rear of the constructing. Consideration to element is obvious throughout chef Santiago Gomez’s menu, with each dish exactly and sometimes gorgeously plated (tostadas, together with a hamachi tostada with charred serrano-yuzu mayo and burnt avocado, are served atop a mattress of dried corn kernels) and generally—as in a starter of papas bravas: crisp potatoes in chile de arbol mayo—completed tableside. (This final, the place the server principally tossed the potatoes with their sauce such as you would a salad, felt a bit extraneous. However, possibly some aptitude helps distract from the truth that you’re paying $18 for a bowl of potatoes and mayonnaise. An excellent bowl of potatoes and mayo—with black truffle shavings—however nonetheless.) A veteran chef who’s labored with such luminaries as Daniel Boulud, Gomez sources substances from regional producers in addition to small farms in Mexico and has assembled a pleasingly eclectic assortment of dishes. Meat lovers may be sated by entrees like carne asada with turnip-jalapeño puree, however seafood abounds (e.g., wood-fired branzino marinated in citrus and guajillo), as do vegetable choices like a winter squash tetela: a griddled masa cake with mushrooms and shiitake mole. Reservations can be found for 2 areas: the primary eating room and a rooftop lounge serving a smaller, snackier choice. Westside
Mambo Zombi
Far above the hustle and bustle of Edgewood Avenue, a cool respite: this new bar from the house owners of Joystick Gamebar and Georgia Beer Backyard, whose prime flooring this spot inhabits. On the apex of an exterior staircase, the door to Mambo Zombi opens right into a coffin-shaped aperture that glows pink—Freud would have a discipline day. However that’s only the start of the eye-catching decor, which mixes a Day of the Useless motif (e.g., plastic skulls on candelabras) with Afro-Caribbean and different visible parts, hanging crops, and informal furnishings such as you would possibly discover in a buddy’s house. One of many companions is Kysha Cyrus, a veteran Atlanta bartender whose drinks right here lean tiki-ish and rum-forward, incorporating substances as far-flung because the decorations: Curry leaf, as an illustration, perfumes a cocktail referred to as the Rum Ting Ting, and Cyrus’s Elote mixes Rhum Barbancourt from Haiti with housemade corn milk and sweetened condensed milk. The menu additionally contains a number of nonalcoholic choices (together with what the menu describes as a “pre–Incan Empire Andean drink” with purple corn, pineapple husk, piloncillo sugar, fruit, and warming spices), a hemisphere-spanning beer checklist (Costa Rica’s Imperial, Brazil’s Xingu Black), and varied insouciant jokes (underneath “Snacks,” the one merchandise listed on a latest go to was “YOUR DAD,” although it appeared like different choices are within the offing); the bogs, in the meantime, are adorned with stuffed animals with vulgar phrases written on them. Briefly, this place is ideal. Previous Fourth Ward
The Chunk of Korea
BOK for brief—the phrase means “fortune” in Korean—the Chunk of Korea will already be acquainted to many Atlanta diners; the enterprise launched two years in the past as a pop-up and has been a gentle presence round city since then, together with at a weekly Sunday outing within the car parking zone of A Mano. Now, proprietors Gavin Lee and Chloe Jung have landed everlasting digs similtaneously they’ve laid declare to being the one Korean restaurant in Tucker. The menu contains confirmed hits like BOK’s signature bulgogi quesadilla, which is . . . nicely, it’s nearly nearly as good because the phrase “bulgogi quesadilla” sounds, wealthy and gooey meat enclosed in a cracklingly crisp tortilla and served with bitter cream and spicy aioli. Not-too-serious avenue meals is a spotlight right here—see additionally BOK’s sodduk skewers (fried rice desserts with pork sausage, gochujang, and honey mustard) and corn cheese (an unctuous Korean fave, and a really melodious mixture of substances)—in addition to extra substantial bowls of bibimbap and gochujang hen, all of which include an assortment of very fresh-tasting banchan. Sporting an off-the-cuff, spacious eating room, the restaurant shares a car parking zone with a Publix in addition to one other space newcomer: the most recent outpost of Giovanni Di Palma’s Antico Pizza. Tucker
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Atlanta, GA
Notre Dame and Ohio State Arrive in Atlanta and It's the 2nd Visit of the Season for Fighting Irish
Atlanta, GA
New Blockbuster Three-Team Trade Proposal Sends Nic Claxton To Atlanta, Cam Johnson to Milwaukee
Less than one month from today will be the NBA Trade Deadline and there is still some uncertainty as to what will go down at the deadline. Star players like Jimmy Butler and Brandon Ingram have been talked about as players who could be dealt with, but it could end up just being smaller moves and rotation players that get moved. The Atlanta Hawks could actually be a team to watch when it comes to that. Last season, the Hawks were one of the most talked about teams leading up to the deadline, but there was a different feeling around that team. Whether or not Atlanta is a buyer or a seller at the deadline, this team has young building blocks to lean on going forward, but they have some roster questions that could get answered at the deadline. Currently, the Hawks are 21-19 and have won two straight games, including a 16-point win over the Bulls Wednesday night. Atlanta is in 7th place in the Eastern Conference, but only 1.5 games from the No. 4 seed.
The names that have been brought up in trade rumors over the past month or so have been centers Larry Nance and Clint Capela, as well as Bogdan Bogdanovic. Both centers are on expiring deals and might not be a part of the team’s future and Atlanta could look to flip one of them for assets. Going into the deadline, the Hawks have to figure out what to do with the two centers they have on expiring contracts and if they want to be buyers. They have two glaring needs at the backup point guard spot and backup power forward spots, but this team is not going to make any moves that are not forward-thinking. The Hawks have been a nice surprise this season, but they are not going to make win-now moves to try and improve their record this year if it is not about the future as well. They have a core of Trae Young, Dyson Daniels, Jalen Johnson, and Zaccharie Risacher that is going to be the future of the franchise. If they can find a player who fits that timeline, they could pursue them at the deadline.
Could that player be Nets center Nic Claxton?
While the backup point guard and power forward spots might be the most noticeable spots for the Hawks, they still have a question mark going forward at center. Capela and Nance are on expiring deals and while Onyeka Okongwu flashes, he has not done enough during his time in Atlanta to firmly take hold of the starting center spot for the future. If the right player became available, would the Hawks take a chance.
I think that player could be Claxton and I think he would be a great fit on Atlanta. He is young (25 years old), excellent defensively, and should pair well with Trae Young on offense. He received a contract extension from Brooklyn and he would be locked in with Young, Jalen Johnson, Dyson Daniels, and Zaccharie Risacher as the building blocks for the Hawks future.
Let’s look at a hypothetical three-team deal that would send Claxton to Atlanta.
Atlanta Receives: Nic Claxton and Trendon Watford
Brooklyn Receives: Khris MIddleton, Clint Capela, AJ Johnson, Tyler Smith, 2030 2nd round pick (via Atlanta), 2031 1st round pick (via Milwaukee), 2031 top-eight protected 1st round pick (via Atlanta), and a 2031 2nd round pick (via Milwaukee)
Milwaukee Receives: Cam Johnson, Ziaire Williams, Cody Zeller, and David Roddy
Why the Hawks do this trade: For the reasons outlined above. They get younger and better at the center position, locking in a starting core for the future. Claxton is eligible to be traded now and while it is possible Brooklyn holds onto him, they are in complete rebuilding mode and could move him. He would give the Hawks a young and elite defensive anchor when he is healthy and a great rim-running partner with Trae Young. Watford would give the Hawks a possible backup power forward option for the rest of the season (when healthy) and if the Hawks like his fit, they could re-sign him in the offseason. This move would not cost the Hawks a lot of assets. Capela is still a good player, but an expiring deal, and Claxton would be an upgrade. Roddy and Zeller are both players who could be moved. The Hawks would still have picks for any future moves or to use to draft players. This move would be forward-thinking and fits with the Hawks’s timeline of the young players on the roster. This move would also keep the Hawks under the luxury tax.
Why the Hawks don’t do this: If they don’t view Claxton as a significant enough upgrade over their current center situation and they don’t want to use any assets to obtain him. The initial Dejounte Murray trade in 2022 took some of the Hawks’ assets away and while they recouped some of that this past summer when they sent him to New Orleans, they don’t have an overabundance of picks like other teams such as OKC or Orlando. Atlanta may just want to sit tight and do nothing for now.
Why the Bucks do this trade: It gets them younger and better. Johnson would be a significant upgrade over Middleton at this stage in their careers and would improve Milwaukee’s chances of making a run to the Finals, which is all that matters to them as long as they have Giannis. Johnson is shooting well and would benefit from having Giannis and Damian Lillard around him. Williams, Roddy, and Zeller would be depth pieces for the team, although Zeller has not played for Atlanta this year and Roddy struggles on defense. It would be an all-in move for the Bucks and maybe the last one they have left. They could move Taurean Prince to the bench in this scenario and that would improve their depth.
Why the Bucks don’t do this: Maybe Milwaukee does not want to send any more draft assets out or they don’t view Johnson as the player to do it for. Aside from him, none of the other three players is likely to help you in the playoffs.
Why the Nets do this trade: It would give them more assets for the rebuild that is going on and improves their lottery odds. It is no secret that Brooklyn is trying to tank for this draft and next year as well since getting their own draft picks back this summer and there have been plenty of rumors of them moving Johnson this season. They would get two future draft picks and a pair of young players in Johnson and Smith that they could get a look at. Capela is an expiring deal and Middleton only has one year left on his contract after this one. They could try to flip Middleton this summer or next season to a contender that is looking for a veteran player who will be on an expiring deal.
Why the Nets don’t do this trade: Is this enough for them to move off of Johnson and Claxton? Getting an unprotected future pick from Milwaukee is a good asset considering that the Bucks title window is shrinking and that Johnson does not fit in with the Nets future plans. Claxton, however, is 25 years old and could be a part of the Nets future still. Johnson and Smith are intriguing, but there is no guarantee that they would even be decent rotation players. Given MIddleton’s injury history and age, he might not be able to be flipped for much in terms of assets.
This trade might be unlikely, but it makes some sense for all teams involved. The Hawks get younger at center, not to mention Claxton should improve them defensively. Milwaukee gets a younger piece for them to make a run in the East, while the Nets add more assets for the future and improve their tanking odds for this year.
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Atlanta, GA
1988 national champion Wes Pritchett welcomes alma mater Notre Dame to Atlanta
ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – Memories 36 years in the making are all coming back to Wes Pritchett this week.
The Georgia boy who played his high school football at Westminster found a home in South Bend, Indiana – and the rest is history.
The leading tackler on the last Notre Dame team to win it all won’t have to go very far to see his Irish play on Monday night.
“It’s something that I think will mean more to me later down the road,” Pritchett said. “I’m in it right now and I’m old enough to realize stars align only so many times in your life.”
Pritchett, Frank Stams and Mike Stonebreaker were the cornerstones on that 1988 team – or as they’re known around South Bend – “the three amigos.”
“We just had a lot of fun and it ends up that we were pretty good football players too,” Pritchett said. “We had players, we played hard, but when we walked out on the field, we knew that we were going to be the toughest team out there and we were going to punch you in the face.”
Nearly 40 years later, it’s that same spirit that makes them pretty big fans of this year’s “amigos.”
“You can feel the passion in the way those guys played,” Pritchett said. “It reminds all of the guys on the 1988 team of how we felt.”
If something could be more special than playing for a national title, for “Pritch,” Monday night will be.
“To have that opportunity in Atlanta, where I live and where I grew up, where my children have been to a million games at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, and to have the ability to host Coach Holtz and the players I played with, it’s going to be really special,” Pritchett said.
And if it’s anything like 1988, the Irish have a pretty good shot, too.
“I think the Irish will play physical, they’ll keep it close, and it’ll be a lot like the Penn State game,” Pritchett said. “We’ll get a late turnover and win by a field goal. I think Notre Dame wins 27-24.”
Notre Dame and Ohio State face off in the 2025 National Championship on Monday night at 7:30 p.m. inside Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
Copyright 2025 WANF. All rights reserved.
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