Spice up your life - The Mining Journal
Transcription
Spice up your life - The Mining Journal
2015 GOOD EATS AND DRINKS SECTION D PROGRESS Tuesday, March 31 A SPECIAL SECTION OF THE MINING JOURNAL ALSO INSIDE Root 41 Also: Blackrocks Brewery PAGE 2D Rare Earth Goods Also: Just Right Catering Bakery and Deli PAGE 3D Econo Foods expands Spice up your life Spice Merchants of Marquette joins city’s downtown Also: Cognition Brewery PAGE 4D Jackson’s Pit Also: Coachlight Restaurant PAGE 5D Ore Dock Brewery PAGE 6D Java by the Bay Also: Bayou and Chocolay River Brewery PAGE 7D Located on West Washington Street, Spice Merchants offers an array of spices, teas, cocoas and utensils. (Photos by Elizabeth Bailey) By ELIZABETH BAILEY Journal Staff Writer MARQUETTE—Downtown Marquette gets an added taste of the world with the new Spice Merchants of Marquette shop nestled in the 100 block of West Washington Street. From the outside it looks like most of the other shops downtown, but once inside, one can see this isn!t your ordinary shop. Spices and teas from around the world cover the walls and tables throughout the store, with shelves made from old barn beams. But the store offers much more than spices and teas; cocoa, chocolate, salts and other baking necessities line the walls along with tea infusers, salt blocks, and grinders, just to name a few. “There!s everything from curries, barbecues, things for pastas, chicken and pork ...” said co-owner Michael Carl. “Really, if you want to do it right, you have to spend like a half hour, at least, just going through and smelling each one.” The store which has only been open since Black Friday, was booming around the holidays but has since slowed down a little, nevertheless that hasn!t stopped owners Carl and his wife, Carolyn, from being optimistic about the future, especially with summer coming up. “We did extremely good of course around the holidays and it!s nice that we!ve had a lot of repeat customers since ...,” he said. As franchise owners they get a lot of their spices and teas from their supplier, but what makes the shop special is that about one-third of their spice mixes are made in house, including a very popular Marquette Rub for barbecue. Spice Merchants, a company based out of Saugatuck, Michigan, prides itself on having a wide variety of spices, teas, and blends that “no matter your personal preference, our wide selection will be sure to please you.” That is is exactly what the Carls hoped to do by bringing such a store within the city limits. “We saw a store similar to this three years ago, and we thought one would really go up here,” Carl said. “ So it took a while to find a location ... but we love it here, I mean it!s just neat, this end of the block is so neat because there!s so much around here, with you know restaurants and bars and such.” Elizabeth Bailey can be reached at 906-228-2500, ext. 243. Her email address is [email protected]. 2D -— The Mining Journal -— Tuesday, March 31 PROGRESS2015 Root 41 Cozy comfort at new Chocolay restaurant By ELIZABETH BAILEY Journal Staff Writer CHOCOLAY—Nestled in the trees off of U.S. 41 in the old Grove restaurant stands a new blossoming business — Root 41 Restaurant. Started up and owned by sisters, Sarah and Barbra Tullila, who thought it would be a great place to fulfill their dreams to own and run a diner. “We!ve both been in food service and have been for most of our lives, and this restaurant is basically opportunity,” said Barbra Tullila. “It was empty and had been for a while, and Sarah had a lead on it,” Tullila said. “The more we started talking about the vision for our restaurant, and in this space particularly, it just came to be.” As for the set up of the new place, despite being a restaurant previously, work needed to be done to make it the cozy place it is now. “We pretty much did at top to bottom remodel, front of house and the kitchen,” Tullila said. “Time wise we pretty much moved in, in Feb of 2014 and opened July 15th.” Despite only being open for less than a year, the sisters have taken steps to make sure their business has and will be booming. “It!s been a rough winter weather wise, but we got our liquor license the day after Christmas, Santa made a last stop, and that has defiantly helped too, so yeah it!s going good,” she said. But part of the reason people come back is their menu, serving breakfast all day with daily specials makes decisions endless. And coming up with menu items was a fun process, according to Tullila. “We took the concept of classy comfort foods ... and based our menu off that, so the classy comfort, home cooked foods that you!d expect from a nice little diner, but up a notch,” she said. “With presentation, home cooked, made to order fresh food and that!s how we came up with the menu, rotating daily soups specials, fish fry along with our base menu of breakfast all day, lunch and diner specials.” All of the food served are decently priced making going out to eat easier on wallets. “We had to keep location in mind, but not sacrifice on quality either, so, you know there is industry standards of what you should be making per plate, so we took the rule and broke the ones we needed to,” Tullila said. “We wanted to plant our roots here in Chocolay, being on 41 we thought it was a fun little play on words between r-o-ut-e and root. We also come from a logging family ... so the tree motif, being in the woods and being on the highway we want to plant our roots and stay here for a long time.” Root 41 Restaurant is open Tuesday through Saturday 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. and stay open until 9 p.m. on Fridays. And Sundays they!re open 8 a.m. until 3 p.m. For more information visit their Facebook page at www.facebook.com/root41restaurant. Elizabeth Bailey can be reached at 906-228-2500, ext. 243. Her email address is [email protected]. Top, the old Grove restaurant has transformed into a comfy, familyfriendly diner, Root 41 Restaurant. Middle, a view of the counter where people can pick from a variety of domestic and craft beers as well as liquors. At right, coowner and operations coordinator Barbara Tullila pours coffee at the drink station. (Photos by Elizabeth Bailey) Blackrocks Brewery State and hometown pride brew quality beer in Marquette By MARY WARDELL Journal Staff Writer MARQUETTE — Named after the popular leaping-off point in Marquette!s scenic Presque Isle Park on Lake Superior, the Blackrocks Brewery was, for two Marquette residents, a leap of faith in itself at a time of economic uncertainty. Friends and homebrewers for many years, founders David Manson and Andy Langlois originally worked together as pharmaceutical representatives, until downsizing in the company saw Langlois laid off. So they took it as an opportunity. Manson worked longer hours, Langlois planned, and together, they worked and saved to make their dream a reality. “It was definitely not easy on either of us to do it,” Langlois said. “But it was really fun and rewarding to know that we were starting to control our own destiny a bit and making the business what it is.” Back in 2010, they started with a one-barrel system in their pub at 424 N.Third St., a refurbished yellow house with orange trim. The reception was overwhelming, but there was one problem: they were running out of beer. Soon, they added a three-barrel system to meet demand. By 2013, they had expanded to the old Coca Cola Bottling Plant on Washington Street, where they maintain a 5,000 gallon system and distribute beer around the state. But enjoyment and stability, more than growth, continue to be the driving values for Manson, Langlois and their 12 employees. “We don!t have to take over the Midwest; we don!t have to take over nationally — you know, that!s not really what our goal is,” Manson said. “We!ve got a lot of great employees, and we want to make sure that they!re happy and can live a sustainable life out of our operation here. We!d like to have a sustainable life and living.” At the pub, they make use of their three-barrel system to produce the beer on tap and keep their one-barrel for experimentation. This way, customers play a part in the process of tweaking and perfecting different brews, they said. “That!s the one thing that!s been really nice about using the pub as a tasting grounds,” Manson said. “We can knock off a one-barrel of something, and if that gets well-received, we!ll scale it to a three-barrel, and then maybe that!ll make it into the tanks and become a distributed beer. We do have the ability to put out a lot of different beers with the one-barrel and the three-barrel in the pub, so there!s always something pretty unique.” With Michigan rated in the top five states for its number of microbreweries, Manson said there!s a pro-growth spirit within the industry to raise the bar on quality. “When you say you!re a Michigan brewery...you want to make sure that it!s some- A pallet of Blackrocks Brewery!s 51K IPA. Full of earthy grapefruit, apricot and piney hop flavors, this beer is unique to the Marquette area. Part of the proceeds help fund the Noquemanon Trail Network. (Journal photo by Mary Wardell) thing that makes people say "Michigan makes great beer,!” Manson said. “There are a lot of great breweries in Michigan, so it!s in everybody!s best interest to make sure that everybody makes the best product they can to represent, not only your hometown, but the state. Because people from Wisconsin, Ohio, Indiana and all points beyond are amazed at what we!re doing. We!re solidly in the top five, and I think we!ll be in the top three in the next couple years.” Manson and Langlois value giving back to the community that has made it all possible by donating to various benefits and individuals in need. Mountain-biking enthusiasts themselves, they have been able to make a sizable contribution to the Noquemanon Trail Network through sales of their 51K beer (a continuing effort), which was a proud moment for Blackrocks, they said. But they don!t see their business as special for that reason. “There!s a lot of businesses that give back to the community and we don!t want to pat ourselves on the back too hard,” Langlois said. “Because really, I think, if you live here, and you!re being supported by them, you better do something. You don!t need to, but I think it!s important to give back what you can, and at this point, we can.” Blackrocks is also a popular music venue in summer, when local bands play on the outdoor patio in the evenings. Their most popular beers are 51K, Coconut Brown and Grand Rabbits Cream Ale, they said, which are distributed throughout the Upper Peninsula, Northern Wisconsin, and Northern lower and West Michigan. Blackrocks beer will hopefully be coming soon to Metro-Detroit, they said. Mary Wardell can be reached at 906-228-2500, ext. 248. Her email address is [email protected]. The Mining Journal -— Tuesday, March 31 -— 3D PROGRESS2015 Rare Earth Goods Ishpeming business now serving lunch Rare Earth Goods! employee Debbie Gronvall stocks the shelves with selected wines. (Journal photo by Zach Jay) By CRAIG REMSBURG Senior Sports Writer ISHPEMING — Owner Pam Perkins says serving lunch at Rare Earth Goods in Ishpeming serves two purposes: “Hopefully, to get more foot traffic into my store,” the Ishpeming native said. “And, I just love cooking. I do it all myself.” Perkins, a 1979 Ishpeming High School graduate whose maiden name was Rule, started serving lunch at her business in December. There are cafe tables and chairs for as many as 25 customers any one day. She said all lunch items are available “to go.” Perkins makes her quiche the night before and cooks up her soup each day when lunch is served from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. “I serve tomato Gorgonzola on Monday, cheesy cream of broccoli on Tuesday and a "chef!s choice! soup on Wednesday,” she said. “If I want to pick chicken noodle or barley, that!s what I pick.” Thursdays feature a hearty vegetarian soup and Fridays, it!s corn chowder. Quiche is served every day, which includes potatoes, cheddar cheese and smoked bacon. For those wishing to order something to go with their soup, Rare Earth Goods offers several different Panini sandwiches. Besides a bacon, lettuce and tomato Panini, there!s an Italian, one with spinach and artichoke meat and — perhaps the favorite among her customers — the Division Street. “It has fresh pesto, tomato and mozzarella cheese,” Perkins said. “Yesterday, I had grilled Cajun shrimp and rice pilaf to go with it.” She said Rare Earth Goods! lunch items offer the customer “something different.” Nothing is deep friend, so you have more healthy choices,” Perkins said. She added there!s also a “great” cheese selection at the store and different desserts served eery day, be it cheesecake or banana cream pie, for example. Free WiFi use is available and coffee from local vendors is served at Rare Earth Goods. The business, located at 200 E. Division St. in Ishpeming, also offers beer and wine, as well as locally-grown produce and meats. “I don!t carry any mainstream beers,” Perkins said. “I carry craft beers. There!s a big following for craft beers now. “I!ve (also) got a huge wine selection, a lot of Michigan wines.” Along with edible products, Rare Earth Goods also sells such items as clothing, purses and bags, household products and jewelry. “It!s unique ... with a mish-mash of many different things,” Perkins said of her business, adding there are 140 local artists trying to sell their work at Rare Earth Goods. She added she hasn!t taken a paycheck in two years. “I put all the money back into the store and new stock to build an even better store,”Perkins said. Just Right Catering Bakery and Deli Tasty treats and deli all-in-one By ELIZABETH BAILEY Journal Staff Writer MARQUETTE—Right off of highway M-35 in Gwinn, across from the high school sets a little deli only the locals know about. Opened on Sept 12, 2014, Just Right Catering Bakery and Deli has only been open for a few months but prides itself of home cooked food just right for everyone. “I!ve always enjoyed cooking, and I!ve always enjoyed cooking for people and then I wanted to have my own place to cook and cater then it became a little restaurant,” said Michele DeShambo, owner and cook. “It!s something I!ve always wanted to do.” The location, originally was an office building so when DeShambo moved in there was a ton of work that had to be done. Putting in the proper work station for cooking and setting up the front for a deli was a challenge in itself, let alone putting it in such a small area. But it works for the hometown deli. With sandwiches, burgers, wraps, salads, fried food and even desserts that grace the chalkboard menu in the front are all made to order. Along with some Upper Peninsula favorites like cudighi “It kind of started with people asking if I was going to have sub sandwiches, and I was like "hmmm,! this was when I was getting things ready to open, and I was going to open up for catering and just like a deli thing,” she said. “I didn!t have it all figured out, then people were walking by asking and I was like, you know, I can do that...” “One thing led to another ... and I always wanted a good burger and fry.” “We have fresh burger, our bread comes from Trenary, three times a week we go pick up our fresh bread, and we use the same bread for our buns and everything.” So keeping it local and friendly is what it!s all about. Elizabeth Bailey can be reached at 906-2282500, ext. 243. Her email address is [email protected]. A view of the register where customers can place orders from the menu. Just Right Catering Bakery and Deli offers decadent treats, classic sandwiches, burgers and fries. (Journal photos by Elizabeth Bailey) SHAREABLES PUB PLATES Craig Remsburg can be reached at 906-228-2500, ext. 251. His email address is [email protected]. BAR SNACKS Award Winning Soups Amazing Salads & Sandwiches BARTENDER’S PICKS Dine-In, Delivery & Pick-Up Window 510 W. Washington, Marquette 273-1130 www.newyorkdelimqt.com Your Neighborhood Grill & Bar, the way it was always meant to be Food, Drinks & You! www.applebees.com 2902 US 41, Marquette • 226-2043 4D -— The Mining Journal -— Tuesday, March 31 Econo Foods expands Local grocery store adds variety of craft beers By CRAIG REMSBURG Senior Sports Writer MARQUETTE — Tadych!s Econo Foods in Marquette has long taken pride in its extensive beer selection. Now, that selection has grown even larger. This past fall, Econo Foods added what store manager Zach Quinnell says were 450 different types of craft beer. “We!ve seen this trend (for craft beers) coming the last couple of years,” he said. “So, we changed our focus. “It!s what our customers have been asking for. They want more selection and variety.” Craft beers are usually made by smaller breweries and feature many different flavors, Quinnell said. “A lot of them are brewed locally, too,” he said. Econo Foods now carries locally-made craft beers from the Blackrocks Brewery and Ore Dock in Marquette; Upper Hand Brewing in Escanaba; and the Keweenaw Brewing Co. out of Houghton. “Craft beers see a of of variety in malts and hops,” Quinnell said. “That!s what makes them so exciting. They!re always evolving and changing.” He labeled the craft beer additions a “major expansion.” So much so, the store needed to add more storage units. “We added some high-efficiency coolers ... about 20 feet (long) of cooler space,” Quinnell said. “Those new coolers run on about 35 percent less power than the old ones.” The store now carries some 600 different kinds of beer, he said. “(The expansion) has been very successful,” Quinnell said. “The response we!ve gotten from our customers has been nothing but positive. “They!re saying they like the added selection and the variety of beers they!ve never seen before. They!ve heard about some of the beers (we now carry), but have never been able to get before.” He said for now, there are no plans to expand the beer section even more unless demand calls for it. “We!ll let our customers tell us what they like. If they say they want more, we!d love to expand (again),” Quinnell said. The expansion of the beer selection came after Econo Foods added to its natural, organic and gluten-free food areas. “What we are trying to do is capture every aspect,” Quinnell said at the time. “If you!re a natural or organic eater, what we!re trying to do is to have everything you would need for that lifestyle — from breakfast to lunch, to dinner, dessert and snacks. “We want to really encompass every aspect of that lifestyle.” Some of the foods Econo expanded included glutenfree lunch meats, grass-fed beef, and organic dairy and soy products. In addition, Econo has added more Asian, Hispanic and Indian food products to its selection. “Increasing the variety and selection was the goal and we accomplished that,” Quinnell said. Craig Remsburg can be reached at 906-228-2500, ext. 251. His email address is [email protected]. PROGRESS2015 Cognition Brewery Brings new life to historic building Brian Richards, brewmaster at Cognition Brewery, stands by a mash tun. This vessel is primarily responsible for extracting fermentable sugars and dextrins (non-fermentable sugars) from malt. (Journal photo by Elizabeth Bailey) By ELIZABETH BAILEY Journal Staff Writer ISHPEMING — Brew pubs are a thing of the future, with all sorts popping up all over the country, while at the same time reviving a city!s past. Now there is a new brewery on it!s way into our neck of the woods, Cognition Brewery located in the historical Mather Inn located in downtown Ishpeming. Although those involved have had some minor set backs with the set up, they plan to be up and running by the middle of March. “It!s kind of a long and involved story, we!ve been going for two years,” Jay Clancey, owner of Cognition said, “We were trying to put it in a old building over on Main Street first...” With business, not everything works out, things come up and plans fall through but it!s about who you know. Clancey!s wife!s cousin happens to own the old Mather Inn and told him to set up his brewery there in the little garage. Originally he didn!t think that was enough room so plans for the brewery were up in the air. “About this time last year, she had the old coal boilers ... she had them scraped out of there, and she said you should come take a look again, and I did,” he said. “It was a no-brainer to shift the project here because there was already a bar and a lot more room in there.” READERS' CHOICE AWARD Troy Mills stocks the shelf with Ore Dock Brewery beer in the revamped craft beer section at Tadych!s Econo Foods in Marquette. The expansion of the beer selection came after the addition of natural, organic and gluten-free food areas. (Journal photo by Elizabeth Bailey) • Only the Best Ingredients Fresh Baked Breads & Pizza Dough Made from scratch Meatballs Cudighi, Sauces & More! 226-2323 1109 LINCOLN AVENUE Throughout the course of the project three tons of celling have been removed, walls have been knocked down and the floor was even raised up 18 inches. “I figured we!ve moved almost 30 tons of material through the course of this project,” Clancey said. What!s interesting about his brewery, it!s setting up shop in the historical Mather Inn Lounge, so you can bet the ambiance is eerie do a degree. With that much history how could it now be? Maybe it!s the old style bar that they!ve kept or just the fact that it!s located in the lower level of this supposedly haunted building. “The capacity is like like 100 in here, and we hope to have an outdoor area too, eventually.” “It!ll be a trick people to find it at first ... If you!re driving down Hematite you can look over here, but there has to be something to see the brewery we'll have to set up some sort of lazer light show out there,” Clancey joked. “Brian, the brew master, is the nephew of my sister-inlaw, and I!ve been drinking his home-brewed beers for years and it was always unbelievable,” he said. “I just knew he had a knack ... he!s a real serious brewer.” Elizabeth Bailey can be reached at 906-228-2500, ext. 243. Her email address is [email protected]. The Mining Journal -— Tuesday, March 31 -— 5D PROGRESS2015 Jackson’s Pit Negaunee hotspot draws acclaim for food, music By RENEE PRUSI Journal Staff Writer NEGAUNEE — Chef Alexander Baysore takes great pride in the meals produced by the kitchen at Jackson!s Pit Gourmet Grill and Bar. “I grew up in the kitchen watching my dad cook. Food prep has always been a passion of mine. I love to make people happy through their taste buds,” Baysore said. “It is a great feeling to see a smile on someone's face after a meal I've prepared. “Anyone can cook, and anyone can cook for a lot cheaper than what it costs to go out for a meal,” he said. “So, I take extra care in presentation and taste. It has to look good and taste good.” Jackson!s Pit, located along Iron Street in downtown Negaunee, has a kitchen that!s open until 11 p.m. every day with a varied menu. Baysore comes up with the lunch specials, which draw a great deal of interest when posted on Facebook each day. “Our menu at Jackson's Pit has many different items, and that helps when coming up with "specials! ideas,” Baysore said. “It is fun to create and to see what flavors are going to compliment one another. I cook by smell and site, if it smells good and looks good, it will most likely taste good. “My favorite item on the menu is our Tender- loin Steak Spinach Wrap,” he said. “It has tomatoes, red onions, parmesan cheese flakes, and roasted red pepper aioli. Out of all of the sauces we make in house, the red pepper aioli is my favorite. I love it with our french fries, onion rings, and on our burgers. “If you haven't tried it, it is a must when you come here.” In addition to its food, Jackson!s Pit offers a variety of specialty drinks — including a bacon-infused bloody mary; an extensive wine list; and 17 different Michigan craft beers as well as root beer on tap. Open since the Fourth of July 2014, Jackson!s Pit has become a popular draw in Negaunee, some nights having a waiting list for tables. In addition to spectacular food and beverage, Jackson!s Pit brings bands of all genres to provide entertainment, some during the main dinner hours and others into the wee hours of the night. For instance, every Monday, the Louisiana Bayou Boyz — one guitar, one fiddle and a range of song styles —#entertain from 6-10 p.m. On Fridays, it!s the warm, mellow sounds of GLC, most often starting at 6 p.m., but Alexander Baysore works to prepare a meal in the kitchen of Jackson!s PIt in Negaunee, above. The inset shows bartender Shelly Binz shaking a cocktail. (Journal photos by Renee Prusi) sometimes an hour earlier depending on the other entertainment coming in later that evening. The venue also frequently has bands in on Thursdays and Saturdays as owners Mike and Ivy Ridenour consider music a priority. “When people say we!re a restaurant that!s a misconception. It!s a bar with entertainment and good food,” said Mike Ridenour for a February story about the bar!s music. “We had plans to put in a stage all along, plans for a great sound system to be here from the beginning. It was just a matter of getting the stage done.” Ivy Ridenour, for that story, said: “We want this to be a place where people can relax, where they can have fun. Having entertainment is important to us. We are a bar and grill,” she said. “That!s what we wanted and we!re happy it has been so well received.” Jackson!s Pit is located at 305 Iron St. in downtown Negaunee. Its website is jacksonspitnegaunee.com and its phone number is 401-0411. Renee Prusi can be contacted at 906-228-2500, ext. 240. Her email address is [email protected]. Coachlight Restaurant Local breakfast staple gets a facelift By ELIZABETH BAILEY Journal Staff Writer MARQUETTE—Through the years there has been a few changes to the Coachlight Restaurant, located on Washington Street in downtown Marquette but none as extensive as what!s been happening recently. Changes to the face of the building were more evident than want!s been happening on the inside. For those who haven!t been in the restaurant in a while might be caught off guard, but will also be pleasantly surprise by all the changes as well. “We had time to do it (remodeling), we had a few things that needed to be repaired, one thing leads to another and here we are,” said Mark Scott owner of Coachlight. What started as a basic replacing things that needed replacing turned into a large remodel for the family restaurant. With beautiful stone work and lumber covering the walls that once displayed out of date wallpaper. “This is the most extensive that we!ve done though,” Scott said pointing to the stone work. “I already have the vision that it!ll look really good.” The vision just came as the work started Scott said. With lumber that came from Scott himself after lumbering off some land. “This will be the third major remodel since I!ve been here, and I!ve been here since 1976.” Not just the inside is changing, the outside changed recently as well, with bright purple paint and more stone work on the facade. But despite all the changes one thing that won!t be changing drastically is the food, so all the classics are there when wanted. “Business has always been pretty good (since the start of the remodel),” said Scott. Who decided to stay open throughout the whole process. He doesn!t feel like it!s set him back that much, in regards to customers coming in. Renovations are underway at the Coachlight Restaurant. Pictured is the transformation of the back dining area with stone decor. Lumber accents will also be added. (Journal photo by Elizabeth Bailey) REDEFINING QUALITY Our promise is to only use the freshest ingredients to create the best-tasting food for you. Quality is our promise and our recipe. Elizabeth Bailey can be reached at 906-228-2500, ext. 243. Her email address is [email protected]. Never Frozen We serve 100% pure North American beef. We believe this is why our hamburgers taste better and are juicier. An Old Fashioned Value Since 1946… Nothing beats a nice, hot pasty – Ready to go for lunch or dinner! Send a taste of home to out-of-town loved ones with our Nationwide shipping! Voted Best Pasty 9 Years in a row! Mining Journal’s Readers’ Choice Made to Order It’s not about serving billions. It’s how well we serve you and make your sandwich fresh when you order it. Fresh We make every one of our salads fresh every day, because we’ve always believed that fresher tastes better. Original We create unique tastes, like our classic Frosty™ made from 100% cocoa and cream. Ask us about our fundraising program! Dine-In or Take-Out Marquette Store 2164 US 41 West 226-5040 A U.P. Tradition Since 1946 OPEN 7 DAYS • www.lawryspasties.com At The Marquette Mall 6D -— The Mining Journal -— Tuesday, March 31 PROGRESS2015 Ore Dock Brewery Localized ambiance meets quality craft By MARY WARDELL Journal Staff Writer MARQUETTE — Like its namesake, the Ore Dock Brewery is quickly becoming an iconic part of the Marquette scene since opening in 2012. Homebrewers originally, Andrea and Wes Pernsteiner, both biomedical engineers, co-founded the microbrewery after traveling around the United States and Europe, finding breweries to be unique hubs of local culture and conversation. They wanted to bring that to Marquette and started making serious plans in 2009. Andrea said it seemed hard to imagine p e o p l e would want to sit down for a beer there in the early stages, when the space was still just a run-down car garage. “When we found this building, it was in pretty bad shape,” Pernsteiner said. “It hadn!t had any updates — there was still knob and tube wiring. It was just very raw, peeling paint, all those good things.” But the space provided an organic template for what would become a unique ambiance, drawn largely from recycled materials inside the garage. From tables made out of 100-year-old tongue-and-groove flooring from the upstairs, to wood beams taken from nearby collapsing barns; from a swing made out of a grain pallet, to stools made of discarded pipe fittings — Andrea said it was their effort to reclaim as much as possible that inspired the name of one of their most popular beers, the Reclamation IPA, which is distributed locally. “It was some vision, but also some necessity, that we utilized components out of the building,” she said. “It was a scary process because you just never know how that!s gonna go, but it worked out.” While it was challenging to draw warmth from the hard elements of concrete and stone, Andrea said, the results have been well-received. “Every time we have an event for someone in need, the amount of response we receive reminds me again and again the giving nature of this community,” she said. “I firmly believe we couldn!t have done this in any other place besides Marquette. You really need that community support to launch a small business and have it be successful.” It!s a two-silo business, Andrea said, consisting of craft brewing and community. “We hope that people see us as a place that!s promoting the arts and culture in Marquette, both through the craft of brewing and through the craft of music or visual arts,” she said. “Because we really try to promote that in our community space, and in addition, give back to the community with the events we host here.” Brewmaster Nick VanCourt originally graduated in media production from Northern Michigan University in 2004, but, “homebrewing got the best of me,” he explained. He went on to graduate from the World Brewing Academy with an international diploma in brewing technology in the spring of "09 and moved back to Marquette in 2011 to work with the Pernsteiners. Their 10-barrel system may not be huge, but it is unique. This is because VanCourt carefully selects the best ingredients from across the country and Europe, but more important, he said, is their process. “We!re very free with talking about our ingredients and our recipes for beers, but we!re a little bit more guarded in talking about our processes,” he said. At right, in this December 2011 photo, Andrea Pernsteiner points to a set of blueprints while standing in the second story of the Ore Dock Brewery before its renovation. She and Wes Pernsteiner, left, are the founders of the business. They brought on Nick VanCourt, center, as head brewmaster. Below, the second floor of the Ore Dock as seen today. (Journal file photos) “Because in some cases, our processes might set us apart.” An example is their gluten-free beer, called Good Grist. Made out of barley malt, it goes through a special process and is then tested in a lab to ensure it is 100 percent gluten free. “It!s more work and it!s not a cheap process,” he said. “But we do it, because ultimately the beer is so much better because it!s made out of barley, and we!ve processed it properly, rather than starting with a gluten-free grain that might not have the kind of flavor you!d want to get or expect in a beer.” Andrea said the name, “Ore Dock,” is a reminder. “Every day, I hear the fog horn here, and I think, there!s not many places where people get to have those sights or hear those sounds or have that experience,” she said. “And so that!s where Ore Dock came from — just how lucky we are to be here.” Mary Wardell can be reached at 906228-2500, ext. 248. Her email address is [email protected]. • Graduation Party • Seminars • Family Reuniun • Work Meetings Let’s face it, you can’t make every meeting or family gathering the most exciting event of the week. But the food? Well, that’s another story. At KFC, we cater a hot, delicious meal of the world’s best chicken, not to mention a variety of home style sides and irresistible buttermilk biscuits, available as individual box meals or for you to serve buffet-style. So give us a try, but be warned. When the word gets out, you might need a bigger venue. Washington, St., Marquette • 226-7728 • www.kfc.com The Mining Journal -— Tuesday, March 31 -— 7D PROGRESS2015 Java by the Bay Family friendly coffee house is the center of the community Java by the Bay offers a variety of food, coffees, and blended drinks to the residents of L!Anse. The shop was recently named best coffee house in the Upper Peninsula. (Photo coutesy of Java by the Bay) By ELIZABETH BAILEY Journal Staff Writer L!Anse—Mom and pop places don!t always get the support they need to stay afloat but for Java by the Bay in L!Anse have been going strong for 3 and a half years, despite the fact that 2014 was a really rough year for everyone. “I could lie to you and tell you the business is booming, and we've seen nothing increases over the past year... actually I!d say, we!ve been open for three and a half years, and I would say that 2014 was probably the toughest years that we!ve seen since we got into business,” said Bob Dudo, owner and manager of Java by the Bay. “Due to, I think a lot factors, but I think weather was the biggest factor, especially last summer,” he said. “Obviously temperature were real low and the winter prior was really bad, so we!re looking for a little turn around if the weather gets better, as far as tourism and such,” Dudo said hopefully. Owners Dudo and Nikki Collins do their best to incorporate a relaxed, family friendly environment for everyone, with a small staff of part-timers and their daughters that work there. Severing coffee, latte, smoothies, and cappuccinos as wells as full breakfast and lunch menues, so there is something for everyone at this local shop. “I kind of see ourselves as the center of the community in some ways, we!ve kind of fallen into that position over the past few years,” Dudo said. “...our environment here is relaxed, it!s a great place just to come and hang out, and if you just want to come have a cup of coffee and sit and talk all day, that!s great!” The shop also offers a private room with a couple easy chairs, couch and a nice table which offers the perfect meeting place for locals or somewhere to do homework. “We have a really good local customer base and that!s what keeps us alive during the winter, however, without that big influx of toursim through the summer months, it does make things a little bit tougher, to you know, pay the bills throughout the winter, so the tourism is kind of the gravy and the local business would be your bread and butter.” Obviously they!re doing something right, the shop was in the running for the best coffee house in Northern Michigan and the Upper Peninsula, they took number one in the U.P. and second in Northern Michigan. Elizabeth Bailey can be reached at 906-228-2500, ext. 243. Her email address is [email protected]. Bayou and Chocolay River Brewery Great suds and fun at this familyowned brewery and pub By Journal Staff MARQUETTE — Family-owned and operated since 2004 by siblings Tim Soucy, Chere Snyder and their families, The Bayou Bar and Grill, at 200 W. Main St. in Harvey, have been undergoing changes to the restaurant with the addition of the Chocolay River Brewery. The CRB will be the only craft brewery in Chocolay Township. “It!s been a long haul. We!ve come a long way, and we!ve made lots of improvements over the years,” said Soucy, who also owns Soucy Electric, a commercial, residential and industrial electric company he founded 25 years ago. “People around here love craft-brewed beer,” Soucy said. “We feel very welcomed by the local community.” The restaurant underwent a significant expansion last year to make room for the new brewhouse, which is completely installed now and brewing beer. Chocolay River Brewery has a five-barrel system, which produces 155 gallons at a time. Quality craft beer will be sold for consumption on site or in half-gallon growlers to go. They will soon be selling beer glasses and apparel as well. Varieties of beer include a blonde ale, pale ale, black ale, blueberry wheat and more. The Bayou also boasts the best fish fry in town, Soucy said, along with delicious handmade pizzas, apple and cherry wood-smoked barbecue (smoked on site) and deserts made from scratch. “People are very surprised, when they come out here, by the food and quality,” Soucy said. And their full-service bar features more than 75 beers, local and international, as well as wine and liquor. Soucy and CRB Brewmaster Grant Lyke are looking into new food recipes (like pretzel bread and brown- ies) that would incorporate the “spent grain” from the brewing process, which lends a uniquely delicious flavor and texture, Lyke said. They also have a 50 by 100 foot backyard and patio, the perfect place to enjoy a craft brew in the summertime, Soucy said. There and in the large dining room (which can be partitioned), they also hold receptions, banquets and benefits. Outside, there are horseshoe pits, a fire pit and, soon, a 70 percent shade tent to cover the patio as well. The Bayou is open from 7 a.m. to 2 a.m. every day for breakfast, lunch and dinner, and they deliver. “For a while there, we were the only sit-down restaurant in Chocolay Township,” he said. “We do a lot here.” More information about the Bayou can be found on their website, bayourestaurantandbar.com, with a link to the Chocolay River Brewery. Call 249-1338 to find out about banquets, catering, deliveries or to make a reservation. 200 Meeske Ave., Marquette • 225-1363 Our milk comes exclusively from the about 70 family owned and operated dairy farms in the U.P. New Menu -with- Additional Healthy Choices We Offer A Nice Selection Of Grass Fed Beef No Hormones! No Antibiotics! Plus Antibiotic and Steroid-Free Chicken & Pork 223 W. Washington Street Downtown Marquette 6a.m.-6p.m. M-F, 7a.m.-6p.m. Sat., 8a.m.-2p.m. Sun 226-7744 10-6 Mon.-Sat., Noon-4 Sun. ~ Bridge Cards Accepted MARQUETTE MEATS 3060 W. US 41 • Marquette 906-226-8333 www. babycakesmuffincompany.com Using local, organic produce - many gluten free and vegan items available 8D -— The Mining Journal -— Tuesday, March 31 PROGRESS2015 Fresh Flavor Available 24 Hours A Day Natural, Organic & Specialty Choices Whether you’re looking for gluten free, dairy free, hormone free or other options to meet special dietary needs, you’re sure to find a variety of choices throughout our store Juicy Flavorful Choice Meats Cut in-store to guarantee freshness! FRESH, CRISP PRODUCE Daily deliveries assure freshness. Large variety of conventional and organic produce including hard to find items EXPANDED CRAFT BEER SELECTION ~ INCLUDING LOCAL BREWS ~ OVER 450 TYPES OF CRAFT BEER! The area’s largest selection of beer, wine and liquor! OPEN 24 HOURS 1401 O’Dovero Dr., Marquette www.TadychsEconofoods.com • 226-3500