Say goodbye to rubber chicken.
Agriculture
Check out these hot spots, courtesy of three in-the-know Twin Citians.
At Liquor Boy in St. Louis Park, everyday low prices trump the upscale environs.
Summit will introduce a series of limited-run beers that highlight new brewing ingredients; meanwhile, the company updated its logo for the first time since 1999.
The University of Minnesota study found that production of key global crops is likely to increase 38-67 percent by 2050 while the estimated need for those crops will increase by 60-110 percent in that period.
The company, which also reiterated its earnings guidance and expects strong international growth for the current fiscal year, saw its stock rise almost 2 percent following its announcement.
Indeed Brewing Company plans to double its production capacity through a $250,000 upgrade; 612Brew, meanwhile, will open its taproom on Wednesday.
The celebrity chef and Bizarre Foods host reportedly said that “restaurants in the skyway are serving some of the worst food in the city.” Meanwhile, local food trucks have formed a group to respond to skyway restaurants’ claim that trucks are hurting business.
The Minneapolis-based company said that sales in its dessert-flavored category have increased 81 percent over the last year.
The just-announced grant from Hennepin County is on top of $1.5 million worth of environmental cleanup grants that the Metropolitan Council and the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development awarded earlier this month.
Shea has figured out what it takes to succeed in perhaps the toughest business out there—restaurants.
Randy Witt helps restaurant managers keep an eye on the fryers in their kitchens, with online information portals.
A local audio branding agency creates a soundtrack to highlight a global crisis.
How Andrew Zimmern is morphing a hit cable TV show into a diversified, branded network of businesses.
Chocolat Céleste and Just Truffles
fight it out in the chocolate marketplace.
Following the sale of 877 stores to an investor group led by Cerberus Capital Management, Supervalu will replace CEO Wayne Sales with Sam Duncan, a retail veteran who most recently led OfficeMax.
The Litchfield-based egg producer said several individuals were detained on “administrative charges,” which are reportedly used in cases when people are suspected of immigration violations.
The positive results mark the second consecutive quarter of significant growth following a dismal conclusion to the company’s last fiscal year.