Ask Public Radio’s Lynne Rossetto Kasper about meatloaf, and the Splendid Table host will tell you that it’s “a testament to what an ingenious cook can do with next to
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Two Twin Cities entrepreneurs have plans to change the definition of "convenience foods."
Having shepherded the Minnesota Zoo and helped to save the Twins, Kathryn Roberts now leads the former Lutheran Board of Social Ministry into a new age of senior-living management.
State Demographer Tom Gillaspy says Minnesota will have a major labor shortage 10 years from now. Only productivity gains will save the state's economy.
A big customer pulls back. Revenues fall. Manufacturing capabilities fall short. Retool the plant? Winland Electronics changed everything.
At Frattallone's Ace Hardware, the handyman's creative side gets its due.
The company not only carries eco-friendly brands; it handles recycling of old furnishings.
For Bay West, it's about dirty jobs that the company's more than willing to do.
Zipnosis offers a fast diagnosis for common ills.
Pure Market Express brings the raw-food movement to grocery store shelves.
Back from the brink of bankruptcy, ShopNBC has re-adjusted and refocused. Will consumers and investors buy what it's selling?
News bits from around Minnesota.
Fredrikson asks: Does your hobby improve your work?
For businesses selling to other businesses, Web sites are no longer an afterthought—they've become central to the selling process.
Marketing and IT experts explain how their quest for a better Web site has resulted in a better working relationship.
Any guy in a red suit can generate a little mall traffic. But an extraordinary Santa can build a small dynasty.
There are few clear advantages to living in a place where winter begins on October 10th. But here’s one: Like pub owners on the damp English moors and Celtic bluffs,
Jacquie Berglund's volunteer-led beer company is a career starter.