Winona’s in Camden

A new restaurant called Winona’s (instagram) is under construction on Elm Street in Camden located in between Mosaic and First Fig.

Owners Devin Dearden and Hannah Adams envision Winona’s having “small wine bar vibes” and offering an ever changing seasonally-driven food menu. Dearden and Adams plan to serve a selection of small plates such as Cod en Papillote with tomato butter, mushrooms and daikon as well as Roasted Beets and Apples with smoked cheddar vinaigrette and pistachio. The bar program will include wine, beer, sake and sherry with both low intervention and more traditional wines represented in the list.

Dearden has been the chef at The Alna Store since the acclaimed restaurant launched in late 2022. He’s previously worked in Cambridge, New York, and in Portland where he was on the staff at Scales and Evo. Adams also works at The Alna Store and previously worked front of house in Portland at Little Giant, The Honey Paw, and Evo. Their time at The Alna Store saw the restaurant awarded 4½ stars by the Maine Sunday Telegram and honored as a James Beard Award semifinalist in the Best New Restaurant category.

Adams and Dearden have started renovations and hope to open the 24-seat restaurant this fall. The restaurant will be located at 31 Elm Street in the space that was formerly occupied by Goods which closed at the end of May.

Photo Credit: photo courtesy of Winona’s

Slattery Joining The Alna Store

Ben Slattery is joining the team at The Alna Store as their new chef de cuisine. Slattery has worked at a number of Maine restaurants and kitchens over the last twelve years including as the chef de cuisine at the short-lived Pigeons, and as a member of the opening team at Chaval. Slattery is also an experienced whole animal  butcher and worked at L.P. Bisson and Sons in Topsham.

A statement by Slattery reads in part, “My wife and I moved out of the Portland area 5 years ago looking for something that suits our small, growing family. The opportunity to work with the team at The Alna Store feels like a good stroke of fate and a continuation of that trajectory. I’m excited to bring house-made sausages and charcuterie to Alna, and to engage our MidCoast community with family-friendly events; pig or lamb roasts, harvest dinners, holiday celebrations and barbecues. Continuing the work of prioritizing and highlighting partnerships with local farms is super important to me. I’m really excited about the working farmer relationships Jasper and Brian have established over the last year and a half.”

Slattery will be joining a team that includes baker and pastry chef Kristen LaMontagne, sous chefs ​Clara Kazarov and Tyler Dalton, bar manager Charley Zimmerman and owners Jasper Ludwig and Brian Haskins.

The Alna Store was a 2024 James Beard Awards semifinalist in the Best New Restaurant category. The Maine Sunday Telegram awarded The Alna Store 4½ stars and named TAS the Best New Restaurant of 2023.

Photo Credit: Photograph by Nicole Wolf

Yardie Ting Moving

Yardie Ting (websitefacebookinstagram) is moving to the first floor of the Public Market House where they’re taking over the space formerly occupied by Mr. Tuna.

The move will enable owner Shanna-Kay Wright and her team to serve an expanded menu. She expects to add additional seafood options and salads to the menu. Between the front window seating area and the counter that runs along the kitchen, Yardie Ting will initially have 20+ seats. Wright is also working on adding a table seating area and a small market.

Renovations to the 1,734 sq ft space is currently underway (above right) and Wright expects to launch the new Yardie Ting on Tuesday August 27th. Check the Yardie Ting instagram account to follow along with the renovations and relaunch.

Yardie Ting first moved into the Public Market House in 2019 (see below left). Shown below is a 2020 takeout meal of jerk chicken with mac and cheese, festivals and other sides.

To learn more about other new food and dining businesses under development visit our Under Construction page.

 

Gross Bakery Closing

Gross Confection Bar has announced that they’ll be closing their daytime bakery on September 1st. The announcement reads in part,

The decision to close wasn’t easy, but staffing shortages have made it increasingly difficult to keep things running smoothly. We’ve been battling this challenge since COVID, and unfortunately, it hasn’t improved over the past year.

While it saddens us to say goodbye, we’re not disappearing entirely! We’re excited to continue offering a few baked goods during the evening and plan to host bakery pop-ups on weekends from time to time. We’ll keep you posted on those sweet details as soon as we have them.

Gross Confection Bar’s evening dessert and cocktail bar will be unimpacted by this change. The Gross Bakery opened on July 4, 2019 (when the photo above was taken).

Upcoming Food & Dining Events

Monday2Gether is holding their next Secret Table dinner at an as-yet-undisclosed farm in the Portland area.

Tuesday – The Best of 2024 Awards celebration is taking place at Portland House of Music—tickets are available online.

Thursday – Billy Hager and Hannah Buoye from Waxwing Bakery will be the featured chefs at the August taco night at Dandelion Spring Farm in Bowdoinham.

SundayTender Table is holding its annual food music and art market in Congress Square Park.

August 21 – San Diego cocktail bar Mothership will be at Crown Jewel for a pop-up.

August 29Black Goat in Warren will be holding 4-course dinner in collaboration with Eve’s Cidery.

August 30September 1 – The Maine Apple Camp is taking place.

September 8 – The Maine Cheese Festival is taking place in Pittsfield.

September 19Mrs. Gee Free Living and Sur Lie are collaborating on a gluten-free dinner.

September 20-22 – The Common Ground Fair will be taking place.

October 13 – The 16th Annual Open Creamery Day is taking place.

October 23Mrs. Gee Free Living and Sur Lie are collaborating on a gluten-free dinner.

October 24-26 – Harvest on the Harbor is taking place.

Planning a wedding, holding a business event, or hosting visitors from away? Our printed guides are a great resource to help your guests explore the Maine restaurant scene.
25-packs of the Portland and Midcoast pocket guides are now available on our online store.

Gluten-Free Maine

Today’s Maine Sunday Telegram includes an article about gluten-free dining in Maine and a list of 100% gluten-free businesses.

In the 16 years since Maine’s first gluten-free bakery, Wildflours, opened in Brunswick, the options for those with celiac disease or gluten intolerance in Greater Portland have only grown. Back then, “gluten-free eating was still a bit of an anomaly,” as Wildflours website puts it. Today, though, whether someone on a gluten-restricted diet likes to eat out, enjoy a beer at a local craft brewery or snack on a special bakery treat, there are plenty of places where they can do so safely.

Coffee by Design Closes India Street

Coffee by Design has announced the immediate closure of their India Street cafe.

To our loyal customers, friends, and neighbors: We are sorry to announce the immediate closure of our India Street coffeehouse. This decision was not made lightly. We deeply appreciate your support and hope to welcome you soon at our 1 Diamond Street location.

Their Diamond Street location—also the location of the coffee roastery—remains open.

Maine Food & Dining News: Rockland, Stockholm, Bath, Veazie, Poland

New food and dining developments are taking place all across Maine. Here are some recent updates to keep you in the know:

  • 13 Oak (website, instagram) opened has opened for business. The 36-seat Rockland restaurant has been launched by the team from Fresh & Co. in Camden. It’s located at 13 Oak Street (see above) in the building that had been the longtime home of Cafe Miranda. The menu features dishes like a 14-ounce porterhouse pork chop and a roast eggplant with lentils and red sauce. 13 Oak will initially be open Monday through Friday, 5 – 9 pm. Cafe Miranda owner Kerry Altiero closed the cafe in 2022 after operating the restaurant for 29 years.
  • The Times Record reports that a German bakery and restaurant called The Pelzer (website, facebook, instagram) recently opened in Bath. It’s located at 79-99 Commercial Street and is open 9 am – 5 pm daily (10 am on Sundays). You can see the full menu on their website.
  • The Bangor Daily News reports that an Ecuadorian restaurant is the latest eatery to launch out of the Korean Dad incubation space in Veazie. Galindo’s Authentic Ecuadorian Cuisine (facebook) is open on Saturdays 11 am – 7 pm and are serving a menu that includes seco de pollo, ceviche and carne con menestra.
  • The Lewiston Sun Journal has published a feature article about Sebagel (preorder, instagram), a relatively new bagel producer, that bakes at Poland Provisions and has weekend pop-ups at Lakeside Dairy Bar in Naples.
  • Inside Hook has published an article on the expanding Maine oyster aquaculture industry.
  • Maine Public has aired a report on the sovereign market in Stockholm.

For a statewide guide to eating and drinking see the Maine Food Map—a growing list of coffee shops, bars, restaurants, bakeries, cafes, and other food and dining businesses in all of Maine’s 16 counties.

BenReuben’s Closing…2.0 To Come

Graeme Miller announced this morning that he’ll be closing down BenReuben’s Knishery in September.

When we opened the Knishery in 2021, our goal was to nourish and build a community and to share our family recipes and inspiration with those who were willing to enjoy. We are so proud of what BenReuben’s Knishery has been able to accomplish with your help; what an epic community we’ve built together and what beautiful memories we’ve created and shared with each other and our families.

This journey has also confirmed for us that what our community (and we!) really want and need is a full Jewish delicatessen. So we will come back even stronger once again, when it’s the right time and place.

Miller shared that the business has been a great success. He’s now taking the lessons of running the knishery and redirecting his time and energy to launching a full Jewish delicatessen and market. The BenReuben’s catering business will remain in operation during this gap time.

Anyone interested in updates on the delicatessen or on opportunities to provide perspective on what the community needs are of the new enterprise should stay tuned to the BenReuben’s instagram account, or email hello@benreubensknishery.com.

Miller and his wife Caitlin leased the knishery’s current South Portland location at 145 Ocean Street in March 2021 and launched BenReuben’s in May of that year.

Two Fat Cats in the West End

Two Fat Cats (website, facebook, instagram) is opening a new location in the West End at 175 Spring Street adjacent to Chocolat Passion.

Owner Stacy Begin shared that the new location will be a bakery, cafe and market which will serve soups, salads and sandwiches, and their house-made baked goods as well as sell market staples, prepared meals. The menu for the cafe is still under development but the draft menu includes items like breakfast sandwiches, overnight oats with buckwheat honey and berries, seasonal salads, soups, a Cape Cod Chicken Salad sandwich, and a Banana Fluffer Nutter sandwich.

The Lancaster Street location in West Bayside will remain the primary production bakery for Two Fat Cats as well as a retail shop and a place where customers can pre-order a custom cake or desserts for events.

Construction has already begun on the 2,477 sq ft space. Begin hopes to open the new Two Fat Cats sometime in October. Initial thoughts on hours of operation are that they’ll be open Tuesday through Saturday, 7:30 am – 4 pm, and Sundays 9 am – 2 pm.

Two Fat Cats was founded on India Street. An outpost in South Portland opened in 2018 and the Portland location moved to West Bayside in 2020. Begin announced the closure of their South Portland location last month.

To learn more about other new food and dining businesses under development visit our Under Construction page.