Where Baltimore Spring - Summer 2017

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Baltimore

SPRING/SUMMER 2017 THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO GO®

®

IN A WHIRL Over surprising foodie sights & flavors AN INSIDER GUIDE TO BASEBALL’S CAMDEN YARDS

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EXPLORING CHARM CITY FOR FREE

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90 MINUTES AT THE MARYLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY



Baltimore Spring/Summer CONTENTS

SEE MORE OF THE CITY AT WHERETRAVELER.COM

the plan

the guide

3 Editor’s Itinerary

Preakness Stakes Racing for the second jewel in the Triple Crown. Plus: “Jazz” in the spotlight and festivals all over the city

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Baltimore ®

ON THE COVER

“Brackman’s Botanical Bonanza!,” handIN A WHIRL painted + + paper plates, straws, Ping-Pong balls and paper towel tubes, part of the “YUMMM!” exhibition at American Visionary Art Museum ©JILL RIBICH/AVAM Over surprising foodie sights & flavors

AN INSIDER GUIDE TO BASEBALL’S CAMDEN YARDS

E~BLTWM_170400_Cover.indd 1

EXPLORING CHARM CITY FOR FREE

90 MINUTES AT THE MARYLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY

3/28/17 9:45 AM

©TODD OLSZEWSKI

CONNECT WITH US

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10

Oriole Park at Camden Yards

where now 6 Fun with Food

Going beyond the classic crab cake to discover some of Baltimore’s other intriguing eats BY MIKE UNGER

8 Charm City for Free

Renowned art museums, historic sites, kid-pleasing pirate tales and comfy transportation—all gratis!

DINING

From a waterfront cafe to a Basque pintxos bar, restaurant hot spots in 11 neighborhoods

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ENTERTAINMENT

Live music on the dock and a friendly drinking den for whiskey fans

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NAVIGATE

The happenin’ hoods and fun ways to get around town—think copters and cruises

BY BROOKE SABIN

10 Gimme an O!

From the cheers to the beers, an insider’s guide to catching an Orioles game at Camden Yards READ US ON MAGZTER

MUSEUMS & ATTRACTIONS

New furry residents at The Maryland Zoo and historic ships at the harbor

40 Baltimore Your Way

SPRING/SUMMER 2017 THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO GO®

SHOPPING

An old-school barbershop, a trendy boutique and supplies—cheese and more—for a tasty picnic

4 Hot Dates

Whether you’re a first-time visitor, love the outdoors or have kids in tow, we’ve got suggestions tailored to your travel style.

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The essential things to see and do, plus a 90-minute visit to The Maryland Historical Society

BY MIKE UNGER

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MAPS

Eastside, westside, downtown and harbors of the Patapsco River 1


Where to Eat, Shop, Play and Stay Is Just a Touch Away Put the power of WhereÂŽ in the palm of your hand. Our Where Traveler City Guide app gives you instant access to thousands of hand-picked recommendations for things to do and places to go in destinations all over the world. Download it today for iPhone and Android.


YOUR TRAVELING COMPANION SINCE 1936® BALTIMORE

REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES

Kristen Standish

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATOR Rithie Washington CIRCULATION & MARKETING MANAGER

Irena Laster (FROM LEFT) COURTESY MARYLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY; FIRMIN MASSOT, 1823, COURTESY MDHS, GIFT OF MRS. CHARLES JOSEPH BONAPARTE; COURTESY MDHS

ANNE KIM-DANNIBALE, BALTIMORE

N E W S T O T R AV E L B Y

The Essential Baltimore

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Jack Tomalis EDITOR Anne Kim-Dannibale ASSOCIATE EDITOR Brooke Sabin CONTRIBUTING WRITER Mike Unger

REGIONAL EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Leigh ART DIRECTOR Chris Cardelli

EDITOR’S ITINERARY

Harrington

MORRIS VISITOR PUBLICATIONS PRESIDENT Donna W. Kessler CHIEF STRATEGY OFFICER Reab Berry CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Dennis Kelly VICE PRESIDENT OF OPERATIONS Angela E. VICE PRESIDENT, INTERNAL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT Karen Rodriguez SENIOR DIGITAL MARKETING MANAGER

Allen

Christopher Huber

Wendy Brackman’s 10-foot-tall motorized mandala of veggies on the cover (and on display at American Visionary Art Museum, page 18) says it all—Baltimoreans are obsessed with food. And it’s no wonder. After all, this is the home of the famed blue crab. But there are also coddies, pit beef and the “Baltimore Bomb.” See page 6 for more local flavors you have to try. Need more tips? Turn to page 8 to get in on free fun around town and page 10 for a must-have guide to Camden Yards. Short on time? Here’s how to make the most of it at one of the city’s top spots. For my full Baltimore itinerary, go to wheretraveler.com.

90 MINUTES IN:

The Maryland Historical Society

DIRECTOR OF CIRCULATION Scott Ferguson NATIONAL MARKETING MANAGER Melissa Blanco CHIEF CREATIVE OFFICER Haines Wilkerson SENIOR EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Margaret Martin DESIGN DIRECTOR Jane Frey DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY Isaac Arjonilla CREATIVE COORDINATOR Beverly Mandelblatt VICE PRESIDENT, INTEGRATED SALES

Rebekah Valberg

VICE PRESIDENT, NATIONAL MARKETING

Adeline Tafuri Jurecka

DIRECTOR OF PARTNERSHIPS & NATIONAL DIGITAL SALES Bridget Duffie 706.821.6663 NATIONAL SALES COORDINATOR David Gately PUBLICATION SERVICES DIRECTOR Kris Miller PUBLICATION SERVICES MANAGER Cher Wheeler DIGITAL IMAGING Erik Lewis DIRECTOR OF MANUFACTURING Donald TECHNICAL OPERATIONS MANAGER

Horton

Tony Thorne-Booth

E-mails for all of the above except contributors: firstname.lastname@morris.com

MVP | BALTIMORE

575 S. Charles St., Ste. 404, Baltimore, MD 21201 410.783.7520, 410.783.1763 (fax) MORRIS COMMUNICATIONS CHAIRMAN William S. Morris III PRESIDENT & CEO William S. Morris

Since its 1844 founding, the society (page 24) has amassed more than 350,000 objects and millions of books and documents on Maryland’s history. Start a short visit on the first floor. To the right of the glass entryway (above), find intriguing hints of life in 1815 and 1915 through objects

stowed in time capsules uncovered at the (first) Washington Monument. On the second floor, glimpse the original manuscript of Francis Scott Key’s “Star-Spangled Banner” (above, right), shown for a few minutes on the hour from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. After, turn the corner to learn all about

Get going! Explore the city at wheretraveler.com.

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Where® magazine is produced by Morris Visitor Publications (MVP), a division of Morris Communications Co., LLC. 725 Broad St., Augusta, GA 30901, morrismedianetwork.com. Where magazine and the where® logo are registered trademarks of Morris Visitor Publications. Where makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of the information it publishes, but cannot be held responsible for any consequences arising from errors or omissions. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part strictly prohibited. MVP is a proud sponsor of Les Clefs d’Or USA

the doomed marriage of Napolean Bonaparte’s younger brother, Joseph, to local Elizabeth Patterson Bonaparte (above, center), whose beauty and wit (not to mention low-cut French gowns) attracted many suitors (and scandals). If there’s still time, peruse the exquisite furniture on the third floor, where period paintings are displayed with the well-preserved pieces they highlight.

in the world

Where is an international network of magazines first published in 1936 and distributed in over 4,000 leading hotels in more than 50 places around the world. Look for us when you visit any of the following cities, or plan ahead for your next trip by visiting us online at wheretraveler.com. UNITED STATES Alaska, Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Charleston, Charlotte, Chicago, Dallas, Indianapolis, Jacksonville/St. Augustine/Amelia Island, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Maui, Miami, Minneapolis/St. Paul, New Orleans, New York, Oahu, Orange County (CA), Orlando, Philadelphia, Phoenix/Scottsdale, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, St. Louis, Tampa, Tucson, Washington, D.C. ASIA Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore AUSTRALIA Brisbane, Melbourne, Sydney CANADA Calgary, Canadian Rockies, Edmonton, Halifax, Muskoka/Parry Sound, Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, Victoria, Whistler, Winnipeg EUROPE Berlin, Budapest, Istanbul, London, Madrid, Milan, Moscow, Paris, Rome, St. Petersburg 3


WHERE CALENDAR SPRING/SUMMER 2017 Search the full calendar at wheretraveler.com There’s a lot more going on. Visit us online:

MAY 20: The 142nd Preakness Stakes At storied Pimlico Race Course (page 20), men in tweed and women in frillly hats cheer on their favorites to win the second leg of the Triple Crown. What comes with a first-place finish? The famed Black-Eyed Susan Blanket, handmade with real flowers, and a $1.5 million purse. Country-pop star Sam Hunt headlines the InfieldFest. $40 general admission; $110 Infield. See preakness.com.

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W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

©PHIL ROMANS/FLICKR, CREATIVE COMMONS

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Great Things Not to Miss

(FROM TOP) ©PATRICK GILLESPIE/FLICKR, CREATIVE COMMONS; ©TOM JONES/KINETICBALTIMORE.COM; ©DEAN ALEXANDER

1 ”THOMAS & FRIENDS: EXPLORE THE RAILS!” > THROUGH MAY 7 In this exhibit at Port Discovery Children’s Museum, fans of the tank engine and his locomotive pals get hands-on by fixing wheels, pulling levers, playing train conductor and climbing aboard Thomas himself. $14.95, under 3 free. Hours vary seasonally. 35 Market Place, portdiscovery.org

RINGLING BROS. AND BARNUM & BAILEY CIRCUS > APRIL 20-30 On its farewell tour, the famed traveling troupe presents the space-themed “Out of This World” at Royal Farms Arena. $7-$134. Times vary. 201 W. Baltimore St., royalfarmsarena.com 2

July 4 3 MARYLAND FILM FESTIVAL > MAY 3-7 This celebration of cinema returns with 50 features and 75 shorts from around the world, plus presentations by filmmakers (in past years: John Waters, Barry Levinson, Lena Dunham). $12/screening. Times and venus vary. mdfilmfest.com 4 KINETIC SCULPTURE RACE > MAY 6 Powered solely by people (known as “kinetinauts”), outrageous artworks hit the streets—and the water, sand and mud—during

SPOTLIGHT

Baltimore Center Stage

Founded in 1963, Maryland’s state theater (page 33) has been recognized by the The Wall Street Journal as “one of America’s leading regional companies.” In its historic Mount Vernon home, which just got a $28 million reno, catch the world premiere of “Jazz” from May 19 through June 25. Based on Toni Morrison’s novel, the play spotlights fascinating characters in 1920s Harlem and their varied perspectives on traumatic events. $20-$69.

a 15-mile obstacle course through the city. The reward? Prizes for engineering and art, plus the next-to-last finish and best bribes. Free for spectators. 10 a.m. Departs from the American Visionary Art Museum. kineticbaltimore.com

May 6 5 HONFEST > JUNE 10-11 Taking its name from a local term of endearment, this Hampden neighborhood festival draws revelers in 1960s-style beehive hairdos and cat-eye glasses who vie for the title of “Baltimore’s Best Hon.” Free. Sat. 11 a.m.10 p.m., Sun. noon-6 p.m. Centered along W. 36th St., honfest.net 6 INDEPENDENCE DAY > JULY 4 At the Inner Harbor, bands play in the amphitheater and then spectacular fireworks, choreographed to music, light up the city’s night sky. Free. 7-10 p.m. promotionandarts.org

IDINA MENZEL > JULY 18 The star singer who played Elphaba in “Wicked” and voiced Queen Elsa in “Frozen” stops by The Lyric. From $69. 8 p.m. 140 W. Mt. Royal Avenue., modell-lyric.com 7

TOP STOPS Experience the region’s melting pot of cultures through lively festivals. MAY 13 MID-MARYLAND CELTIC FESTIVAL On the Mount Airy Fire Company Carnival Grounds, pipers, dancers and Highland Games celebrate Irish/Scottish heritage and honor veterans. $20 admission, under 13 free. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. 1003 Twin Arch Road, Mount Airy, mid marylandcelticfestival.com JUNE 8-11 ST. NICHOLAS GREEK FOLK FESTIVAL St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church offers Hellenic specialties like gyro, spanakopita, pastitsio and galaktoboureko, plus music and dancing. Free admiscaption here sion. Times vary by day. 520 Ponca St., stnicholasmd.org JUNE 10-11 FEAST OF ST. ANTHONY This century-old neighborhood tradition channels the Old Country through live performances and tasty cuisine. $1 admission. Sat. noon-8 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.7 p.m. Along Stiles and Exeter sts., littleitalymd.com JULY 15-16 CARIBBEAN CARNIVAL A parade kicks off the festivities, which include live music and samples of Caribbean fare. $10 admission. Sat. noon-10 p.m., Sun. noon-9 p.m. Lake Clifton Park, baltimorecarnival.com 5


where now

Baltimore

The savvy traveler’s guide to exploring Charm City

LOCAL FLAVORS

Fun with Food Filling up on unusual tastes and sights all around the city

Chicken liver spread at Parts & Labor


(FACING PAGE) ©SCOTT SUCHMAN; (THIS PAGE, FROM TOP) COURTESY ABBEY BURGER BISTRO; COURTESY ATTMAN’S DELICATESSEN; ©JEFF KUBINA/FLICKR, CREATIVE COMMONS

Intriguing Eats

SURPRISING SITES

Baltimore’s burgeoning food scene has brought new quirky flavors to join beloved longtime staples. Here are some tasty cutting-edge and classic dishes for diners with a taste for adventure.—By Mike Unger

Food plays a starring role on the plate, of course, but also in unexpected spots.—BS

PIT BEEF Since 1987, East Baltimore mainstay Chaps has been serving the city’s twist on barbecue. Hunks of bottomround flat are grilled at 500 to 600 degrees over charcoal for about two hours before being sliced thin and cooked to order. The must-try topping? Chaps’ tiger sauce, a combination of horseradish and mayonnaise. 5801 Pulaski Highway, 410.483.2379

American Visionary Art Museum In “YUMMM! The History, Fantasy, and Future of Food,” displays like Wayne Coyne’s Gummy Bear selfportrait and a burned-toast wall mosaic explore society’s relationship with sustenance. PLACE: 800 Key Highway TIME: Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. PRICE: $15.95, students $9.95

CODDIES Deep-fried balls of codfish and potatoes are squirted with mustard and nestled between

saltine crackers. They’re a perfect precursor to a heaping corned beef sandwich from Attman’s Delicatessen, which has been around since 1915. 1019 E. Lombard St., 410563.2666 GIZZARDS & GRAVY At chef Spike Gjerde’s butcher shop and restaurant, Parts & Labor, no animal product goes to waste. The gizzards and gravy are served

with fine herbs and Carolina Gold rice. Because everything here is so fresh, the menu changes frequently. If the gizzards are gone, try the trotter cheese, chicken feet, chicken liver spread or blood sausage. 2600 N. Howard St., 443.873.8887 BALTIMORE BOMB Founded by Rodney “The Pie Man” Henry, Dangerously Delicious Pies serves all kinds of its namesake. The Baltimore Bomb is loaded with Berger cookies (a local specialty) that melt down into a sweet, vanilla chess filling. 2839 O’Donnell St., 410.522.7437; 810 W. 36th St., 410.522.7437 KADDO BORWANI The baked and panfried baby pumpkin appetizer has been a favorite at Afghan restaurant The Helmand since it opened in 1989. Served with a garlicy yogurt sauce that includes a bit of sugar, the tender chunks of pumpkin have a hint

of sweetness. This dish is so good, you could eat it for dessert. 806 N. Charles St., 410.752.0311

SPICY DUCK BURGER If you can form it into a patty and plop it between two buns, chances are Federal Hill’s Abbey Burger Bistro serves it. Among the wackiest items is a spiced duck burger with sesame mayo, kimchi, cucumber and spring onion salad. Devour it with a side of tater tots. 1041 Marshall St., 443.453.9698 FRIED HARD CRAB Baltimoreans learn to crack steamed blue crabs shortly after birth, but even many of the most crustaceancrazy diners have never encountered the fried hard-shell variety. At Stoney Creek Inn, the crab is stuffed with a crab cake, then dipped in batter and deep fried. Guy Fieri found this spot for his Food Network show “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives.” 8238 Fort Smallwood Road, 410.439.3123

Port Discovery At this topranked children’s museum, exhibitions are all about interaction. The 2-and-up set heads to “Tiny’s Diner” to learn about prepping meals, serving customers and tallying up orders. PLACE: 35 Market Place TIME: Tues.-Fri. 9:30 a.m.4:30 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. PRICE: $14.95, under 2 free Ma Petite Shoe Yes, you can get cool kicks and trendy heels (Katy Perry Collection), but chocolate? That, too! There’s even a chocolate happy hour. PLACE: 832 W. 36th St. TIME: Hours vary by day; happy hour from 6 p.m. Natty Boh Gear With logos on everything from clothing to stickers and glassware, this shop toasts the beloved National Bohemian beer, first brewed in Baltimore in 1885. PLACE: 1624 Thames St., 3600 O’Donnell St. TIME: Mon.-Fri., Sun. 10 a.m.6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-7 p.m. For more information: wheretraveler.com

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WHERE NOW Baltimore

Charm City for Free

All Around Town From parks and monuments to bus rides and story times, the city offers lots of wallet friendly activities. Take advantage of some of our favorite freebies.—BS

• Greet the Sultan of Swat. Baseball’s Babe Ruth was born in a row house here, and his statue presides over the entrance to Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Corner of W. Camden and S. Eutaw sts., orioles. com

• Visit the first obelisk to

For more information: wheretraveler.com

TREASURE TROVES Lucky for fans of world-class art, many creativeminded Baltimore destinations carry no admission fee. At The Walters Art Museum, find a varied collection that includes paintings, sculpture, Fabergé eggs, knights’ armor and an intact Egyptian mummy in its original wrappings. Three galleries dubbed the Chamber of Wonders display the riches that might have been owned by a 17th-century nobleman in the Spanish Netherlands. To view the internationally renowned Cone Collection of modern art—and the world’s largest holding of works by Henri Matisse— head to the Baltimore Museum of Art (above). Its 95,000 objects also encompass ancient mosaics, African masks and contemporary sculptures in two terraced gardens. Outsider artists are the focus at the one-of-a-kind American Visionary Art Museum. While there’s an admission fee for the indoor galleries, exploration of the quirky outdoor art comes gratis. You can’t miss the 55-foot-tall whirligig by farmermechanic Vollis Simpson. Next-gen creatives hone their skills at the Maryland Institute College of Art, which also has public galleries. See pages 18-19. 8

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

honor the first president. With a cornerstone laid 30-plus years before that of its D.C. counterpart, the Washington Monument is the centerpiece of elegant Mount Vernon Place. 699 N. Charles St., mvpconservancy.org

shelters his remains. 515 W. Fayette St., westminsterhall.org

• See sublime architecture. Designed by Benjamin Henry Latrobe, the Baltimore Basilica is America’s first Roman Catholic cathedral. 409 Cathedral St., baltimorebasilica.org

• Take a ride. Need a break from hoofin’ it? The Charm City Circulator, a fleet of eco-friendly buses, delivers passengers to

• Say “Aye!” to a sing-along chantey. During story times on Urban Pirates’ ship the “Fearless,” young buccaneers enjoy tall tales, plus songs and games (June 21-Aug. 25: Wed.-Fri. at 9 a.m.). 911 S. Ann St., urbanpirates.com

• Pay tribute to the master of the macabre. One-time local Edgar Allan Poe died here—under fittingly mysterious circumstances. At Westminster Burying Ground, fans can see his original grave and the monument that now

Charm City Circulator

most of the major sights, including the National Aquarium and Fort McHenry. charmcitycirculator.com

• Make a beeline for books. Dating from 1882, the Enoch Pratt Free Library offers not only reading material but also classes, music and lectures. 400 Cathedral St., prattlibrary.org

• Savor those harbor views.

Westminster Burying Ground

In Federal Hill Park, a look-out point during the War of 1812, claim a perch on one of the benches and enjoy the panoramic vista. 300 Warren Ave., bcrp. baltimorecity.gov/parks

(THIS PAGE, FROM TOP) COURTESY BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART; ©DAVID WILSON/FLICKR, CREATIVE COMMONS; ©BROOKE SABIN; (FACING PAGE) ©M01229/FLICKR, CREATIVE COMMONS

OUT+ABOUT


PHOTO CREDIT

From the top of Federal Hill Park, take in panoramic vistas of Baltimore’s famed Inner Harbor.

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HOT TIPS

Gimme an O!

PHOTO CREDIT

In the hometown of Babe Ruth, baseball inspires die-hard devotion. Credit three world championships, legendary players and a trend-setting stadium. BY MIKE UNGER

10 W H E R E C I T Y N A M E I M O N T H Y E A R


WHERE NOW Baltimore

Game Plan

CHEERS!

When it opened in 1992, Oriole Park at Camden Yards set a new standard for urban, baseball-only stadiums, and it remains one of the majors’ most beloved fields. Here are nine innings of tips to make your visit a home run.

(FACING PAGE) ©TODD OLSZEWSKI; (THIS PAGE, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP) ©TODD OLSZEWSKI (2); ©MOLLIE RYAN

FIRST Be sure to get to your seats in time for the national anthem. Fans yell “O!” as the performer sings, “O say does that star-spangled banner yet wave.” The shout-out is a tribute to both the team and the lyrics that were penned in Baltimore’s harbor by Francis Scott Key. SECOND A relic from the site’s rail-yard days, the circa 1900 B&O Warehouse is the stadium’s signature backdrop. Stroll inside to sample a baseballthemed beer (Wild Pitch Wheat, Rain Delay Dempsey’s taps

IPA) at Dempsey’s, named for an Orioles catcher, or shop for gear at the team store. THIRD Walk along Eutaw Street, between the warehouse and the stadium, and look down at the plaques showing where homers landed. In a game, no one’s ever hit the warehouse—432 feet from home plate down the right field line.

FOURTH Grab a bite at Boog’s BBQ, operated by legendary first baseman Boog Powell. Pit beef, a Baltimore specialty, is the focus, and as the lines prove, Boog does it right. You might even spot the big man himself behind the counter or working the crowd. FIFTH Stand in the Flag Court, and watch the game from above the right field scoreboard. Flags for each American League team are flown in order of the current divisional standings. SIXTH If the children are getting antsy, take them to the Kids’ Corner, featuring a moon bounce, speed pitch and batting cage. After Sunday games, kids under 14 can run the bases. SEVENTH Return to your seats for a sing-along version of “Thank God I’m a Country Boy.” The team started playing the Eutaw Street crowds

John Denver tune in the 1970s, and it’s been a seventh-inning staple ever since. O’s in action

EIGHTH Ascend to the Roof Deck, overlooking center field. You need a ticket to sit in one of the seats, but anyone is welcome to stand and watch the game on the field or on one of the full-service bar’s TVs. NINTH When the game’s tight, often there’s action in the bullpens, where the relief pitchers warm up. Along the railing above them, fans line up for great views of 90-mileper-hour fastballs that pop into the catcher’s glove. Nearby, Orioles Legends Park displays statues of six greats, including Cal Ripken Jr. and Frank Robinson. EXTRA INNINGS At Pickles Pub, in the shadow of the stadium, savor a beer (or two) and celebrate a win, or drown your sorrows and proclaim, “We’ll get ‘em tomorrow!”

Locals love not only their teams but also the sports bars that toast them.—BS Pickles Pub Next to Camden Yards, this longtime fave draws rowdy crowds on game days. TRY: The Oriole Dog, a footlong hot dog with, yes, PB&J and cream cheese (served outside on game days); the namesake pickles, fried in beer batter GO: 520 Washington Blvd. Frank & Nic’s More upscale, this friendly spot about a block from Camden Yards also offers outdoor seating. TRY: Mussels, steamed with Old Bay seasoning and Natty Boh beer GO: 511 W. Pratt St. Looney’s Pub In Canton, the Irish-accented corner bar has pool, arcade games, trivia nights and T-shirts that say “Drink like a champion today.” TRY: Hot (temperature and spice) crab dip; wings a dozen ways GO: 2900 O’Donnell St. Mother’s Federal Hill Grille For Ravens home games, fans head to its Purple Patio, a parking lot turned “football field” outfitted with bars and a grill. TRY: The Heart Attack burger, cheese-stuffed and deep-fried (featured on “The Today Show”) GO: 1113 S. Charles St. Turp’s The only sports bar in elegant Mount Vernon, it’s got the requisite TVs and makes its home in a historic brownstone. TRY: O’s, onion rings with spicy mayo; Johnny U(nitas), grilled chicken breast on sour dough GO: 1317 N. Charles St. For more information: wheretraveler.com

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the guide Canton Corner Barbershop At this groomer, find classic cuts, shaves and beard care in a nostalgic setting. www.cantoncorner barbershop.com. 2809 Hudson St., 410.624.5899. Map H8

Antiques CHARLOTTE ELLIOTT— Furniture,

estate and handmade jewelry, sterling silver flatware, vintage clothing. Rare books at Book Store Next Door. Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 6 p.m. www.charlotteelliottinc. com. 837 W. 36th St., Hampden, 410.243.0990 North of Map A1 CROSSKEYS ANTIQUES— Selection of

furniture, paintings, mirrors from 17th through 20th centuries. More than 10,000 pieces in collection like waxes carrying Buckingham Palace’s seal of approval. Sat. 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. www.crosskeysantiques. com. 801 N. Howard St., Mount Vernon, 410.728.0101 Map C3

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Brightside Boutique Christie Griffiths’ tattoo cultureinspired looks expand into Hampden. New here? Her own clothing line and outfits for men. www. shopbrightside.com. 915 W. 36th St., 410.814.0595. North of Map B1

PARADISO— Well-appointed shop on

“The Ave.” carries antique and modern pieces. A designer jewelry case complements furniture. Local delivery and shipping. Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. or by appointment. www.paradisohampden.com. 1015 W. 36th St., Hampden, 410.243.1317 North of Map A1

Apparel CHRISTOPHER SCHAFER CLOTHIER—

Dapper father-and-son team crafting made-to-measure clothing rooted in English traditions with modern flair in cool digs. By appointment only. www.christopherschafer.com. 1400 Aliceanna St., Harbor East, 410.404.5131 Map E7

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

Cheese Galore & More! At Cross Street Market, build a tasty picnic with, yes, cheese, but also salumi and fresh bread. www. cheesegaloreandmore.com. 1065 S. Charles St., 410.244.5515. Map C8

DOUBLEDUTCH— Women’s styles by

well-known designers (Orla Kiely) and locals (Pistol Stitched). Bags, sunglasses, jewelry, handmade apparel. Mon.Thurs. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 7 p.m., Sun. noon-6 p.m. www.doubledutch boutique.com. 1021 W. 36th St., Hampden, 410.554.0055 North of Map A1 HANDBAGS IN THE CITY— Designer bags

and ready-to-wear women’s clothing. Labels like DVF, Tory Burch and Kate Spade. Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. www.handbagsinthecity. com. 840 Aliceanna St., Harbor East, 410.528.1443 Map E7 HATS IN THE BELFRY— Casual, designer,

dress and fashion hats. Fedoras, porkpies, driver, straw, newsboys, cowboy, cloches, fascinators. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 9 p.m., Sun. till 7 p.m. www.hatsinthebelfry.com.

(FROM LEFT) ©VLADISLOVEM/SHUTTERSTOCK; ©JILL HUGHES; COURTESY LEXINGTON MARKET AND BALTIMORE PUBLIC MARKETS

Shopping Spring/Summer


Welcome to Lexington Market, the best way to taste what Baltimore has to offer.

Whether you come

from near or far, you’ll find the city’s favorite flavors served up by Baltimore natives. We’ve got dozens of vendors, offering all kinds of fresh-made food for you

TASTE BALTIMORE to sample and savor.

LexingtonMarket.com Mon – Sat 6:30AM - 6:00PM 400 W. Lexington Street Baltimore, MD

BALTIMORE at Lexington Market


THE GUIDE 813A S. Broadway, Fells Point, 667.239.3655 Map F7 HUNTING GROUND— Lesser-known

brands and vintage in an old church. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 8 p.m., Sun. noon-6 p.m. www.shop huntingground.com. 3649 Falls Road, Hampden, 410.243.0789 North of Map A1 MANO SWARTZ FURS— Family-owned

and run furrier since 1889 selling new and used items. Appraisals, repairs (“Mano Makeovers” turning coats into vests, blankets, etc.), storage, donations to local charities. Exclusive U.S. carrier of Zuki fur designs. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. www.manoswartz.com. 10801 Falls Road, Lutherville, Md., 410.825.9000 SAMUEL PARKER CLOTHIER— Since

1921, traditional menswear and furnishings. Hand-tailored Samuelsohn suits, Ralph Lauren footwear and Robert Talbott shirts and neckwear. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sat. till 5 p.m. www.sam uelparker.com. 86 Village Square, Cross Keys, 410.435.5000 North of Map B1 SIXTEEN TONS— Vintage-inspired men’s

shirts and denim, accessories, hats. Sun.-Mon. noon-5 p.m., Tues.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 7 p.m. www.shop16tons.com. 1021 W. 36th St., Hampden, 410.554.0101 North of Map A1 STEPHEN WISE DESIGNS— Local design-

er’s suits and accessories, plus tailoring services and occasional sewing classes. Mon.-Sat. 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. www.face book.com/stephen.wise.94. 216 N. Paca St., Downtown, 667.309.6021 Map C5 UNDER ARMOUR BRAND HOUSE— Flag-

ship of Baltimore-based performance brand. Workout apparel, plus footwear and accessories. Innovation Center with newest products, some not yet released. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-7 p.m. www.underarmour. com. 700 S. President St., Harbor East, 410.528.5304 Map E7

Art/Craft Galleries ART GALLERY OF FELLS POINT— Co-op

for sculpture, photography, glass work, oils by local artists. Summer: Tues.-Fri. noon-6 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Winter: Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.5 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. www. fellspointgallery.org. 1716 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.327.1272 Map F7 14

C. GRIMALDIS GALLERY— Contempo-

rary gallery of post-World War II art. Representing artists including Anthony Caro, Grace Hartigan (estate), Raoul Middleman, Richard Serra, Chul Hyun Ahn, John Waters. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.5:30 p.m. www.cgrimaldisgallery.com. 523 N. Charles St., Mount Vernon, 410.539.1080 Map C4 CORRADETTI GLASSBLOWING— In his-

toric Clipper Mill, studio and gallery for vases, bowls, ornaments and jewelry. Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.3 p.m. and 5-9 p.m. www.corradetti. com. 2010 Clipper Park Road, Ste. 119, Woodberry, 410.243.2010 North of Map A1 GALERIE MYRTIS— Contemporary

gallery showing social and historic landscapes. Ongoing “Tea with Myrtis” art salons. Thurs.-Sat. 2-6 p.m. www.galeriemyrtis.net. 2224 N. Charles St., Station North, 410.235.3711 North of Map C1 GOYA CONTEMPORARY— Fine prints

including Baldessari, Chihuly, Condo, Hirst, Kusama, Lewitt, Stella. Up-andcomers via Goya-Girl Press. Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sat. noon-5 p.m. www. goyacontemporary.com. Mill Center, Studio 214, 3000 Chestnut Ave., Hampden, 410.366.2001 North of Map A1 POTTERS GUILD— Handcrafted pottery

by more than 40 local artists. Minutes from the Light Rail (Woodberry stop). Thurs.-Fri. 11 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat.-Sun. noon-5 p.m. www.pottersguild.org. 3600 Clipper Mill Road, Meadow Mill, 410.235.4884 North of Map A1 ROBERT MCCLINTOCK STUDIO GALLERY— Vibrant works on the

quirkiness and beauty of Baltimore. McClintock’s medium: photography merged with digital painting. Tues.Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. www.robertmcclintock.com. 1809 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.814.2800 Map F7

Books ATOMIC BOOKS— ”Literary finds for

mutated minds” like obscure comics, magazines, DVDs. A favorite of native son John Waters (who receives his fan mail here). Next door, Celebrated Summer record store. Sun.-Tues. 11 a.m.7 p.m., Wed.-Thurs. and Sat. till 9 p.m., Fri. till 10 p.m. www.atomicbooks.

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017


SHOPPING com. 3620 Falls Road, Hampden, 410.662.4444 North of Map A1 THE BOOK ESCAPE— New and used

books in welcoming environment with comfy chairs, neatly arranged shelves. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. noon6 p.m. www.thebookescape.com. 805 Light St., Federal Hill, 410.504.1902

Baltimore’s Best since 1985

Map C8 THE CHILDREN’S BOOKSTORE—

Fine children’s literature. Stuffed toys, puppets, posters, cards, audio tapes and CDs. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.5:30 p.m. www.thecbstore.com. 737 Deepdene Road, Roland Park, 410.532.2000 North of Map B1 THE KELMSCOTT BOOKSHOP— Rare and

fine literature, manuscripts, prints and antique “book art.” Binding and restoration services. Resident “security” cats roaming the aisles. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sat. by appointment. www.kelmscottbookshop.com. 34 W. 25th St., Charles Village, 410.235.6810 Map C1

Visit Us 830 Aliceanna Street

(In the Heart of Harbor East)

Shop Online amaryllisjewelry.com

For Kids

410-576-7622

Explore

the finest silver jewelry from world-renowned designers Harbor East Baltimore 612 S. Exeter Street Baltimore, MD 21202 410-469-9118 Downtown Annapolis 34 Market Space Annapolis, MD 21401 410-268-7666

AMUSE— Eco-friendly specialty toy

store with educational games, stuffed animals and other well-made items. A variety of products open and on display for in-store play time. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-7 p.m., Sun. till 6 p.m. www. amusetoys.com. 1623 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.342.5000 Map E7; 2580 Quarry Lake Drive, Pikesville, Md., 410.415.0000 CANTON GAMES— Board games,

Dungeons & Dragons books, action figures, collectibles and more. Try before you buy. Mon.-Fri. noon-7 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. www.canton games.com. 2101 Essex St., Canton, 410.276.2640 Map F7 THE CORDUROY BUTTON— Infant and

children’s apparel (featuring local designers) plus rain boots and toys. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. noon5 p.m. www.thecordbutton.com. 858 Kenilworth Drive, Towson, Md., 410.823.5437 WEE CHIC— Simple trendy clothing and

BlancaFlorSilverJewelry.com

accessories for children from newborns to size 8. Modern shop with lots of colors and wide assortment of wearable clothing from quirky straw hats to trendy sundresses. Mon.-Wed. and Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Thurs. till 8 p.m., Sat. till 5 p.m. www.weechic.com. w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m

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THE GUIDE 10751 Falls Road, Lutherville, Md., 410.878.7400

Home Decor CURIOSITY— Interior designer-owned

boutique for lighting, accessories, frames, prints. Tues.-Fri. noon-7 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. noon.-4 p.m. www.curiosityforthehome.com. 1000 Lancaster St., Harbor East, 410.727.6262 Map E6 PHINA’S LUXURY LINEN COLLECTIVE—

Wide selection of fine linens, towels, pillows, candles and other home goods. Also skincare products by Ahava, Spa Blends and Erbaviva. Everyone who walks in the door receives a wrapped gift. Tues.-Wed. and Fri.-Sat. noon-6 p.m., Thurs. till 8 p.m., Sun. noon-3 p.m. www.phinas.com. 919 S. Charles St., Federal Hill, 410.685.0911 Map C8 SU CASA— Stylish furniture, decorative

arts, items for the kitchen, including wine gear, gifts for kids. Custom designs/services. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.9 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 9:30 pm., Sun. till 7 p.m. www.esucasa.com. 901 S. Bond St. (at Thames St.), Fells Point, 410.522.7010 Map E8 TROHV— Two-level shop with artful gifts:

greeting cards, bar and kitchen gear, jewelry, baby items. Also furniture and goods by local artisans. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Fri. till 8 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. www. trohvshop.com. 921 W. 36th St., Hampden, 410.366.3456 North of Map A1

Jewelry & Gifts 2910 ON THE SQUARE— Located on

O’Donnell Square, handmade gifts, artisan jewelry, accessories and Judaica plus items for pets and for the home. Tues.-Sat. noon-8 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.4 p.m. www.2910onthesquare.com. 2910 O’Donnell St., Canton, 410.675.8505 Map G8 AMARYLLIS— Since 1985, limited-edition

pieces drawn from ateliers of more than 100 local and national designers. Alexis Bittar, Chan Luu, David Urso, Nashelle. Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. www.amaryllis jewelry.com. 830 Aliceanna St., Harbor East, 410.576.7622 Map E7

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BIJOUX— Antique, estate and contem-

porary pieces. Jewelry from Georgian, Victorian and Edwardian to Art Nouveau and Art Deco. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.5 p.m., Sun. noon-4 p.m. www.bijoux jewels.com. Mt. Washington Mill Dye House, 1340 Smith Ave., Mt. Washington, 410.823.5545 BLANCA FLOR— Intricately designed

jewelry and handmade metalworks (trays, bowls) from Mexico, American Southwest, Indonesia and other farflung locales. Hours vary by location. www.blancaflorsilverjewelry.com. 612 S. Exeter St., Harbor East, 410.469.9118 Map E7; 34 Market Space, Annapolis, Md., 410.268.7666 EMPORIUM COLLAGIA— Local artist Lu-

ana Kaufmann offering soaps, jewelry, glassware, stationery, botanicals, gifts plus own found-image art. Sun.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-7 p.m., Fri.-Sat. noon-10 p.m. www.luanakaufmann.com. 1732 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.534.5340 Map F7 MISHA & CO.— Exquisite custom fine

jewelry from statement pieces to engagement rings and wedding bands. Engraving. Pre-owned watch purchases. Mon. and Sat. 10 a.m.5 p.m., Tues.-Wed. and Fri. till 6 p.m., Thurs. till 8 p.m. www.mishaandco.com. Green Spring Station, 10751 Falls Road, Lutherville, Md., 443.275.1321 ZELDA ZEN— Artisan jewelry, tapestry

scarves, warm and stylish hats plus home goods like Votivo candles. Mon.Sun. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. 1634 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.625.2424 Map F7

Personal Care/Fitness CHARLES STREET BARRE— Fitness

program combining classic barre, yoga, pilates and high-energy dance in studios with concert-quality sound. Single classes to unlimited monthly passes, plus private sessions. Daily from 6:15 a.m.-7 p.m., check website for schedule. www.charlesstbarre.com. 339 N. Charles St., 443.869.0498 Map C4 SHY WATTERS HAIR STUDIO— Upscale

salon for owner/stylist Shy Watters’ expert treatments: extensions, weaves, blow-outs, color, etc. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 8 a.m.-4 p.m. www.shywatters.com. 1745 Fleet St., 410.779.7047 Map F7

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

THE SPA AT THE IVY— Luxe spa inside

The Ivy Hotel for facials, massages and body treatments using Natura Bissé products. Also mani/pedis, makeup/ hair services. By appointment only. www.theivybaltimore.com/the-ivyspa. 205 E. Biddle St., Mount Vernon, 410.514.6180 Map D2 SPROUT— Eco-conscious salon built from

recycled materials and specializing in non-toxic treatments with organic products. Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m.-7 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. www.sproutsalon. com. 925 W. 36th St., Hampden, 410.235.2269 North of Map A1

Retail Centers ARUNDEL MILLS— Outlet and retail mall

with 200-plus retailers, restaurants and entertainment, Cinemark Egyptian 24 Theaters and Maryland Live! Casino. A 20-minute drive from Baltimore. Mon.Sat. 10 a.m.-9:30 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.7 p.m. www.arundelmillsmall.com. 7000 Arundel Mills Circle, Hanover, Md., 410.540.5110 BELVEDERE SQUARE MARKET— Vendors

like Atwater’s Bakery, Neopol Savory Smokery and Pure Chocolate by Jinji. Hours vary by vendor. Check website for details. www.belvederesquare.com. 529 E. Belvedere Ave., North Baltimore 410.464.9773 North of Map F1 CROSS STREET MARKET— Since 1846,

fresh seafood, wings, ice cream, pastries, flowers, cheese, tobacco and fruit. Mon.-Sat. 7 a.m.-6 p.m. Light & Cross sts., Federal Hill, 410.685.6169 Map C8 THE GALLERY— Vertical mall with Banana

Republic, Johnston & Murphy, Michael Kors and Pandora, plus specialty stalls and independent shops. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun. noon-6 p.m. www. thegalleryatharborplace.com. 200 E. Pratt St., Inner Harbor, 410.332.4192 Map D6 GREEN SPRING STATION— Collection of

locally owned boutiques, salons and restaurants (Becket Hitch home decor, Bare Skinlabs, Stone Mill Bakery). Acac fitness club. Hours vary by vendor. Check website. www.greenspring station.com. 10803 Falls Road, Lutherville, Md., 410.825.0400 HAGERSTOWN PREMIUM OUTLETS—

Stores like Banana Republic, Kate Spade, Nike, J. Crew, Tommy Hilfiger and Coach offering deep discounts.


SHOPPING An hour-long drive. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. till 7 p.m. www. premiumoutlets.com. 495 Premium Outlets Blvd., Hagerstown, Md., 301.790.0300 LEXINGTON MARKET— Opened in 1782,

now largest of the city’s six historic market buildings. Loud, bustling home of Faidley Seafood with famous crab cake. Fresh produce, baked goods (Berger cookies), local meats from 130 merchants. Mon.-Sat. 6:30 a.m.-6 p.m. www.lexingtonmarket.com. Lexington and Eutaw sts., 410.685.6169 Map C5 MT. VERNON MARKETPLACE— Hip hall

with an industrial vibe, featuring food vendors (Pinch for dumplings, Taps Fill Station, The Local Oyster) and some retail (produce, coffee, tea, housewares). Near Walters Art Museum. Mon.-Thurs. 8 a.m.-11 p.m., Fri. till noon, Sat. 10 a.m.midnight, Sun. 10 a.m.-11 p.m. www.mt vernonmarketplace.com. 520 Park Ave., Mount Vernon, 443.804.3933 Map C4 THE QG— Retro-inspired one-stop

department store with men’s and women’s apparel, grooming parlor with billiards room, cigar lounge, spa and shoe shine. Upstairs bar. Mon. 11:30 a.m.-8 p.m., Tues.- Fri. 10 a.m.8 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.- 5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.5 p.m. www.theqg.com. 31 S. Calvert St., Inner Harbor, 410.685.7428 Map C6 QUEENSTOWN PREMIUM OUTLETS—

Savings at 65 stores: Adidas, Banana Republic, Brooks Brothers, Gucci, Nike, Polo Ralph Lauren. An hour drive from city. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.9 p.m., Sun. till 8 p.m. www.premium outlets.com. 441 Outlet Center Drive, Queenstown, Md., 410.827.8699

Shoes FOR RENT SHOES— Footwear from inde-

pendent and major international designers. Plus apparel, accessories and an in-store gallery highlighting local artists. Tues.-Sun. noon-6 p.m., Mon. by appointment. www.forrentshoes. com. 515 Cathedral St., Mount Vernon, 443.873.9928 Map C2 MA PETITE SHOE—Jeffrey Campbell,

Dolce Vita, Seychelles, vegan lines. Cafe next door with artisan chocolates. Store: Mon.-Thurs., Sat. 11 a.m.7 p.m., Fri. till 8 p.m., Sun. noon5 p.m. Cafe: Tues.-Thurs. 10 a.m.7 p.m., Fri. till 8 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.7 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., (Chocolate

Happy Hour from 6 p.m.) www.ma petiteshoe.com. 832 W. 36th St., Hampden, 410.235.3442 North of Map A1 POPPY AND STELLA— Boutique stocking

labels like Pour La Victoire, Oh Deer!, Jimmy Choo and Jeffrey Campbell. Handbags, accessories. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 8 p.m., Sun. noon-6 p.m. www.poppyandstella. blogspot.com. 728 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 410.522.1970 Map F7 SASSANOVA— Bright pink walls and

cheetah carpet creating a colorful backdrop for designer shoes and accessories. Kate Spade, The Printery. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. noon.5 p.m. www.sassanova.com. 805 Aliceanna St., Harbor East, 410.244.1114 Map E7

Specialty Stores/Services CROSS STREET TOBACCO— Family-

owned, oldest-operating cigar shop in the city with knowledgeable staff. Comfy lounge with TVs for smoking Cohibas, Montecristos, et. al. Extensive selection in walk-in humidor maintained at 70 percent humidity, plus accessories. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 10 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. www.cstcigars.com. 1103 Light St., Federal Hill, 410.752.9220 Map C8 A GOOD YARN— Wide array of yarn and

knitting supplies. Local, hand-dyed and hand-spun varieties at this teaching shop. Tues.-Fri. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. by appointment only. Sat. open coffee session 10 a.m.-noon. www.agoodyarn. com. 1738 Aliceanna St., Fells Point, 410.327.3884 Map F7 NATTY BOH GEAR— National Bohemian

beer logo on clothing, home decor, glassware and stickers. Hard-to-find merch featuring Baltimore Bohemians, city’s minor league soccer squad. Mon.-Fri., Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sat. till 7 p.m. www.nattybohgear. com. 1624 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.276.1038 Map E7; 3600 O’Donnell St., Canton, 410.285.7666 Map H8 POLINA’S PRIVÉ LINGERIE— Quality

women’s intimate apparel and accessories. Names like L’Agent by Agent Provocateur, Blush, Eberjay, La Perla. Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Sun. till 6 p.m. www.polinasprive.com. 724 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 410.276.0205 Map F7

THE SOUND GARDEN— Baltimore institu-

tion stocks rare imports to Top 40. Knowledgeable staff. Listen before you buy. In-store performances. Sun.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight. www.cdjoint.com. 1616 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.563.9011 Map E7 THAT’S THE POINT NEEDLECRAFTS—

Cozy shop for knitting, crocheting, needlepoint and cross-stitching supplies. Classes, community “sit and stitch” sessions. Tues. 4-9 p.m., Wed.-Sat. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. (third Thurs. till 8 p.m. with in-store discounts). www.thatsthepointneedlecrafts. com. 1005 S. Charles St., Federal Hill, 410.347.7524 Map C8

Wine/Gourmet Foods THE CHARMERY— Husband-and-wife

David and Laura Alima’s handcrafted unique ice creams made with local ingredients (Old Bay). Sundaes, floats, handspun milkshakes. Sun.-Thurs. noon-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m. www.thecharmery. com. 801 W. 36th St., Hampden, 410.814.0493 North of Map B1 CHARM CITY CHOCOLATE— Husband-

and-wife team sharing family recipes for cherry cordials, truffles and bon bons, plus seasonal specials (chocolate-covered matzo). Mon.-Sat. noon8 p.m., Sun. till 6 p.m. www.charmcity chocolate.com. 809 W. 36th St., Hampden, 443.449.5164 North of Map A1 URBAN CELLARS BEER, WINE & SPIRITS— “Local libations” at this

Charles Plaza shop. Domestic and imported fine wines, craft beers, premium liquors plus the knowledgeable counsel of owner Jim Amato. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. www.urbancellarsmd. com. 222 N. Charles St., Downtown, 410.528.8088 Map C5 VACCARO’S— Since 1956, Italian sweets

(29 varieties of cookies), rum cake, cheesecake, tiramisu, sfogliatelle, pasticiotti, eclairs, gelati, Napoleons, cannoli. Sun.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight. (O’Donnell St. location opens one hour earlier). www. vaccarospastry.com. 222 Albemarle St., Little Italy, 410.685.4905. Map D6; O’Donnell Square, 2919 O’Donnell St., 410.276.4744 Map G8

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THE GUIDE

Museums+Attractions

The Maryland Zoo in Baltimore

Historic Ships

More than 1,500 animals populate this Druid Hill Park menagerie founded in 1876. Among the lions, cheetahs and bears living in the third-oldest zoo in the U.S. ? Eastern hellbender salamanders, lionhead rabbits and African penguins. Now, bobcats take up residence. Six-year-old Josie (above) and kit Kilgore scamper through their new home in the Maryland Wilderness, next door to the North American river otter. $18. www.mary landzoo.org. Druid Hill Park, 443.552.5296. North of Map B1

Docked at the Inner Harbor, find boats with storied pasts, like USS Constellation (above), the last intact Civil War-era vessel built by the Navy. $5-$18. www.historic ships.org. Pier 1, 301 E. Pratt St., 410.539.1797. Map D6

AMERICAN VISIONARY ART MUSEUM—

Unique in the U.S. for presenting work by self-taught, outsider artists. Jim Rouse Visionary Center with art cars, the Cabaret Mechanical Theatre, kinetic sculptures. Paintings from the Von Bruenchenhein Collection. “Matt Sesow: Shock and Awe,” 150 paintings by the D.C.-based Mensa scholar, whose arm was severed during a freak accident during his youth, through May 28. “YUMMM! The History, Fantasy and Future of Food,” 35 artists joining forces with individuals from a wide spectrum of fields, including science, agriculture, humor and literature, through Sept. 3. Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.6 p.m. $15.95, seniors $13.95, students $9.95, 6 and under free. Sideshow gift shop and Encantada restaurant. www.avam.org. 800 Key Highway, 410.244.1900 Map D8

ASIAN ARTS AND CULTURE CENTER— An

ongoing collection, objects from Korea, China, Japan and Southeast Asia. Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-4 p.m., during exhibitions. Free. www.towson.edu/asianarts. Fine Arts Building, Towson University, 8000 York Road, 410.704.2807 BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART— Hous-

ing 95,000 objects, ancient mosaics to contemporary art. Cone Collection features Renoir, Matisse, Gauguin and Picasso. Dorothy McIlvain Scott American Wing showcasing 200 years of American artistic efforts, Tiffany hall and salon of Maryland-related works. African and Asian art galleries featuring 85 works in the former and more than 2,000 in the latter. “Off the Shelf: Modern & Contemporary Artists’ Books,” more than 130 rarely seen bound pages by Picasso, Miró, Hockney, through June 25. “Timeless Weft: Ancient Tapestries and the Art of Louise B. Wheatley,” textile creations by the celebrated Maryland artist,

through July 30. Sculpture garden

with 34 masterworks and Gertrude’s restaurant for Chesapeake flavors. Wed.-Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free. www. artbma.org. 10 Art Museum Drive, 443.573.1700 North of Map D1 BROMO SELTZER ARTS TOWER— The

city’s tallest building at the time of its 1911 construction, built by Captain Isaac Emerson, inventor of the Bromo Seltzer headache remedy. Now a Westside icon holding studio space for more than 30 visual and performing artists, plus a museum on the 15th floor with antique bottles and other artifacts from the company’s history. Open house every Sat. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. with clock room tours ($5 donation) on the hour from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. www. bromoseltzertower.com. 21 S. Eutaw St., 443.874.3596 Map C6 MARYLAND INSTITUTE COLLEGE OF ART (MICA)— Nation’s oldest fully

accredited, four-year, degree-granting

BIG PICTURE From its five-story-high IMAX screen, the Maryland Science Center (page 20) explores the origins of the national anthem.

18

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

(FROM LEFT) COURTESY THE MARYLAND ZOO IN BALTIMORE; COURTESY HISTORIC SHIPS

Art Museums


M U S E U M S + AT T R A C T I O N S

BALTIMORE ON THE

WATER Experience the city from a fun, fresh perspective.

OF BALTIMORE

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art college with gallery for works by national and international artists, faculty and students. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. Free. www.mica.edu. Fox Building, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave., 410.669.9200 Map C1 THE WALTERS ART MUSEUM— Art, jew-

elry, medieval armor and Egyptian collection (virtual autopsy of a mummy). “Chamber of Wonders,” the imaginary gallery of a fictional 17th-century Flemish noble. Small sculptures from Mesoamerica. Audio tours. “Training the Eye: 19th-Century Drawing,” 17 watercolors, graphite and ink illustrations, some shown for the first time, May 14Aug. 13. “Janet & Walter Sondheim Artscape Prize 2017 Finalists,” works by artists who made the final cut for the city’s most prestigious art award, June 17-Aug. 13. Wed.-Sun. 10 a.m.5 p.m., Thurs. till 9 p.m. Free walk-in tours. Café. www.thewalters.org. 600 N. Charles St., 410.547.9000 Map C3

Attractions EDGAR ALLAN POE’S GRAVE— At West-

minster burial grounds, final resting place of Baltimore’s most famous poet. On Poe’s birthday, Jan. 19, an unknown admirer brought cognac and roses to his grave for nearly 70 years until 2009. A new anonymous “Poe Toaster,” chosen by Baltimoreans, revives the tradition. 8 a.m.-dusk. Free. 519 W. Fayette St., 410.706.2072 Map B5 EUBIE BLAKE NATIONAL JAZZ INSTITUTE AND CULTURAL CENTER—

Exhibits honor Baltimore jazz artists Blake, Billie Holliday and Cab Calloway. See website for exhibition schedule, plus concerts, classes and poetry readings. Be Free Fridays, poetry readings last Friday of each month 7 p.m. Wed.Fri. 1-6 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. (Sun. by appt.). $5. www.eubieblake.org. 847 N. Howard St., 410.225.3130 Map C2 FORT MCHENRY— A strategic instal-

Baltimore’s only city-based and waterfront Helicopter Tour Company offering a variety of tour packages, departing daily! +Q^(MFWR(NY^ HTR a a NSKT%Ć^HMFWRHNY^ HTR

lation protecting the city during the Revolution, War of 1812 and Civil War. War of 1812 battle here inspired Francis Scott Key to pen the words of “The Star-Spangled Banner.” Visitors center has films and exhibits. Daily flag raising at 10 a.m., lowering at 4 p.m. Visitors Center and Star Fort 9 a.m.-4:45 p.m., park 9 a.m.-5 p.m. $10, 15 and under free. www.nps.gov/fomc. 2400 E. Fort Ave., 410.962.4290 South of Map F8

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THE GUIDE HISTORIC SHIPS IN BALTIMORE— The

USS Constellation, from 1854, was the last Civil War-era vessel built by the Navy. After years of restoration, the 1,400-ton, 179-foot warship returned to the Inner Harbor in 1999. Other Inner Harbor ships to tour: Taney, the last surviving warship of Pearl Harbor; Torsk, a sub from World War II; Chesapeake, a lightship that guided early-1900s mariners across the Chesapeake Bay. Daily from 10 a.m. Hours vary by month; call to confirm. One ship: $5-$11, two ships: $6-$15, four ships: $7-$18; 5 and under free. www.historicships.org. Pier 1, 301 E. Pratt St., 410.539.1797 Map D6 M&T BANK STADIUM— Home of

Baltimore’s NFL franchise (and Super Bowl XLVII champions!) the Ravens since 1998. 71,000-capacity stadium (119 suites and 8,196 club seats) west of the Inner Harbor. www. baltimoreravens.com. 1101 Russell St., 410.261.7283 Map B8 MARYLAND SCIENCE CENTER— Three

levels of interactive exhibits. Live demos like “Dinosaur Mysteries,” “Follow the Blue Crab” and newest “Science & Main.” The Shed, DIY workshop for all ages. 50-foot domed Davis Planetarium, an IMAX theater with five-story-high movie screens, showing films like “Born to Be Wild,” “Penguins,” “Star-Spangled Banner: Anthem of Liberty.” Tues-Fri. 10 a.m.5 p.m., Sat. till 6 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.5 p.m. (The Shed, Kids Room, SciLab close earlier.) $24.95, seniors $23.95, children 3-12 $18.95, under 3 free. IMAX extra. Discounted admission Fridays after 5 p.m. Gift shop and cafe. www.mdsci.org. 601 Light St., 410.685.5225 Map C7 THE MARYLAND ZOO IN BALTIMORE—

More than 1,500 animals on 160 acres. Raptor Garden, Giraffe Feeding Station, Polar Bear Watch and Chimpanzee Forest. “Penguin Coast,” a state-of-the-art exhibit recreating the African waterside home of these endangered birds, with up-close and underwater views. Newest addition: wild bobcats. “After Hours with the Animals” on select days when zoo stays open till 7 p.m. with $10 admission. Daily 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $18, seniors $15, children $14, under 2 free. Free parking. www.marylandzoo.org. Druid Hill Park, 443.552.5296 North of Map B1

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NATIONAL AQUARIUM— Nearly 20,000

creatures housed in rain forest, Australian river gorge and coral reef ecosystems. See jellies and animal feedings. 4-D Immersion Theater and Harbor Market Kitchen. Ongoing exhibits like “Living Seashore” with two touch pools. “Blacktip Reef,” a 260,000gallon Indo-Pacific coral reef exhibit with up-close views of sharks, stingrays and a 500-pound sea turtle. Hours vary by season, but generally Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri. till 8 p.m., Sat.-Sun. till 5 p.m. Check website for current schedule. $24.95-$39.95, under 3 free. Prices for special tours vary. Online purchase with timed entry recommended. At the Inner Harbor. www.aqua.org. 501 E. Pratt St., 410.576.3800 Map D6 ORIOLE PARK AT CAMDEN YARDS—

Home of Baltimore’s MLB franchise, the Orioles, built in 1992, offering behindthe-scenes tours with a peek at the dugout, scoreboard control room and press box. Learn about the transformation of a railroad yard into a world-class ballpark. Tickets for tours at north end box office near Gate H. Tours vary by day/game schedule. Check website for details. $9, seniors/children $6, 3 and under free. www.orioles.com. 333 W. Camden St., 888.848.2473 Map B6 PHOENIX SHOT TOWER— Before D.C.’s

Washington Monument, the tallest building in the United States. Tours of this bullet-producing site on the grounds of the Carroll Mansion, former residence of Charles Carroll, who signed the Declaration of Independence. National Historic Landmark. Sat.-Sun. noon-4 p.m. $5, children/ seniors/students/military $4, under 6 free. www.carrollmuseums.org. 800 E. Fayette St., at President St., 410.605.2964 Map D5 PIMLICO RACE COURSE— Storied home

of the Preakness Stakes, second leg of the Triple Crown. Daily for simulcast racing, 350 betting windows. Sun.-Tues. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Wed.-Thurs. till midnight, Fri. till 1 a.m., Sat. till 1:30 a.m. Grandstand/clubhouse admission $3, Sports Palace restaurant seats $5, $3 after 7:30 p.m. www.pimlico.com. 5201 Park Heights Ave., 410.542.9400 North of Map B1 RIPLEY’S BELIEVE IT OR NOT!— An

8,000-square-foot “odditorium” for experiencing the wacky, wonderful world of Ripley. Outrageous and incredible

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017


M U S E U M S + AT T R A C T I O N S artifacts from around the world, plus illusions in the Marvelous Mirror Maze and 4-D Moving Theater. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. $17.99, children (ages 4-12) $11.99, plus fees for theater and maze. Combo tickets available. www. ripleys.com/baltimore. 301 Light St., 443.615.7878 Map C6 THE STAR-SPANGLED BANNER FLAG HOUSE— Home of Mary Pickersgill,

who sewed the flag that inspired Francis Scott Key’s lyrics to “The StarSpangled Banner.” Period furniture, war artifacts and a glass replica of the banner. Discovery gallery for kids. Orientation film. Self-guided tours Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Docent tours Wed., Thurs. Sat. $8, seniors (55+)/ military $7, students $6, under 6 free. www.flaghouse.org. 844 E. Pratt St., 410.837.1793 Map D6 TOP OF THE WORLD— Sweeping city

views from the 27th floor of the I.M. Pei-designed World Trade Center, the tallest pentagonal building (all angles being equal) in the world. Observation level museum with rotating art exhibitions. Wed.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 7 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. $6, seniors/military $5, children (ages 3-12) $4, under 3 free. www. viewbaltimore.org. 401 E. Pratt St., 410.837.8439 Map D6 WESTMINSTER HALL AND BURYING GROUND— A restored historic church

ODDITORIUM

®

with catacombs, surrounded by one of Baltimore’s oldest cemeteries. Plots hold many public figures, including Edgar Allan Poe. Burial grounds (free) daily 8 a.m.-dusk. Hall/catacomb tours $5, seniors/children $3. www. westminsterhall.org. 519 W. Fayette St, 410.706.2072 Map B5

Golf Courses BULLE ROCK GOLF COURSE— Named

INE. SKIP THE LIN E. BUY ONL

hereBaltimore www.Ripleys.coStmre/W et, Baltimore 301 Light

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@Ripleys

for America’s first Thoroughbred. Pete Dye-designed, top-ranked course approximately 30 miles northeast of Baltimore. Five sets of tees on long and short holes. Clubhouse with restaurant and views of Chesapeake Bay. Full locker room service. Caddies available. www.bullerockgolf.com. 320 Blenheim Lane, Havre de Grace, Md., 410.939.8887 THE CLUB AT TURF VALLEY— A bent

grass course with 36 holes, driving range, practice areas, men’s and w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m

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THE GUIDE women’s locker rooms. For every level of player. Also spa, saunas, pools, tennis courts, Fairway Lounge and Alexandra’s for dining. www.turfvalley. com/golf. 2700 Turf Valley Road, Ellicott City, Md., 410.465.1500

Historic Religious Sites BALTIMORE BASILICA— National Shrine

of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. In 1806, Bishop John Carroll placed the cornerstone of this landmark site, Mother Church of Roman Catholicism. Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.4 p.m., Sat.-Sun. till end of mass. Guided tours Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m., 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., Sun. noon. Gift shop: Mon.Fri. 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Sat. 9:30 a.m.5:30 p.m., Sun. 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. www.baltimorebasilica.org. 409 Cathedral St., 410.727.3565 Map C4 LLOYD STREET SYNAGOGUE—

Maryland’s first synagogue in 1845, now the third-oldest in the country, built by Baltimore Hebrew Congregation and designed by Robert Cary Long Jr. Site of the Jewish Museum of Maryland. Gift shop and library. Guided tours Sun. 3 p.m. and 4 p.m., Mon.-Thurs. 3 p.m. $10, seniors $8, students $6, under 12 $4, under 4 free. www.jhsm.org. 15 Lloyd St., 410.732.6400 Map E5 THE NATIONAL SHRINE OF ST. ALPHONSUS LIGUORI— Designed

by architect Robert Cary Long in 1845 in Southern German neo-Gothic style. Sun. Mass: Lithuanian (8:30 a.m.), English (10 a.m.), city’s only Tridentine Mass (11:30 a.m.). Mon.-Sat. Mass 7 a.m., 12:10 p.m. Call to arrange tours. Gift shop: Mon.-Thurs. 8:30 a.m.-2 p.m., Fri. and Sun. till 1 p.m. www.stalphonsus balt.org. 114 W. Saratoga St., 410.685.6090 Map C4 ST. JUDE SHRINE— A center of devotions

to St. Jude, patron saint of hopeless causes. Mass Sun. 8, 9, 11:30 a.m.; Mon.Tues., Thurs.-Fri. 7 a.m., noon; Wed. 7, 7:45 a.m., noon; Sat. 7:45 a.m., noon, 4:30 p.m. Check online for additional services. www.stjudeshrine.org. 512 W. Saratoga St., 410.685.6026 Map B4 ST. MARY’S SPIRITUAL CENTER & HISTORIC SITE— Site of the first Catho-

lic seminary in the U.S. (1791) and home of first American saint Elizabeth Seton. Mon.-Fri. noon-3:30 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 13 p.m. Call ahead during inclement

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weather. Free. www.stmaryspacast.org. 600 North Paca St., 410.728.6464 Map B4

Monuments & Memorials BATTLE MONUMENT— The city’s official

emblem. A 39-foot memorial for the 39 Baltimoreans who died in the War of 1812 designed by Frenchman Maximillian Godefroy and bedecked with sculptures (Lady Baltimore and griffins) by Antonio Capellano. A concrete replica replaces the original “Lady” who now resides in the Maryland Historical Society. www.baltimorecity.gov. Calvert & E. Fayette sts. Map C5 HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL— Sculptor

Joseph Sheppard’s powerful bronze work pays tribute to the millions killed in the Holocaust. Central plaza is triangular like the badges Jews were forced to wear. Inscribed plaques, station lamp posts and boxcar symbols plus 1940s railroad tracks lining walks. www.josephsheppard.com. 1009 N. Charles St., 410.752.1313 Map D6 WASHINGTON MONUMENT— The

178-foot-tall column (228 steps up), built in 1815, is one of the nation’s earliest memorials for George Washington. Architect Robert Mills also designed the monument in Washington, D.C. Renovated museum plus two time capsules with some items on display at Maryland Historical Society. Wed.-Fri. 11 a.m.-3 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Reserve online to climb steps. $6, under 13 $4. Museum free. www. mvpconservancy.org. 699 N. Charles St., 410.396.0929 Map C3

Museums & Libraries B&O RAILROAD MUSEUM— Smithsonian

Institution affiliate with the oldest, most comprehensive collection of railroad artifacts in the Western Hemisphere. Site (40 acres) features the 1851 Mount Clare Station, 1884 Baldwin Roundhouse and first mile of commercial railroad track in the United States. “The War Came By Train,” rail artifacts and locomotives commemorating the Civil War’s 150th anniversary, ongoing. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.4 p.m. $18, seniors (60+) $16, children $12, under 2 free. www.borail.org. 901 W. Pratt St., 410.752.2490 Map A6 BABE RUTH BIRTHPLACE MUSEUM—

The childhood residence of George

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

Herman Ruth Jr. showcases Babe’s early years. Exhibits include “Babe Batted Here”; “Babe: Husband, Father, Friend”; and “’O’ Say Can You See: The Star-Spangled Banner in Sports.” (Through March) Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.5 p.m. (Beginning April) Daily 10 a.m.5 p.m. Gift shop. $7, seniors $5, children (ages 4-16) $4, under 3 free. www.babe ruthmuseum.com. 216 Emory St., 410.727.1539 Map B6 BALTIMORE CIVIL WAR MUSEUM—

Exhibits at historic President St. Station. On April 9, 1861, the first bloodshed of the Civil War occurred when a Massachusetts volunteer militia left this station to walk to the B&O’s Camden Station but was attacked by Southern sympathizers. Gift shop. Thurs.-Mon. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $3, children (ages 12-18) $2, under 12 free. www.civilwar baltimore.com. 601 S. President St., 443.220.0290 Map E7 BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF INDUSTRY—

On waterfront site of 1865 oyster cannery, theme galleries like “pharmacy” and “machine shop.” Artifacts: a Linotype and 1930s spice grinder used to concoct Old Bay seasoning. “Helen Delich Bentley Tribute,” four garments and 12 hats from the pioneering reporter and elected official’s wardrobe dating from the 1960s-1970s demonstrating her civic pride, through April 30. “Reinvention: The Work of Chris Bathgate,” 15 precisely crafted metal sculptures by the self-taught machinist, ongoing. Machinery workshops and exhibits. Popular with school groups. Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $12, seniors $9, students $7, under 6 free. www.thebmi.org. 1415 Key Highway, 410.727.4808 South of Map D8 CARROLL MANSION— Stately residence

of Charles Carroll, only Catholic signer of Declaration of Independence, preserved in its 19th-century grandeur. Dedicated to history of Baltimore and Jonestown. Tours (also of nearby Phoenix Shot Tower). Sat.-Sun. noon-4 p.m. (last tour starts 3 p.m.). $5, children/ seniors/students/military $4, under 6 free. www.carrollmuseums.org. 800 E. Lombard St., 410.605.2964 Map E6 ENOCH PRATT FREE LIBRARY— Crown

jewel of the city’s public library system and one of the oldest in the country, dating from 1882. Featuring soaring architecture as well as cozy reading nooks. Benefactor Pratt mandated that


M U S E U M S + AT T R A C T I O N S the library serve both rich and poor of all races. Mon.-Wed. 10 a.m.-7 p.m., Thurs.-Sat. till 5 p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m. www.prattlibrary.org. 400 Cathedral St., 410.396.5430 Map C4 EVERGREEN MUSEUM & LIBRARY—

Ambassador John Work Garrett’s 48-room Gilded Age mansion. Art, rare books, opulent furnishings, Léon Bakst décor, plus theater. “Seventeen Men: Portraits of Black Civil War Soldiers,” Captain William A. Prickitt’s photo album of the men who saved his life, passed down through generations with drawings and research by Michigan artist Shayne Davidson fleshing out the stories of these men, through June 4. “Bakst Reimagined,” rarely seen items from the museum’s collection including costume and set designs from his “The Sleeping Princess,”ongoing. Tues.-Fri. 11 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat.-Sun. noon-4 p.m. Tours on the hour, final tour 3 p.m. $8, seniors $7, students/ children $5, under 5 free. www. museums.jhu.edu. 4545 N. Charles St., 410.516.0341 North of Map D1 FREDERICK DOUGLASS-ISAAC MYERS MARITIME PARK— Dedicated to the

African-American shipbuilders who, like orator Douglass, toiled on the docks of Fells Point. Gallery space with learning centers, ship restoration workshop. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat.-Sun. noon-4 p.m. $5, seniors $4, students $2, 5 and under free. Guided group tours $8. www.douglassmyers.org. 1417 Thames St., 410.685.0295 Map E8 GEORGE PEABODY LIBRARY— The

noted philanthropist built this library, a celebrated architectural achievement, in 1866 with five tiers of cast iron balconies rising to a stunning stained-glass skylight in main hall. More than 300,000 volumes, mostly from 18th to early 20th centuries. Tues.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Fri. till 3 p.m. www.peabodyevents.library. jhu.edu. 17 E. Mount Vernon Place, 410.659.8179 Map C3 GEPPI’S ENTERTAINMENT MUSEUM—

A history of pop culture explored through collectibles, toys, music and more at Camden Station (near Camden Yards). “Baltimore Heroes,” the city’s cultural pioneers; “A Story in Four Colors,” comic books in pop culture; “Extra! Extra!,” newspaper comics as social commentary; “Revolution,” rock and roll’s impact on American culture from 1961 to 1970. Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.-

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THE GUIDE

M U S E U M S + AT T R A C T I O N S

6 p.m. $10, seniors (55+) $9, students $7, under 4 free. www.geppismuseum. com. 301 W. Camden St., 410.625.7060 Map C7 HOMEWOOD MUSEUM— Built in 1801 on

a campus of Johns Hopkins University, the Palladian-style, Federal-period mansion was a wedding gift from Declaration signer Charles Carroll to his son. Furnished to reflect life in early 19th-century Baltimore. Tues.-Fri. 11 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat.-Sun. noon-4 p.m. Tours on the half hour, last at 3:30 p.m. $8, seniors $7, students/children $5, under 5 free. www.museums.jhu.edu. 3400 N. Charles St., 410.516.5589 North of Map C1 JEWISH MUSEUM OF MARYLAND— One

of the largest Jewish museums in the country. Two galleries with exhibits, library, research center containing more than 1.1 million documents, artifacts and photos. Three-building complex includes the B’nai Israel Synagogue built in 1876. “Remembering Auschwitz: History, Holocaust, Humanity,” four exhibitions combined displaying archival photographs and artworks to provide a comprehensive look at the notorious death camp, through May 29. $10, seniors (65+) $8, students with ID $6, children (4-12) $4, under 4 free. Sun.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. www.jewishmuseummd.org. 15 Lloyd St., 410.732.6400 Map E5 JOHNS HOPKINS ARCHAEOLOGICAL MUSEUM— Highlighting nearly 700

objects housed in a renovated university building’s atrium. Interior features drawers with cuneiform tablets, stamped bricks from Rome and more. On loan: Goucher College’s Egyptian mummy. Mon.-Fri. 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. First Sat. of month noon-4 p.m. Free. archaeologicalmuseum.jhu.edu. 150 Gilman Hall, 3400 N. Charles St., 410.516.0383 North of Map C1 MARYLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY—

A 150-plus-year-old society with more than 100,000 artifacts and a library of nearly 7 million items, including original manuscript of “The Star-Spangled Banner” and the original Lady Baltimore statue from the Battle Monument, the city’s official emblem. Period furniture, silver, toys, paintings. “What & Why: Collecting at the Maryland Historical Society” with more than 50 items spanning four centuries of donations to the museum, including influential

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African American jazz musician Eubie Blake’s practice pianos, a wool tapestry of George Washington and a sign from recently closed LGBTQ venue Club Hippo, through June 30. Wed.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. $9, seniors $7, students/children $6, under 3 free. First Thurs. of month free. www. mdhs.org. 201 W. Monument St., 410.685.3750 Map C3 NATIONAL ELECTRONICS MUSEUM—

Nearly 10,000 artifacts celebrating science and engineering. Nike Ajax, radar, radios, vacuum tubes, manuscripts. Among the galleries: Cold War, Early Radar and Under Seas. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.4 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. $5, students/ seniors $3, 5 and under free. www. nationalelectronicsmuseum.org. 1745 W. Nursery Road, Linthicum, Md., 410.765.0230 NATIONAL GREAT BLACKS IN WAX MUSEUM— Tableaux of 100 figures:

civil rights leaders, athletes, African citizens, ministers, politicians and notables like Langston Hughes and Baltimorean Billie Holiday. Exhibits on slavery and the Middle Passage. Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. (closed Mon. Sept.-Oct.), Sun. noon-6 (till 5 p.m. Sept.-Oct.) p.m. $13, seniors/students $12, ages 3-11 $11, under 3 free. www. greatblacksinwax.org. 1601-03 E. North Ave., 410.563.3404 North of Map E1 NATIONAL MUSEUM OF DENTISTRY—

Objects like George Washington’s dentures shown within the world’s first dental college. Films, toothbrushes through time, interactive exhibits that let kids play dentist. “The Operatory of the Future” and “American College of Dentists’ Mace and Torch,” symbols of the founding of the college. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; call to schedule a tour. $7, seniors/students $6, ages 3-12 $5, under 2 free. www.dentalmuseum.org. 31 S. Greene St., 410.706.7461 Map B5 PORT DISCOVERY— Ranked among top

five U.S. children’s museums, three levels of activities to educate and entertain. Kids get soaked (slickers and Crocs provided) in Wonders of Water (daily except Mon.). “Thomas & Friends Explore the Rails!,” climbable Thomas and hands-on toy railway for exploration, plus area to play conductor and fix an engine, through May 7. Tues.-Fri. 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. $14.95, military/under

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

2 free. www.portdiscovery.org. 35 Market Place, 410.727.8120 Map D6 REGINALD F. LEWIS MUSEUM— The

experiences and contributions of Maryland African Americans from the past to the present. Three galleries, a theater for shows and talks, oral history recording studio, classrooms and cafe. “Now That’s Cool!,” more than 40 objects displayed for the first time, including a signed photograph of abolitionist and orator Frederick Douglass, through Dec. 31. Wed.-Sat. 10 a.m.- 5 p.m., third Thurs. 5-8 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. $8, seniors/children/students $6, under 6 free. Gift shop. www.lewismuseum.org. 830 E. Pratt St., 443.263.1800 Map D6

Parks & Gardens CYLBURN ARBORETUM— Businessman

Jesse Tyson’s 1863 mansion, now with a 207-acre park, 20 themed gardens, wooded trails and the Nature Museum holding bird specimens, nests, eggs, fossils, skulls and seashells. Visitor Center, Mansion. Hours vary by season and month. Check website for details. Self-guided or cell tours. Free. www. cylburnassociation.org. 4915 Greenspring Ave., 410.367.2217 North of Map B1 DRUID HILL PARK— On the National

Register of Historic Places, the city’s first municipal park. Druid Hill Lake and Howard Peters Rawlings Conservatory, the country’s second-oldest Victorian structure of its kind, and The Maryland Zoo in Baltimore. Walking trails, athletic courts. www.druidhillpark.org. 900 Druid Park Lake Drive North of Map A1 PATTERSON PARK— One of the city’s old-

est parks began as a six-acre donation in 1827 and now spans 137 acres with lake, ice rink in winter, ball fields, pool and tennis courts. Victorian Pagoda. www.pattersonpark.com. Eastern and Patterson Park aves. Map G5/6 RAWLINGS CONSERVATORY & BOTANIC GARDENS— In Druid Hill Park since

1888, complex grew from five-story glass, wood and steel Palm House to three greenhouses, two display pavilions and outdoor gardens. Orchids, flower shows. “Plants and People” program every Sunday (1:30-3:30 p.m.). Wed.-Sun. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $5 suggested donation. www.rawlingsconservatory. org. 3100 Swann Drive, 410.396.0008 North of Map A1


THE GUIDE

(FROM LEFT) ©JOHN DEAN PHOTOS/WATERFRONT KITCHEN; COURTESY LA CUCHARA

Dining

Waterfront Kitchen

La Cuchara

This “mission-driven” Fells Point spot is all about connecting with nature. Besides partnering with Baltimore Urban Gardening with Students, an educational program for inner-city kids, the restaurant also works with local farms to provide the ingredients for tasty dishes like cast-iron crab cakes with celery root purée and Korean BBQ seared duck. Other perks? A “sweet” spot on the harbor, looking out at the iconic Domino Sugar sign. www.waterfrontkitchen.com. 1417 Thames St., 443.681.5310. Map E8

At this Hampden dining room, Ben Lefenfeld’s wood-fired flavors and Greg Schwab’s lauded wine list transport diners to Basque country. www.lacucharabaltimore. com. 3600 Clipper Mill Road, 443.708.3838. North of Map B1

Canton

JACK’S BISTRO— American. Chef haunt

ANNABEL LEE— American. Homage

to one-time local Edgar Allan Poe, a tavern for “upscale comfort” food: Jack Daniels baby back ribs, duck breast with honey grits, crab cakes. Darts. Watch the Os (on TV) by candlelight. “Literary” cocktails. D (daily). www. annabelleetavern.com. 601 S. Clinton St., 410.522.2929 $$ Map H7 THE BOATHOUSE CANTON— American. Relaxed, harbor-front spot

with dog-friendly patio for grilled favorites. Crab cakes, BBQ wings, Maryland crab soup, plus chicken Chesapeake, steaks, blackened tuna. Live music. L & D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). Happy hour daily. www.boathousecanton.com. 2809 Boston St., 410.773.9795 $$$$$ South of Map G8 BO BROOKS RESTAURANT— Seafood.

Waterfront crab house with platters, cream of crab soup. Pick crabs on the waterfront deck or on the

floating cabana. L & D (daily). www. bobrooks.com. 2780 Lighthouse Point, 410.558.0202 $$ Map G8 FORK & WRENCH— American. “Working

class” vintage decor but “four-star attitudes” with an indoor courtyard dishing up regional cuisine. Five-spiced quail, grilled octopus, housemade pastas. D (daily), Br (Sun.). www.the forkandwrench.com. 2322 Boston St., 443.759.9360 $$-$$$ Map G7 GUNTHER & CO.—American. Airy bi-level

loft encompassing 7,000 square feet with “garden wall.” Jerry Trice in the kitchen, plating globally inspired “ingredient-driven” dishes: flat breads, artisanal cheeses, dumplings. Hoisinglazed rack of lamb, wood oven-roasted chicken, tea-smoked duck breast. Extensive wine list, beer, cocktails. Patio. L (Mon.-Fri.), D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.eatatgunther.com. 3650 Toone St., 443.869.6874 $$-$$$ East of Map H8

with eclectic fare in French style. Grilled kale salad, butter-poached sea bass, Guinness-braised steak and an all-bacon burger. International wines, craft beers. Bar till late. D (Wed.-Sun.). www.jacksbistro.net 3123 Elliott St., 410.878.6542 $$ Map H8 LANGERMANN’S— Southern. Chef Neal

Langermann’s low-country cuisine. Braised short rib, shrimp and grits, chicken roasted with Creole spices, mac and cheese, fried green tomatoes. L (Thurs.-Sun.), D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.langermanns.com. 2400 Boston St., 410.534.3287 $$-$$$ Map G7 MAMA’S ON THE HALF SHELL— Seafood.

Handsome, Old World-style bistro for authentic Maryland crab soup, crab cakes, steamed shrimp, oyster stew. Raw bar on the first floor, dining room upstairs. L & D (Mon.-Sat.), Br (Sun.). 2901 O’Donnell St., 410.276.3160 $$ Map G8

TALENTED TOQUE This spring, Cindy Wolf of Charleston (page 28) received her sixth nom for James Beard’s Best Chef Mid-Atlantic award.

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THE GUIDE OF LOVE AND REGRET— From the brewer

of Stillwater Ales, a cheery pub with 20-plus draft beers plus small plates, entrees and gourmet burgers. Upstairs lounge with cocktails on tap. D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.ofloveandregret. com. 1028 S. Conkling St., Canton, 410.327.0760 East of Map H8 SIP AND BITE— American. Since 1948,

diner food from fried egg sandwich, chicken liver omelet and hash browns to crab cakes, pork chops. Counter and booth service, take-out. Late-night crowd. B, L & D (daily, 24 hrs.). www. sipandbite.com. 2200 Boston St., 410.675.7077 $-$$ Map G7

Charles Village GERTRUDE’S— American. Inside Balti-

more Museum of Art, Chesapeake crab cakes, burgers, seafood gumbo, steaks by celeb chef John Shields. Cocktails, wines. L (Tues.-Fri.), D (daily), Br (Sat.Sun.). Jazz on Sunday. www.gertrudes baltimore.com. 10 Art Museum Drive, 410.889.3399 $$$ North of Map C1 PAPERMOON DINER— American. Clas-

sic diner fare in an eye-poppingly eccentric environment, plus creative milkshakes (bacon, “Kaptain Krunch”), hot sandwiches, pastas, “TV dinners.” T-shirts and other souvenirs. B, L & D (daily). www.papermoondiner24. com. 227 W. 29th St., 410.889.4444 $ North of Map C1 PARTS & LABOR—American. Prized chef

Spike Gjerde’s restaurant-butchery with 10-foot open hearth in former tire shop. Rib eye, sausages, corned tongue, prize hamburger, collards and rich desserts. L & D (daily). www. partsandlaborbutchery.com. 2600 N. Howard St., 443.873.8887 $$$ North of Map C1 R. HOUSE— International. Converted

auto body shop turned food hall for showcasing local culinary talent. Mediterranean street food, Korean BBQ, farm-to-table vegetarian, locally sourced fried chicken, Hawaiian poke (raw marinated tuna salad). R. Bar for libations. B, L & D (daily). 301 W. 29th St., 443.347.3570 North of Map C1

Eastside MO’S SEAFOOD FACTORY—Seafood.

From Mo Manocheh, classic seafood dishes (steamed crab sautéed in white wine, butter and garlic), plus lighter fare (salads, sandwiches) in an unfussy setting. Full bar, karaoke. L & D (daily). www.mosseafood.com. 7600 Eastern Ave., 410.288.2424 $$ East of Map H5

Federal Hill BLUEGRASS TAVERN— Southern.

Sophisticated bistro-bar with floorto-ceiling windows and chef Antonio Rice’s “from scratch” cooking: catfish jambalaya, “Hoppin’ John” mussels, “smoked” fried chicken. Snacks like sweet potato cornbread. D (daily). Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.bluegrasstavern. com. 1500 S. Hanover St., 410.244.5101 $$-$$$ South of Map C8 ENCANTADA—American. Whimsical

restaurant inside American Visionary Art Museum, where funky art (a Pez collection just outside) greets diners. Chef Melanie Molinaro sending out color-rich dishes from a vegetableheavy menu, supported by GMO-free, sustainably raised meats (duck, Wagyu). Inventive cocktails (“The Cheshire Cat” with purple ice), eclectic wines. L (Wed.-Fri.), D (Wed.-Sat.), Br (Sat.Sun.). www.encantadabaltimore. com. 800 Key Highway, 410.752.1000 $$ Map D8 MOTHER’S FEDERAL HILL GRILLE— American. Buzzing tavern with Kobe

beef sliders, Buffalo shrimp, chili, ribs, catch of the day plus burgers. Pop Pop’s ice cream (housemade as is 90 percent of menu). Kids’ menu. Purple Patio for NFL Ravens and college ball fans, 98 Rock post-game show. L & D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). Bar late. www. mothersgrille.com. 1113 S. Charles St., 410.244.8686 $$ Map C8 RYLEIGH’S OYSTER— Pubs & Taverns.

Bivalves, of course, but also crabs, mussels, calamari, lobster rolls, “heritage” soups, salads, burgers. L (Fri.), D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.ryleighs.com. 36 E. Cross St., 410.539.2093 $$ Map C8 SPOONS CAFE—American. On a brick-

lined street, a popular cafe serving breakfast all day: signature “O-Nuts” (Baltimore-style beignets), four kinds of Benedicts, cinnamon roll pancakes, plus fried oysters and grits, sandwiches, salads. Coffee bar drinks. B & L 26

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

(Mon.-Fri.), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.spoons baltimore.com. 24 E. Cross St., 410.539.8395 $$ Map D8

Fells Point ALEXANDER’S TAVERN— Pubs & Taverns. Two blocks from Water Taxi

stop, an award-winner with wings, pizza, sliders, crab cakes, BBQ pulled pork, taters (cheesy, Texas or crab). Daily specials. Drafts, microbrews and wines (all $6). Two bars, six flat screens, plus games for families and bar crowd. L & D (Mon.-Fri.), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www. alexanderstavern.com. 710 S. Broadway, 410.522.0000 $-$$ Map F8 ANGIE’S SEAFOOD—Seafood. In former

Obrycki’s space, steamed blues dusted with Old Bay, crab cakes, “Angie’s Seafood Combo,” plus certified Angus beef steaks, pasta, chicken. Champagne, wines (14 by the glass), beer, cocktails. Free shuttle (limited area). L & D (daily). www.angiesseafood.com. 1727 Pratt St., 410.342.0917 $$$ Map F6 BLUE MOON CAFE— American. Popular

spot in the mornings, serving breakfast anytime. Regulars rave about housemade cinnamon rolls and Captain Crunch French toast. B & L (Mon.-Fri., 24 hours Sat.-Sun.). www.bluemoon baltimore.com. 1621 Aliceanna St., 410.522.3940 $ Map E7; 1024 Light St., 443.759.4907 Map C8 BOND STREET SOCIAL—American.

Lively space on the water for sharing creative small plates. Eggplant “meatballs,” chicken fried steak sliders, pizzettas. Head-turning drinks like liquid nitrogen martinis. Bar till late. D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.bondstreetsocial. com. 901 S. Bond St., 443.449.6234 $$-$$$ Map F8 DINOSAUR BBQ— Barbecue. Local

outpost of lauded New York-based restaurant, serving up Southern-style barbecue. Smoked brisket, ribs, pulled pork and fixins. Shrimp boil, sliders, fried green tomatoes. 20 beers on tap. L & D (daily). Early and late happy hours. www.dinosaurbarbque.com. 1401 Fleet St., 443.708.9070 $$ Map E7 FLEMING’S PRIME STEAKHOUSE— Steakhouse. Prime cuts of beef, pork

and poultry and grilled fish along with 100 wines by the glass, plus another 100 on by-the-bottle list. D (daily). 720 Aliceanna St., 410.332.1666 $$$ Map D7


DINING KOOPER’S TAVERN— Pubs & Taverns.

Neighborhood bar for sliders, sandwiches, pizza, meatloaf, pastas, short ribs, build-your-own burgers, a dozen drafts. Specials: Mon. fajitas, Tues. burgers, Wed. crab cakes, Thurs. mussels and Belgian beer, Fri. oysters. Live music, trivia nights. L & D (Mon.-Fri.), Br (Sat.-Sun.). Happy hour weekdays. www.koopers.com. 1702 Thames St., 410.563.5423 $$ Map E8 MARE NOSTRUM— Mediterranean. Sleek

spot for Greek classics: grilled meats and fish, dolmas, a variety of dips from hummus to yogurt with beets and garlic. L & D (daily). www.marenostrum baltimore.com. 716 S. Broadway, 410.327.6173 $$$ Map E/F7 POINTS SOUTH LATIN KITCHEN— Latin.

Near the harbor on a cobblestone street, Central and South American fare like spicy Peruvian shrimp, shellfish stew in a sofrito-lime broth, pupusas (filled corn tortillas) and small plates. Handcrafted cocktails. D (Mon.-Sat.), Br (Sat.-Sun.). Bar till late. www.points southbaltimore.com. 1640 Thames St., 443.563.2018 $$$ Map E7 RIPTIDE BY THE BAY— Seafood. Peel-

and-eat shrimp, blue crabs, oysters and clams, specialty cocktails and outdoor breezeway dining. Margarita Mon., $2.50 crab Tues., build-your-ownburger Wed., $1 oyster Thurs., drink specials Fri. and weekends. Pets welcome. Live music schedule. Boat dock. L & D (daily). www.riptidebythebay.net. 1718 Thames St., 410.732.3474 $$$ Map F7 SLÁINTE IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT— Irish. Named after the Gaelic toast for

good health and prosperity. Guinness onion soup, bangers and mash, corned beef and cabbage. Specials: Mon. oysters, Tues. cheesesteaks, Wed. burgers, Thurs. prime rib, Fri. fish and chips and $1 oyster happy hour, Sun. late-night happy hour. Sports TVs, Tues. music. Trivia. B, L & D (daily). Happy hour. www.slaintepub.com. 1700 Thames St., 410.563.6600 $$ Map E8 THAMES STREET OYSTER HOUSE— Seafood. New England- and Mid-

Atlantic-style fare by Eric Houseknecht: lobster roll, bouillabaisse, crab cakes, skirt steak, also soups, sandwiches, and, naturally, raw bar with oysters. L (Wed.-Sun.), D (daily). Bar till late. www.thamesstreetoysterhouse.com.

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THE GUIDE 1728 Thames St., 443.449.7726 $$$ Map F7 TWIST— Mediterranean. Bright, hip spot

where Mediterranean gets a modern bent. Mezze and Greek salad, but also chicken wings and steak Provencal salad. Entrees from lamb shank to sandwiches and burgers. Extensive brunch menu. B, L & D (daily), Br (Sat.Sun.). www.twistfellspoint.com. 723 S. Broadway, 410.522.4000 $$ Map F7 WOODY’S CANTINA— Mexican. Third-

floor spot that beckons patrons with its relaxed Mexican vibe, harbor views and daily specials. Fish tacos, pulledchicken enchiladas and carne asada, plus extensive selection of tequila and mezcal. L (Mon.-Fri.), D (daily), Br (Sat.Sun.). www.woodyscantinabaltimore. com. 821 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 410.563.6800 Map F7

Hampden BIRROTECA— Italian. In an 1883 struc-

ture, family-style trattoria whose name means “nice place for beer” but also for bruschetta, pastas, salumi and artisan pizza (duck confit, escargot, mussels). Cocktails, wine plus 24 taps and 25+ craft beers. Lively bar. D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). Bar till close. www.bmore birroteca.com. 1520 Clipper Road, 443.708.1934 $$ North of Map A1 DYLAN’S OYSTER CELLAR—Seafood.

Dylan Salmon’s namesake digs for “oysters & booze.” Focused menu of bivalves, plus whole-roasted trout, crab imperial, “coddies” (cod fish cakes served with Saltine crackers and mustard), salads (Caesar, crab macaroni). Wine, beer and cocktails. No desserts. L Sun., D (Tues.-Sun.). www. dylansoyster.com. 3601 Chestnut Ave., 443.853.1952 $$-$$$ North of Map B1 THE FOOD MARKET— American.

Industrial-chic space with open kitchen for chef Chad Gauss and his fried oysters, lobster fingers, bison hanger steak, wagyu rib eye, crab cake, truffle fries. D (daily), Br (Fri.-Sun.). Free valet. www.thefoodmarketbaltimore.com. 1017 W. 36th St., 410.366.0606 $$$$$ North of Map A1 GOLDEN WEST CAFÉ— Southwestern.

Popular, cell-phone-free spot for New Mexican fare: fajitas, quesadillas, skirt steak, tilapia tacos plus burgers (nine ways), veggie riblets. Late-night Long Bar. Takeout window. All-day breakfast.

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Kids’ menu. D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.goldenwestcafe.com. 1105 W. 36th St., 410.889.8891 $-$$ North of Map B1 LE GARAGE— French. Garage gone chic

for French classicswith a twist: French onion and oxtail soup, coq au vin dumplings, burger au poivre. Intriguing tartines (open-faced sandwiches). D (daily), Br (Sun.). www.legarage baltimore.com. 911 W. 36th St., 410.243.6300 $$-$$$ North of Map C1 WOODBERRY KITCHEN— American.

James Beard winner Spike Gjerde in a rustic space with farm-to-table deviled eggs, trout salad, short ribs, brick-oven chicken, soft shells, Chesapeake oysters. Mezzanine for people watching. Kids’ menu. D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.woodberrykitchen.com. 2010 Clipper Park Road, 410.464.8000 $$$ North of Map B1

Harbor East AZUMI—Japanese Fusion. Chic

waterfront spot for modern takes on Japanese seafood and steak (Wagyu, filet mignon). Full sushi menu with fish flown in from Tokyo, creative desserts, sakes with a master sommelier. L (Mon.Sat.), D (daily). DJ weekends. www. azumirestaurant.com. 725 Aliceanna St., 443.220.0477 $$$ Map D7 BAR VASQUEZ— Argentinian. Hand-

some two-story digs (formerly Pazo) for the rustic cuisine of the Americas: grilled meats, empanadas, seafood, fugazza (Argentinian pizza). Casual vibe downstairs with live Latin music nightly. Formal setting upstairs with whiskey bar. D (mon.-Sat.). www.barvasquez. com. 1425 Aliceanna St., 410.534.7296 $$$-$$$$ Map E7 CHARLESTON— American. James Beard

finalist Cindy Wolf’s cuisine with a Southern accent (cornmeal-fried oysters, smoked salmon, lamb or buffalo tenderloin) in three to six courses ($79-$124; wine extra). Wine pairings by Tony Foreman. Water views from bar. Reservations recommended. D (Mon.Sat.). www.charlestonrestaurant.com. 1000 Lancaster St., Sylvan Bldg., 410.332.7373 $$$$ Map E8 CHIU’S SUSHI— Japanese. Quality sushi

and sashimi (plus tempura and teriyaki) served by kimono-clad waitresses. Sushi counter chefs. Lunch specials. L (Mon.-Sat.), D (daily). Happy hour.

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

www.chiussushi.com. 608 S. Exeter St., 410.752.9666 $$ Map E7 CINGHIALE— Italian. Beard-nominated

chef Cindy Wolf and lauded sommelier Tony Foreman’s enoteca/osteria for “modern” and “honest” fare of Northern and Central Italy at the harbor. D (daily). www.cgeno.com. 822 Lancaster St., 410.547.8282 $$$$ Map E8 OCEANAIRE SEAFOOD ROOM— Seafood. Expansive dining spaces with

fresh-catch menu printed daily (often live Maine lobster) plus escargots, steaks, rich sides. Raw bar supplied by both coasts. Award-winning chowder. Wine pairings. Valet parking ($8). D (daily). www.theoceanaire.com. 801 Aliceanna St., 443.872.0000 $$$ Map E7 OUZO BAY— Greek. Kouzina with

posh bar (open late) and patio. Fresh catches, spanakopita, mussels with feta, charcoal-grilled calamari, moussaka plus whole fish and chops. Cocktails, eight ouzos. L (Mon.-Fri.), D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.ouzobay. com. 1000 Lancaster St., 443.708.5818 $$$-$$$$ Map E7 ROY’S— Hawaiian Fusion. Beard-winner

Yamaguchi’s mai tais, sushi, sashimi, maple pork dim sum, blackened ahi, macadamia-crusted mahi mahi, misoyaki-seared butterfish plus short ribs, Thai lemongrass chicken. Prix-fixe or à la carte. Bar. Valet parking. L (Mon.Fri.), D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). Happy hour and late-night bar. www.roysrestaurant. com. 720-B Aliceanna St., 410.659.0099 $$$-$$$$ Map D7 TEN TEN AMERICAN BISTRO— American.

Sophisticated bistro with old brick walls, marble bar and Southern- and Chesapeake-accented charcuterie, shrimp and grits, ribs, steak, pasta, cast-iron chocolate chip cookie. L (Mon.-Fri.), D (Mon.-Sat.), Br (Sun.). www.bagbys1010.com. 1010 Fleet St., 410.244.6867 $$$ Map E7 WIT AND WISDOM— American. Creden-

tialed chef Zack Mills heading Michael Mina’s “modern tavern.” East Coast comfort food: roasted bone marrow, peanut soup, oyster stew, Maine lobster. Harbor views. B & D (daily), L (Mon.-Sat.). www.witandwisdom baltimore.com. Four Seasons Hotel, 200 International Drive, 410.576.5800 $$$-$$$$ Map D7


DINING Inner Harbor/Downtown AGGIO— Italian. Star chef Bryan Voltag-

gio’s ricotta gnocchi, tuna crudo, charred octopus, pastas, prawns with polenta, strip steak with fingerling potatoes. A la carte or five courses ($75, wine pairings add $45). Valet. D (Tues.Sat.). www.volt-aggio.com. 614 Water St., 410.528.0200 $$$-$$$$ Map D5 B&O AMERICAN BRASSERIE— American.

Stylin’ space in Beaux Arts structure now Hotel Monaco. Charcuterie, small plates, Maryland rockfish with almonds, duck fat fries, scallops with ginger. Artisan wines. B, L & D (daily), Br (Sat.Sun.). Bar till late. Happy hour. www. bandorestaurant.com. 2 N. Charles St., 443.692.6172 $$$ Map C5 BUBBA GUMP SHRIMP CO.— Seafood.

Casual Seafood Restaurant in Historic Fells Point Complimentary Shuttle for Downtown Hotels 1727 E Pratt Street (410) 342-0917

angiesseafood.com

National “shrimp company” with waterfront views and patio for crab cakes, hush “pups” (fish), salads, sandwiches, “bourbon” skewers, jambalaya, Dixie ribs, Key lime pie. Kids’ menu. L & D (daily). Happy hour. www.bubbagump. com. 301 Light St., 410.244.0838 $$ Map D7 FOGO DE CHAO— Brazilian. A

“churrascaria” with gaucho chefs serving slow-roast beef, pork, chicken (unlimited 16 cuts, sides). Lunch $36.95, dinner $52.95, brunch $39.95. Kids 7-12 half-price, 6 and under free. Caipirinhas, wines of the hemisphere. L (Mon.-Fri.), D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.fogodechao.com. 600 E. Pratt St., 410.528.9292. $$$ Map D6 FRENCH KITCHEN— French. In Lord

Voted Readers Choice

“BEST ITALIAN” -Baltimore Magazine

HAPPY HOUR SUN - FRI COMPLIMENTARY SHUTTLE INDOOR BOCCE COURT PRIVATE DINING HOMEMADE PASTA

1012 Eastern Avenue, Little Italy 410. 783. 9209 lascaladining.com

Baltimore Hotel’s elegant Versailles Room, bistro overseen by Alsace native chef Frank Ziegler. Charcuterie, lobster bisque, seafood vol au vent, rack of lamb, beef Bourguignon. In-house desserts. B (daily), L (Mon.-Fri.), D (Wed.Sat.). www.lordbaltimorehotel.com. 20 W. Baltimore St., 410.539.8400 $$$$$ Map C5 M&S GRILL— American. From patio,

views of the USS Constellation; in clubby dining room, sandwiches, seafood, aged steaks, crab cake or soft shells platter, rich sides. Good wines, bar. L (Mon.-Fri.), D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.mccormickandschmicks.com. 201 E. Pratt St., 410.547.9333 $$ Map D6 MCCORMICK & SCHMICK’S— Seafood.

Daily catches from Pacific Northwest (Alaskan salmon, Pacific swordfish) and East Coast (Maine lobster bisque, w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m

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THE GUIDE Maryland style crab soup). Tablecloths, dark wood paneling, chandeliers, mosaic floors and mahogany bar. Patio by lighthouse. L & D (daily). Happy hour. www.mccormickandschmicks. com. 711 Eastern Ave. (adjacent to Pier 5), 410.234.1300 $$ Map D7 MISS SHIRLEY’S— Southern. Named for

a late, sassy, influential cook and honoring her with fried green tomatoes, sliders, crab cake Benedict and sandwiches, griddle cakes, omelets, po’boys, soups and sandwich combos. L (Mon.Fri.), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www.missshirleys. com. 750 E. Pratt St., 410.528.5373 $$ Map D6; 513 W. Cold Spring Lane, 410.889.5272 North of Map C1; 1 Park Place, Annapolis, Md., 410.268.5171 MORTON’S— Steakhouse. Where power-

lunchers dig into porterhouse, New York strip, filet mignon, lobster, shrimp Alexander. Cocktails, bar and sommelier team. D (daily). www.mortons. com. 300 S. Charles St., 410.547.8255 $$$$ Map C7 PHILLIPS SEAFOOD— Seafood. In the

Power Plant, Eastern shore favorites (crab cakes) plus clams, mahi mahi, lobster since 1956. Sandwiches, steak, chicken too. Kids’ menu. Waterfront view, crab deck and live music. Shipping. L & D (daily). www.phillipssea food.com.601 E. Pratt St., 410.685.6600 $$$ Map D6; 7002 Arundel Mills Circle, Hanover, Md., 443.842.7000 RUSTY SCUPPER— Seafood. Fresh fish

and shellfish prepared many ways, plus aged steaks and chops, pasta, salads and sandwiches. Fine view of harbor from the rooftop deck and promenade. Water taxi stop #4. L (Mon.-Sat.), D (daily), Br (Sun.). Happy hour. www. rusty-scupper.com. 402 Key Highway, 410.727.3678 $$$ Map D7 TIN ROOF—American. Energetic outpost

of Nashville original located inside Power Plant Live! with multiple stages for live music. Local bar atmosphere with big-screen TVs and a focus on good food: burgers, steak sandwiches, quesadillas, wings, plus big salads. L (Tues.-Sun.), D (daily). www. tinroofbaltimore.com. 32 Market Place, 443.873.8137 $ Map D5 TIR NA NOG— Irish. Well-appointed

harbor action. L & D (daily). www. tirnanogbaltimore.com. 201 E. Pratt St., 410.483.8968 $$ Map D6 UNO PIZZERIA & GRILL— American. At

Harborplace, popular spot for deepdish and thin-crust pizza, pasta, steak, seafood, burgers, beers and wines plus sundaes and “double deal” specials. L & D (daily). Also Columbia and Ellicott City. www.unos.com. 201 E. Pratt St., 410.625.5900 Map D6

Little Italy ALDO’S— Italian. Aldo Vitale’s Southern

Italian regional dishes with housemade ingredients like pancetta and soppressata or pickled vegetables. Well-appointed library for private dining. D (daily). www.aldositaly.com. 306 S. High St., 410.727.0700 $$$ Map E6 CHIAPPARELLI’S— Italian. Since 1940, a

beloved Little Italy destination. Rustic brick walls, white tablecloth service. Generous pastas ($$), classic veal dishes, famous salad, mussels in white wine, crab cake Castillo. Wine bar. L & D (daily). www.chiapparellis.com. 237 S. High St., 410.837.0309 $$$ Map E6 LA SCALA— Italian. Chef-owner Nino’s

shellfish, veal chops, herbed or stuffed, steaks, salumi, 17 housemade pastas ($$), Caesar salad. Indoor bocce court (at happy hours), wine tasting room and terrace. Valet. D (daily). www. lascaladining.com. 1012 Eastern Ave., 410.783.9209 $$ Map E6 MO’S CRAB & PASTA FACTORY— Seafood. Crabs year-round with

unique seasoning plus backfin crab cakes, stuffed shrimp, lobster, mussels, combos, steamers, chicken and surf-and-turf, linguine with six sauces. Kids’ menu ($). L & D (daily). Free hotel shuttle. www.mosbaltimore. com. 502 Albemarle St., 410.837.1600 $$-$$$ Map E7 MO’S FISHERMAN’S WHARF— Seafood.

Part of chef Mo Manocheh’s empire with its own wholesale market/carryout nearby. Steamed crabs, lobster, Cajun combo, spiced shrimp, chicken parmesan, Cajun combo, steaks. L & D (daily). www.mosseafood.com. 219 S. President St., 410.837.8600 $$-$$$ Map D6

pub with furnishings from Ireland. Irish classics like herb-crusted rack of lamb, shepherd’s pie plus American burgers and fries. Grab a pint, and watch the

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Mount Vernon/ Station North BOTTEGA— Italian. Intimate, candlelit

15-seater with simple, evolving Tuscanstyle fare: octopus salad, hanger steak, roast chicken, baby back ribs, housemade pastas, salted chocolate caramel pie. BYOB. Reservations recommended. D (Wed.-Sun.). www. bottega1729.com/. 1729 Maryland Ave., 443.708.5709 $$$ North of Map C1 THE BREWER’S ART— American. Innova-

tive fare and house-made Belgian-style ales (house Resurrection ale) served in opulent turn-of-the-century Mount Vernon mansion. Seasonal meat, seafood and vegetarian items (rosemary garlic fries), plus international wines, spirits and beers. L (Sat.-Sun.), D (daily). www.thebrewersart.com. 1106 N. Charles St., 410.547.6925 $$ Map C2 COLETTE— French. Stefano Porcile

(Woodberry Kitchen, Fork & Wrench) creating modern French cuisine in a charming spot seating 75. Grilled Arctic char, duck breast with apple mustard, plus small plates (gruyere beignets, slow-roasted carrots). Bar, Euro-heavy wine list. Near Charles Theatre. D (Wed.-Mon.), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www. colettebaltimore.com. 1709 N. Charles St., 443.835.2945 $$$ North of Map C1 JOE SQUARED— Italian. Coal-fired

pizzas, sandwiches (Italian cheese steak or Chesapeake chicken), risottos (clam and zucchini or arugula and venison) and 16 drafts on tap. Weekly specials. Nightly live music, art shows. Weekend brunches. L & D (daily). www. joesquared.com. 33 W. North Ave., 410.545.0444 $$ North of Map C1 MAGDALENA—American. In The Ivy

Hotel, fine dining in five rooms: garden (with terrace views), treasury (with vault), wine cellar, tasting room and bar. Chef Mark Levy (The Point, Adirondacks) turning out photogenic plates of rockfish with smoked tomato and crab butter, and braised octopus. Local and boutique wines. Free valet. D (Tues.Sat.). www.theivybaltimore.com. 205 E. Biddle St., 410.514.0303 $$$$ Map D2 THE PRIME RIB— Steakhouse. Since 1965,

Art Deco-style supper club for lobster, filet mignon, chops, Imperial crab. Business casual, jackets for men Sat. night. Piano Sun.-Wed., piano/bass Fri.-Sat. Bar. Complimentary valet. D (daily).


DINING www.theprimerib.com. 1101 N. Calvert St., 410.539.1804 $$$$ Map C2 SOTTO SOPRA— Italian. High ceilings,

murals and mosaic floors, Ricardo Bosio’s pastas, wild boar cacciatorini. Opera dinners one Sun. a month (call), wine tastings. L (Mon.-Sat.), D (daily). www.sottosoprainc.com. 405 N. Charles St., 410.625.0534 $$$ Map C4 TIO PEPE— Spanish. Since 1968, softly

Southern Scratch Kitchen

lit, subterranean bistro known for its sangria, paella and zarzuela. Catalan wines plus seafood bisque, Segovia suckling pig, Serrano with melon, beef tournedos with sherry sauce. L (Mon.Fri.), D (daily). www.tiopepebaltimore. com. 10 E. Franklin St., 410.539.4675 $$$ Map C4

Mount Washington HAUTE DOG CARTE— Hot Dogs. “Fabu-

Dinner Every Day • Friday Lunch • Weekend Brunch

1500 South Hanover St. • Federal Hill • (410) 244-5101 • www.bluegrasstavern.com Craft Cocktails • Private Events • Birthday Parties

lous franks” in all weather outside the Bonjour Bakery Cafe. Spicy Italian dog with Dijon, Filipino dog with ginger miso sauce, veggie pup and daily chef specials (all $5). L (daily). www. hautedogcarte.com. 6070 Falls Road, 410.608.3500 $ LE BISTRO DU VILLAGE— French.

Formerly Crepe du Jour with savory crepes, plus classic French dishes, soups, salads, sandwiches. L (Mon.Fri.), D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). www. crepedujour.com. 1609 Sulgrave Ave., 410.542.9000 $$ MT. WASHINGTON TAVERN— American. Since 1979, light fare plus

salmon latkes, oysters, crab wontons, burgers, steaks, chicken piccata. Bay murals, equine art, vintage maps plus shuffleboard table. Wines and beers. L (Mon.-Fri.), D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun.). Bar till late. www.mtwashingtontavern.com. 5700 Newbury St., 410.367.6903 $$$ THE NICKEL TAPHOUSE—American.

Buzzing tavern known for fries, mussels, roasted oysters, burgers ($$), steake frites, duck. Wines, cocktails, 32 draft beers. D (daily), Br (Sat.-Sun). www.nickeltaphouse.com. 1604 Kelly Ave., 443.869.6240 $$

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THE GUIDE

Entertainment

Pier Six Pavilion

Birds of a Feather

Moored on a spit of land that juts into the Inner Harbor, this nightspot rocks the dock with top talent. Music fans sit under a soaring canopy (held aloft by 70-foot masts) or lounge on the lawn, relishing panoramic views and cooling breezes. This season’s headlining acts include jam band Umphrey’s McGee on May 19, singer-songwriter-guitarist Bryan Adams on June 11 and English rockers The Moody Blues on July 19. www.piersixpavilion.com. 731 Eastern Ave., 410.783.4189. Map D7

It was named a top whiskey bar by Southern Living magazine, but this Fells Point spot remains decidedly laid back. Drinkers flock here for both the friendly service and the 120 single malts. 1712 Aliceanna St., 410.675.8466. Map F7

Select shows listed; see venue websites for full schedules. THE 8X10— Venue for live music running

the gamut with bluegrass, EDM, jam, rock, alternative, hip-hop, funk and more. Live acts nightly. Ages 18 and up. John Brown’s Body, 9 Mile Roots April 21; The Suffers May 6; The Sunbathers, Luke O’Brien, Muscle Tough May 19. www.the8x10.com. 10 E. Cross St., Federal Hill, 410.625.2000 Map C8 BALTIMORE SOUNDSTAGE— An eclectic

venue hosting everything from heavy metal to spoken word. Lucky Chops April 23; Amine May 2; Maryland Deathfest 2017 May 25-28; An Evening with Dawes June 13; BJ Barham July 3. www.baltimoresoundstage. com. 124 Market Pl., Inner Harbor, 410.244.0057 Map D6 JOSEPH MEYERHOFF SYMPHONY HALL— Home of the Baltimore Sym-

phony Orchestra; also hosts touring performers, speakers and companies. Its unique architecture means no flat walls or 90-degree angles. BSO: Rachmaninoff’s Symphony No. 2, Part’s “Credo,” Stravinsky’s “Symphony of Psalms” April 28-30; Golden Dragon Acrobats April 29; “E.T. The Extraterrestrial” in Concert May 19-21; BSO: Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos June 10-11; John Mulaney: “Kid Gorgeous” June 18. www.bsomusic. org. 1212 Cathedral St., Mount Vernon, 410.783.8000 Map C2 MODELL PERFORMING ARTS CENTER AT THE LYRIC— Opened in 1894 as a music

hall, now a 2,564-seat theater in Mount Royal and on the National Register of Historic Places. Excellent acoustics. “Annie,” the Tony-winning musical based on the popular comic strip April 21-22; Steve Winwood April 25; Bill Maher June 24; Idina Menzel July 18. www.lyricoperahouse.com.

140 W. Mount Royal Ave., Mount Vernon, 410.900.1150 Map C1 OTTOBAR— Gritty rock bar with sports

on TV. Live acts from hard-core punk and alt-rock to acoustic and rockabilly. Also performance art, karaoke and DJ dance parties. Amorphis, Swallow the Sun, Iris Divine, Novarium April 22; Surfer Joe, PLRLS, Flying Faders, Candy Shell May 10; Suffocation, Revocation, Silent on Fifth Street May 19; DJ Mark Farina June 3. www.theotto bar.com. 2549 N. Howard St., Charles Village, 410.662.0069 North of Map C1 POWER PLANT LIVE!— Entertainment

complex near the Inner Harbor with more than 15 restaurants, bars and concert venues plus an art gallery. Options range from the sophisticated Mosaic Lounge to the rock ‘n’ roll scene at Angels and late-night tunes at Tin Roof. www.powerplantlive.com. Market Place and Water St., Downtown Map D5

FOR THE RECORD Baltimore has America’s oldest city-funded orchestra (BSO) and longest-running “little theater” (Vagabond Players).

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W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

(FROM LEFT) COURTESY VISIT BALTIMORE; ©CHETTY THOMAS/SHUTTERSTOCK

Concert Venues


E N T E R TA I N M E N T

URBAN PIRATES

Baltimore & a nd National H arbor’s Swashbuckling adve nture Family Adventure Cruises Adult BYOG Cruises Corporate Outings Field Trips & Groups

410-327-8378 Baltimore National H arbor 301-300-0895 Check Cruise Times & Purchase Tickets Online

urbanpirate s.com

RAMS HEAD LIVE!— In Power Plant Live!,

top touring acts, emerging artists, tribute bands and local favorites. Most shows standing room only; all ages. The Ravyns, The 1974, The Russ Greene Band April 22; The Cult May 3; Pixies, Cymbals Eat Guitars May 14; Maryland Deathfest May 25-28; Saved by the 90s: A Party with The Bayside Tigers June 10. www.ramsheadlive.com. 20 Market Place, Downtown, 410.244.8854. Box office: 410.244.1131 Map D5 ROYAL FARMS ARENA— Home of the

Baltimore Blast soccer team, this facility hosts 800,000 guests and 120 events each year. Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus: “Out of This World” April 20-30; Chance the Rapper June 6; Neil Diamond June 9; Journey June 14. www.royalfarmsarena.com. 201 W. Baltimore St., Downtown, 410.347.2020 Map C6 SHRIVER HALL— In its 51st season, a

concert series presenting top-notch classical solo and chamber music recitals. On The Johns Hopkins University Homewood Campus. Susan Graham (mezzo-soprano), Malcolm Martineau (piano) April 23; Dover Quartet April 29. www.shriverconcerts.org. 105 Shriver Hall, 3400 N. Charles St., 410.516.7164 North of Map C1

Theater BALTIMORE CENTER STAGE— Kwame

Kwei-Armah overseeing classic and new productions at Maryland’s recently renovated state theater. Cafe, two bars. “Jazz,” a world premiere based on the Toni Morrison novel May 19-June 23. www.centerstage. org. 700 N. Calvert St., Mount Vernon, 410.332.0033 Map C3 BALTIMORE THEATRE PROJECT— Lovers

of stagecraft head here for original works, music and dance performances. Domineka Reeves: “Together We Stand,” a dance work exploring controversial issues in America April 22; The Collective: “This Is Home,” dances inspired by this universal theme April 2730; Iron Crow Theatre: “Bootycandy,” a subversive comedy about growing up black and gay June 9-18; Air Dance Bernasconi: “Air(realist),” various ways of defying gravity June 23-25. www. theatreproject.org. 45 W. Preston St., Mount Vernon, 410.752.8558 Map C2

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33


THE GUIDE CHESAPEAKE SHAKESPEARE COMPANY— Performing in the renovat-

ed 1885 Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company (and, during the summer, in Ellicott City). ”The Fantasticks,” a romantic musical about young love April 21-May 21; “The Tempest,” the Bard’s tale of shipwrecks, mystery and magic (performed outdoors at Ellicott City’s PFI Historic Park) June 16-July 23. www.chesapeakeshakespeare.com. 7 S. Calvert St., Inner Harbor, 410.244.8570 Map D5 CREATIVE ALLIANCE— Contemporary

art and performance space inside the historic Patterson Theater (circa 1910) hosting comedy, film screenings, experimental music and burlesque shows. Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Free entry, ticket prices vary. Marquee Lounge for dinner and drinks. www. creativealliance.org. 3134 Eastern Ave., Highlandtown, 410.276.1651 Map H6 EVERYMAN THEATRE— In a historic

building, local performers dedicated to making theater accessible and affordable to all. “Los Otros,” a musical about two people who discover they are linked in unexpected ways through April 23; “Noises Off,” a farce about actors prepping for opening night May 17-June 18. www.everyman theatre.org. 315 W. Fayette St., Westside, 410.752.2208 Map C5 FRANCE-MERRICK PERFORMING ARTS CENTER— For Broadway shows and

more, a state-of-the-art complex built from the Hippodrome Theatre (circa 1914), two late-1800s banks and a new building. “Something Rotten,” set in 1595 and following two brothers who attempt to write the world’s first musical April 18-23; AC2: An Evening with Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen April 28; Brian Regan: Live Comedy Tour May 12; “Finding Neverland,” the story behind J.M. Barrie’s creation of Peter Pan June 27-July 2. www. france-merrickpac.com. 12 N. Eutaw St., Westside, 410.837.7400 Map B5 VAGABOND PLAYERS— “America’s old-

est continuously running little theater.” “The Odd Couple,” Neil Simon’s beloved comedy about roommates with opposite personalities through May 7; “See How They Run,” a madcap farce set in a conservative post-war English village May 26-June 25. www. vagabondplayers.org. 806 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 410.563.9135 Map E7

34

Bars & Nightclubs 13TH FLOOR— Atop the 1903 Belvedere,

an elegant lounge with panoramic views, high-end cocktails and live jazz. Full dinner menu. Wed. 510 p.m., Thurs. till 11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 1:30 a.m. www.13floorbelvedere. com. 1 E. Chase St., Mount Vernon, 410.347.0880 Map C2 CAT’S EYE PUB— Friendly Irish watering

hole with 32 beers on tap (including locally brewed Resurrection Ale and Heavy Seas Loose Cannon), more in bottles and a full bar. Live music nightly. Daily noon-1:30 a.m. www. catseyepub.com. 1730 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.276.9866 Map F7 GRAND CENTRAL— A gay bar in a mas-

sive space with multiple lounges and decks, plus a dance floor and stage. Wed.-Sun. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Bar Mon.-Sat. 4 p.m.-2 a.m., Sun. 3 p.m.-2 a.m. www. centralstationpub.com.1001 N. Charles St., Mount Vernon, 410.752.7133 Map C2 THE HORSE YOU CAME IN ON—

A historic waterfront institution (since 1775) that counts Edgar Allan Poe among former patrons. Mon.-Sun. 11:30 a.m.-1:30 a.m. www.thehorse baltimore.com. 1626 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.327.8111 Map E8 LOCH BAR— Connected to the Four Sea-

sons Hotel, a posh venue specializing in seafood (crab cakes, caviar, raw bar) and whiskey. Also wine, cocktails and local brews. Patio, harbor view. Live music nightly. Sun.-Thurs. 10:30 a.m.midnight, Fri.-Sat. 10:30 a.m.-1 a.m. (bar till 2 a.m.). www.lochbarbaltimore.com. 240 International Drive, Harbor East, 443.961.8949 Map E7 MUSTANG ALLEY’S— In a stylin’ space,

12 lanes of bowling with four reserved for duckpin bowling (a favorite native pastime). Cocktails, full menu. Tues. 4:30-11 p.m., Wed.-Sat. noon-midnight, Sun. noon-10 p.m. www.mustangalleys. com. 1300 Bank St., 2nd floor, Little Italy, 410.522.2695 Map E6 THE OWL BAR— Dark wood, cozy corners

and a friendly bar staff that serves yards of beer and brick-fired pizzas. Dates to pre-Prohibition when it was an F. Scott Fitzgerald hangout. Mon. 11:30 a.m.10 p.m., Tues.-Wed. 11:30 a.m.-midnight, Thurs.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.- 2 a.m., Sat. 11 a.m.2 a.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. www.theowl bar.com. 1 E. Chase St., Mount Vernon, 410.347.0888 Map C2

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

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E N T E R TA I N M E N T PRATT STREET ALE HOUSE— Brewpub

with 42 taps, Oliver ales, full menu and 25 HD TVs. Mon.-Sun. 11 a.m.11 p.m., bar till 2 a.m. www.pratt streetalehouse.com. 206 W. Pratt St., Downtown, 410.244.8900 Map C6 WOODY’S CANTINA— A third-floor spot

with a relaxed Mexican vibe, harbor views and daily specials. Extensive selection of tequila and mezcal, plus dishes like fish tacos, pulled-chicken enchiladas and carne asada. Mon.-Sun. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. www.woodyscantina baltimore.com. 821 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 410.563.6800 Map F7

Gaming HORSESHOE CASINO—A $442 million

venue with more than 2,500 slots, table games and a World Series of Poker room. Restaurants by celeb chefs Guy Fieri, John Besh and Aarón Sánchez, plus a bar and the Baltimore Marketplace. www.caesars.com/ baltimore. 1525 Russell St., Downtown, 443.931.4200 South of Map B8

Sports Bars PICKLES PUB— A stop for grub and pints

before and after Orioles and Ravens games. Steamed shrimp with Old Bay, Maryland crab soup, fried pickles. Daily 11 a.m.-2 a.m. www.picklespub.com. 520 Washington Blvd., Downtown, 410.752.1784 Map B6 TURP’S SPORTS BAR & RESTAURANT—

where you are. ®

(and where you’re going.) All the latest buzz about the city from the experts at Where Magazine. Shopping, dining, attractions, it’s all here 24/7.

In a historic brownstone, a welcoming spot to cheer on the teams with beer, crabcakes, wings and game-day specials. Mon.-Sun. 11 a.m.-midnight. www.turpsonline.com. 1317 N. Charles St., Mount Vernon, 410.347.0349 Map C2

Wine Bars GRAND CRU— Laid-back wine bar also

offers solid cocktails, fancy beers. Plus wine shop. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight, Sun. noon-8 p.m. www.grandcrubaltimore.com. 527 E. Belvedere Ave., Belvedere Square, 410.464.1944 North of Map C1 THE WINE MARKET— Once a foundry,

now a wine bar, bistro and shop. Eight hundred wines by the bottle, 25 by the glass. Courtyard patio in warmer months. Bistro: Mon.-Thurs. 5-9:30 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 10:30 p.m. www.winemarket bistro.com. 921 E. Fort Ave., Locust Point, 410.244.6166 South of Map E8 w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m

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THE GUIDE

Navigate

Charm City Helicopters

Spirit Cruises

Looking for fresh perspectives on this historic city? Get a bird’s-eye view with this new company founded by local flight instructor Caitlyn Shipley. She and her fiancé, Freddie Ephraim, pilot their custom Bell 407 helicopter for tours ranging from the 12-minute Destination Baltimore, over icons like Camden Yards, Fort McHenry and the Natty Boh sign (above), to luxury packages with dinner, limo and hotel stays. From $129. www. flycharmcity.com. 1800 South Clinton St., 410.707.1013. South of Map G8

On these jaunts into the picturesque Inner Harbor and Patapsco River, you can enjoy sightseeing along with a buffet, music and a rooftop lounge. $45.90-$76.90. www.spiritcruises.com. 561 Light St., 866.845.7245. Map D7

Neighborhoods

BALTIMORE WATER TAXI— Canopied

CANTON— More than 200 years ago,

vessels crisscrossing the harbor with stops at Canton, Fells Point, Inner Harbor and Federal Hill. Open daily; hours change seasonally. All-day pass $14, one-way ticket $8, under 11 $7, under 3 free. Buy with cash or credit card on board, online or at visitor center (401 Light St.). Weather permitting. www. baltimorewatertaxi.com. 410.563.3900 URBAN PIRATES— “Pirate” ship depart-

ing from Fells Point for kid-friendly adventure on the Inner Harbor. Dress up, hunt for treasure, shoot water cannons on a 90-minute cruise. Also adult BYOG (grog) cruises. Check schedule online. $22-$25, under 3 $12. www. urbanpirates.com. 911 S. Ann St., Fells Point, 410.327.8378 Map F7

Captain John O’Donnell sailed into Baltimore and named his plantation for the Chinese port that brought him wealth. Find shops, bars and cafes just east of Fells Point. Map G7/H7 FEDERAL HILL— The clay dome that rises

eclectic shops line main drag “The Avenue” (W. 36th Street). North of Map A1 HARBOR EAST— Attention foodies: lots

to discover in this affluent community within walking distance of the Inner Harbor. Look for the Katyn Memorial landmark sculpture. Map E7 INNER HARBOR— An urban revitalization

just south of the Inner Harbor, bordered by Key Highway, Hanover and Cross streets, served as an observatory from 1795 to 1895. Home to pubs, eateries and Cross Street Market. Map D8

success story, now the city’s popular maritime zone thanks to the National Aquarium, Maryland Science Center, historic ships, cruises and waterfront paths for strolling. Map D6/7

FELLS POINT— William Fell, a shipbuilder

LITTLE ITALY— Narrow, twisting streets

from Lancaster, England, founded this maritime community in 1730. Today the 14-block area bustles with young residents who like its architectural history, cafes and taverns. Map F6/7 HAMPDEN— The city’s center of kitsch

and the setting for the movie “Pecker,” by off-beat film director John Waters. Pink flamingos adorn row house yards;

known for bocce courts, colorful citizens and Old World food at many trattorias that range from checkered cloth to chic. www.littleitalymd.com. Map E6 MOUNT VERNON— Cultural enclave

with fashionable residences, unique boutiques, The Walters Art Museum, Enoch Pratt Free Library, Peabody Institute, Baltimore Basilica and the (first) Washington Monument. Map C3/4

WELCOME! During most of the 19th century, Baltimore was the number two port of entry for immigrants (after NYC’s Ellis Island).

36

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

(FROM LEFT) COURTESY CHARM CITY HELICOPTERS; COURTESY SPIRIT CRUISES

Cruises


N A V I G AT E WESTSIDE— A dynamic urban district just

west of downtown. Visit historic Lexington Market, Edgar Allan Poe’s grave or the B&O Railroad Museum. Theaters include Everyman and the FranceMerrick Performing Arts Center. Map B4

THE SHARPEST WAY TO RIDE.

Tours & Transport BALTIMORE NATIONAL HERITAGE AREA— Comprising historic sites,

The Water Taxi has new boats, new routes and extended hours. Explore Baltimore like a local.

cultural institutions, arts venues, parks. Offers guided walking tours of city neighborhoods like Fells Point and Little Italy. $10, seniors/students $7, under 13 free. Also maps for self-guided strolls. www.explorebaltimore.org. Most tours departing from 401 Light St., Inner Harbor, 410.878.6411 Map D7 CHARM CITY CIRCULATOR— Free!

Fleet of low-emission buses running daily along four routes at 10-minute intervals. Stops include Inner Harbor, Fells Point, B&O Railroad Museum, Penn Station and Fort McHenry. www. charmcitycirculator.com. Office at 417 E. Fayette St., 410.350.0456 Map D5

410.563.3900 | baltimorewatertaxi.com

Charm City TOURS

CITY BREW TOURS— Led by a guide/

designated driver, behind-the-scenes glimpses (and tastings) at local breweries like Oliver, Heavy Seas and Peabody Heights, followed by a meal with beer pairings. $85-$90. www.citybrewtours. com/baltimore. Departs from 99 W. Baltimore St., 410.469.8687 Map C5 SUPERSHUTTLE— Serving more than 40

CUSTOM TOURS OF BALTIMORE AND WASHINGTON, DC BO OK

ONLINE

airports nationwide with affordable, 24/7 transport. Door-to-door service, group rates, charters and frequent flier points and miles with select airlines. www.supershuttle.com. 800.258.3826 YELLOW CAB OF BALTIMORE— Founded

in 1909, operates 600 taxis (some hybrid) in the Baltimore area. Wheelchair access. $30 flat rate from downtown to BWI Thurgood Marshall Airport. Book by phone or online. www.yellowcab ofbaltimore.com. 410.685.1212

Visitor Center BALTIMORE VISITOR CENTER—

LEARN ABOUT CHARM CITY’S HISTORY, ARCHITECTURE, AND ENTERTAINMENT HISTORY.

CHARMCITYTOUR.COM (410) 622-2445

Providing shopping information, dining reservations and touch-screen kiosks for instant guides plus tickets for events and attractions. Daily 9 a.m.6 p.m. (call for seasonal hour changes). www.visitbaltimore.org. 401 Light St., Inner Harbor, 877.225.8466 Map C7

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Baltimore Your Way UNIQUE TRAVEL RECOMMENDATIONS, FIT TO MATCH YOUR PERSONAL STYLE. FIND THE CITY CURATED FOR YOU AT WHERETRAVELER.COM/BALTIMORE.

Family Traveler

FirstTimer

Outdoors Enthusiast

Have kids in tow? Charm City’s playful personality translates to plenty of fun for all members of the family. At (1) Baltimore Museum of Industry, see key inventions (and even some demos) that helped fuel the city’s economy. Having your head up in the clouds is encouraged at the (2) Maryland Science Center, where stargazers peek at the heavens through a 1927 Clark telescope in the Davis Planetarium (Fridays and Saturdays in good weather). At Mount Vernon’s (3) Papermoon Diner, feast on all-day breakfast, Kaptain Krunch milkshakes and the quirky decor.

Newcomers to the city are in luck. Baltimore delights with eye-opening sights and a quirky vibe all its own. Budget at least two hours to visit the (1) National Aquarium, and be sure to make your way to the top level’s rain forest exhibit for a glimpse of golden tamarin monkeys scampering through the trees. At the circa 1911 (2) Bromo Seltzer Arts Tower, explore more than 30 artist studios, and view the inner workings of the giant clock at the top. After, head to historic (3) Lexington Market for local treats like authentic crab cakes at Faidley’s and fudgy Berger cookies.

With a bustling waterfront and walkable neighborhoods, Charm City is an outdoor lover’s dream. Golfers will appreciate (1) Bulle Rock’s Pete Dye-designed course with a clubhouse and gorgeous views of the Chesapeake Bay. In the mood for a walk? Take a tour with guides from (2) Baltimore National Heritage Area through history-rich neighborhoods like Mount Vernon and Fells Point. (3) American Sailing Tours offers 90-minute jaunts in the harbor aboard the schooner, Summer Wind. Book a wine and cheese voyage, then toast the stunning city views.

40 W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S P R I N G / S U M M E R 2017

(FROM TOP TO BOTTOM, LEFT TO RIGHT) ©DUKE ZIMMERMAN; COURTESY MARYLAND SCIENCE CENTER; ©JIHONATION.COM; COURTESY NATIONAL AQUARIUM; COURTESY VISIT BALTIMORE; ©MAKUAHINE PA’I KI’I/FLICKR, CREATIVE COMMONS; COURTESY BULLE ROCK GOLF COURSE; COURTESY BALTIMORE NATIONAL HERITAGE AREA; ©TUSKPHOTO/SHUTTERSTOCK

[WHERE INSIDE]


Esquire Picked The 20 Best Steaks In The Esquire Picked TheU.S. 20 Best Steaks In The U.S. You Have To Leave Town The YouFor Have ToOther Leave19. Town For The Other 19.

“At the Prime Rib, it’s always 1965 – the year it opened. The leopard-print dining room looks like George Steinbrenner’s private club. The waiters wear tuxes. You wear a jacket. And the kitchen roasts the majestic prime rib, on the bone, its collar of fat suffused into the inner layer, the core of rose red, all of it giving off the intoxicating aroma of old money.”

The 20 Best Steaks in America Esquire Magazine

1101 N. Calvert St. • Baltimore, Md 21202 410-539-1804 • Complimentary Valet Serving dinner nightly beginning at 5:00 •PM Offering live piano and complimentary valetParking nightly Nightly Dress code: Collared shirt for men. Shorts not permitted. www.theprimerib.com 1101 N. Calvert St. • Baltimore, Md 21202 • 410-539-1804 • Complimentary Valet Parking Nightly www.theprimerib.com


TTLE! U H S E FRE Welcome! Kids

Inner Harbor Locations: Mo’s Crab & Pasta Factory (410) 837-1600 502 Albemarle Street Little Italy

Mo’s Fish Market (410) 837-5511

Next to Mo’s Fisherman’s Wharf

Downtown

New location: 9727Pulaski Highway, White Marsh (410) 238-1700- 9727

mosbaltimore.com FREE DELIVERY

Mo’s Fisherman’s Wharf (410) 837-8600 219 S. President Street

Towson (410) 823-2200


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