Where Baltimore Spring 2017

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WINTER/SPRING 2017 THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO GO®

Baltimore ®

ON THE

BEAT

MUSIC FROM ALT TO CLASSICAL

+

SHOPPING AT THE CITY’S HISTORIC PUBLIC MARKETS

FORT McHENRY IN 90 MINUTES

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Baltimore Winter/Spring CONTENTS

the plan

SEE MORE OF THE CITY AT WHERETRAVELER.COM

Rams Head Live!

3 Editor’s Itinerary

Restaurant Week More than 100 eateries offer tasty deals. Plus: a light festival at the Inner Harbor, Amy Schumer on stage and the Orioles at Camden Yards

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®

ON THE

BEAT

MUSIC FROM ALT TO CLASSICAL

+

SHOPPING AT THE CITY’S HISTORIC PUBLIC MARKETS

FORT McHENRY IN 90 MINUTES

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E~BLTWM_170100_000c1.indd 1

12/27/16 5:16 PM

COURTESY RAMS HEAD LIVE!

ON THE COVER Maestra Marin Alsop, music director of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. Photo ©Grant Leighton CONNECT WITH US

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where now 6 To Market, To Market

Baltimore’s historic public shopping centers are hubs of local flavor and offer a window into the city’s vibrant communal past. BY ANNE KIM-DANNIBALE

8 Pilgrimage for Poe

Plotting a course to the haunts of revered mysteryhorror scribe—and one-time local resident— Edgar Allan Poe. BY BROOKE SABIN

10 On the Beat READ US ON MAGZTER

MUSEUMS & ATTRACTIONS

Marveling at toothpick architecture and other cool things to see and do

40 Baltimore Your Way

Baltimore

SHOPPING

A new cafe/bookshop by Spike Gjerde and a new storefront for natural body products pros SoBotanical

4 Hot Dates

WINTER/SPRING 2017 THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO GO®

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The essential things to do and see, plus 90 minutes at historic Fort McHenry

Family traveler, luxury seeker, romantic or all three? We’ve got just the itinerary, tailored to suit your travel style.

the guide

With a happenin’ music scene honored by Rolling Stone magazine, Baltimore offers no shortage of top-notch venues for live tunes. BY JULEKHA DASH

DINING

Sizzling shared plates at a Fells Point hotspot and elevated pub fare at a Canton newbie

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ENTERTAINMENT

Escape rooms with Charm City themes and a tuckedaway bar for superb sips

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NAVIGATE

The hot neighborhoods and best ways to get around town, plus brewery tours (with samples!)

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MAPS

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



YOUR TRAVELING COMPANION SINCE 1936® BALTIMORE

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 Julekha Dash REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES

Kristen Standish

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATOR Rithie Washington CIRCULATION & MARKETING MANAGER

Irena Laster

REGIONAL EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Leigh ART DIRECTOR Dusty Martin

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, INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT Karen Rodriguez GENERAL MANAGER, WHERE MAPS

Allen

Christopher Huber

History buffs may know the city’s “key” role in the War of 1812 (see below), but did you know Baltimore also has the oldest continuously operating public market system in America? Check out these hubs of local color (and flavor!) on page 6. Literary fans find plenty to read into about one-time resident Edgar Allan Poe’s life by following in his footsteps (page 8). Music lovers are in the right town, according to Rolling Stone magazine. Find the beat at venues for classical, rock and even world music on page 10. Even if you have only limited time, we can show you how to make the most of it at one of the city’s top spots.

90 MINUTES IN:

Fort McHenry

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, 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

ALL COURTESY VISIT BALTIMORE

CHAIRMAN William S. Morris III PRESIDENT & CEO William S. Morris

Built from 1799 to 1802, this star-shaped fort (above and page 19) became an important garrison in the War of 1812. Francis Scott Key, detained on a British ship, watched as American forces fought off the enemy for 25 hours. By early morning, he saw the massive American flag

flying overhead, inspiring him to write verses that later became the U.S. national anthem. Over the years, the stronghold has been used as a prison during the Civil War and a hospital in WWI. For a quick visit, start at the Visitors Center, where a moving video provides background on the

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

bastion’s history. Then make your way to the barracks to experience 19th-century military life. On weekends, handson artillery and cannon demonstrations (above, center) draw crowds. And every day at 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., visitors participate in what may be the most popular activity—helping to raise and lower a flag (above), just like the one Key saw that joyful morning.

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

For a palate-pleasing—and budget-friendly—way to sample the city’s burgeoning foodie scene, take advantage of this week’s deals. Less than $20 gets you a two-course lunch or brunch, and less than $35 a threecourse dinner, at 100-plus venues like the luxe Magdalena, the everpopular Miss Shirley’s Cafe and The Food Market, which plates Chad Gauss’ hearty comfort fare (above). baltimorerestaurantweek.com

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W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I W I N T E R / S P R I N G 201 7

©DANIEL MCGARRITY

JAN. 13-22: Baltimore Restaurant Week


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6 (FROM TOP) COURTESY VISIT BALTIMORE; COURTESY AMERICAN CRAFT COUNCIL; “THE POOL” BY JEN LEWIN, PHOTO COURTESY BALTIMORE OFFICE OF PROMOTION & THE ARTS

Great Things Not to Miss

1 MLK PARADE > JAN. 16 The city celebrates the life and legacy of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. with marching bands, equestrian units, color guards and dance squads along his namesake boulevard. Free. Noon-2 p.m. promotionandarts.org 2 POE TOASTER > JAN. 19 For 60-plus years (until 2009), an anonymous admirer brought cognac and red roses to Edgar Allan Poe’s grave on the writer’s birthday. Now a “reincarnation,” chosen by secret ballot, performs the toast. Free. 6-7 p.m. Westminster Hall & Burying Ground, 515 W. Fayette St., mdhs.org

Baltimore Museum of Art

3 BALTIMORE BOAT SHOW > JAN. 26-29 Climb aboard vessels, take classes, try paddleboarding and meet Captain Dale Lisi, star of Nat Geo’s “Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks.” $14, under 16 free. Thurs.-Sat. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. till 5 p.m. Convention Center, 1 W. Pratt St., baltimoreboatshow.com

creations, like Jeffrey Oh’s wooden stools (below). $16, under 13 free. Fri. 10 a.m.8 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Convention Center, 1 W. Pratt St., craftcouncil.org/baltimore American Craft Show

4 AMERICAN CRAFT SHOW > FEB. 24-26 More than 650 top craft artists bring their latest

SPOTLIGHT

Light City

In 1816, Baltimore became the first American city to use gas lanterns to brighten night-time streets. Now, more than 200 years later, from March 31 to April 8, it basks in the glow of this international light, music and innovation festival. Don’t miss the 1.2-mile art walk along the Inner Harbor, featuring illuminated sculptures, live concerts and interactive displays like Jen Lewin’s “The Pool” (above), which invites folks in for a “dip.” Free. lightcity.org

5 AMY SCHUMER > MARCH 4 The multi-talented comedian, writer, actress, producer and alum of local Towson University makes a stop on her #Schumer Tour. $42-$112. 8 p.m. Royal Farms Arena, 200 W. Baltimore St., royalfarmsarena.com 6 O’S HOME OPENER > APRIL 3 Baltimore’s storied baseball team takes the field against the Toronto Blue Jays. See website for ticket prices. 3:05 p.m. Camden Yards, 333 W. Camden St., orioles.com

TOP STOPS Cultural venues showcase local luminaries and otherworldly beings. THROUGH JAN. 22 JOHN WATERS’ “KIDDIE FLAMINGOS” For this G-rated version of the cult filmmaker’s notorious “Pink Flamingos,” Waters asked friends’ children to dress up and read an adapted script. Free. Video plays continuously. Wed.Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat-Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Baltimore Museum of Art , 10 Art Museum Drive, artbma.org THROUGH FEB. 5 “THE ENIGMATIC EDGAR A. POE IN BALTIMORE & BEYOND” See rare artifacts from what may be the world’s finest private collection related to the scribe. Think portraits, caption here first editions and “The Raven” in Poe’s own handwriting. Free. Tues.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri. till 3 p.m. George Peabody Library, 17 E. Mount Vernon Place, pea bodyevents.library.jhu.edu THROUGH APRIL 16 “FEROCIOUS BEAUTY: WRATHFUL DEITIES FROM TIBET & NEPAL” Sculptures and paintings from the John and Berthe Ford Collection depict deities who appear fearsome but are thought by devotees to aid in the attainment of spiritual goals. Free. Wed.-Sun. 10 a.m.5 p.m. (Thurs. till 9 p.m.). The Walters Art Museum, 600 N. Charles St., thewalters.org 5


where now

Baltimore

The savvy traveler’s guide to exploring Charm City

SHOP LOCAL

To Market,To Market Baltimore’s historic public shopping centers offer a window into the city’s vibrant communal past.

Broadway Market 6

WHERE CITY NAME I MONTH YEAR

PHOTO CREDIT

BY ANNE KIM-DANNIBALE


For more information: wheretraveler.com

Public markets offer staples and prepared foods, like pastries at Berger’s Bakery.

ALL COURTESY LEXINGTON MARKET AND BALTIMORE PUBLIC MARKETS

“Gastronomic capital” That’s what Ralph Waldo Emerson proclaimed about Baltimore after visiting its famed Lexington Market, opened in the 1700s. Today, Lexington and the five other city-run commercial hubs (the oldest continuously operating system in the country) are still hawking groceries and specialty items like gourmet cheese and even muskrat. Though changes are afoot (Lexington and Cross Street are slated for multimillion-dollar renovations; others may go private), there’s still time to savor the local flavor at these mom-and-pop institutions. For details, visit www.bpmarkets.com. AVENUE First opened in 1871, Upton’s Avenue now bears a colorful façade fitting a 1957 upgrade. Inside, find Cuties on Duty souvenirs and Just Juice It beverage bar. 1700 Pennsylvania Ave.

CROSS STREET This Federal Hill fixture offers gourmet wedges at Cheese Galore & More, fresh oysters at Nick’s and pretty daisies at The Flower Shop. 1065 S. Charles St.

LEXINGTON The oldest market in America, with iconic Berger’s Bakery and Faidley’s Seafood, also has catacombs underneath (for tours, visit baltimoreheritage.org). 400 W. Lexington St.

BROADWAY The smallest of the markets operates in the oldest building (1786), with vendors like The Pretzel Twist and Lucia’s, a popular spot with Fells Point’s late-night crowd. 1640-41 Aliceanna St.

HOLLINS Once a supply stop for Civil War soldiers, Hollins in southwest now serves up affordable meals at Eddie’s Lunch and Mike’s Lunch, fresh produce and seafood. 26 S. Arlington Blvd.

NORTHEAST This bustling center has more than 30 vendors, like Fresh Roast Marketplace for made-fromscratch cafeteria food to Pure Shea for handmade body products. 2101 E. Monument St.

Lexington Market in the 1950s

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WHERE NOW Baltimore

Pilgrimage for Poe

MASTER OF THE MACABRE If ghosts exist, then surely that of Edgar Allan Poe roams the streets of Baltimore. The revered writer was born in Boston and considered Richmond home, but this is where he died. And fittingly, Poe’s demise on October 7, 1849, at age 40 remains shrouded in mystery. He was found, disheveled and delirious, at a bar turned temporary polling place in Fells Point. After four incoherent days in the hospital, he awoke— nevermore! Speculation on the cause of death has run the gamut from alcoholism to rabies. Poe’s Baltimore experiences, though, weren’t all tales of woe. In his 20s, he lived in a brick duplex on N. Amity Street (above), where he fell in love with his cousin and future wife, Virginia Eliza Clemm, and launched his literary career after claiming first prize in a short story contest run by the Baltimore Saturday Visiter. Nearly two centuries later, the man credited with creating the detective story still inspires a devoted following around the world and in the city where he wrote, loved and died.—Brooke Sabin 8

W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I W I N T E R / S P R I N G 201 7

The Tell-Tale Haunts From a crowded house to a rollicking saloon and a graceful graveyard, these Poe-related sites give glimpses into the man of mystery.

• From 1833 to 1835, Poe occupied a five-room home—in what must have been very close quarters— along with his aunt, grandmother and two cousins. Now a National Historic Landmark, the Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum (left) opens for self-guided tours, $5, Friday to Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. (closed seasonally; check website). Poe devotees echo his footsteps across the original floors and up the narrow, twisty (almost menacing!) staircases. Though mostly unfurnished, the rooms showcase informational placards plus artifacts like a telescope, chair and traveling desk. Be sure to get a look at the attic space where Poe likely worked and slept. 203 N. Amity St., poeinbaltimore.org • According to legend, Poe was last seen sentient at The Horse You Came in On (below). This Fells Point mainstay (since 1775) serves up saloon fare like crabcakes on brioche buns and locally brewed Loose Cannon IPA, plus live music daily. 1626 Thames St., thehorsebaltimore.com

• Of the scribe’s many followers, the most faithful may be the Poe Toaster. For 60-plus years (until 2009), the anonymous admirer visited Poe’s grave at Westminster Burying Ground (right). Every January 19, Poe’s birthday, he raised a glass of cognac, then left the bottle and three red roses. (A new toaster, chosen by locals, revived the tradition in 2015.) The cemetery is open daily, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. 515 W. Fayette St., westminsterhall.org

• Poe’s ghost would no doubt frequent Annabel Lee Tavern (above), Kurt Bragunier’s brick-andmortar tribute to the writer. Named for his last poem, the Canton bar sets a creepy yet cozy tone with stuffed ravens, scrawled verses and comfort food to pair with Poe-themed cocktails. 601 S. Clinton St., annabelleetavern.com • At the 1882 Enoch Pratt Free Library, a Poe collection holds books, letters, a lock of hair and a fragment of his coffin. 400 Cathedral St., prattlibrary.org

(THIS PAGE, FROM LEFT) ©BROOKE SABIN (2); COURTESY ANNABEL LEE TAVERN; (FACING PAGE) ©BROOKE SABIN

OUT+ABOUT


PHOTO CREDIT

At Westminster Burying Ground, a monument shelters Poe’s remains, along with those of his wife and mother-in-law. His original burial site, also here, is marked by a gravestone. w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m

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WHERE NOW Baltimore

On the Beat

Live music fans are known to sing Baltimore’s praises. Honored by Rolling Stone magazine for its happenin’ scene, the city offers no shortage of topnotch venues, regardless of your lyrical tastes. British punk band The Adicts at Ottobar

10 W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I W I N T E R / S P R I N G 201 7

BY JULEKHA DASH

©JAMES BLUCHER/FLICKR, CREATIVE COMMONS

SHOW STOPPERS


(CLOCKWISE FROM TOP) COURTESY VISIT BALTIMORE; RENDERING COURTESY CENTER STAGE; COURTESY CREATIVE ALLIANCE; ©DAVE HARP

ROCK, JAZZ, CLASSICAL, INDIE, POP and even obscure world beats can be found at the city’s diverse music halls, from intimate clubs showcasing local talent to a 14,000-seat arena that’s hosted Bruce and Beyoncé.

CLASSICAL The city’s top classical music venue, Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall is the place to hear the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra take on Tchaikovsky or Brahms. Marin Alsop, the first female music director of a major American orchestra, leads innovative programs like Off the Cuff, exploring the backstories of masterworks, and BSO Pulse, bringing indie rock bands to play with the classical musicians. The recently renovated Modell Performing Arts Center at The Lyric hosts opera, ballet and big touring shows, such BSO at The Meyerhoff

as Riverdance. You’ll also find nationally known recording artists like Brandi Carlile and Gavin DeGraw. At Johns Hopkins University’s Homewood Campus, Shriver Hall features chamber music, including classical and newer works. The free Discovery Series showcases emerging artists. LOCAL AND INDIE The divey atmosphere at the Ottobar is part of its charm, as is the

Pier Six Pavilion

people-watching at this haven for the indie/ hipster crowd. Come early to shoot a round of pool, and head to the balcony for the best views of the stage. An intimate spot in Federal Hill, The 8x10 is one of the best places to catch local bands, as well as some bigger names. The two floors offer good views from all vantage points and a bar on each level. POP, ROCK AND RAP Downtown Baltimore’s Ram’s Head Live! has hosted some of the biggest names in the biz, including Jay Z and the Beastie Boys, plus notable indie acts. The two-story venue offers great sightlines regardless of where you stand, but some like to get there early to snag Creative Alliance

a spot on the balcony, directly over the stage. Near Power Plant Live!, Baltimore Soundstage has featured rock, rap, soul and acoustic artists, both emerging and wellknown performers such as Pete Yorn and India Arie. It houses three bars and offers sandwiches and pub grub. Royal Farms Arena has welcomed chart toppers like Justin Timberlake, Bruce Springsteen and Beyoncé. In the heart of downtown, the arena is close to parking garages, restaurants and the light rail. In warm months, fans head to the Inner Harbor’s Pier Six Pavilion for waterfront views along with well-known acts like Stevie Wonder and James Taylor. WORLD AND ECLECTIC A multipurpose art space, Creative Alliance hosts world music, such as Indian Bhangra, Central Asian throat singers and Balinese Gamelan, plus fiddlers, jazz, folk, blues and other genres. For more details on these venues, see pages 32-33.

Spotlight on Center Stage Maryland’s state theater, founded in 1963, has been recognized by The Wall Street Journal as “one of America’s leading regional companies.” And its historic Mount Vernon home just got a $28 million renovation. “Every inch of our theater is the stage,” says artistic director Kwame Kwei-Armah. “From the moment you walk in, you’re engaging with art.” In the Past

Productions that made their world premieres here include 1996’s Broadway-bound musical comedy “Triumph of Love” and 2015’s bio-musical “Marley.” What’s New

The two existing theaters gained some major upgrades, and a third smaller one was added. In the revamped first floor lobby, the new Sherman Cafe and Bar offers cocktails, local brews and tasty bites. Now Showing

“The White Snake” runs from Feb. 24 to March 26, and “Twisted Melodies” takes the stage March 17 to April 16. See page 33 for details.—BS

Center Stage’s first floor lobby

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the guide Bird in Hand

Ruth Shaw Inc.

SoBotanical

This hip new cafe by Spike Gjerde and The Ivy Bookshop sells locally sourced nibbles and bestsellers. www.birdinhandcharlesvillage. com. 11 E. 33rd St., 410.243.0757.

At this boutique, called a “fashion destination stand-out” by Harper’s Bazaar, find labels like Helmut Lang and The Row. www.ruth shawinc.com. 68 Village Square, 410.532.7886. North of Map B1

The first brick-and-mortar storefront of this popular online aromatherapy seller offers an essential oils bar and custom blends. www.sobotanical.com. 48 E. Cross St., 410.234.0333. Map C8

North of Map D1

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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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 ANGEL PARK MULTI-BRAND BOUTIQUE— From owners of Katwalk,

hard-to-find menswear brands, many European, in an eclectic, modern shop. Akomplice T-shirts, Scott Langton neoprene jackets, plus unique accessories like wooden bowties, Mitchell and Co. all-natural body products, upcycled candles. Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun.

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

till 6 p.m. 1707 Aliceanna St., Fells Point, 410.669.0600 Map F7 BRIGHTSIDE— Two native New Yorkers

curate funky clothing, jewelry and more inspired by “tattoo couture.” Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-8 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. www.shopbrightside. com. 1133 S. Charles St., Federal Hill, 410.244.1133 Map C8; 732 S. Broadway, 410.522.1337 Map F7 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

(FROM LEFT) ©SCOTT SUCHMAN; COURTESY RUTH SHAW INC.; ©MOUSTACHE GIRL/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

Shopping Winter/Spring


SHOPPING 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. Classic fedoras, porkpies, straw hats, newsboys, cowboy hats. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 9 p.m., Sun. till 7 p.m. www. hatsinthebelfry.com. 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

KATWALK— Mod rocker pieces with

“bling” and Bohemian styles. Feminine dresses and blouses plus edgy leathers. Mitchell and Co. hand-made, all-natural soaps. Mon. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Tues.-Thurs. till 8 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 8:30 p.m., Sun. till 6 p.m. www.face book.com/katwalkfashionshowroom/ timeline. 1709 Aliceanna St., Fells Point, 410.669.0600 Map F7 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 Zuki fur designs. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. www.manoswartz.com. 10801 Falls Road, Lutherville, Md., 410.825.9000 PARTY DRESS BOUTIQUE— Date night-

worthy looks and accessories. New arrivals monthly. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.9 p.m. www.partydressboutique. com. 723 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 410.675.5105 Map F7 SAMUEL PARKER CLOTHIER— Since

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

1921, traditional menswear and furnishings. Hand-tailored Samuelsohn suits,

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THE GUIDE Art/Craft Galleries ART GALLERY OF FELLS POINT— Non-

profit 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 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 EMP— 5,000-square-foot arts space for

multiuse: gallery, theater, movie house and workshop. Run by young artists of EMP Collective. See website for upcoming shows. www.empcollective. org. 307 W. Baltimore St., Downtown, 410.244.0785 Map C5 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

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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— ”Literally finds for

mutated minds” like obscure comics, magazines, DVDs. A favorite of native son John Waters (who receives his fan mail here). Next door, sister shop 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.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 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

For Kids 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

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SHOPPING CANTON GAMES— Board games,

Dungeons & Dragons books, action figures, collectibles and more. Try out purchases on a table in store. Mon.- Fri. noon-7 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. www.cantongames.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

Superb customer service to help you find the perfect dress and accessories for any occasion.

723 S. Broadway Fells Point

410.675.5105 • partydressboutique.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. 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 MCLAIN WIESAND— Custom-built fur-

niture by craftsmen focusing on “fine art” in their designs. Sample products in online catalog. Custom pieces also available. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. www. mclainwiesand.com. 1013 Cathedral St., Mount Vernon, 410.539.4440 Map C2 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

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THE GUIDE 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 WOODKNOTT— New furniture shop of

designer/maker Eric Knott specializing in custom furnishings (including bespoke light fixtures) for row homes and other petite domiciles. In-store sales. Wed.-Sun. 10 a.m.-7:30 p.m. www. woodknott.com. 912 S. Charles St., Federal Hill, 443.708.7493 Map C8

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 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

Luana Kaufmann offers 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

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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

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 MITCHELL AND CO.— Mother-daughter

team selling hand-made, all-natural body oils, soaps, scrubs, lotions. Available exclusively at Angel Park and Katwalk boutiques (See Apparel). www. mitchellandcoskincare.com. 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., Fells Point, 410.779.7047 Map F7 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— Colorful salon built from

recycled materials and specializing in non-toxic treatments using 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

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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—

Outlet stores like Banana Republic, Kate Spade, Nike, J. Crew, Tommy Hilfiger and Coach. 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, local meats from 130 merchants. Mon.Sat. 6:30 a.m.-6 p.m. www.lexington market.com. Lexington and Eutaw sts., 410.685.6169 Map C5 MT. VERNON MARKETPLACE— Hip

marketplace 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.mtvernonmarket place.com. 520 Park Ave., Mount Vernon, 443.804.3933 Map C4


SHOPPING 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, Calvin Klein, Coach, Gucci, Nike, Polo Ralph Lauren. An hour drive from city. Mon.Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. till 8 p.m. www.premiumoutlets.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

Wine/Gourmet Foods

CROSS STREET TOBACCO— Family-

THE CHARMERY— Husband-and-wife

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

David and Laura Alima’s hand-crafted ice creams made with local ingredients. 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 CHEESE GALORE AND MORE!— Inside

historic Cross Street Market, a cheese lover’s paradise slicing up aged asiago to tomme de savoie. Also all-natural salami, olives, homemade crostini and fresh baked bread. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.7 p.m., Sat. till 6 p.m. www.cheese galoreandmore.com. Cross Street Market, 1065 S. Charles St., Federal Hill, 410.244.5515 Map C8 STREETS MARKET & CAFE— Local

outpost of D.C.-based health food store. Organic local produce, everyday household goods, chef-driven prepared foods. Daily 7 a.m.-10 p.m. www. streetsmarketcafe.com. 222 N. Charles St., Mount Vernon, 667.930.3405 Map C5 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

Ripley’s Believe It Or Not!

Through March 1, the “Sons” exhibition at this African American cultural site asks visitors to compare their perceptions of black men to reality. $8. www. lewismuseum.org. 830 E. Pratt St., 443.263.1800 Map D6

This “odditorium” displays the weird, the wacky and the wonderful, like Harry Potter’s Hogwarts Castle made entirely of toothpicks. $17.99. www. ripleys.com/baltimore. 301 Light St., 443.615.7878. Map C6

Art Museums

ASIAN ARTS AND CULTURE CENTER— An

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,” the D.C.based artist’s “raw, visceral, good to the bone” paintings, 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

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. “Front Room: Guerrilla Girls,” 48 protest posters from the feminist collective’s body of work from 1985 to 2012 demonstrating how the art world marginalizes women artists and artists of color, through March 12. “Oliver

Evergreen Museum & Library Amb. John Work Garrett’s mansion houses rare books, art and a Leon Bakst theater for performances. $8. www.museums. jhu.edu. 4545 N. Charles St., 410.516.0341. North of Map D1

Herring: Areas for Action,” 12 videos of daily public performances in a New York City gallery in 2010 showing 50 volunteers getting joyfully doused in messy things like glitter and food dye, through April 2. “Shifting Views: People & Politics in Contemporary African Art,” photographs, prints and drawings from seven artists offering their views on the continent’s residents, through June 18. 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

GREAT HEIGHTS Top of the World (page 20) crowns the Inner Harbor’s World Trade Center, the tallest pentagonal building on Earth.

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(FROM LEFT) ©JERRY TALIAFERRO/REGINALD F. LEWIS MUSEUM; ©ARIELLE FRAGASSI/FLICKR, CREATIVE COMMONS; ©FREDERIC C. CHALFANT/WIKIMEDIA, CREATIVE COMMONS

Reginald F. Lewis Museum


M U S E U M S + AT T R A C T I O N S 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 ART PLACE— A non-profit

contemporary gallery at Power Plant Live! Registry of 1,600 regional artists. “Abhidnya Ghuge & Heather Harvey,” works by these installation artists exploring the intervention of spaces and the use of various materials, Jan. 19March 11. Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Free. www.mdartplace.org. 8 Market Place, 410.962.8565 Map D5 MARYLAND INSTITUTE COLLEGE OF ART (MICA)— Nation’s oldest fully

accredited, four-year, degree-granting art college with gallery for works by national and international artists, faculty and students. “William A. Christenberry: Laying-by Time,” a look back at the late American painter’s work, including the rarely shown “Klan Room Tableau,” a dense multimedia piece illustrating Christenberry’s response to the violence of the Ku Klux Klan, through March 12. “Light and Shadow: Paintings and Drawings by Philip Koch from Edward Hopper’s Studio,” the MICA faculty member’s extensive work of the famous painter’s Cape Cod studio and its surroundings, through March 25. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon5 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. “Anne Arundel County Public Schools Student Art Show,” highlighting works by local youngsters in the Sculpture Court, through March 26. “Ferocious Beauty: Wrathful Dieties from Tibet and Nepal,” a dozen sculptures, paintings and ritual objects depicting these at times intimidating spiritual beings, through April 16. “From Rye to Raphael: The Walters Story,” art and artifacts illustrating the stories behind the Walters family’s gift collection to the city establishing the museum, ongoing. 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 BALTIMORE CONVENTION CENTER—

Inner Harbor/downtown complex hosting expos and trade shows for industry folk and consumers alike. www.bccenter.org. 1 W. Pratt St., 410.649.7000 Map C6 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-

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 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. Rise and Conquer, official mascots of the NFL Ravens. “Penguin Coast,” a state-of-the-art exhibit recreating the South African waterside home of these endangered birds, with up-close and underwater views. Newest addition: cheetah brothers from San Diego Wildlife Safari Park. “After Hours with the Animals” on select days when zoo stays open till 7 p.m. with $10 admission. (Jan.-Feb.) Fri.Mon. 10 a.m.-4 p.m., (March-April) 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 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. “Dolphin

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THE GUIDE Discovery,” all-day access to dolphins and experts, featuring training, play, feeding times and more. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Fri. till 8 p.m., Sat.-Sun. till 5 p.m. $24.95-$39.95, under 3 free. 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

SPOTLIGHT

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

Sultan of Swat Babe Ruth entered the world in a tiny row house here, and an O’s manager gave him (George Herman) his first baseball contract and his nickname. Those events plus later glories are recounted at the Babe Ruth Birthplace Museum (page 22). See Babe’s first catcher’s mitt, the bat from his legendary 1927 season and a list of his 714 home runs. A vintage film shows Ruth’s famed “called shot,” when he pointed to the outfield, then hit a home run. The endless loop doesn’t answer “was he gesturing to hecklers or just being a cocky show-off?” —Christine Jubert

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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 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+)/

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

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 U.S. NAVAL ACADEMY— College of the

U.S. Navy. Guided walking tours daily; Ages 18 and older must bring photo ID. Gift shop. $10.50, seniors $9.50, children $8.50, under 5 free. Daily 9 a.m.4 p.m. Check website for tour schedule. www.usna.edu/. 52 King George St., Annapolis, Md., 410.293.8687 WESTMINSTER HALL AND BURYING GROUND— A restored historic church

surrounded by one of Baltimore’s oldest cemeteries. Plots hold many public figures, including Edgar Allan Poe. Burial grounds daily 8 a.m.-dusk. $5, seniors/children $3. www.westminster hall.org. 519 W. Fayette St, 410.706.2072 Map B5

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


M U S E U M S + AT T R A C T I O N S ens 1! Opary 2 anu

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

J

OLD ST. PAUL’S CHURCH— The Anglican

Adventures Around Every Bend!

You’re the conductor, so jump on board with Thomas & Friends for playful learning and rail yard fun on the Island of Sodor.

35 Market Place, Baltimore • portdiscovery.org

Thomas & Friends™ Explore the Rails! was created by Minnesota Children’s Museum, presented by Fisher-Price and sponsored by 3M. © 2016 Gullane (Thomas) Limited

community’s “Mother Church of Baltimore” founded in 1692. Current building, one of the city’s architectural gems, dates to 1856. Sunday services (8:30 and 10:30 a.m.) plus Wed. noon. Eucharist service. www. stpaulsbaltimore.org. 309 Cathedral St., 410.685.3404 Map C5 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 a.m., 7:45 a.m., noon; Sat. 7:45 a.m., noon. 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

Catholic seminary in the United States (1791) and home of first American saint Elizabeth Seton. Mon.-Fri. noon3:30 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 1-3 p.m. Call ahead during inclement weather. Free. www. stmaryspacast.org. 600 North Paca St., 410.728.6464 Map B4

ODDITORIUM

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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. w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m

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THE GUIDE 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 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

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BALTIMORE COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY MUSEUM— In a 19th-century

stone building, manuscripts, photos, ledgers and clippings document the county’s history. Fri. noon-4 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. $5. www.hsobc.org. 9811 Van Buren Lane, Cockeysville, Md., 410.666.1878 BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF INDUSTRY—

On waterfront site of 1865 oyster cannery, theme galleries like “pharmacy” and “machine shop.” Artifacts: a Linotype, a steam pump 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. “Video Game Wizards,” interactive exhibit allowing aspiring “wizards” to create their own computer game, 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 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,

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

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 FIRE MUSEUM OF MARYLAND— Bells,

flashing lights, antique vehicles and an engine to climb plus 250 years of firefighting history. Exhibits like “Life of a Fireman” and “The Great Baltimore Fire of 1904.” Gift shop. Sat. 10 a.m.4 p.m. Closed in Jan. $14, seniors/ firefighters $12, ages 2-18 $6, under 2 free. www.firemuseummd.org. 1301 York Road, Lutherville, Md., 410.321.7500 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.6 p.m. $10, seniors (55+) $9, students


M U S E U M S + AT T R A C T I O N S $7, under 4 free. www.geppismuseum. com. 301 W. Camden St., 410.625.7060 Map C7 HAVRE DE GRACE MARITIME MUSEUM—

Items like a replica of a shad shack tell the story of the port’s history. Also home to Chesapeake Wooden Boat Builders School, which teaches construction and restoration of wooden crafts. “Beyond Jamestown: Life 400 Years Ago,” a journey back in time with Capt. John Smith and crew in the New World, ongoing. Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m. Suggested donation $3. www.hdgmaritimemuseum.org. 100 Lafayette St., Havre de Grace, Md., 410.939.4800 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. “A Winter’s Residence: Charles Carroll of Homewood’s Townhouses, 18001816,” new works illustrating what life was like for the Carroll family as they moved between their country residence, Homewood, and their city townhouses, through Feb. 15. 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 IRISH RAILROAD WORKERS MUSEUM—

Visit this pair of 1848 row houses to learn about the Irish railroad workers who helped build the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. One house re-creates the life of a family of eight (plus one boarder), while the other serves as a tribute to Baltimore’s Irish. Museum open Fri.Sat. 11 a.m.-2 p.m., Sun. 1-4 p.m. Tours (by request) include Lemmon Street, St. Peter’s Church and the Hollins Street Market. Register online or by phone. Free. www.irishshrine.org. 1325 Bolton St., 410.669.8154 Map A6 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,

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THE GUIDE

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

Humanity,” four exhibitions combined displaying archival photographs and artworks to provide a comprehensive look at the notorious death camp, March 5-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— More than 700 objects

housed in renovated university building’s atrium. Interior features drawers for 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. archae ologicalmuseum.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 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. Ongoing: “Inventing a Nation: Maryland in the Revolutionary Era”; “The Star-Spangled Banner Gallery”; “Divided Voices: Maryland in the Civil War.” 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 CRYPTOLOGIC MUSEUM—

From the National Security Agency, explanations of America’s cryptologic history with code-making and codebreaking artifacts. Highlights: WWII Enigma cipher machine, museum library and the 60 Years of Cryptologic Excellence exhibit. Gift shop and library. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. First and third Sat. of month 10 a.m.- 2 p.m. Free. www.nsa.gov. 20 miles south of Baltimore, NSA, off Route 32. 9800 Savage Road, Ft. Meade, Md., 301.688.5849 24

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!,” a climbable Thomas and hands-on Island of Sodor toy railway for exploration, plus Sodor Steamworks where children dress up as conductors 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 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. “Sons: Seeing the Modern African

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

American Male,” photographs challenging visitors to compare perceptions of black men to reality, through March 1. “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

Dining

Bond Street Social ets, chicken pot pie empanadas and cast iron nachos. Inventive drinks, (think head-turning liquid nitrogen martinis) keep the party going until closing time. www. bondstreetsocial.com. 901 S. Bond St., 443.449.6234. Map E8

Canton

BO BROOKS RESTAURANT— Seafood.

ANNABEL LEE— American. Homage (FROM LEFT) COURTESY BOND STREET SOCIAL; ©JUSTIN TSUCALAS/GUNTHER & CO.

Gunther & Co.

This happening gathering place sits on the waterfront in Fells Point and offers indoor and outdoor fire pits to keep diners toasty. Find warmth on the menu, too, in small plates ideal for sharing, like baked brie pock-

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. Mon.-Sat. 4 p.m.1 a.m., Sun. from 3 p.m. to close. 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. Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-11 p.m., Fri. 11 a.m.-midnight, Sat. 10 a.m.-midnight, Sun. 10 a.m.-11 p.m. Brunch Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Happy hour daily 3:307 p.m. www.boathousecanton.com. 2809 Boston St., 410.773.9795 $$$$$ South of Map G8

Waterfront crab house with platters, cream of crab soup. Pick crabs on the waterfront deck or on the floating cabana. Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-9 p.m., Sat. till 10 p.m., Sun. till 8 p.m. 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. Mon.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. brunch/supper 10 a.m.10 p.m. www.theforkandwrench.com. 2322 Boston St., 443.759.9360 $$-$$$ Map G7 JACK’S BISTRO— American. Chef haunt

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 2 a.m. Wed.-Sat. 5-

In an airy, two-story loft decorated with a “garden wall,” this new Canton spot dishes up “ingredient-driven” fare with global twists, like hoisin lamb. www. eatatgunther.com. 3650 Toone St., 443.869.6874. East of Map H8

11 p.m., Sun. till 10 p.m. www.jacks bistro.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. Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri. till 11 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-11 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Brunch weekends 10 a.m.-3 p.m. www.langermanns. com. 2400 Boston St., 410.534.3287 $$-$$$ Map 2 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. Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-2 a.m., Sun. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. (brunch). 2901 O’Donnell St., 410.276.3160 $$ Map G8

CRUSTACEAN STATION At lunch, vendors in the Chesapeake Bay area sell almost as many crab cakes as hamburgers and hot dogs.

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THE GUIDE 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. Open 24 hrs. except Tues. 311 p.m. 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. Tues.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-9 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Brunch Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-3 p.m., jazz on Sunday. www.gertrudesbaltimore.com. 10 Art Museum Drive, 410.889.3399 $$$ North of Map C1 PAPER MOON DINER— American.

Classic diner fare in an eye-poppingly eccentric environment, plus creative milkshakes (bacon, “Kaptain Krunch”), hot sandwiches, pastas, “TV dinners.” T-shirts and other souvenirs. Sun.Thurs. 7 a.m.-9 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m. 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. Daily 11 a.m.-4 p.m. and Mon.-Sat. 5-10 p.m., Sun. till 9 p.m. www.partsandlaborbutchery.com. 2600 N. Howard St., 443.873.8887 $$$ 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. Daily noon-1 a.m. 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. Mon.-Thurs.

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5-10 p.m., Fri. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. and 411 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m.-3 p.m. and 411 p.m., Sun. 8 a.m.-3 p.m. and 49 p.m. www.bluegrasstavern.com. 1500 S. Hanover St., 410.244.5101 $$$$$ South of Map C8 ENCANTADA—American. A whimsical

restaurant inside the 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. 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. Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-11 p.m., Fri. till midnight, Sat. 8 a.m.-midnight, Sun. 8 a.m.-10 p.m. 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. Daily 11 a.m.2 a.m. www.ryleighs.com. 36 E. Cross St., 410.539.2093 $$ Map C8 SOBO CAFÉ— American. Colorful spot for

comfort food: poblano corn chowder, chicken pot pie, mac and cheese, shrimp and scallop risotto. Draft beer, cocktails. Buy art by locals off the walls. Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Mon.Sat. 5-10 p.m., Sun. 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m., 5-9 p.m. www.sobocafe.net. 6 W. Cross St., 410.752.1518 $$ 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. Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-2 p.m., with kitchen opening at 8 a.m. Sat.-Sun. 8 a.m.-2 p.m. www. spoonsbaltimore.com. 24 E. Cross St., 410.539.8395 $$ Map D8

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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. Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-2 a.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-2 a.m. 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). Sun.-Thurs. noon-midnight, Fri.-Sat. noon-1 a.m. www.angiesseafood.com. 1727 Pratt St., 410.342.0917 $$$ Map F6 THE BLACK OLIVE— Greek. On a cobble-

stone street, hospitality by the Spiliadis family: seafood, rack of lamb, vegetarian. Organic ingredients, sustainable wines. Private wine cellar dining. Mon.Fri. noon-2:30 p.m., nightly 5-10 p.m. www.theblackolive.com. 814 S. Bond St., 410.276.7141 $$$$ Map E8 BLUE MOON CAFE— American. Popular

spot in the mornings, serving breakfast anytime. Regulars rave about housemade cinnamon rolls and Captain Crunch French toast. Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.3 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 24 hours. www.blue moonbaltimore.com. 1621 Aliceanna St., 410.522.3940 $ Map E7; 1024 Light St., 443.759.4907 Map C8 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. Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight, Sun. till 10 p.m. Early and late happy hours. www.dinosaurbar bque.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. Mon.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. till 9 p.m. 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. Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.2 a.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Brunch weekends till 3 p.m. Happy hour weekdays 4-7 p.m. www.koopers.com. 1702 Thames St., 410.563.5423 $$ Map E8 MARE NOSTRUM— Mediterranean. Sleek

Southern Scratch Kitchen

spot for Greek classics: grilled meats and fish, dolmas, a variety of dips from hummus to yogurt with beets and garlic. Mon.-Thurs. 4-10 p.m., Fri. till 11 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-11 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-10 p.m. www.marenostrum baltimore.com. 716 S. Broadway, 410.327.6173 $$$ Map E/F7 POINTS SOUTH LATIN KITCHEN— Latin.

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

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. Mon.-Wed. 510 p.m., Thurs.-Sat. till 10:30 p.m. Bar late. Weekend brunch. 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. Sun.-Wed. 11 a.m.-midnight, Thurs.-Sat. till 2 a.m. www.riptidebythebay.net. 1718 Thames St., 410.732.3474 $$$ Map F7 SLÁINTE IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT— Irish. “Sláinte” is Gaelic 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. Daily 7 a.m.-2 a.m. Breakfast. Happy hour Sun.-Fri. 3-7 p.m. www. slaintepub.com. 1700 Thames St., 410.563.6600 $$ Map E8

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THE GUIDE THAMES STREET OYSTER HOUSE— Seafood. New England- and Mid-

Atlantic-style fare prepped by Eric Houseknecht: lobster roll, bouillabaisse, crab cakes, skirt steak, also soups, sandwiches. Wed.-Sun. 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Sun.-Thurs. 510 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5 p.m.-midnight. Bar till 1:30 a.m. daily. www.thames streetoysterhouse.com. 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. Sun.-Thurs. 10 a.m.11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 9 a.m.-11 p.m. www. twistfellspoint.com. 723 S. Broadway, 410.522.4000 $$ Map F7 WATERFRONT KITCHEN— American.

Spot with its own greenhouse for farmsourced cooking. Maryland rockfish, organic chicken, steak and pasta. Tues.Fri. 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m., Tues.-Thurs. 59 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 510 p.m. Sun. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. (brunch) and 5-9 p.m. At Douglass-Myers museum, water taxi stop #8. Valet p.m. www. waterfrontkitchen.com. 1417 Thames St., 443.681.5310 $$$-$$$$ Map E8 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. Mon.-Fri. 3 p.m.-1 a.m., Sat.Sun. 11 a.m.-1 a.m. Happy hour Sun.-Fri. 3-7 p.m. 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. Mon.Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri. till 11 p.m., Sat. noon-11 p.m., Sun. noon-10 p.m. Bar till close. www.bmorebirroteca.com. 1520 Clipper Road, 443.708.1934 $$ North of Map A1

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. Sun.-Thurs. 5-11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight. Weekend brunch (Fri.-Sun.) 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Free valet. www.thefood marketbaltimore.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. All-day breakfast. Kids menu. Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.10 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.-9 p.m. www.golden westcafe.com. 1105 W. 36th St., 410.889.8891 $-$$ North of Map B1 LA CUCHARA— Basque. Inside historic

Meadow Mill, former site of the London Fog factory, a traditional pintxos bar for jamon croquettes, tortilla Espanola and modern takes on tapas. Wood-grilled entrees, plus sweets like chocolate hazelnut bombe. Knowledgeable sommelier. Mon.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m. and 59 p.m. www.lacucharabaltimore.com. 3600 Clipper Mill Road, 443.708.3838 $-$$$ North of Map B1 LE GARAGE— French. Garage gone chic

for updated French classics like French onion soup dumplings, beef tartare with Asian touches, burger au poivre. Intriguing tartines (open-faced sandwiches). Sun.-Thurs. 5 p.m.-midnight, Fri.-Sat. till 1 a.m. Late-night menu. Sun. brunch. www.legaragebaltimore. 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. Mon.-Thurs 5-10 p.m., Fri.Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. till 9 p.m. Weekend brunch 10 a.m.-2 p.m. www.wood berrykitchen.com. 2010 Clipper Park Road, 410.464.8000 $$$ North of Map B1

Harbor East AZUMI—Japanese Fusion. Chic wa-

terfront spot for modern takes on Japanese seafood and steak (Wagyu, filet mignon). Full sushi menu with fish flown 28

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

in from Tokyo, creative desserts, sakes with a master sommelier. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. and 4-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. and 4 p.m.-midnight, Sun. 4-10 p.m. DJ weekends. www. azumirestaurant.com. 725 Aliceanna St., 443.220.0477 $$$ Map D7 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-$114; wine extra). Wine pairings by Tony Foreman. Water views from bar. Mon.-Sat. 5:30-10 p.m. www.charleston restaurant.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. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri. 11 a.m.11 p.m., Sat. noon-11 p.m., Sun. 310 p.m. Happy hour weekdays, 36:30 p.m. www.chiussushi.com. 608 S. Exeter St., 410.752.9666 $$ Map E7 CINGHIALE— Italian. Lauded chef Cindy

Wolf’s enoteca/osteria for “modern” and “honest” fare of Northern and Central Italy: à la carte or four courses ($62), rustic menu ($29). Mon.-Thurs. 5:30-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. 5-9 p.m. www.cgeno.com. 822 Lancaster St., 410.547.8282 $$$$ Map E8 FLEET STREET KITCHEN— American.

Historic building with cedar wine cellar, floor-to-ceiling windows, open kitchen, artisanal, farm-to-table cuisine: butterpoached lobster, duck confit, short ribs. Beers, wines, cocktails. Mon.Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. till 9 p.m. www.fleetstreetkitchen. com. 1012 Fleet St., 410.244.5830 $$$$ Map E7 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). Sun.Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m. 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,


DINING eight ouzos. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. and 4-10 p.m., Fri. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. and 4 p.m.-midnight, Sat. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. and 4 p.m.-midnight, Sun. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. and 4-10 p.m. www.ouzobay.com. 1000 Lancaster St., 443.708.5818 $$$$$$$ Map E7 PAZO— Mediterranean. See-and-be-

seen restaurant-lounge in cavernous digs. Beard finalist Cindy Wolf’s fare of Spanish coast and Italy’s isles: tapas, seafood, game and Neapolitan pizza plus 100-label wine list. Complimentary valet parking. Mon.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 1 a.m. (bar till 2 a.m.), Sun. 5-9 p.m. www.pazorestaurant.com. 1425 Aliceanna St., 410.534.7296 $$$$$$$ Map E7 ROY’S— Hawaiian Fusion. Beard-winner

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

angiesseafood.com

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. Mon.Fri. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. till 9 p.m. Happy hour and late night bar. www.roysrestaurant.com. 720-B Aliceanna St., 410.659.0099 $$$$$$$ Map D7 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. Breakfast, lunch and Sun.-Thurs. 6-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5:3010:30 p.m. www.witandwisdom baltimore.com. Four Seasons Hotel, 200 International Drive, 410.576.5800 $$$-$$$$ Map D7

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

gio’s ricotta gnocchi, tuna crudo, charred octopus, pastas ($$), prawns with polenta, strip steak with fingerling potatoes. A la carte or six courses $95, wine pairings $65. Valet. Tues.-Sat. 511 p.m. Weekend brunch. www.voltaggio.com. 614 Water St., 410.528.0200 $$$-$$$$ 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. Breakfast, lunch and Mon.Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. till 9 p.m. Bar later. Happy hour w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m

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THE GUIDE Mon.-Fri. 4:30-6:30 p.m. www.bando restaurant.com. 2 N. Charles St., 443.692.6172 $$$ Map C5 BUBBA GUMP SHRIMP CO.— Seafood.

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. Sun.Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m. Happy hour weekdays 4-6 p.m. www.bubbagump.com. 301 Light St., 410.244.0838 $$ Map D7 DICK’S LAST RESORT— Pubs & Taverns.

“Eat, drink and be wary” (of the outspoken staff) says this spot on the pier at Power Plant. Lunch till late. Nautical decor (huge anchor), beer and “porch” for nightly live rock. “Firecracker” salmon, fried shrimp and scallops, “crabby” cakes and (served in steel buckets) ribs, other “grub and booze.” Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m. www.dickslastresort.com. 621 E. Pratt St., 443.453.5961 $ Map D6 FRANK & NIC’S— American. Near Cam-

den Yards, “West End Grille” with 15 TVs. Scallops, crab cakes, chops, filet and lo mein. Kids’ menu, game day specials, happy hours. Some nights DJ, live music. Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.1:30 a.m., Sat.-Sun 10 a.m.-1:30 a.m. www.frankandnics.com. 511 W. Pratt St., 410.685.6800 $$ Map B6 FRENCH KITCHEN— French. In Lord

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. Mon.-Fri. 6:30 a.m.-2 p.m. (Kitchen closes between breakfast and lunch). Wed.-Sat. 5:30-9 p.m. Weekend brunch 6:30 a.m.-noon. www.lord baltimorehotel.com. 20 W. Baltimore St., 410.539.8400 $$-$$$ Map C5 HARD ROCK CAFÉ— American. London-

born “hamburger joint” with rock ‘n’ roll motif, sounds and memorabilia (rocker gear) in Power Plant Live! Fajitas, steaks, smokehouse ribs and chicken. Kids menu, Rock Shop merch. Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight, bar late. www.hardrock cafe.com. 601 E. Pratt St., 410.347.7625 $$ Map D6

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JOE SQUARED— Italian. Coal-fired piz-

zas, 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. Sun.-Mon. 11 a.m.-midnight, Tues.-Sat. till 2 a.m. www.joesquared. com. 33 W. North Ave., 410.545.0444 $$ North of Map C1; 30 Market Place, 410.962.5566 Map D5 JOHNNY SANCHEZ—Southwestern.

Overlooking Ravens stadium, star-chef team Aaron Sánchez and John Besh’s venture at Horseshoe Casino. Empanadas, goat tacos, suckling pig carnitas, lobster and mango ceviche, pork belly sandwich, cheese flan, cinnamon churros. Small plates, late-night menu ($). Margaritas, major beers (16 Mexican+), Latin and California wines. Sun., Wed.Thurs. 5-11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 2 a.m. www. caesars.com/baltimore. 1525 Russell St., 443.931.4575 $-$$ South of Map B8 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. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. till 9 p.m. 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, Maryland style crab soup). Tablecloths, dark wood paneling, chandeliers, mosaic floors and mahogany bar. Patio by lighthouse. Sun.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m. Happy hour weekdays 4-7 p.m. www.mccormickand schmicks.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. Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-3 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 7:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. 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

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

MORTON’S— Steakhouse. Where power-

lunchers dig into porterhouse, New York strip, filet mignon, lobster, shrimp Alexander. Cocktails, bar and sommelier team. Sun.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m. 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. Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-9 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 10 p.m. www.phillipsseafood.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. Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m. (kitchen closed 2-3 p.m.). Happy hour weekdays 47 p.m. Brunch Sun. till 2 p.m. www. rusty-scupper.com. 402 Key Highway, 410.727.3678 $$$ Map D7 SATURDAY MORNING CAFE—Southern.

“Simple Alabama cuisine” made from scratch, with breakfast served all day. Sandwiches, salads and chef’s specials (Cajun chicken pasta, BBQ chicken, teriyaki salmon) for lunch. Daily 7:30 a.m.-3 p.m. www.saturday morningcafe.com. 111 Water St., 410.528.7789 $ Map C6 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. Daily 11 a.m.-2 a.m. www.tinroof baltimore.com. 32 Market Place, 443.873.8137 $ Map D5 TIR NA NOG— Irish. Well-appointed

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 harbor action. Daily 11 a.m.-2 a.m. www.tirnanogbaltimore.com. 201 E. Pratt St., 410.483.8968 $$ Map D6


DINING 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. Sun. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Mon.-Thurs. till 11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight. Also Columbia and Ellicott City. www.unos. com. 201 E. Pratt St., 410.625.5900 Map D6

Little Italy CHIAPPARELLI’S— Italian. Since 1940, a

beloved Little Italy destination. Rustic brick walls, white tablecloth service. Generous pastas ($$), classic veal dishes, famous salad, mussels in white wine, crab cake Castillo. Wine bar. Sun.Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-9 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 10 p.m. www.chiapparellis.com. 237 S. High St., 410.837.0309 $$$ Map E6 LA SCALA— Italian. Chef-owner Nino’s

shellfish, veal chops, herbed or stuffed, steaks, salumi, 17 housemade pastas ($$), Caesar salad. Indoor bocce court (at happy hours), wine tasting room and terrace. Valet daily. Mon.-Thurs. 4:3010 p.m, Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. 210 p.m. www.lascaladining.com. 1012 Eastern Ave., 410.783.9209 $$ 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 surfand-turf, linguine with six sauces. Kid’s menu ($). Sat.-Wed. 11 a.m.-midnight, Thurs.-Fri. till 1 a.m. 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. Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-midnight, Fri.-Sat. till 1 a.m. www.mosseafood.com. 219 S. President St., 410.837.8600 $$-$$$ Map D6 OZRA— Mediterranean. Persia-meets-

Mediterranean in this stylish two-level space. Eggplant three ways, tabouleh, grilled and skewered meats, Persian ice cream. Select wines. Bar and terrace on second floor. Tues.-Thurs. 5-10:30 p.m., Fri.-Sun. 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m. www.ozraus. com. 806 Stiles St., 410.528.2710 $$$$$ Map E6

Mount Vernon 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. Sun.-Mon. 5-9 p.m., Tues.Thurs. till 10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 10:30 p.m. www.thebrewersart.com. 1106 N. Charles St., 410.547.6925 $$ Map C2 DUKEM— Ethiopian. Colorful platters of

tastes to scoop up with injera bread (no forks). Veggies, kitfo, tibs, wats. Often live music, dancers, singers plus coffee ceremony some nights. Ethiopian wine and beers. Daily 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m. www.dukemrestaurant.com. 1100 Maryland Ave., 410.385.0318 $$ Map C2 THE HELMAND— Afghan. Surrounded by

textiles (on the wall), dine on traditional fare (callow, kabobs) in this restaurant (open since 1989) owned by the brother of the president of Afghanistan. Lamb and vegetarian dishes, tea service. Sun.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5-11 p.m. www.helmand.com. 806 N. Charles St., 410.752.0311 $$ Map C3 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. Tues.-Thurs. 5:30-9:30 p.m., Fri. till 10 p.m., Sat. 510 p.m. www.theivybaltimore.com. 205 E. Biddle St., 410.514.0303 $$$$ Map D2 THE PRIME RIB— Steakhouse. Since

1965, fine 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. Mon.-Thurs. 510 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. 49 p.m. 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. Sun.-Thurs. 5-9 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 10 p.m. www.sottosoprainc. com. 405 N. Charles St., 410.625.0534 $$$ Map C4

TIO PEPE— Spanish. Since 1968, softly 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. Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri. till 11:30 p.m., Sat. 5-11:30 p.m., Sun. 4-10 p.m. www. tiopepebaltimore.com. 10 E. Franklin St., 410.539.4675 $$$ Map C4

Mount Washington CREPE DU JOUR— French. Savory and

sweet fillings, including sugar and lemon, ratatouille, walnuts and blue cheese. French-inspired entrées in p.m. Mon. 11 a.m.-9 p.m., Tues.-Thurs. till 10 p.m., Fri. till 11 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.11 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. www. crepedujour.com. 1609 Sulgrave Ave., 410.542.9000 $$ ETHEL’S CREOLE KITCHEN— Cajun/ Creole. Baltimore’s slice of the bayou

serves up spicy gumbo, red beans and rice, jambalaya and blackened fish. Consider a po’ boy sandwich for lunch. Tues.-Sun. 11 a.m.-2 p.m., Tues.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. till 9 p.m. www.ethelscreolekitchen.com. 1615 Sulgrave Ave., 410.664.2971 $$ North of Map A1 HAUTE DOG CARTE— American. “Fabu-

lous franks” in all weather outside the Bonjour Bakery Cafe. Line up for spicy Italian with Dijon, Filipino with ginger miso sauce, “veggie pup” and daily chef specials. Wed.-Sun. 11:30 a.m.2:30 p.m. www.hautedogcarte.com. 6070 Falls Road, 410.608.3500 $ North of Map A1 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. Mon.Sat. 11 a.m.-11 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Bar till late. www.mtwashingtontavern. com. 5700 Newbury St., 410.367.6903 $$$ North of Map A1 THE NICKEL TAPHOUSE—American.

Buzzing tavern (est. 2013) known for fries, mussels, roasted oysters, burgers ($$), ribs, wild catfish. Wines, cocktails, 32 draft beers. Mon.-Thurs. 4-10 p.m., Fri. till 11 p.m., Sat. 5-11 p.m., Sun. 510 p.m. Weekend brunch 11:30 a.m.3 p.m. www.nickeltaphouse.com. 1604 Kelly Ave., 443.869.6240 $$ North of Map A1 w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m

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THE GUIDE

Entertainment

Inspired by video games, real-life escape rooms have become all the rage. At this Power Plant Live! venue near the Inner Harbor, two of the three rooms offer mysteries with a Baltimore twist. Think robbery on the B&O Railroad

Concert Venues 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. Broccoli Samurai, Headless Robot, Ten Feet Tall Jan. 19; Sunbathers, The Milestones, The Far Future, The Herd Brothers Jan. 21; Runaway Gin, A Tribute to Phish Jan. 28; Tinnarose, Caleb Stine Feb. 18; Mammojam 2017 March 4. 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. Aesop Rock with Rob Sonic and DJ Zone Jan. 19; Who’s Bad: The Ultimate Michael Jackson Tribute Band Jan. 27; Chippendales 2017: Best. Night. Ever. Tour Feb. 8; Beth Hart Feb. 13; Frozen Harbor Music Festival 2017 Feb. 17-18; Golden Gate

WC Harlan (a gold locomotive, above) and the death of one-time resident Edgar Allan Poe. Teams have 60 minutes to solve the puzzles and escape. $29/person. www.charm cityclueroom.com. 6 Market Place, 443.970.6678. Map D5

Wingmen Feb. 22; David Duchovny Feb. 27; Australia’s Thunder from Down Under March 10-11; New Found Glory March 22; PotterCon March 25. 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. John Cleese Jan. 17; BSO SuperPops with singers Ann Hampton Callaway, Tony DeSare and Frankie Moreno: “A Tribute to Ol’ Blue Eyes” Jan. 27-29; BSO with pianist Gabriela Montero: Bruckner’s Symphony No. 4 Feb. 3-4; BSO Pulse: Lake Street Dive Feb. 23; BSO with pianist Hélène Grimaud: Brahms’ Piano Concerto No. 2 March 3-4; BSO SuperPops: Celtic Celebration March 17-19; Ted Koppel March 21; BSO Off the Cuff: Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Scheherazade” April 1; BSO with vio-

In a cozy Remington row house with no sign (look for the door that says “Enter”), this speakeasy-style drinking den mixes some of the best cocktails in the city. 400 W. 23rd St., 410.925.7900. North of Map C1

linist Ray Chen: Berlioz’s “Symphonie fantastique” April 7-8. 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. “A Night of Magic, Mystery and Illusion” featuring Steven Brundage Jan. 28; Riverdance: The 20th Anniversary World Tour Feb. 17-19; The Classic Rock Show March 7; Impractical Jokers: The Santiago Sent Us Tour March 10; Kathy Griffin April 7; Rain: A Tribute to The Beatles April 13. www.lyricopera house.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. “What a Joke”: A

JERRY, SAY “CHEESE!” Brian Shupe, co-owner of The 8x10 club (above) in Federal Hill, was once a photographer for the Grateful Dead.

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

(FROM LEFT) ©BRUCE FINGERHOOD/FLICKR, CREATIVE COMMONS; ©JEN TROVATO/HORACE AND MAE PHOTOGRAPHY

Charm City Clue Room


E N T E R TA I N M E N T National Comedy Fest Supporting the ACLU Jan. 21; Black Radio, Van Meter, The Driftwood Renegades Jan. 29; 90s Dance Party Feb. 4; Box of Rain: Grateful Dead Tribute Feb. 18; Allison Crutchfield and The Fizz March 2; Architects, Stray from the Path, Make Them Suffer March 28; Great American Crayon Band April 15. www.theottobar. 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 RAMS HEAD LIVE!— In Power Plant Live!,

top touring acts, emerging artists, tribute bands and local favorites. Most shows standing room only; all ages. Riff Raff Jan. 21; Blind Pilot Feb. 4; Psycho Killers with Marco Benevento Feb. 11; Old Dominion Feb. 17; Saved by the 90s with The Bayside Tigers Feb. 25; The Legwarmers (80s experience) March 18; Blue October March 30. 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. Amsoil Arenacross 2017 Jan. 20-22; Disney on Ice: “Dream Big” Feb. 8-12; Monster Jam Feb. 24-26; Amy Schumer Live March 4; Lionel Richie with Mariah Carey March 15; Stevie Nicks with The Pretenders March 26; Festival of Laughs with Mike Epps April 1. 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. Inon Barnatan (piano), Anthony McGill (clarinet), Alisa Weilerstein (cello) Jan. 22; Venice Baroque Orchestra Feb. 12; Jonathan Biss (piano), Brentano String Quartet Feb. 26; Junhong Kuang (guitar) March 11; Daniil Trifonov (piano) April 2. www.shriverconcerts.org.

105 Shriver Hall, 3400 N. Charles St., 410.516.7164 North of Map C1 WINDUP SPACE— Edgy art/music/film/

performance space with casual bar. Every Tues. (9:30 p.m.-midnight): the Out of Your Head collective of improvising musicians. Every first Thurs. (7 p.m.): MONDOBaltimore: Trash Flicks and Cult Epics. Tues.-Sat. (sometimes Sun. and Mon.) from 5 p.m. www.thewindupspace.com. 12 W. North Ave., Station North, 410.244.8855 North of Map C1

Theater BALTIMORE THEATRE PROJECT— Lovers

of stagecraft head here for original works, music and dance performances. “The Call of the Wild,” Jack London’s novel adapted and performed by Charlie Bethel through Jan. 29; Iron Crow Theater: “F***ing A,” a modern-day fable inspired by “The Scarlet Letter” Feb. 3-12; Peabody Chamber Opera: “Women in the Dark,” three short operas Feb. 16-19; Evolutionary Art Works: ”The Meeting,” imagining the philosophical debate between Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. Feb. 23-26; Todd Marcus Quintet, Quartet and Trio March 10-12; Iron Crow Theatre: “Edith Can Shoot Things and Hit Them,” a comingof-age tale set on a remote farm in Middle America (mature themes) March 31-April 2. www.theatreproject. org. 45 W. Preston St., Mount Vernon, 410.752.8558 Map C2 CENTER STAGE— Kwame Kwei-Armah

overseeing classic and new productions at Maryland’s recently renovated state theater. Cafe and bar. “The White Snake,” inspired by an ancient Chinese fable about animal spirits who take human form Feb. 24-March 26; “Twisted Melodies,” an immersive one-man show based on the life of 70s soul singer Donny Hathaway March 17-April 16. www.centerstage. org. 700 N. Calvert St., Mount Vernon, 410.332.0033 Map C3 CHESAPEAKE SHAKESPEARE COMPANY— Performing in the renovat-

ed 1885 Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company (and, during the summer, outdoors in Ellicott City). ”Richard III,” Shakespeare’s historical play about the king’s rise to power, here set during WWI Feb. 10-March 5; “The Taming of the Shrew,” the Bard’s comedic and

controversial battle of the sexes March 17-April 9. www.chesapeake shakespeare.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. “Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations,” a stylized and fastpaced adaptation in which six actors play 35 characters Feb. 1-March 5; “Los Otros,” a musical about two people who discover they are linked in unexpected ways March 22-April 23. www. everymantheatre.org. 315 W. Fayette St., Westside, 410.752.2208 Map C5 FELLS POINT CORNER THEATRE—

Community theater with local performers and writers. “Blackbird,” an intense drama about a criminal coming face to face with his victim Jan. 13-29; “Trust,” a play depicting lust, temptation and rock ‘n’ roll in the 90s grunge scene Feb. 17-March 19; “10x10x10,” 10 plays by 10 actors, each 10 minutes long March 31-April 16. www.fpct.org. 251 S. Ann St., 410.276.7837 Map F6 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. Ina Garten The Barefoot Contessa, sharing stories from her life in the Hamptons and her Food Network show Jan. 17; “Beautiful,” following Carole King’s rise to fame and including songs like “I Feel the Earth Move” and “You’ve Got a Friend” Jan. 24-29; The State Ballet Theatre of Russia: “Swan Lake” Feb. 10-11; Shen Yun:”Experience a Divine Culture,” classical Chinese music and dance Feb. 17-19; Lewis Black: The Rant, White & Blue Tour Feb. 24; “The Bodyguard,” a musical based on the film with the hit song “I Will Always Love You” Feb. 28-March 5; “Rent,” a 20th anniversary tour of the Pultizer Prizewinning musical that re-imagines

w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m

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THE GUIDE Puccini’s “La Bohème” March 31April 2. www.france-merrickpac. com. 12 N. Eutaw St., Westside, 410.837.7400 Map B5 SPOTLIGHTERS THEATRE— Intimate

community stage (since 1962). “The Threepenny Opera,” Bertolt Brecht’s Socialist critique of capitalism and morality, set in Victorian-era London Jan. 13-Feb. 5; “The Women,” a satirical look at female culture in 1939 New York Feb. 24-March 19; “The Wiz,” an urbanized adaptation of “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” April 7-30. www. spotlighters.org. 817 St. Paul St., Mount Vernon, 410.752.1225 Map C3 VAGABOND PLAYERS— “America’s

oldest continuously running little theater. “The Complete History of America (abridged),” a rollercoaster ride through 600 years of history in 6,000 seconds Jan. 6-Feb. 5; “Motherhood Out Loud,” celebrated American writers on the humor and drama of being parents Feb. 24-March 19; “The Odd Couple,” Neil Simon’s beloved comedy about roommates with opposite personalities April 7-May 7. www. vagabondplayers.org. 806 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 410.563.9135 Map E7

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 BAD DECISIONS— Unassuming decor but

sophistication in its hand-crafted cocktails like s’mores martinis and meadspiked cider. Monthly bacon happy hour (free bowls of bacon, habanerobacon mojitos) draws crowds; check website for date. Daily 2 p.m.-2 a.m. www.makeabaddecision.com. 701 S. Bond St., Fells Point, 410.979.5161 Map F7 BREWERS CASK— With “Love Thy Beer”

as its slogan, bar with 50 bottles and 20 drafts. Full menu with emphasis on comfort appetizers. Mon.-Thurs. 4 p.m.-1 a.m., Fri.-Sat. noon-1 a.m. www.brewerscask.com. 1236 Light St., Federal Hill, 410.273.9377 Map D8

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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 CLUB CHARLES— Art deco decor and

bohemian vibe. A John Waters favorite near The Charles Theatre. Mon.-Sun. 6 p.m.-2 a.m. www.clubcharles.us. 1724 N. Charles St., Station North, 410.727.8815 North of Map C1 GRAND CENTRAL— A gay bar in a mas-

sive space with pool tables, a video pub and a dance floor. 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 HOWL AT THE MOON— Power Plant Live!

institution featuring a rock ’n’ roll dueling piano bar, happy hours and theme nights. Wed.-Thurs. 7 p.m.-2 a.m., Fri. 5 p.m.-2 a.m., Sat. 5:30 p.m.2 a.m. www.howlatthemoon.com. 22 Market Place, Downtown/Inner Harbor, 410.783.5111 Map D5 ILLUSIONS BAR & THEATER— Spencer

Horsman, co-owner and magician, mingles on weekends with card tricks and an escape act. A chic crowd orders Magic Hat beer and magic-themed cocktails. Fri.-Sat. 5 p.m.-1 a.m. www. illusionsmagicbar.com. 1025 S. Charles St., Federal Hill, 410.727.5811 Map C8

2 a.m. Themed happy hours weekdays. www.maxs.com. 737 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 410.675.6297 Map F7 MOSAIC LOUNGE— A fashionable crowd

flocks here for martinis and steady music. Décor features mirror balls and mood lighting. Fri.-Sat. 10 p.m.2 a.m. www.mosaic-baltimore.com. 4 Market Place, Downtown/Inner Harbor, 443.468.5308 Map D5 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 OF LOVE AND REGRET— From the brewer

of Stillwater Ales, a cheery pub with 20-plus draft beers plus small plates, gourmet burgers. Upstairs lounge with cocktails on tap. Mon.-Thurs. 410 p.m., Fri. till 1 a.m., Sat. 11 a.m.1 a.m., Sun. till 10 p.m. www.oflove andregret.com. 1028 S. Conkling St., Canton, 410.327.0760 East of Map H8 ONE-EYED MIKE’S— At a hand-carved

1860s bar, staff serving wine by the glass and bottle plus cocktails and beer. World’s first Grand Marnier club. Also full menu of pub fare. Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-2 a.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-2 a.m. www.oneeyedmikes.com. 708 S. Bond St., Fells Point, 410.327.0445 Map E8 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.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.2 a.m., Sat. 11 a.m.-2 a.m., Sun. 11 a.m.midnight. www.theowlbar.com. Inside the Belvedere, 1 E. Chase St., Mount Vernon, 410.347.0888 Map C2

LOCH BAR— Connected to the Four Sea-

PRATT STREET ALE HOUSE— Brewpub

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

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

MAX’S TAPHOUSE— Beer mecca attract-

ing a raucous crowd with 102 brews and five casks on tap plus 1,200 bottled beers. Pool tables on the first floor with a chill lounge upstairs. Daily 11 a.m.-

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

RYE— From the man behind Stuggy’s

hot dogs, a cozy and candlelit bar with ambitious cocktails using locally sourced and house-made ingredients. Short food menu (charcuterie, poutine, flatbread). Daily 5 p.m.-2 a.m. www. ryebaltimore.com. 807 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 443.438.3296 Map F7


E N T E R TA I N M E N T 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 plus video poker machines, table games and a World Series of Poker room. Restaurants by celeb chefs Guy Fieri, John Besh and Aarón Sánchez, plus a 24-hour bar and the Baltimore Marketplace. www.caesars.com/ baltimore. 1525 Russell St., Downtown, 443.931.4200 South of Map B8

Indoor Skydiving IFLY BALTIMORE—An indoor skydiving

facility, where flyers suit up, enter the flight chamber and float on air. From $59.95. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.Sat. 9 a.m.-11 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.-10 p.m. www.iflyworld.com. 8209 Town Center Drive, White Marsh, 667.888.4359

Movie Theaters THE CHARLES THEATRE— Five screens

at this streetcar barn-turned-cinema that books everything from arty foreign films to current Hollywood releases. Arrive Sun. 9:45 a.m. for coffee and bagels, and stay after for a Q&A session. www.thecharles.com. 1711 N. Charles St., Station North, 410.727.3456 North of Map C1 THE SENATOR THEATRE— Baltimore’s

last remaining Art Deco (1939) movie palace, now restored and screening current films. www.thesenatortheatre. com. 5904 York Road, Belvedere Square, 410.435.8338 North of D1

Sports BALTIMORE ORIOLES— Named for the

Maryland state bird, Baltimore’s MLB team playing on its home field at the storied Camden Yards. Toronto Blue Jays April 3, 5; New York Yankees April 7-9; Boston Red Socks April 21-23; Tampa Bay Rays April 24-26. www.orioles.com. 333 W. Camden St., Downtown, 888.848.2473 Map B6

COPPIN STATE UNIVERSITY— Founded

in 1900, a historically African-American college with NCAA Division 1 basketball team the Eagles. North Carolina A&T State Jan. 14; Norfolk State Jan. 23; Morgan State Jan. 28; North Carolina Central Feb. 6; BethuneCookman Feb. 11; Delaware State Feb. 13; Hampton March 2. $10, children/students $5. www.coppin statesports.com. 2500 West North Ave., 410.951.6936 North of Map A1

Sports Bars GREENE TURTLE— Flat screens in every

booth bring new meaning to dinner in front of the TV. Hearty pub food (burgers, wings). Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.2 a.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-2 a.m. www. greeneturtle.com. 718-722 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 410.342.4222 Map E7 LOONEY’S PUB— One of the anchors

of O’Donnell Square, a casual, twostory corner pub. More than 40 TVs broadcast sports. www.looneyspubmd. com. 2900 O’Donnell St., Canton, 410.675.9235 Map G8 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—

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. (also lunch and brunch). www.winemarketbistro. com. 921 E. Fort Ave., Locust Point, 410.244.6166 South of Map E8

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THE GUIDE

Navigate

Friends doubted him, but beer buff Chad Brodsky was determined to start a brewery-touring biz. So in 2008 he donned some lederhosen and handed out flyers on a Burlington, Vermont, street corner, attracting his first

Cruises BALTIMORE WATER TAXI— Canopied

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 SPIRIT CRUISES— Tours, plus scenic

cruise and buffet on two enclosed decks. Open-air top deck, DJ and dancing. Lunch, brunch, dinner and holiday cruises. Year-round; times vary by day. $18.92-$79.90. www.spiritcruises baltimore.com. 561 Light St., Inner Harbor, 866.845.7245 Map D7 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

Mount Vernon customer. Since then his company has expanded to Boston, Philly, D.C. and this suds-obsessed city, where experts lead visits to top breweries, followed by a meal with beer pairings. $85-$90. www.city brewtours.com. 410.469.8687

BYOG (grog) cruises. Resumes April 1; check schedule online. $22-$25, under 3 $12. Through March 31, indoor pirate parties available. www.urbanpirates. com. 911 S. Ann St., Fells Point, 410.327.8378 Map F7

Neighborhoods CANTON— More than 200 years ago,

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

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 FELLS POINT— William Fell, a Quaker

shipbuilder from Lancaster, England, founded this maritime community in 1730. Today the 14-block area

North of the Inner Harbor, find this cultural enclave that’s home to The Walters Art Museum, the Peabody Institute, Center Stage and the nation’s first Washington Monument, above. www.mount vernonbaltimore.org. Map C3/4

bustles with young residents who like its architectural history, cafes and taverns. www.fellspointmainstreet.org. 410.675.8900 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; 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 Inner Harbor. Look for the Katyn Memorial landmark sculpture. www.harboreast.com. President and Aliceanna sts. Map E7 INNER HARBOR— An urban revitalization

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 LITTLE ITALY— Narrow, twisting streets

known for bocce courts, colorful citi-

A FLAG FACT Because of its enormous size, the Star-Spangled Banner was pieced together on the floor of a Baltimore brewery.

36

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

(FROM LEFT) COURTESY CITY BREW TOURS; ©SEAN MARSHALL/FLICKR, CREATIVE COMMONS

City Brew Tours


N A V I G AT E zens and Old World food at many trattorias that range from checkered cloth to chic. www.littleitalymd.com. Map E6 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

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

cultural institutions, arts venues, parks. Offers guided walking tours of city neighborhoods beginning in April. $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 EXECUCAR— At more than 55 airports

around the country, sedan and SUV service with flat rates, meet-and-greet and group services plus frequent flier points and miles with select airlines. www.execucar.com. 800.410.4444 SUPERSHUTTLE— Serving more than 40

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—

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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1

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Light Rail Train Station (MARC) Bus Station

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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

Romantic

Luxury Seeker

Baltimore can be a grown-up town, but its playful personality hints at pro-kid leanings, too. Even in the off season, there’s plenty to see at the (1) Maryland Zoo in Baltimore. Tots spot African penguins (especially at meal time: 10:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m.), giraffes and polar bears. At the Inner Harbor, (2) Uno Pizzeria & Grill offers kids more than their own menu; they get to make their own pizza pie. On the site of a former oyster cannery, the (3) Museum of Industry tells the story of Baltimore’s manufacturing past with intriguing displays and hands-on demonstrations.

In the city where Edgar Allan Poe fell in love, there’s plenty of inspiration for amorous outings. At the (free) (1) Baltimore Museum of Art, lovers gaze at beautiful paintings and sculptures and the world’s largest collection of works by Henri Matisse. In (2) Patterson Park, couples take selfies by the lovely Victorian Pagoda (above) or glide along hand-in-hand on the ice rink (through March 30). Candlelight and live opera singers set the mood for romance at chef Riccardo Bosio’s (3) Sotto Sopra, where diners also fall in love with house-made pastas like ravioli “dell’amore.”

This city of Gilded Age mansions offers many ways to enjoy the good life. The father-and-son team at (1) Christopher Schafer Clothier’s entices the fashion-conscious with bespoke suits made with the latest fabrics from London’s Saville Row and Jermyn Street. Art aficionados find fine prints by Kirst, Kusama and Stella at (2) Goya Contemporary, plus up-and-comers through the gallery’s Goya-Girl Press. At (3) Magdalena restaurant inside The Ivy Hotel, a mansion-turned-luxe lodging, chef Mark Levy plates up luscious dishes like bucatini with crab and scallops.

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

(FROM TOP TO BOTTOM, LEFT TO RIGHT) COURTESY MARYLAND ZOO IN BALTIMORE; COURTESY UNO PIZZERIA & GRILL; COURTESY MUSEUM OF INDUSTRY; ©2006 SUCCESSION H. MATISSE, PARIS/ ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY NEW YORK. PHOTO BY ERIK KVALSVIK; COURTESY SOTTO SOPRA; COURTESY CHRISTOPHER SCHAFER CLOTHIER; COURTESY GOYA CONTEMPORARY; COURTESY THE IVY HOTEL

[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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