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	<title>Club Charles &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>Club Charles &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>Baltimore&#8217;s Best Dive Bars</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/baltimores-best-dive-bars/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Aaron Hope]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Dec 2022 16:30:57 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[1919]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore dive bars]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cat's Eye Pub]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Club Charles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dive bars]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[J.M. Giordano]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mt. Royal Tavern]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Natty Boh]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?post_type=article&#038;p=135249</guid>

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Edited by Lydia Woolever
</p>
<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.5rem; padding-top:1rem; margin-bottom:0;">
Photography by J.M. Giordano
</p>
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Lettering by Luke Lucas</p>
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Spot illustrations by Jason Schneider</p>



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<h6 class="thin tealtext uppers text-center">Food & Drink</h6>


<img decoding="async" class="mobileHero" alt="Long Live Dive Bars" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/baltmag_divebars_red_layers_FA_V2_CMYK.jpg"/>

<h5 class="text-center">We raise a Boh to Baltimore’s old-school watering holes.</h5>

<hr/>


<p class="unit text-center" style="font-size:1.5rem; padding-top:1rem; margin-bottom:0;">By Lydia Woolever</p> 
<p class="clan text-center" style="font-size:1rem; padding-top:1rem; margin-bottom:0;">Photography by J.M. Giordano</p>
<p class="clan text-center" style="font-size:1rem; padding-top:1rem; margin-bottom:0;">Lettering by Luke Lucas </p>
<p class="clan text-center" style="font-size:1rem; padding-top:1rem; margin-bottom:0;">Spot illustrations by Jason Schneider</p>
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<h6 class="thin uppers text-center" style="color:#23afbc; text-decoration: underline; padding-top:1rem;">December 2022</h6>
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<p>
<b>ALLY HUTCHINS HAS SPENT MOST OF HER LIFE</b> behind the bar
at 1919. On a Wednesday evening in late October, the 60-year-old Baltimore
native stands with her back to the register, taking drink orders from patrons
who arrive as soon as the side door opens at 5 p.m.</p>
<p>“Hi, Dominic—what can I get for ya?” she shouts to a regular, her gray braid swinging as she lets out a raspy laugh and The Young Rascals’ 1967 “Groovin’” plays softly on the stereo.
</p>
<p>
Hutchins is at home here. Her family bought this corner rowhome and its blue neon
sign back in 1984, and she now lives upstairs with her husband, John, and their
bull terrier, Sniffy. Usually, though, she can be found downstairs, amidst the <I>tchk</I> of beer cans and
above the other loose-leashed dogs who mosey in through the back alley of this tiny neighborhood
hole-in-the-wall, tucked back off busy Fleet Street on the far eastern edge of Fells Point.</p>
<p>In fact, blink, and you can miss it. Though not once you’re inside.
</p>
<p>
“Put something up and it never comes down,” says Hutchins, looking
around the shrine-like walls, plastered in fading photographs, folk art, bumper stickers, cattle skulls, and Christmas lights that glow year-round—a hodgepodge patina reflecting the cast of local characters who have made this place their bar.
</p>
<p>
“We’ve had two deaths here, one wedding, and some people have even told me they
got pregnant because of my drinks,” says Hutchins with a wry smile. “But at the end of the day, it’s just a bar. Sometimes magic happens.
Sometimes nothing does.”
</p>
<p>
Of course, such stardust does not grace every drinking establishment, and those
like 1919 are becoming an endangered breed. Today, we call them dive bars, once considered an insult but now an undeniable term of endearment, particularly in these changing times. As longtime owners age out, new developers increasingly move in, leaving a sleek homogeny of high-end cocktail bars and hipsterfied microbreweries in their wake.
</p>
<p>
Dive bars, by contrast, defy simple definition, ranging in the eye of the beholder from simple, old-school, corner taverns, beloved for their gruff barkeeps, to rough-around-the-edges drinking dens, with loud music and dim lighting. Always, they sell affordable drinks and lack most modern amenities. Maybe there’s a jukebox, or a dartboard, and often, a well-worn pool
table. The faint whiff of cigarette smoke is commonplace. As is Keno. </p>
<p> Don’t expect a website or social media—just know that they close late, or at a last-minute time of their choosing, and a handful still open at sunrise. Night and day, there are regulars, many of whom live within crawling distance of the front door.
</p>
<p>
“People
would probably strike if we closed, so we keep going,” says Ana Marie Cushing of <a href="https://catseyepub.com/">Cat’s Eye Pub</a> on Thames Street, even as longtime neighbors like BAR and The Wharf Rat fall like dominos.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Above: Scenes from 1919 in Fells Point.</center></h5>
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<div class="medium-8 push-2 columns" style="padding-top:1rem; padding-bottom:1rem;">
<p>
In Baltimore, neighborhood
bars were once a dime a dozen—some straightlaced, some rowdy—with seemingly every
block offering a beer and a shot to a mix of shift workers, sailors, artists, newspapermen, and other street-roving souls. In 1968, the city had 2,200 liquor licenses to today’s 1,221, and by 1979, <i>Baltimore</i> magazine predicted that, soon enough, “New bars will all look the same, and how a drinker is to tell one hanging-fern/exposed-brick/butcher-block-tabled spot from another escapes [us].” That, of course, proved alarmingly prescient. Then the coronavirus pandemic closed even more of these one-of-a-kind haunts for good.
</p>
<p>
“When one place goes, a little piece of you goes with them,” says Andy Norris, second-generation owner of <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/berthas-fells-point-closure-regulars-pay-respects-to-bar-that-changed-the-neighborhood/">Bertha’s Mussels</a>, which will <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/berthas-fells-point-closure-regulars-pay-respects-to-bar-that-changed-the-neighborhood/">shutter</a> on South Broadway this month after 50 years in business. “People come here from other places and find their own families. Which epitomizes Charm City.”
</p>
<p>
Indeed, these bars are intertwined in this town’s identity—frayed tethers to its underdog
spirit and blue-collar past, crumbling temples of simpler times. Here, conversation conquers digital scrolling, and community is formed over strong-pour communion. At their best, these are everyman spaces—where regardless of age, class, race, or gender, everyone can come together over the Orioles, Utz, and Natty Boh. Though some have
undoubtedly opened their arms to outsiders more than others.
</p>
<p>
“We welcome everybody,” says Ben Franklin, veteran bartender at the Mt. Royal Tavern in Mid-Town Belvedere. “That is, until you become an asshole—then we throw you out.”
</p>
<p>
No nonsense. No nostalgia. No irony. No frills. No fuss. Baltimore dives hold the line between the past and future, where behind brick glass and Formstone facades this city can remember where it came from, and, with a good buzz, consider where it wants to go.</p> <p>At the very least, we can still pull up a barstool and push the limits of last call just a little bit longer,
particularly at watering holes like those listed below.
</p>
<p>
“This place has given me life,” says Hutchins, noting that her daughter, Zana, who manages 1919’s live-music lineup, hopes to take over the bar one day. By 6 p.m., it’s standing-room only, and no one seems to mind.</p><p>“I’ll probably stay until I can’t get up and down the steps anymore,” she says. “Besides, what else am I going to do?”
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>A vintage cigarette
machine greets you at Club Charles.</center></h5>
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<hr/>



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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
3 MILES HOUSE
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
REMINGTON
</h6>

<p>
There are few places in Remington
where the old and
newly revitalizing neighborhood
collide more than this
blush-colored hole-in-the-wall
on Miles Avenue. For the
last two decades, 3 Miles
House has been an
enclave for longtime locals to
wind down after a hard
day’s work. Most regulars
knock back cans of red-label
Budweiser. Scratch-offs are
sold behind the bar,
along with Newport cigarettes
for the smoking patio out back.
It’s the old guard for the first
few hours of service, but on
weekend evenings, more recent
residents trickle in for the
lacquered jukebox and games of darts under the watchful
eye of a painterly portrait of John
Wayne.
</p>
<p>
<b>Know The Way:</b>
Get buzzed in through the 27th
Street door, next to the
mural of the bar’s late house cat,
Missy, who was known to
curl up against customers.
</p>
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<h5 class="magnel uppers">
THE BOILERMAKER
</h5>
<p>
Beloved by bartenders,
this shot-and-a-beer
combo was
apparently named
for the post-shift
drink of steam locomotive
workers in
the 1800s. Whether
downed as a slow sip
or quick chaser, it
remains a cheap,
stiff way to take a
load off. Never go
wrong with a
bourbon and Boh.</i>
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Above: An old pay phone and
abundant memorabilia at 1919; the 1919 mascot, Sniffy.</center></h5>
</div>
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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
1919
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
FELLS POINT
</h6>

<p>
There is a good chance
you’ve driven down Fleet
Street a thousand times and
never known that on the
edge of a quiet alley sits this
hidden gem of a
neighborhood bar. Once you
discover its blue neon
sign, you’ll want to return
time and time again to this
narrow Fells Point rowhouse,
covered in an eclectic mix of mementos gathered over
the last 38 years. Amidst
dusty chandeliers and colorful
string lights, it’s a whimsical swirl
of weird and wonderful that
bottles some dwindling essence
of Baltimore, where
artists, musicians, and other
bohemian types mingle with
both lifelong and come-lately neighbors over cans of
beer, booze on the rocks,
or owner Sally Hutchins’
special dirty martinis. On
weekends, expect an impressive
lineup of live alt-country
tunes, from bluegrass
residencies to their
monthly hootenanny. 
</p>
<p>
<b>Must Love Dogs:</b>
Enter like a local
through the side door,
where repeat customers
often bring four-legged
friends for happy hour.
</p>
</div>
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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
BUCK FOWLER’S TAVERN
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
OVERLEA
</h6>

<p>
Google might say that Buck’s
on Belair Road—pronounced
“b’lair” in these parts—is
permanently closed. But past
northeast Baltimore’s autobody
shops and car dealerships,
on the literal city-county
line, you’ll find this circa-1950
tavern is still kicking, though just
barely. Into the ’90s, the family-run, former “stag bar” (aka
men only) was a popular hangout for
Colts players like Art Donovan
and Bruce Laird, but many of its biggest fans
have kicked the bucket in recent years.
Even so, the Coors Light sign
turns on daily at 11 a.m., with
WBAL on the TV, a <i>Sun</i> on the
oak bartop, and perhaps the city’s
best dartboard in the back room. During a recent lunch beer, one
local, whom the tenured bartender
referred to as “the mayor,”
topped off his own tequila
and talked about how bustling
the place used to be. Take his
advice: “If you’re not looking
for a lot of wild and crazy
excitement, come on down, sit
with the old farts, and have a
beverage.” 
</p>
<p>
<b>All In The Family:</b>
The second-generation proprietor,
Chuck, passed away in 2004,
when he was eulogized in
<i>The Sun</i> as “the host with the
most,” leaving the business to
his son-in-law.
</p>
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<span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE="MAX-HEIGHT:200PX; width:auto;" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/baltmag_divebars_pikeville-whiskey.jpg"/></span>

<h5 class="magnel uppers">
R.I.P. WHITE LABEL
</h5>
<p>
There was a time not
that long ago when
every Baltimore dive
kept a rail bottle of
white-label Pikesville
Supreme behind the bar. First
distilled in Maryland
in the late 1800s,
the rye whiskey was
discontinued in
2016, much to the
chagrin of imbibers
with frugal wallets and decent taste.
</p>

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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
BUTTS & BETTY’S
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
UPPER FELLS
</h6>

<p>
The red neon in the oblong
windows of Butts & Betty’s
speaks to the sort of all-service glory days that this 87-year-old
stalwart once offered near
Patterson Park. Unlike the
packaged goods advertised on
aging bar signs across the city,
this Gough Street bar touted
sandwiches and money orders,
while a newer marquee with
some missing letters also now
trumpets lottery, NFL, and a
working ATM. Sadly the hot
pastrami has disappeared, like
most of the Bethlehem Steel
workers who used to show up
for drinks and dinner at 6 a.m.
Pizzas now get nuked behind
the bar to help buffer the
Jameson and Jell-O shots that
flow so freely here.
Keno and a purple pool table
encourage you to stay awhile,
while neighborhood pups, like
Penny the pug, greet guests
like they own the place.  
</p>
<p>
<b>Leading Ladies:</b>
The bartenders of
this fourth-generation, family-run,
woman-owned business
are that just-right blend of
surly and sweet that makes a
modern Bawlmer hon.
</p>
</div>
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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
CAT’S EYE PUB
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
FELLS POINT
</h6>

<p>
If Baltimore had an official
honky-tonk, it would be down
the cobblestones of Thames
Street and up through the turquoise
portal of Cat’s Eye Pub.
Seven days a week, this Fells
Point anchor cranks out a serious
roster of live music—from
rock-and-roll and blues to funk
and jazz by notable local and
regional favorites like Nothin’
But Trouble, Sean K. Preston,
and Ursula Ricks—luring a rug-cutting
crowd, always ready for a good time. Maritime
memorabilia nods to the neighborhood’s past, when watering
holes like this old faithful were
safe harbor for the tugboat
captains and visiting sailors of
a working waterfront. As fancy
hotels, valets, and bouncers
move in on the surrounding
blocks, Cat’s Eye, circa 1975,
keeps the salty-dog flame burning. Pick one of the
35 beers on tap, ogle at the old oil-painting homage to Ireland, and
ask for second-generation owner Tony
Cushing, who is often
behind the bar and ready to pour a round of
shots.  
</p>
<p>
<b>Love Letters:</b>
After several
coats of paint, management has
conceded that the bathroom graffiti
is a rite of passage. Grab a
Sharpie and leave your mark.
</p>
</div>
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<img decoding="async" STYLE="MAX-HEIGHT:200PX; width:auto; display:block; margin: 0 auto;" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/baltmag_divebars_rip-berthas.jpg"/>

<h4 class="magnel uppers text-center">
GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN
</h4>
<p class="text-center">
Let’s pour one out for
those that have left us lately.
</p>


<div class="medium-10 push-1 columns">
<div class="medium-4 columns" >

<p>
American Harry’s <br/>
Backstretch Saloon<br/>
Bad Decisions<br/>
BAR<br/>
Bertha’s Mussels<br/>
Dimitri’s
</p>

</div>
<div class="medium-4 columns" >

<p>
The Dizz<br/>
Holiday House<br/>
Leadbetter’s<br/>
Long John’s Pub<br/>
Midway Bar
</p>

</div>
<div class="medium-4 columns" >

<p>
Park Inn<br/>
Pop’s Tavern<br/>
Rendezvous Lounge<br/>
The Wharf Rat
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Above: The main bar and the
exterior neon at Club Charles in
Station North.</center></h5>
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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
CLUB CHARLES
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
STATION NORTH
</h6>

<p>
We got into a heated debate at
the Mt. Royal Tavern over
whether Club Charles qualified
as a dive bar. Low lighting?
Check. Cheap beer and shot
combos? Check. A Rock-Ola
jukebox featuring an incredibly
curated catalogue that ranges from David Bowie to Björk?
Check, check. Sure, Club Chuck,
as it’s affectionately known, is
hard to categorize, but in our
eyes, this Art Deco hideout has
all the charm, edge, and crimson
Lynchian lighting that fits the
bill. Open Wednesday to Sunday
until 2 a.m., it’s a rendezvous for
night owls of all ilks, often featuring
a cast of creative characters
and the occasional visit
from our own Pope of Trash,
John Waters. Trust in the front
window’s neon “Cocktails”
sign—the bartenders here make
bona fide concoctions, often featuring
macabre names like
Persephone and Corpse Reviver.
We opt for the rye Manhattans.  
</p>
<p>
<b>Pulp Fiction:</b>
Owner Joy Martin’s
mother, Esther, opened the bar
as The Wigwam in 1951, which
Waters once described as “Studio
54 for bums.”
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>
Above: Sipping a beer at The Drinkery; the U-shaped bar of The Drinkery in Mt. Vernon.</center></h5>
</div>
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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
THE DRINKERY
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
MT. VERNON
</h6>

<p>
Waxing rhapsodic about last-of-their-kind dives is especially true when it comes
to stalwarts like The Drinkery
on Read Street. An institution
of the local LGBTQ community
since 1972, this butter-yellow
building on the western edge
of Mount Vernon is one of the
longest-standing gay bars in
Baltimore, with the loss of other
inclusive establishments perhaps
epitomized in <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/pride-festival-celebrates-the-hippo-closes/">The Hippo becoming
a CVS</a>. Inside, the V-shaped
bar follows the shape
of its snug room, and all around
it, a buoyant crowd rubs elbows
while Whitney Houston
blasts through the stereo.
Order a cold can of Union Craft
Brewing’s locally made Divine
IPA, or a mixed drink of your
choosing, but buyer beware—these are heavy pours. (Luckily,
there’s a throwback snack machine to soak up the spirits.)
“Dive bars are just more fun,” says manager Larry Evener.
“There’s camaraderie—everybody gets to know
everybody.”
 
</p>
<p>
<b>Boogie Shoes:</b>
On our last
visit, the back corner turned
into an impromptu line dance,
and all were welcome to join.
</p>
</div>
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<h5 class="magnel uppers">
NO SMOKING
</h5>
<p>
It’s been 15 years
since Maryland
banned smoking
inside bars and
restaurants, and
while we don’t
miss the overflowing
ashtrays,
we do have a soft
spot for the few
old dives that
never got rid of
their retro cigarette
machines.
Some places still
sell packs from
behind the bar.
</p>

</div>
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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
FRAZIER’S ON THE AVENUE
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
HAMPDEN
</h6>

<p>
There’s a decision that must
be made when visiting <a href="https://www.instagram.com/fraziersbmore/">Frazier’s</a>
on 36th Street in the
heart of Hampden: to enter
the cavernous <i>Cheers</i>-like hall
to the left, with its back billiards,
compact bar,
and shlumpy leather couch
amidst a cacophonous swirl of
’80s music and ole Bawlmer
odes—Pimlico, Memorial Stadium,
Arrow Beer. Or to enter
the small, rock-and-roll-ish side bar to the right,
with its single pool table and
fading framed posters from the 1979 City Fair. “It’s crazy
over there, isn’t it?” said one
regular on a Thursday evening,
referring to the former as we
sidled into a green laminate
booth in the latter. The side
bar opens at 5 p.m., while service
starts at breakfast or
lunch with hangover-curing
comfort food next door. Both
spaces draw a diverse mix of
locals for $2.50 happy-hour
drafts and a late last call of 2
a.m. Their infamous karaoke is over, unfortunately, but trivia
now takes place on Tuesday
nights. 
 
</p>
<p>
<b>Back In The Day:</b>
Circa 1939, the original Frazier’s
used to be located on the now-residential
corner of West
33rd Street and Elm Avenue.
</p>
</div>
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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
IDLE HOUR
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
RIVERSIDE
</h6>

<p>
One might not expect to find a
corner bar best known for its
devotion to Chartreuse on a
list of local dives, but next year,
Idle Hour <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/beloved-idle-hour-reopens-in-south-baltimore/">turns 20</a>, and all along, the
beloved South Baltimore
haunt has straddled its
good taste with an unpretentious irreverence, making it
right at home in the once-working-class neighborhood
of Riverside. For certain customers,
house pickleback
shots are preferred over that
signature green liqueur, which has been made by French monks since the 1700s (and
which this bar was once supposedly
the top-seller of in
the entire United States). On
your way in under its tiny tin
awning, smack a favorite bumper
sticker on the collage-like
front door, then grab a well-worn
stool and listen to the record
player spin all night. A few
years back, their loyal following
helped raise over $50,000
to keep the red lights glowing
on Fort Avenue. Here’s to another 20, at least.
 
</p>
<p>
<b>Rock On:</b>
The bar hosts BYO vinyl and DJ
nights, with listening sessions
currently in collaboration with
WYPR’s <I>Essential Tremors</I> radio show.
</p>
</div>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Above: Iconic brick glass, a taxidermied marlin, and Utz chips for
life at Mary’s Tavern.</center></h5>
</div>
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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
MARY’S TAVERN
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
UPPER FELLS POINT
</h6>

<p>
Searching for a dive bar in
Upper Fells, you’ll likely walk
right by Mary’s on a sleepy
corner of Gough Street on your way toward its neighbor, Butts
& Betty’s. Don’t come looking
for loud music and sticky
counters. Instead, owner Jim
Poniatowski keeps his pint-size
parlor impeccably tidy,
and he’s always on call, either in his
backroom recliner or at the
bar watching technicolor TV
shows. Walking inside is like stepping
back in time to the bygone
days when every Baltimore
block had its own
standby, tended by the
folks who lived upstairs. We
stumbled upon this multi-generation, circa-1959
treasure years ago and have
kept it close to the chest ever since,
in hopes that it would stay as unchanged
as it was that first
evening. Red awnings and
wood paneling wrap the room
in warmth, and cold cans of
Boh are served with an itty-bitty
beer glass, like the shift
drinks of yore. 
 
</p>
<p>
<b>Greatest Hits:</b>
Mary’s has one of the last
legit jukeboxes in the city,
spinning classics like Elvis
and Patsy Cline.
</p>
</div>
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<h5 class="magnel uppers">
BAR SNACKS
</h5>
<p>
Everyone knows
that Baltimore is
Utz country, and a
good indicator of a
local dive is often
found behind the
bar, where a small
rack hangs fun-size
bags of these Pennsylvania-made potato
chips. Extra
points for those
with the crab flavor
or Party Mix.
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>
Above: The Sistine
Chapel mural ceiling at the Mt. Royal
Tavern; making important jukebox
selection decisions at the
Mt. Royal Tavern; the iconic
neon sign at the “Dirt Church.”</center></h5>
</div>
</div>

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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
MT. ROYAL TAVERN
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
MID-TOWN BELVEDERE
</h6>

<p>
In our eyes, the Mt. Royal Tavern
might be the best dive bar
not just in Baltimore, but the
entire world. In this city, though, it is the
ultmate granddad of such institutions,
where locals know it
as MRT, or simply the “Tavern,” or even more aptly,
the “Dirt Church”—that unorthodox
mecca congregating
all walks of city life for nights
of bacchanalian revelry along
its long blue bar and beneath
its Sistine Chapel-replica ceiling.
“Beware pickpockets and
loose women,” one sign warns,
though the clientele is largely
an amicably inebriated MICA-meets-buccaneer bunch. Follow
the red neon sign inside, where
cheap beer, hefty shot glasses,
and bags of Utz are in stock
seven days a week, starting at
10 a.m. Pay your hand-written
tabs with cash only and
chat up your barkeeps, who
are full of colorfully R-rated
stories. (The bar once installed
a “cuss bucket,” which didn’t
last long, of course.) The back smoking
alley is a party in its own
right, and the real-deal jukebox
is one of the best in town,
featuring everything from The
Misfits to Tom Waits and
Howlin’ Wolf. 
</p>
<p>
<b>Pen Pals:</b>
Ask your bartender for the gift
pack: a house postcard to
send to someone special and
a matchbook that dubs the
bar “where art is bullshit and
good bullshit is an art.”
</p>
</div>
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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
MUIR’S
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
FEDERAL HILL
</h6>

<p>
Once a neighborhood of factory
and waterfront workers,
the Fort Avenue stretch from Federal
Hill to Fort McHenry used
to be a haven of blue-collar
bars. These businesses have
been replaced by condos and
coffee shops, but Muir’s is still
there, with its pinnacle spire
and “Beer Wines Liquors” neon
sign. Circa 1944, it’s the oldest
continuously owned bar on the
block and still run by the
namesake family. Don’t let the
bright lighting and white walls
of recent renovations fool you;
this is still a true-blue corner
bar, with one retired barmaid
turned neighborhood barfly
recently schooling us on her
mashed potato recipe. (We’ll take it to the grave, Sharon.) They
open before lunchtime, Monday
to Saturday, when Natural
Light beers and neat Jim
Beams are go-to orders.
</p>
<p>
<b>Harbor Heritage:</b>
Three generations of
Baltimore’s industrial muscle
have run this bar. The original
owner, Roland Muir Sr., was a
tugboat captain; his successor,
Roland Jr., was a longshoreman
(and National Brewing Company
employee); and his nephew,
Tom—the current owner—works at the Port today.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Above: Scenes
from Mum’s in Federal Hill: graffiti and stickers
cover the walls; darts and pool
are still favorite pastimes.</center></h5>
</div>
</div>

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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
MUM’S
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
SHARP-LEADENHALL
</h6>

<p>
On a leafy residential street on
the western edge of Federal
Hill, Mum’s is a far cry from the
Mother’s Grilles and Mad Rivers
that make up much of the
rest of the neighborhood. The
gritty dive is a cocoon of dark
wood and crotchety service,
with a sign shouting “THIS
IS NOT A FRAT PARTY” to the
packs of post-college kids who
sometimes stumble inside. One
Wednesday night this fall, the L-shaped
bar was full of low-key locals,
ranging from millennials to
boomers, with one young couple playing pool beneath the
seemingly sole light source:
a green-glass billiard lampshade.
The old jukebox has been digitized,
and we’re patiently waiting for live rock concerts
to return by the boarded-up fireplace, where a
life-size cut-out of Luke Skywalker
now watches over in their
stead. 
</p>
<p>
<b>Hot Shot:</b>
Forget Fireball—first timers should order the
“Number 1 Special,” which includes a
can of Boh and a shot of “Evil,” aka a
sweet, house-made, cinnamon-honey
ode to the Lithuanian
liqueur, viryta.
</p>
</div>
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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
OTTOBAR
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
REMINGTON
</h6>

<p>
Most folks know of this hallowed
Howard Street business as a
rock club, with music lovers usually wandering down the alley to
crowd its mosh pit for
concerts beneath the twinkle of
a grungy old disco ball. Upstairs,
though, is another story, where
a mishmash of red vinyl booths,
checkerboard linoleum floors,
local art, and a lone pool table create
an oft-overlooked yet quintessential
dive. Open nightly, the
Ottobar lounge is a rough-and-tumble
retreat for hipsters and
hard-rock enthusiasts, featuring a
constant rotation of events,
from drag shows and dance
parties to their infamous Metal
Monday showcase. The logo
famously features a martini
being stirred by the namesake
bar cat, but we tend to lean toward
Natty Bohs and whiskey-ginger
ales. 
</p>
<p>
<b>Music Maven:</b>
If you get the
chance, chat up owner Tecla
Tesnau, who has many a story
after being with the business
since its humble downtown
beginnings, circa 1997. “These
crazy little bars are great places
to get steeped in the pulse of
the city,” she says.
</p>
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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
POL’S CAFÉ
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
CANTON
</h6>

<p>
One local bar owner told us that we
had to check out this weathered
Canton pool hall. It’s where he
and his staff would often end up
after closing time, which makes
sense—following a busy night
of hospitality, Pol’s is the kind
of unassuming corner joint
where the industry, or any
neighborhood regulars, like the
ones who rooted on the Ravens
during one fall visit, can be truly anonymous. This Foster Avenue
elder dates back to 1934, which,
upon closer look, you can
clearly see in the silver bar, the
brick-glass windows, and the pink-and-cream subway-tiled walls.
TVs and video poker now distract
visitors waiting their turn
at eight-ball. 
</p>
<p>
<b>Earn Your Stripes:</b>
The billiard table, with its golden
trophies lining the top of the
mantle-like bar, is a stop on the
local pool-league circuit.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Scenes from Shamrock
Inn: Tending
bar; pool trophies line the wall;
racking solids and stripes; a game
of eight-ball heats up.</center></h5>
</div>
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<div class="medium-8 push-2 columns" style="padding-top:1rem; padding-bottom:1rem;">

<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
SHAMROCK INN
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
HAMILTON
</h6>

<p>
Harford Road used to be a serious
strip for unfancy bars, from Dead Freddie’s
to Holiday House. Slowly
they’ve closed or changed
hands, but Shamrock Inn remains—a city-limits melting pot
that, with a blessing from habitué
John Waters, was voted one
of the best bars in America by
<i>Esquire</i> magazine in both 2007
and 2011. It’s one of the few
places “that hasn’t been affected
by real estate porn,” wrote Waters
back then, and that’s certainly
still true today. Past the
cobwebbed cigarette machine,
snag a busted barstool and signal owner Terry
for a beer from the packaged-goods cooler. “You actually
like that stuff?” asked one eyepatched
pool shark swigging a
Natural Ice when we ordered
our first Boh. Whatever you’re
drinking, you’re here to watch
the wannabe Cool Hand Lukes heckle each other over solids
and stripes. On occasion, cover
bands and DJ sets also fill the back
room.  
</p>
<p>
<b>Order A Poor Man’s Crab
Cake:</b>
Eating food at a dive bar
is a bit like Russian roulette, but
this compact flat-top-fryer combo fuels
a full food menu, from grilled
cheese to Baltimore coddies, aka “the poor
man’s crab cake.”
</p>
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<h5 class="magnel uppers">
LET’S GO O’S
</h5>
<p>
Whatever your
opinion on TVs in
bars, there are few
better ways to bond
with strangers in Baltimore than
by bellying up for a
Ravens or O’s game.
Remember the din
of local drinkeries
when the Birds
made it to the
American League
Championship
Series in 2014?
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Above: Pouring a Boh and a display of Baltimore’s boxing history at Venice Tavern in Highlandtown.</center></h5>
</div>
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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
VENICE TAVERN
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
HIGHLANDTOWN
</h6>

<p>
On the corner of Conkling and
Bank streets, a white sign with a
giant green arrow points down
sidewalk steps to one of the last
basement bars in Highlandtown,
if not Baltimore. Born when
Prohibition was repealed in
1933, <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/review-venice-tavern-little-italy-retains-character-of-highlandtown-landmark/">Venice Tavern</a> was founded
by Italian immigrants Mary
and Frank DeSantis, who sold
spaghetti and 15-cent beers out
of this subterranean lair beneath
their own home. Now run by fourth-generation
great-grandson,
Dominic, the bar’s black-and-white
photographs reveal that not much has changed.
A portrait of
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the patron saint of Repeal
Day, still presides over the bar,
which is open Monday through Saturday, starting as early
as 8 a.m., 
but now craft beers have
been added to the taps, like Diamondback’s
Green Machine and Brewer’s
Art’s Resurrection. Imbibers
range from Gen Z pool players
aiming for the corner pocket to blue-collar
barflies betting their luck on
video slots. 
</p>
<p>
<b>Local Lore:</b>
Baltimore’s
boxing history is on full
display here, with vintage fliers and
a hand-drawn mural celebrating
the lightweight achievements of
Dominic’s grand-uncle.
</p>
</div>
</div>



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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
WALT’S INN
</h4>
<h6 class="mohr-black" style="color:#d4a027;">
CANTON
</h6>

<p>
On the beaming plastic sign at
the corner of O’Donnell Street
and East Avenue, the number
seven has been painted over, indicating that this once-nightly
neighborhood bar has
felt the changes faced by many
of its kind in the wake of Covid-19. They’re now only open
on weekends, but the Canton
throngs still know to shuffle
down to the tin awnings,
Formstone siding, and porthole
windows of Walt’s on Fridays
and Saturdays, when the seasoned
songhouse hosts arguably
the best karaoke in town.
Be sure to join on the chorus
when some brave singer picks
Wilson Phillips, Tracy Chapman,
or Jon Bon Jovi. But let the
Solo cups foretell just how
rowdy (and, oftentimes, bro-tastic)
this bar can be. 

</p>
<p>
<b>Hot Tip:</b>
Muster the courage needed to
trill your favorite tunes with
the help of infamous house
Jell-O shots, which, on one recent visit, meant pumpkin pie flavor with a crown of whipped cream.
</p>
</div>
</div>

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<h2 class="magnel text-center">ANOTHER ROUND</h2>
<h5 class="thin uppers clan text-center">NEW BARS KEEP THE OLD CHARM
FLOWING IN BALTIMORE.</h5>

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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
<a href="https://29thstreettavern.com/">29TH STREET
TAVERN</a>
</h4>
<h6 class="magnel" style="color:#2f99b3;">
REMINGTON
</h6>

<p>
There was a moment
when we foolishly
wondered where else
we’d go in Remington for a shot of Pikesville
Rye and off-key karaoke
once the green-and-yellow light shut
off for good at Long
John’s Pub. But in
2018, Baltimore native
Aaron Reinhart eased
our worries when he
purchased the bar.
Sure, the white-label
bottles and mic-sung
standards might have
gone the way of the
buffalo (and luckily, the
carpet floor, too). But Reinhart
kept the old Formstone,
and the new neon sign
has quickly become a
neighborhood beacon,
drawing a diverse
crowd for affordable
drinks—more than 50
offerings in total, from
Coors Banquet bottles
to Charm City Meadworks’
honey brews—and a sizeable menu of
down-home pub fare.
On a recent Friday
happy hour, every
seat was taken at the
J-shaped bar. 
</p>
<p>
<b>Heading North:</b>
Reinhart also
took over Belvedere
Square’s old Swallow at
the Hollow watering
hole back in 2011, and
it’s busy as ever today.
</p>

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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
<a href="https://www.instagram.com/melanies_griffithstavern/?hl=en">MELANIE’S AT GRIFFITH’S TAVERN</a>
</h4>
<h6 class="magnel" style="color:#2f99b3;">
HAMPDEN
</h6>

<p>
There was a collective
sigh of dismay among
many Hampdenites
when it was announced
that the neighborhood’s
last authentic dive bar,
known by locals as “the
Ice House,” would be
sold. But since reopening
in April with a fresh
coat of paint, new owners
Allison Crowley and
Hannah Spangler have
made minimal changes
to the Hickory Avenue
hangout, originally a
men-only stag bar and
always a mainstay for
the neighborhood’s
dwindling working-class
crowd, though the
vibe has certainly
evolved. Natty Boh
now mingles with natural
wine, but, more
importantly, the atmosphere
has grown increasingly
inclusive for younger
patrons and the LGBTQ
community. On a recent
Thursday night, a baby
and its beer-sipping
parents were down the
bar from a gray-haired
old-timer fiddling with
a pack of Winstons.
</p>
<p>
<b>Fun And Games:</b>
Past customers can rejoice
in knowing that the
Pac-Man and Skee Bowl
games live on in the
bar’s left corner.
</p>

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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
<a href="http://oldmajorbaltimore.com/">OLD MAJOR</a>
</h4>
<h6 class="magnel" style="color:#2f99b3;">
PIGTOWN
</h6>

<p>
A stone’s throw from
Carroll Park, this Pigtown
corner bar has
become a welcome addition
to the Southwest
Baltimore community
since arriving in 2018.
The former Cockeyed
Cow Saloon got an upgrade
under owner
Candice Bruno, who has
transformed the classic
cop hangout on Carey Street
into a Black-owned, open-armed
meeting place for a
medley of neighbors—
first, through its rum-based
tropical cocktails
and Caribbean food menu, then through
its recurring events,
from yoga classes to
board game nights. Still,
in true dive fashion,
plenty of beers, both
ubiquitous and rare, are
on offer, plus a house
punch that packs a one-two.
</p>
<p>
<b>Looking Back:</b>
Old Major is named for a
central character in
George Orwell’s seminal
<I>Animal Farm</I>, and, of
course, the neighborhood’s
swine-strewn
history, when pigs were
once paraded from the
nearby B&O rail lines
through the streets to
local slaughterhouses.
</p>

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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
<a href="https://royalbluebar.com/">THE ROYAL BLUE</a>
</h4>
<h6 class="magnel" style="color:#2f99b3;">
STATION NORTH
</h6>

<p>
Randy Coffren
and Rich Pugh know how
to open a Baltimore bar.
From their flagship
Johnny Rad’s on the
Fells-Canton border to its sister
Snake Hill in Highlandtown,
the duo strikes the
right chord in creating
hip hangouts that are
suffused with the city’s
scrappy soul. At their
new digs on Maryland
Avenue, the old Gallery
One bartop has been
updated with punk concert
bills from the late
Charm City Art Space
venue, long located next door, and
that genre’s heyday gets
a hat tip throughout,
from ’70s-inspired décor
to a disco-balled dance
floor for late-night debauchery.
Order a Narragansett
tallboy and the
slam-dunk smash burger
to sustain you through
the night. Says Coffren, a
self-proclaimed dive bar
expert, “I’m going to end
up buying one of those
tiny six-tops and tending
bar until I croak.” We
hope he means it. 
</p>
<p>
<b>Side Hustle:</b>
Slink off to the
side lounge, where a
neon sign beckons “The
Party” to its analog
TV and retro sofas.
</p>

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<h4 class="magnel" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
<a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/southpaw-cocktail-bar-doug-atwell-finally-opens-fells-point/">SOUTHPAW</a>
</h4>
<h6 class="magnel" style="color:#2f99b3;">
FELLS POINT
</h6>

<p>
Cocktail aficionados
know that bartender
Doug Atwell helped
change the city’s drink
game when he opened the original Rye cocktail
bar on a sliver of South
Broadway in Fells
Point. That era ended in
2016, but luckily, for
the rapidly skyscraping
neighborhood, the veteran
barkeep has now
opened a new corner
bar at the crossroads of
Bond and Fleet streets.
Its nonchalant space
hawks fresh takes on
classic concoctions, plus
budget-friendly libations
like Coors Banquet
bottles or High
Life ponies (which can
be easily converted
into Atwell’s pride-and-joy Dr. Pepper shots).
An old-school jukebox
will be up and running
any day now. All we
ask is that he brings
back “Thunderstruck.” If you know, you know.
</p>
<p>
<b>What’s In A Name?</b>
Southpaw’s nom de
plume is not because
Atwell is left-handed
but rather is an homage to the
owner’s favorite
things: baseball and dogs,
not to mention our city’s location just below the Mason-Dixon Line. What’s more Baltimore
than that?
</p>

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		<title>Club Charles Comes Back to Life</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Oct 2017 08:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bar exam]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Club Charles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Station North]]></category>
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			<p>In an age when bars are becoming easier to define—dive, rustic, speakeasy—we cherish the ones that have defy categorization. For nearly 70 years, Club Charles (<em>1724 N. Charles St.</em>) has lived outside the box. That’s why its sudden closure announcement in late July via an unassuming black-and-white sign on its door and abrupt reopening earlier this month didn&#8217;t really surprise us at all.</p>
<p>But the characteristic impulsivity of owner Joy Martin (whose mom, Esther, bought the bar in 1951) had us feeling like the bar&#8217;s journey was unfinished—like a great conversation that gets disrupted by the bright lights of last call. For a couple of months, we mourned the charms and paradoxes of a place that always made us feel comfortable while still a little on edge. Club Charles is a bar where we can have an intimate conversation in the tiny room to the right of the bar or nearly get our head taken off by a trapeze artist up above. </p>

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			<p>Sure, with its crimson hue, neon “Cocktails” sign, and Lynchian aesthetic, you could call it hipster. But it also feels like an everyman bar. You wouldn’t be surprised to run into just about anyone—your buttoned-up coworker, your neighbor, or whatever musician is playing the Ottobar that night. That being said, its list of celebrity patrons does seem to have a through-line: Iggy Pop, Johnny Depp, and, in particular, John Waters, who would make a fitting poster child.</p>
<p>We&#8217;re relieved that it&#8217;s open again to be a beacon after a long night, a harbor from the humidity of Artscape, a go-to Halloween spot where the bartenders’ costumes are a little too scary, an excuse to wax rhapsodic in its circular booths and, of course, a place to curate our own soundtrack on its fabled jukebox. </p>
<p>When we are inside Club Charles, time operates on its own scale. We are never really sure how many minutes or hours we spend under those dim red lights. But we&#8217;re glad we get to spend a few more. For many years, a sign hung above the bar that proclaimed, “I’ll sleep when I’m dead.” We are just happy that this glorious ghost came back to life.</p>
<hr />
<p><em>This story originally appeared in the October 2017 issue of </em>Baltimore <em>and has been updated since its print publication</em>.</p>

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		<title>Open &#038; Shut: Tagliata; Huckle’s Brand Hot Sauce; Club Charles</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/open-shut-tagliata-huckles-brand-hot-sauce-club-charles/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Lauren Cohen]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Jul 2017 15:38:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Club Charles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Huckle's]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Open & Shut]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tagliata]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Local Fry]]></category>
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			<p><strong>COMING SOON</strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://tagliatarestaurant.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Tagliata:</a> </strong>Atlas Restaurant Group is putting the finishing touches on this new fine-dining den in Harbor East—as well as its neighboring cocktail bar The Elk Room—which are slated to debut in the next coming weeks. Set in the building that previously housed Fleet Street Kitchen, the new Italian chophouse will boast a rustic interior with nearly 140 seats, and a modern piano bar on the lower level. Headed up by former Cinghiale chef Julian Marucci, the kitchen will focus on house-cured charcuterie, pasta, and an array of steaks and chops. <em>1012 Fleet St., 410-244-5830</em></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.thelocalfry.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">The Local Fry:</a> </strong>North Baltimore locals will no longer have to make the trek south to dig into chicken wings and gourmet French fries at this Federal Hill shop. Husband-and-wife owners Kevin and Elizabeth Irish announced yesterday that they would be opening a second location at The Rotunda in Hampden. Slated to debut early 2018, the shop will feature the couple’s signature wings (think flavors like Old Bay, lemon pepper, and Gochujang), banh mi sandwiches, and loaded fries topped with everything from Buffalo chicken to barbecue pork. Though the new spot will be a bit smaller than the flagship (approximately 1,200 square feet), the owners are excited to cater to the Hampden, Roland Park, Charles Village, and Johns Hopkins communities. “We feel our menu perfectly suits these areas’ demographics,” Kevin and Elizabeth tell us. “We can’t wait to be a part of another great Baltimore neighborhood.” <em>711 W. 40th St.</em></p>

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			<p><strong><a href="https://www.facebook.com/TheBunShop/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">The Bun Shop:</a> </strong>Towson University students will have a new study spot to check out when classes resume this fall. The Bun Shop—which operates a flagship in Mt. Vernon and a second location on Light Street downtown—is making moves to the county, debuting yet another cafe at 40 W. Chesapeake Ave. in Towson. The artsy spot specializes in worldly offerings including everything from Paraguayan empanadas to Vietnamese iced coffee. <em>40 W. Chesapeake Ave., Towson</em></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.ddgbethesda.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Duck Duck Goose:</a> </strong>The Fells Point building that previously housed dive bar Bad Decisions is in for a makeover. Chef Ashish Alfred, a Montgomery County native, will bring a second location of his Bethesda restaurant Duck Duck Goose to the space later this year. A spin on the classic French brasserie, the restaurant offers small plates like beef tartar and Japanese eggplant ratatouille, alongside heartier entrees including scallops with Israeli couscous, and, of course, dry-aged duck. <em>1928 Fleet St.</em></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.hucklesauce.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Huckle’s Hot Sauce:</a> </strong>This homegrown hot sauce startup will join the likes of Earth Treks, The Charmery, and Baltimore Whiskey Company inside <a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.com/2017/5/16/union-craft-brewing-moving-to-medfield" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Union Collective</a> next year. The 138,000-square-foot Medfield warehouse will combine an expanded Union Craft Brewing facility and taproom with makerspace for eight local businesses. Huckle’s—which currently bottles its sauces out of Lauraville restaurant Maggie’s Farm during off hours—will take up 6,000 square feet of the communal market, making use of a test kitchen, retail area, and additional production equipment. <em>1700 W. 41st St.</em></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://annabelleetavern.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Annabel Lee Tavern:</a> </strong>This beloved corner bar has taken us all on a bit of an emotional rollercoaster over the past few months. Back in May, foodies were devastated when owner Kurt X. Bragunier announced that he would be <a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.com/2017/5/26/annabel-lee-tavern-closing-its-doors-this-weekend" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">closing his tribute</a> to Edgar Allan Poe due to financial reasons. But soon after, two local investors <a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.com/2017/6/12/annabel-lee-tavern-is-staying-open-after-all" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">swooped in to save</a> the spot—and we’re happy to report that a grand reopening date has officially been set for Friday, August 11. The dimly-lit hangout will reopen its doors with plenty of duck-fat fries, barbecue chicken nachos, and Buffalo mushrooms to go around. Moving forward, the bar will open for lunch on the weekends, expand its carry-out menu, make use of delivery services like OrderUp, and offer beer, wine, and growler refills to go on a daily basis. <em>601 S. Clinton St., 410-522-2929</em></p>
<p><strong>OPEN</strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.com/2017/6/12/annabel-lee-tavern-is-staying-open-after-all" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Avenue Kitchen &amp; Bar:</a> </strong>Earlier this week, two local restaurateurs launched this new concept in the space that formerly housed Le Garage on the Avenue in Hampden. Aptly named for its location, the restaurant from Patrick Dahlgren of The Rowhouse Grille and Bill Irvin, formerly of La Folie Steak Frites, will focus on American staples paired with local beer and wine. Dishes to look out for include duck taquitos, spicy grilled octopus, cast-iron strip steak, and crab cakes with lemon potatoes. <em>911 W. 36th St., 443-961-8515</em></p>
<p><strong><a href="https://www.facebook.com/bmorelicks/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">B’more Licks:</a> </strong>Just in time for peak summer temperatures, this ice cream shop on the corner of South Milton and Eastern Avenues is now officially <a href="{entry:45884:url}">open for business</a> in Highlandtown. The lengthy menu lists snowballs, Italian ice, a plethora of soft serve concoctions (including specialty flavors like amaretto, cinnamon, red velvet, and lemon cookie), and scoops of vegan ice cream. If you’re feeling adventurous, sample outside-of-the-box treats like waffle cone nachos, tacos, and cones filled with warm espresso. <em>2437 Eastern Ave.</em></p>
<p><strong>CH-CH CHANGES</strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.volt-aggio.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Aggio:</a></strong> Maryland’s own celebrity chef Bryan Voltaggio is bringing new energy to his modern Italian concept in Power Plant Live. He recently appointed chef Dan Metz, formerly of Canton’s Fork &amp; Wrench and The Wine Market in Locust Point, as chef du cucina. A graduate of L’Academie de Cuisine in Gaithersburg, Metz puts his own spin on traditional Italian flavors with new dishes including foie gras bruschetta topped with cherries and pickled mushrooms, a zucchini salad with burrata and basil-buttermilk dressing, and spaccatelli pasta with Marcona almond pesto. <em>614 Water St., 410-528-0200</em></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://claddaghbaltimore.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Claddagh Pub:</a> </strong>Don’t be surprised if things seem a bit different the next time you hit up this Irish staple on O’Donnell Square in Canton. Not only does the 24-year-old mainstay have a new chef and menu (think smoked kielbasa, pan-seared rockfish, and Asian duck), but it also boasts a <a href="{entry:46217:url}">revamped outdoor courtyard</a>. The previously underutilized space, which is now named The Cork Yard Bar, is equipped with a custom bar, strung lights, water misters, a designated area for live bands, and furniture imported from the Emerald Isle. <em>2918 O’Donnell St., 410-522-4220</em></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.thecharlesbaltimore.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">The Charles:</a> </strong>Federal Hill revelers will be happy to hear that the building which previously housed Mad River Baltimore will soon reopen with a brand-new concept called The Charles. Spearheaded by operation partners Andrew Wheeler and David Yike, the rebrand will yield modern-industrial touches, elegant banquette seating, and a menu of fine-tuned fare when it debuts this fall. Stay tuned for updates. <em>1110 S. Charles St., 410-727-2333</em></p>
<p><strong>EPICUREAN EVENTS</strong></p>
<p><strong>7/26: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/events/125155484712289/?active_tab=discussion" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Rum on the Roof</a><br /></strong>The Maryland Science Center continues its series on the science behind adult beverages with this special tasting led by master distiller Ben Lyon of Saint Michaels-based Lyon Distilling Co. Head up to the roof to enjoy sweeping views of the city skyline while sampling light bites, knocking back different varieties of Lyon’s rum, and sipping tropical umbrella drinks. <em>601 Light St., 7-9 p.m., $55-60, 410-685-2370</em></p>
<p><strong>7/26: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/events/410219329374442/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Smoking Bowls Cookout</a></p>
<p></strong>Head to Hampden’s Union Craft Brewing to enjoy craft beers paired with eats from Jon Carroll of local ramen pop-up Smoking Bowls. The evening’s menu will include Carroll’s take on classic American barbecue dishes, with options like carrot salad, teriyaki wings, cheeseburger steamed buns, and pork belly lollipops.  <em>1700 Union Ave., 5-10 p.m., 410-467-4290</em></p>
<p><strong>NEWS</strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.travelandleisure.com/trip-ideas/city-vacations/baltimore-sagamore-pendry-rebirth" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><em>Travel + Leisure</em> Gives Love to Charm City:</a></strong><strong> </strong>Baltimore received some well-deserved praise in a piece published by <em>Travel + Leisure </em>magazine earlier this week. Aside from lauding attractions like the Sagamore Pendry Hotel and Fells Point waterfront, the article—which calls us “the coolest city on the East Coast”—gives love to foodie hangouts like Café Hon, Woodberry Kitchen, Clavel, Cosima, and Bottega.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.giadadelaurentiis.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Giada De Laurentiis Teases Baltimore Restaurant:</a> </strong>In a Facebook Live Q&amp;A last week, Food Network star Giada De Laurentiis mentioned that she plans to open a new restaurant in Charm City next year. “I’m going to open a restaurant in Baltimore,” she said. “Don’t ask me why, I have to think of a reason. But I am going to open a restaurant in Baltimore in 2018.” Though there’s no word yet on the location of the spot, De Laurentiis joins a slew of celebrity chefs targeting the Baltimore area. The most recent being Gordon Ramsay, who will open a British-inspired steakhouse inside Horseshoe Casino later this year.   </p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.witandwisdombaltimore.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Wit &amp; Wisdom Receives Honors from <em>Wine Spectator</em>:</a><em> </em></strong>For the fifth consecutive year, Wit &amp; Wisdom inside the Four Seasons Baltimore has received an Award of Excellence by <em>Wine Spectator </em>magazine for its top-notch vino varieties. The restaurant was lauded for its expansive wine list, as well as its strength in champagne. “As an American tavern, we, of course, focus on domestic deliciousness,” said lead sommelier Julie Dalton, in a statement. “But I’m particularly thrilled for the nod to our strength in champagne. The world would be a happier place if we all drank more champagne.” <em>200 International Drive, 410-576-5800</em></p>
<p><strong>SHUT</strong> <strong>(FOR NOW)</strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.clubcharles.us" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Club Charles:</a> </strong>The neon lights inside this 66-year-old Station North staple will dim for the foreseeable future on August 1. According to reports by <a href="http://www.citypaper.com/blogs/feedbag/bcpnews-last-call-club-charles-20170725-story.html"><em>City Paper</em></a><em>, </em>owner Joy Martin will be closing the bar for renovations starting next month, and there is no clear indication of when it will reopen, if at all. The dive bar has long been a destination for locals to down drafts of beer, marvel in eclectic décor, and sing along to familiar jukebox jams. <em>1724 N. Charles St., 410-727-8815</em></p>

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