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	<title>Whole Foods &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>Whole Foods &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>How Michele Tsucalas Built a Granola Empire in Baltimore</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/businessdevelopment/how-micheles-granola-owner-michele-tsucalas-built-national-granola-empire-in-baltimore/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Aaron Hope]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Mar 2023 20:00:59 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Business & Development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[granola]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Michele Tsucalas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Michele's Granola]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MOM's Organic Market]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Whole Foods]]></category>
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<hr style="border-bottom: 1px solid tan;" />
<h2 style="font-size:2.5rem; margin-bottom:0.5rem;" class="plateau-five text-center"><b>BY Jane Marion</b></h2>

<span class="text-center clan">
<h5 style="font-size:1.5rem;">Photography by Justin Tsucalas</h5>
<h6 style="font-size:1.25rem;;">Lettering by  Luke Lucas</h6>
<h6 style="font-size:1.25rem;;">Hair & Makeup by Dean Krapf</h6>
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<h6 class="thin tealtext uppers text-center">Food & Drink</h6>
</a>

<h1 class="title">Peace, Love, & Granola</h1>
<h4 class="text-center">
How Michele Tsucalas built a granola empire in Baltimore.
</h4>

<img decoding="async" class="mobileHero" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/MAR_MichelesGranola_MobileHero.jpg"/>



<h4 class="text-center" style="padding-top:2rem;">By Jane Marion</h4>

<h5 class="text-center">Photography by Justin Tsucalas</h5>
<p class="text-center">Lettering by Luke Lucas <br/> Hair & Makeup by Dean Krapf</p>





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<p  class="intro">
<span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE="MAX-HEIGHT:300PX; width:auto;" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/MAR_MichelesGranola_DropO.png"/></span>
<b>ON AN EARLY FALL MORNING</b>, inside a
run-of-the-mill Timonium office park, a
kitchen staff dressed in white aprons, white
chef shirts, and bouffant caps measures
and mixes, spreads and smooths, bakes
and breaks, and finally bags and boxes
sheets of granola. Against the backdrop of
shiny steel ovens, industrial-sized mixers,
and walls papered with hygiene signs, the
crew works with yeoman-like efficiency for
a brand that has quietly become a made-in-Maryland cereal superstar.
</p>

<p>
Twenty-four hours later, <a href="https://www.michelesgranola.com/">Michele’s Granola</a>—seven flavors in all, from
almond butter to lemon-pistachio, plus seasonal and limited-edition varieties—will get shipped to some 3,500 grocery stores across the United States,
including Whole Foods Markets, Giants, Krogers, The Fresh Markets, Sprouts,
Wegmans, Graul’s Market, Eddie’s of Roland Park, as well as mom-and-pop
markets (not to mention online on Amazon). The food product—once an “itty
bitty granola baby” in the words of its founder—has a footprint in virtually
every state from Maine to Hawaii, and it is now one of the top-selling premium
granolas in the country.
</p>
<p>
“It’s amazing that we sell so well in California,” says Sam Hopkins, the
company’s senior materials manager, as she stands in the neatly organized
warehouse, piled floor-to-ceiling with boxes marked “Denver,” “York,” “South
Carolina,” “Atlanta,” and “Mendocino.” “California is the birthplace of granola—you’d think they have their own small-batch scene, but they love ours.”
</p>
<p>
Behind this powerhouse product is the brand’s namesake, Michele Tsucalas,
whose likeness appears on the label—an illustration inspired by the work of Art
Nouveau artist Alphonse Mucha featuring a Mother Nature-like goddess with
golden locks and a basket of grain cradled in her arms. Ironically, when people
find out that she makes granola, they assume it’s just a hobby. Says Tsucalas,
“When people hear that I make granola, or they taste the granola for the first
time, they say, ‘This is so nice—do you have a kitchen in your garage?’”
</p>

<p>
<p>
Clearly not. Making the granola from start to finish at her sprawling
25,000-square-foot production facility takes somewhere between two-and-a-half to three hours per batch. By the end
of each weekday, 8,000 pounds of granola
will be made over the course of two nearly
round-the-clock shifts.
</p>
<p>
It’s no small feat, creating a star food
item in a sea of similar products, but Tsucalas
has defied the odds. Beyond its terrific
taste, what sets the granola apart is its
unique texture. Though the foundational
recipe—a combination of oats, nuts, seeds,
coconut, brown sugar, and oil—seems classic,
it’s inexplicably crisp, featherlight yet
dense, yielding a healthful, hearty, addictive
mix. You’ll find it on grocery stores
shelves in the cereal aisle, but it’s also
the perfect anytime snack—a go-to energy
booster for wilderness walks, a topping for
yogurt, and even ice cream.
</p>
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<div style="max-width:1200px; display:block; margin:0 auto;">
<div class="flex-video">
	<video controls="true" autoplay="false" name="media" muted="false"><source src="https://player.vimeo.com/progressive_redirect/playback/808096663/rendition/480p/file.mp4?loc=external&signature=8bc462adacead36d39fb952d80964eff974e8b8ca72e46c8dd20ec8f076a9ca2" type="video/mp4"></video>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
<i>—Video by Justin Tsucalas</i>
</h5>

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<p>
And while the process of making it is a
proprietary secret, the key, says Tsucalas,
is doing things by hand, from smoothing
the granola onto trays before it gets baked
to breaking it into smaller pieces after it
comes out of the oven—at which point the
product is checked not just for that right
honey-hued color, but crunch, based on the
sound of the snap (similar to the sound of
shattering glass) to make sure the moisture
has been baked out. Bagging, too, is done
by hand so that the pieces hang together in
fat, crunchy clusters.
</p>
<p>
Founded 17 years ago, the bootstrap
start-up is now a major player on the cereal
scene. The company is projecting $15 million
in revenue for 2023, a number that’s
even more impressive given that annual
revenue for female-owned businesses averaged
$475,707 in 2021, according to <i>Forbes.</i>
Not bad for a brand that started as a farmers’
market stand, then hit it big when six
12-ounce bags first sold at a Whole Foods
Market in north Baltimore.
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Clockwise from top: Tsucalas sits in her Lutherville home; Tsucalas talks with kitchen staff; labels being printed.</center></h5>
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<p>
<b>SITTING ON A MOSS-GREEN</b> velvet chair in her beautifully appointed
Lutherville home, amidst an array of handmade pottery, wicker baskets,
textured pillows, and plants, the 44-year-old Tsucalas—with her long
brown mane, dangly earrings, peasant dress, and bare feet—is exactly
the kind of person one might envision behind such delicious granola. She
exudes an inner peace. And when she smiles, which she does frequently,
her face brightens.
</p>
<p>
“We make granola and sell granola,” says Tsucalas, who shares her
home with her husband, Justin, a photographer (and contributor to <i>Baltimore</i>
who shot the images for this story), their two children, Oliver, 9, and
Hazel, 8, and their sheepadoodle, Miles, who bounds around the house
with toddler energy. “It’s very simple, but it’s important to have a story.”
</p>
<p>
Tsucalas’ story starts in Montgomery County, where she grew up, just
down the road from her father’s dental practice. Her mother worked there
as well. “At a young age, I had this sense of the freedom and flexibility
that working for yourself provides,” she recalls.
</p>
<p>
Baking was an early interest. “My mom wasn’t a big cook,” she says.
“I grew up in the ’80s and it was all about convenience. I remember when we bought our first microwave. The meal preparing was meant to be
quick and there were other things you would pursue because of the
time it saved.”
</p>
<p>
But, unlike her mother, Tsucalas enjoyed spending time in the
kitchen. “One year, my mom made a cake, put the first candle in it,
and it exploded like the turkey in National Lampoon,” she says, laughing
at the memory. “From that point on, I stepped up to make the
birthday cakes. I experimented with different flavors—I’m sure a lot
of it came from a box—but it was the contentment that I got from the
process and the joy that it brought people. That just stuck with me.”
</p>
<p>
After graduating from Duke University in 2000 with an economics
degree, as her peers moved into jobs in investment banking, Tsucalas
contemplated her future. “I remember the day Morgan Stanley
came to recruit on campus—I just didn’t feel it,” she says. “It wasn’t
that I couldn’t do that, it just wasn’t something I was interested in.”
</p>
<p>
In her early 20s, Tsucalas briefly worked for a tech company in
Northern Virginia before moving to Ireland, where she worked for
a year in an Asian noodle restaurant, followed by another year as a
server at a pizza joint in Australia. After her Irish friends landed service
jobs back in the U.S. on Martha’s Vineyard, she followed them,
serendipitously landing a job waiting tables at the famed Black Dog
Bakery Café. When she tasted their granola bars, still warm from the
oven, it was transformative.
</p>
<p>
“They stood out to me as something that were better than anything
I’d ever had before in the breakfast cereal category,” she says.
“You could see every ingredient—oats, seeds, and nuts—and I loved
the way the clean, whole grain, and slightly sweet flavors melted in
my mouth. The whole scratch-made bakery concept was also new and
inspiring to me. From there, I tried every yogurt-and-granola bowl I
came across, and soon started working on my own homemade cereal.”
</p>
<p>
Back in the Mid-Atlantic again by 2003, Tsucalas worked as a
fundraiser for a nonprofit. In her off-hours, she dreamed of Black
Dog’s granola and decided to make her own, often sharing her goods
with family and friends. “I loved people’s reactions,” she says. “I remember
giving granola to a friend as she was leaving my apartment.
She called me when she got home and said, ‘It’s all gone.’” Another
friend convinced Tsucalas that she should try to sell it. She contemplated
peddling it at local farmers’ markets but was discouraged
after learning it would require a business permit and working in a
commercial kitchen when she already had a full-time job.
</p>
<p>
But in 2005, she took a part-time position selling baked goods for
Takoma Kitchens, a cafe that had a stall at the prestigious Takoma Park
Farmers’ Market in Montgomery County. “They had long been part of the
market scene and were real advocates for local farming, real food, and farmto-
table living,” says Tsucalas. “That inspired me.”
</p>
<p>
Her timing was perfect. It was right as the locavore movement was
seeing a resurgence and granola was once again becoming a stylish food
trend, in large part thanks to the Bare Naked Granola brand, which modernized
the product by putting it in a standup pouch, repositioning it as a
convenient energy food in a resealable package. “They really made granola
hip again,” she says. “It wasn’t just something your grandma made or a
hippie thing.”
</p>
<p>
Although Takoma Kitchen did not sell granola, customers were repeatedly
requesting it. One day, Tsucalas asked the owner if she might sell
her own. After getting the green light, the following week she brought six
tin-tied, craft-paper bags to the market—three “Original” and three with raisins,
sold as “Michele’s Granola.” “I always thought I’d think of something
else to call it,” she says, “but I never did.”
</p>
<p>
The granola, whose recipe hasn’t changed since the company’s founding,
was an instant hit, selling out every week. Out of her tiny apartment
in Northern Virginia, it took her six hours to make six pounds, but she
believed that maybe she had stumbled onto
something. “Early on, the feedback from
customers really gave me confidence—if
three people were coming back each week
saying it’s the best they’ve ever had, or
they’re completely devouring it, why
couldn’t that be a thousand people?” she
remembers thinking at that time.
</p>
<p>
Working at the market also gave her a
sense of personal fulfillment. “I was drawn
to the opportunity to create something of
my own that had value,” says Tsucalas.
“It was about making things better.” In no
time at all, she amped up her production, working nights at her boss’s commercial kitchen. “I knew I was ready to
leave my job,” she says, and by 2006, she decided to pursue her granola
business full-time.
</p>
<p>
In 2008, she moved the business to Baltimore, where rent was cheaper,
and workspace was easier to come by. Her first commercial kitchen
was in Curtis Bay, a 1,000-square-foot space on the site of a former pizzeria.
She had four employees at the time, including Tony Sowa, who is
now the company’s national sales and distribution manager. To get up
and running, she purchased a double convection oven on eBay for $3,000
with money she had saved from the farmers’ market. “On the day it was
delivered, the guy took it off the back of the truck and left it on the sidewalk,”
she says. “It didn’t fit through the front door.” Feeling defeated,
she called Sowa, who then owned a landscaping company. “I was like, ‘It’s
over.’ I just spent everything I had.” Sowa brought some of his crew, took
the oven apart, loaded it through the doors, and then rebuilt it. Then, says
Tsucalas, “we were rocking and rolling.”
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>From top: Michele’s Granola hangs
together in fat, crunchy clusters; Tsucalas
checks for quality control; kitchen
staff mixes, spreads, bakes, breaks,
and bags sheets of granola in the
commercial kitchen in Timonium.</center></h5>
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<p>
<b>AT THE FARMERS’ MARKETS</b>, she had noticed
that many farmers sold directly to customers
to avoid the lower profit margins in
wholesale. But thanks to her business-school
smarts, Tsucalas saw an opportunity to sell
higher volumes—even if the profit margin was
lower per unit—by selling at grocery stores,
which at the time were just beginning to stock
their shelves with local goods. “I followed the
flow of what was happening with local food,”
she says. “I started selling at the local co-ops—Takoma Park-Silver Spring Co-op, Glut Food
Co-op in Mt. Rainer, those were our first customers.”
From there, she started selling to independently
owned organic markets throughout
the region, including Roots, Yes! Organic Market,
and MOM’s Organic Market, where the store
manager set aside ingredients for her to buy in
bulk and to help cut costs.
</p>
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<p>
Her big break came in 2009 when the Whole
Foods in Baltimore’s Mt. Washington neighborhood
started carrying the pantry staple. “Tony
and I had sold Michele’s Granola to practically
every locally owned natural and specialty foods store in the region,” says Tsucalas, “and
Whole Foods was the natural next step.” As
luck would have it, the grocery manager at
her first Whole Foods had formerly worked
at the Takoma Park-Silver Spring Co-op,
which, up until then, had been Tsucalas’
only customer, and was already a fan.
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>From left: Sam Hopkins,
Michele Tsucalas, and Tony Sowa in the
warehouse facility; bags of Michele’s
Toasted Muesli.</center></h5>
</div>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
The team at the production facility. 
</h5>

</div>
<p>
<b>IN THE BEGINNING</b>, Michele’s Granola
occupied a tiny row on a single end cap at
Whole Foods. But the “Original” flavor bags
(which are still the top-selling flavor) flew
off the shelves, and soon they were being
carried at the store’s bigger Harbor East location.
“I was helping make it, doing deliveries,
and doing all the orders,” says Sowa. “We
had a Ford Excursion that was running on
vegetable oil. I was literally driving around
delivering the granola and calling people
to sell it.” Back then, there were 60 Whole
Foods in the Mid-Atlantic. Michele’s Granola
was in 15 of them within that first year.
</p>
<p>
Five years after its founding, the business
hit a million dollars in annual revenue,
and Michele’s Granola was well on its way to
becoming a small-batch behemoth. In 2010,
the company moved from Curtis Bay to the
former Glarus Chocolatier space on Aylesbury
Road in Timonium. (Along the way,
she met her husband, Justin, at Holy Frijoles
in Hampden—and they married in 2013.) By
2015, the company outgrew that space and
moved just down the road to the current office
park on Greenspring Drive, where it has
undergone several expansions, including a
brand-new area for packaging and labeling.
</p>
<p>
Lisa de Lima, vice president of groceries
at MOM’s Organic Market, was an early
adopter of the brand when she brought it
to the store in 2008. “It tasted great and
the fact that she was a local vendor was icing
on the cake,” says de Lima. “It has been
one of the most successful local products
we’ve ever carried. Customers say they want
local, but don’t always buy it—Michele’s has
led the way.”
</p>
<p>
And that growth has only continued. In early 2020, when the COVID-19
pandemic hit, online sales quadrupled, in part because people were staying
home and “moving their dollars from restaurant spending to grocery
spending,” she says.
</p>
<p>
Tsucalas never imagined the company would experience such exponential
growth. “For years people asked me what my plans were, I’d say,
‘to make granola,’” she says, though her vision has expanded, including
hiring a CEO and doubling her staff to a team of 83 that will increase to 100
by the end of 2023.
</p>
<p>
To diversify the brand, the entrepreneur has augmented her product line
to include a series of spreadable nut butters mixed with granola. There are
also two types of muesli (a toasted cereal with no oil or refined sugar) on
offer, including an apple-cinnamon flavor. But the real growth, says Sowa,
came from taking the brand from natural and organic food stores to conventional
markets. “The current movement in grocery stores at large is to bring
in the natural shopper,” he says. “It has been really awesome to see that.”
</p>
<p>
Beyond the product itself, Tsucalas takes great pride in not only being
women-owned, but vegan, verified non-GMO, and sourcing organic ingredients
wherever possible. She is proud of the company’s green initiatives,
too, including running electricity entirely on wind power and recycling or
composting 80 percent of production materials (even the packaging peanuts
are made of cornstarch, which means they dissolve in water) and 100
percent of food waste.
</p>
<p>
The company also donates one percent of its sales to <a href="https://www.facebook.com/GiveOneForGoodFood/">Give One For Good
Food</a>, a charitable network that supports local food entrepreneurs and
urban farmers (and organizations such as the <a href="https://www.baltimorehungerproject.org/">Baltimore Hunger Project</a>)
who are providing nutritionally balanced food to communities in need. As
part of the mission, giving employees a voice is also important, including
encouraging staff members to invent their own flavors. (Baker Jennifer
Barrett came up with the limited-edition Toasty S’mores and even got her
photo on the bag.)
</p>
<p>
Customers have taken note. “Michele’s Granola has been a staple in
my home for many years—it’s always a part of my daily routine,” says
Baltimore resident Hope Ayers, who favors the toasted muesli and supports
the company’s commitment to social change and environmental
friendliness. “Supporting women-owned and local businesses is also very
important to me,” says Ayers. “By supporting them, I support all women—
and our entire community.”
</p>
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<p>
Maryland resident Jay Schlossberg receives a bi-monthly subscription of
salted-maple-pecan and purchases the lemon-pistachio granola at the grocery
store. “They hit all the marks,” says Schlossberg, who appreciates the
company’s organic and recycling efforts. “Also, it’s some of the best granola
I’ve ever eaten.”
</p>
<p>
Fortunately, fans will be able to get their fix for years to come.
“Many food companies sell an idea with the intention of getting in and
out, but we’re like, ‘We might be able to do this for the rest of our lives,’”
says Sowa. “I’m down with wearing tie-dye and flip-flops and making granola
for the rest of my life.” Tsucalas puts it like this: “My original purpose
was to make granola. I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be beautiful to make a living
doing that?’”
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Scenes from the annual <a href="https://www.michelesgranola.com/blogs/news/the-first-ever-granola-olympics">Granola Olympics</a>, a team-building exercise that started in 2018 and allows staff to flex their hand-mixing, pan-patting, scooping, and bag-sealing techniques.</center></h5>
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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/businessdevelopment/how-micheles-granola-owner-michele-tsucalas-built-national-granola-empire-in-baltimore/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>This Local Frozen Biscuit Business Does Baltimore Proud</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/mason-dixie-biscuits-co-does-baltimore-proud/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Lauren Cohen]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Dec 2020 15:53:40 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ayeshah Abuelhiga]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mason Dixie Biscuit Co.]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mason Dixie Foods]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Whole Foods]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?post_type=article&#038;p=102010</guid>

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<p>As a young girl growing up in Baltimore public housing, Ayeshah Abuelhiga fondly recalls her dad taking her, along with her sisters, to the H&amp;S Bakery Outlet store for 5-cent bread.</p>
<p>“We’d drive down Fleet in my Dad’s old Grand Prix,” recalls Abuelhiga. “He used to get traffic tickets because we liked standing up and putting our heads out the big windows just to smell the bread.”</p>
<p>After graduating from George Washington University, she worked corporate jobs, but wasn’t fulfilled.</p>
<p>“In college, I worked multiple jobs and always ended up being in restaurants. It felt like home,” says Abuelhiga, whose mom is Korean and dad, who passed away last year, was Palestinian-Israeli. “It was a melting pot.”</p>
<p>Despite her heritage, the family ate Southern-inspired food. “We always ate American comfort food,” she says. “My mom hated the smell of lamb, my dad hated the smell of kimchi, so it was like, ‘Fried chicken, it is.’”</p>
<p>At Thanksgiving it was biscuits, which Abuelhiga learned to make for her younger sisters. So, when the 35-year-old entrepreneur thought about starting her own venture, a biscuit business seemed like a natural fit. “I realized I could make them as a breakfast item and sop it up with gravy or do them with fried chicken,” she says.</p>
<p>By 2014, with $27,000 raised on Kickstarter, she opened <a href="https://masondixiefoods.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Mason Dixie Biscuits Co</a>. as a pop-up sandwich spot. Over time, the business moved to a full-fledged brick-and-mortar location in the Shaw section of D.C. Because she was selling out daily, Abuelhiga began preparing her biscuits ahead of time and freezing them. Soon customers were taking bags home. “It took on a life of its own,” she says.</p>
<p>In 2015, Whole Foods came calling for her all-natural products. Before long, Mason Dixie biscuits were stocked on store shelves, including all Whole Foods Markets nationally, as well as Wegman’s, Harris Teeter, and Mom’s Organics in the Baltimore area.</p>
<p>Sadly, in June, Abuelhiga shuttered her shop due to the pandemic, though Mason Dixie is one of the fastest-growing baked-goods companies in the U.S. Meanwhile, Abuelhiga relocated her brand to Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, not far from H&amp;S.</p>
<p>“I was like, ‘There’s only one place to go—and it’s home.’ I want to be around people who forgive me for saying ‘Bawlmer.’”</p>
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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/mason-dixie-biscuits-co-does-baltimore-proud/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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