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Archive for It’s Local

Eat like a local: One Denverite’s guide to the best places to eat in the Mile High City

By Joe Rassenfoss · Comments (0)
Tuesday, April 2nd, 2013

Guidebooks and dining critics can definitely point you to great restaurants. But let’s face it, we all think WE know the best restaurants. I’m no different. So here’s the start of what will be an ongoing guide to the best places to eat in Denver.

Lower Downtown: The neighborhood at the north end of the 16th Street Mall is loaded with bars and restaurants. Consider a couple of favorites:

  • Jax LogoJax Fish House: I can’t eat here often enough. The seafood’s great and don’t miss the oyster specials at the great bar. In fact, consider eating at the bar. It’s more fun than the tables. After the meal, walk across to the Oxford Hotel for a nightcap at the art deco treasure, the Cruise Room.
  • Wazee Supper Club: Casual, fun, good food (excellent pizza) for everyone. Your wallet will thank you.
  • Vesta Dipping Grill:  There’s a reason this spot’s endured since 1997 in LoDo. Killer seasonal menu, cool space, great service and those dipping sauces.

Larimer Square: This historic block has become a high-end restaurant mecca in the past decade. You’ll spend more here, you’ll also find some of Denver’s best restaurants, including:

  • The Market

    The Market

    Rioja: Jennifer Jasinski gets plenty of praise for the seasonal Mediterranean menus she creates at this pricy but worth-it destination. She deserves the praise.

  • Bistro Vendome: Warm, cozy space, great French food. It’s not Paris, it is great.
  • Market: This isn’t a fancy dinner destination. But they serve a solid breakfast, lunch and dinner, great desserts and the coffee bar never stops. On a sunny day, sit out front and watch the world go by.

Highlands

Head north from the city to the metro area’s hottest new food destination:

  • TaqueriaDuo: Locally sourced, perfectly prepared New American in a warm space that’s instantly comfortable. Leave room for the insanely good desserts.
  • LoHi Steakhouse: Get a good steak, salads and more at a fair price in a fun atmosphere. Great bar with a community table (a good option) to eat at if it’s crowded.
  •  Taqueria Patzcuaro: If you REALLY want authentic Mexican, head to this northeast Denver mecca not far from Duo for lunch and dinner. Totally casual, completely excellent. We can’t get enough of the Tacos Carbon sitting out on their sunny porch.

Et Cetera

A few quick pops outside downtown.

  • Potager: Consistently creative, seasonal New American offerings. The lively Cap Hill space is at once informal and classy, nearly always buzzing with a good crowd. Or are they just buzzing from the great selection of wine and micorbrews?
  • Fruition: There’s a reason Chef Alex Seidel keeps winning all those awards. Brilliant food and relentless attention to detail, right down to the cheese created at his Fruition Farms.

More to come ….

 

 

Comments (0)
Categories : It's Local
Tags : Denver's best restaurants

“Give Where You Live” on Colorado Gives Day this Tuesday

By Joe Rassenfoss
Thursday, November 29th, 2012

Colorado Gives Day provides an opportunity to “give where you live.”

The third annual online day of giving on Tuesday (Dec. 4) has generated more than $20 million in donations during its first two years. GivingFirst.org manages the online event, providing a safe and secure place to donate. On this day it will handle all donations Read More→

Categories : It's Local
Tags : Cafe 180, Colorado Gives Day, pay it forward

Community news CAN pick up some of the slack for ‘traditional’ news outlets

By Joe Rassenfoss
Thursday, June 7th, 2012

There is much talk about the declining number of working (that is, “paid”) journalists and how it will have a negative impact on our ability to understand the world we live in clearly. Hard to disagree with that notion.

There is also a lot of discussion about how “community”  journalism will be required to pick up some of the slack of those missing reporters, but that it will be inferior journalism. Not so fast. There are plenty of cases where the second kind of storytelling works just fine when compared to the “big boys” of journalism.

Need an example? Look no farther than Read More→

Categories : It's Local
Tags : community journalism, Denver Post, YourHub

Eat a great meal, have a great time, support the effort to end hunger at Cafe 180′s event, Chefs 180

By Joe Rassenfoss
Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

Want to help eliminate hunger? Want to do that while having a good time? Then join me at Chefs 180, the start of a great series of events that will introduce you to the best chefs in town — and their food.

Chef Tyler Wiard of Elway’s in Cherry Creek will host the inaugural Chefs 180 event, sponsored by Café 180 and Pat “Gabby Gourmet” Miller, on June 7. The evening includes appetizers created by the cafe, leading up to an entrée prepared by Wiard, who Read More→

Categories : It's Local
Tags : Cafe 180, Chef's 180, eliminate hunger, Elway's of Cherry Creek, pay it forward, Tyler Wiard

Changing times bring three new sections at the Denver Post

By Joe Rassenfoss · Comments (0)
Friday, February 24th, 2012

Denver Post readers should have noticed by now that three new sections have been introduced in recent weeks: $mart, OutWest and Home.

Monday brings $mart, which uses the Business and Lifestyles staff to create a section that (in the Post’s words) “fuses business news and lifestyles storytelling to help readers navigate consumer culture.”

That’s smart in several ways. Monday Business sections have always suffered because little business news occurs over the weekend. The result is a section filled with unfocused wire copy and thumb-sucker stories that don’t move the needle for readers. Integrating with Lifestyles spreads the workload at a paper where staffs are stretched thin. And, oh yes, this combines two sections into one, tightening news hole on a day when fewer ads seem to be sold.

In the case of Out West, the effort seems to rest more with Lifestyles (especially Kyle Wagner, who’s wrangling the section) to create a section that “feature the adventures available around the state, along with tips on how to make them happen. We’ll showcase stories from locals involved in health, wellness and outdoor pursuits on all levels.”

Home resides on Saturdays and promises to, among other things, “take you inside homes full of meaning and inspiration … profile the makers and shakers who are changing or reviving traditions.”

Mind you, none of these ideas are new. The Rocky Mountain News (remember them? Today is the three-year anniversary of its closing) produced similar sections in its day. But each of these revisions shows that the Post is trying to deliver a product that’s more local, more closely aligned with its readers. And in these days when the web is stealing eyeballs and advertising, delivering a unique product is not just a good business model, it’s a good survival strategy.

What do you think of the changes? Share your thoughts.

Ask R&R Media today how they can help you with media relations, crisis management, social media and other communication needs.

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Categories : In the News, It's Local
Tags : Denver Post

Two reasons you must attend the National Western Stock Show & Rodeo

By Joe Rassenfoss · Comments (0)
Thursday, January 5th, 2012

The National Western Stock Show & Rodeo officially begins its annual run with the Stock Show Parade at noon today (Jan. 5). Mayor Michael Hancock has also proclaimed it “Dress Western Day.”

There’s nothing new about all that. Happens every year.

This year, however, there IS something new about the Stock Show. It’s organizers are saying if they don’t expand the show’s site, it will ultimately go out of business. A proposal has been floated (and hotly contested) to move the Stock Show to a site near DIA in Aurora that will also include a Gaylord Entertainment hotel and conference center. Other developers have begun to come forward with additional ideas to aid expansion.

But this is not a blog post about the “right” idea (although we have some). This is to encourage everyone — particularly Denverites — to attend the Stock Show. Why? First of all, because it’s fun, a Denver tradition that helps connect us with our Western frontier past. Second, at some point soon it’s entirely possible Denver voters will be asked to vote on an enormous bond connected to the Stock Show’s future. By attending, you’ll better understand what the fuss is about.

Here’s the overall schedule. Or just plan a day at the rodeo.  It’s time for some Western fun. Yee-HAW!

 

Comments (0)
Categories : It's Local
Tags : Aurora, Denver, Denver Stock Show, Gaylord Entertainment, National Western Stock Show & Rodeo, rodeo, Stock Show

Winter Solstice’s ‘darkest’ day means brighter ones ahead in Denver

By Joe Rassenfoss · Comments (0)
Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

It's a dark and snowy day in Washington Park

Whether you like today’s snowstorm in Denver or hate it (we are voting the “pro” ticket at R&R Media World Headquarters), you have to admit it’s the perfect weather for the first official day of winter.

And here’s something we can ALL like: today is the shortest day of the year for sunlight. The sun rose today at 7:18 a.m. and will set at 4:39 p.m. Actually, maybe we DON’T all like that news, since it means a depressingly short 9 hours, 21 minutes and 13 seconds of daylight.

So here’s the good news: From now on the days start getting longer. Not by a lot, mind you. By Dec. 28 the amount of daylight will only have grown by 1 minute and 24 seconds. But if you’re patient (Hint: You have no choice), on the final day of January the daylight will last a whopping 46+ minutes longer.

So be patient, brighter days are ahead.

Comments (0)
Categories : It's Local
Tags : daylight, Denver, sunrise, sunset, winter, Winter Solstice

Buy an ornament, support the Golden Dome

By Joe Rassenfoss · Comments (0)
Wednesday, December 21st, 2011

Looking for a holiday gift that gives? Support the renovation of the Colorado State Capitol Building dome. It’s in need of help, as noted on the website dedicated to its repair:

“The cast iron enclosure of the dome and drum has deteriorated due to water infiltration and the intense freeze-thaw cycle of Colorado. The observation deck, the unforgettable field trip destination for generations of Colorado’s school children, has been closed to all visitors since 2007 due to the danger of falling cast iron. Experts have declared the deteriorated structural metal fasteners holding the enclosure together to be a significant hazard to the building and its occupants.”

So how to help? Do it via text message, sponsorship or online donation. But here’s another cool alternative: Buy a Dome Commemorative Ornament. Learn more and buy one here.

 

Comments (0)
Categories : It's Local
Tags : Colorado State Capitol Building, Colorado State Capitol Building dome, Colorado State Capitol Building renovation

It’s official: ‘Tebowing’ has now been taken TOO far

By Joe Rassenfoss · Comments (0)
Tuesday, December 20th, 2011

Really, Occupy Denver?

We support your right to protest. We understand many of the reasons you protest. We’re even OK with the fact that the Occupy movement has never really coalesced into a focused movement to achieve specific change.

But on Monday night, when Denver Police moved in to clear out your Civic Center encampment, the Denver Post reports some of you “Tebowed” as they approached?

C’mon now.

 

 

Comments (0)
Categories : It's Local
Tags : Civic Center Park, Denver Police, Occupy Denver, Tebowing, Tim Tebow

Colorado Tourism Hall of Fame taps trio for induction

By Joe Rassenfoss · Comments (0)
Sunday, December 18th, 2011

There’s a lot of talk these days of bringing tourists to the state, specifically as it relates to the Gaylord Entertainment project in Aurora near Denver International Airport.

But that’s in the future. In the here and now, the  Colorado Tourism Hall of Fame recently announced three people for induction:  Nick LeMasters, longtime Cherry Creek Shopping Center General Manager; Pete Meersman, CEO of the Colorado Restaurant Association, and Charlie Papazian, President of the Great American Beer Festival. In addition, a posthumous award will be presented on behalf of Colorado singer John Denver.

Read more in this story from the Denver Business Journal about the March 14 induction ceremony. Want to see ALL of the hall of fame inductees over the years? Look here.

Comments (0)
Categories : It's Local
Tags : Cherry Creek Shopping Center, Colorado Restaurant Association, Colorado Tourism Hall of Fame, Denver, Great American Beer Festival, tourism
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