Baltimore - Morris Media Network
Transcription
Baltimore - Morris Media Network
SUMMER / FA L L 2 0 14 THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO GO Baltimore ® ® wheretraveler.com wheretraveler.com + ORIOLES AT BAT, OLD BAY AT 75 WATER MUSIC, RAVENS FANS & MR. RIPLEY SALUTE! The flag, Blue Angels, tall ships and the heroes of Fort McHenry Find the best of the city wheretraveler.com BLTWM_1407SF_COVER.indd 1 6/26/14 3:12:01 PM BLTWM_1407SF_FP.indd 2 6/26/14 3:12:05 PM BLTM_1407SS_FP.indd 1 6/19/14 5:33:48 PM Baltimore Summer/Fall CONTENTS SEE MORE OF BALTIMORE AT WHERETRAVELER.COM The Plan Let’s get started Defenders Day at Fort McHenry 3 Editor’s Itinerary The Guide The best of Baltimore 12 40 My Baltimore SHOPPING New York fashion on the racks and hipster “skin art” on the side Jordan Faye Block An arts-savvy gallery owner curates a day in the city. 16 MUSEUMS & ATTRACTIONS A cherished moment that launched a career and now a show of images 23 DINING Mo’s knows: how Old Bay seasoning, at 75, still puts the zest to fresh catches. Also Inside 4 Hot Dates 6T_g\`beX 46..&3 '" - - 5)&$0.1-&5&(6*%&50(0 wheretraveler.com wheretraveler.com 8 Where Now 33 ENTERTAINMENT Getting lost in a maze of mirrors plus other eye-popping oddities at Ripley’s Believe It or Not! ORIOLES AT BAT, OLD BAY AT 75 SALUTE! The flag, Blue Angels, tall ships and the heroes of Fort McHenry Find the best of the city wheretraveler.com ON THE COVER The U.S. Navy Blue Angels supercharge the celebration. Composite photo: ©Joseph P. Cirone (planes) and ©Dan Thornberg/Shutterstock (flag) 6 A Replay of 1776 Because the British didn’t take “no” for an answer, a young nation and the militia of Baltimore rally to send them home…again. BY JEAN LAWLOR COHEN 8 Time Travel Tracking the landscape of war, by car and by foot, at museums and historic houses, with music, tours, cannon fire and Blue Angel flyovers BY RACHEL CHISM CONNECT WITH US 10 Manning the Fort Ranger Vince Vaise talks about Francis Scott Key, heroes of the Battle of Baltimore and what it takes to be a Fort McHenry reenactor. BY BROOKE SABIN 2 36 NAVIGATE In Patterson Park, finding serenity, history and a Victorian-style pagoda with a view 38 MAPS Eastside, Westside, Baltimore Downtown plus harbors of the Patapsco River (FROM TOP) ©TIM ERVIN; ©ERROL WEBBER WATER MUSIC, RAVENS FANS & MR. RIPLEY W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S U M M E R / FA L L 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_TOC.indd 2 7/2/14 8:37:11 AM Your travel ing companion since 1936® where ® Editor’s Itinerary Rachel chism b a lt i m o r e regional vice president Rick Mollineaux associate publisher Jack Tomalis Managing editor Rachel Chism Associate editors Jean Lawlor Cohen, “O” Say Can You See? project lead designer Heather business administrator In a city where so many American traditions began, there’s a lot to celebrate. This year marks 60 years at bat for Baltimore’s beloved Orioles. The national anthem, which was penned not too far from baseball’s most beautiful ballpark (Camden Yards, of course), also has a birthday this year—200! Pride for the city’s rich history echoes throughout the stadium as fans shout the anthem’s ‘O!’ extra loudly to express love for the city and its team. So let that anthem ring as fans come together to celebrate baseball and the American spirit. After all, the O’s raised the 30-by-42-foot Star-Spangled Banner replica on opening day. Brooke Sabin Guffin Rithie Washington Circulation & Marketing Manager Lisa Fabis regional editorial director Leigh Harrington MORRIS VISITOR PUBLICATIONS PRESIDENT Donna W. Kessler VICE PRESIDENT OF OPERATIONS Angela E. Allen CHIEF TRAVEL EDITOR Geoff Kohl General manager, Where Maps Christopher Huber director of circulation Scott Ferguson national marketing Manager Melissa Blanco CHIEF CREATIVE OFFICER Haines Wilkerson SENIOR REGIONAL EDITORIAL DIRECTOR T rip P lann e r Margaret Martin design director Jane Frey photography director Susan Strayer creative coordinator Beverly Mandelblatt For my full Baltimore itinerary, go to wheretraveler.com. vice president, nATIONAL SALEs Rick Mollineaux 202.463.4550 Director OF PARTNERSHIPS & national digital sales Bridget Duffie 706.821.6663 NATIONAL SALEs coordinator David Gately 202.463.4550 (from left) courtesy Babe Ruth Museum; ©Todd olszewski; Courtesy Pickles Pub director of production Kris Miller production manager Cher Wheeler graphic designer Ria Takharu Retouch Specialist Erik Lewis director of manufacturing Donald Horton Technical operations manager Tony Thorne-Booth E-mails for all of the above: firstname.lastname@morris.com MORRIS COMMUNICATIONS CHAIRMAN & CEO William S. Morris PRESIDENT William S. Morris IV III MVP | Baltimore 575 S. Charles St., Ste. 404 Baltimore, MD 21201 410.783.7520, 410.783.1763 (fax) WhereTraveler.com 725 Broad St., Augusta, GA 30901. Where magazine and the where® logo are registered trademarks of Morris Visitor Publications. Where makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of the information it publishes, but cannot be held responsible for any consequences arising from errors or omissions. All rights reserved. MVP is a proud sponsor of Les Clefs d’Or USA BLTWM_1404SS_Itin-Mast.indd 3 >> AFTERNOON Oriole Park at Camden Yards takes inspiration from ballparks of the early 20th century with its retro design. Tour the stadium that inspired a generation of urban ballpark construction. Guests visit the dugout, press level, control room and suite level on the public tour. Tickets at the main box office. >> EVENING Beyond left field at Camden Yards, fans flock to game-day hangout Pickles Pub for Orioles pre-game and post-game festivities. Go for a Natty Boh, The Brewer’s Art Resurrection Ale, beer-battered fried pickles or a shrimp salad sandwich (above), all rites-of-passage fore and aft the Yard. where in the world ® Where® magazine is produced by Morris Visitor Publications (MVP), a division of Morris Communications Co., LLC. >> Morning At the Sports Legend Museum at Camden Yards, fans pay homage to the history of Maryland’s celebrated sports. The Babe Ruth Birthplace Museum honors Baltimore’s own, the Great Bambino whose memorabilia ranges from childhood pictures to the bat he swung in his famed 1927 season. Where is an international network of magazines first published in 1936 and distributed in over 4,000 leading hotels in more than 50 places around the world. Look for us when you visit any of the following cities, or plan ahead for your next trip by visiting us online at wheretraveler.com. United States Alaska, Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Charleston, Charlotte, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Georgia, Indianapolis, Jacksonville/St. Augustine/Amelia Island, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Maui, Miami, Minneapolis/St. Paul, New Orleans, New York, Northern Virginia, Oahu, Orange County (CA), Orlando, Philadelphia, Phoenix/Scottsdale, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, St. Louis, Washington, D.C. ASIA Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore AUSTRALIA Brisbane, Melbourne, Sydney Canada Calgary, Canadian Rockies, Edmonton, Halifax, Muskoka/Parry Sound, Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, Victoria, Whistler, Winnipeg Europe Berlin, Budapest, Istanbul, London, Milan, Moscow, Paris, Rome, St. Petersburg w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 3 7/2/14 10:15:38 AM WHERE CALENDAR SUMMER/FALL 2014 Search the full calendar at wheretraveler.com There's a lot more going on this month. Visit us online: HOT DATES SEPTEMBER 7 Purple Pride When the Ravens face the Cincinnati Bengals in the season opener at M&T Bank Stadium, they shoot for redemption. The Bengals, after all, eliminated the team from playoff contention last season. Game time: 1:00 p.m. baltimoreravens.com c 4 COURTESY BALTIMORE RAVENS/SHAWN HUBBARD wheretraveler.com W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S U M M E R / FA L L 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_HotDates.indd 4 7/2/14 9:27:19 AM For more information: wheretraveler.com Top Stops 7 Great Things Not to Miss 1 ArtScape July 18-20 America’s largest freebie arts fest returns with live music, performances and exhibits by artists, fashion designers and craftspeople. artscape.org Friday Night Live July 18-August 29 Fridays at 6 p.m., Belvedere Square hosts a free outdoor concert series that also includes retail shops, restaurants and merchants like Flying Dog Brewery. belvederesquare.com 2 Artscape O’s Magic August 8 Join the Orioles in celebrating their 60th anniversary with a post-game fireworks and laser show. A luncheon with Hall of Famers precedes the game. baltimoreorioles.mlb.com 3 (From Top) ©Edwin Remsberg Photography; ©Nick Prevas SPOTLIGHT Lights, Camera, Action! In July and August, movie buffs head to under-the-stars cinemas for free screenings of favorite flicks. On Thursdays, stake out a spot on Federal Hill for the American Visionary Art Museum’s family series showing films like Back to the Future and Jurassic Park. The AVAM is open and free on movie nights (avam.org). The Cinema Alfresco Open Air Film Festival (littleitalymd.com) presents Italian-inspired feature films like Gladiator and Moonstruck on Fridays at 9 p.m., projected on the exterior of Ciao Bella restaurant. Local restaurants offer movie night carry-out specials for picknickers.—Rachel Chism BLTWM_1407SF_HotDates.indd 5 june 29-December 21 Farmers Market Go for fresh local produce, artisan shops and foods from favorite Baltimore vendors like Baron’s pit beef, Zeke’s Coffee and Ruben’s Crepes. Free admission. Sun. 7 a.m.-noon. Holliday and Saratoga sts., 410.752.8632 Vintage Treasures August 21-24 4 Billed as “Maryland’s largest antiques event,” the Baltimore Summer Antiques Show at the Convention Center draws 550-plus international exhibitors. baltimoresummer antiques.com 5 Book Club September 26-28 More than 200 celebrity and local authors connect with fans at the Inner Harbor. Also children’s activities, live music and food. baltimorebookfestival.com 6 Free Fall October 1-31 During this citywide arts celebration, everything from music and theater performances to museum admission is free of charge. freefallbaltimore.com 7 Ode to boh October 11 Baltimore’s Beer Week commences with an “opening tap” celebration at Das Best Oktoberfest, an all-youcare-to-taste beer tour through Old World Munich. dasbestoktoberfest.com August 1-11 Meal DEals More than 80 downtown eateries offer prix-fixe lunch ($15) and dinner ($20, $30). baltimorerestaurantweek.com August 22September 1 Deep Fried The Maryland State Fair means horse races, fried candy bars, carnival games and bull riding. $8, children (6-13) $3. Timonium Fairgrounds, 2200 York Rd., Timonium, 410.252.0200, caption here marylandstatefair.com September 20-21 From the vine More than 20,000 gather to taste local wine and food and scope out bottling, fermenting and food pairing at the Maryland Wine Festival. $30 admission. 500 S. Center St., Westminster, 410.386.3880, marylandwine.org September 29 Farm To Chef Maryland’s top chefs pair with local growers to create dishes at this culinary competition. Proceeds benefit Day of Taste. $120. 6:30 p.m. 800 Key Hwy., 410.244.0044, farmtochefmd.com 5 7/2/14 8:40:31 AM where now Baltimore The city remembers and celebrates EVENTS A Replay of 1776 “By Dawn’s Early Light” by Edward Percy Moran 6 PHOTO CREDIT Only one generation (29 years) after the end of America’s Revolutionary War, the former colonies and Great Britain took up arms again. Troops mustered across Maryland, in nearby territories and at sea for what present-day Governor Martin O’Malley (and others) call “the second war of independence.”—Jean L. Cohen WHERE B CA I TLT Y IN MAOMREE II M SU OM NM T HE RY/EFA A RL L 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_WhereNow.indd 6 7/1/14 4:49:17 PM w There’s a lot more going on this month. Visit us online: Time Line wheretraveler.com The sweep of events that began in 1807 with the British takeover of a ship named The Chesapeake figured seven years later in Baltimore with the rebuff of British ships and land forces. The scrappy port of merchant wealth and shipyards, then America’s third largest city, witnessed and participated in many key moments during the final months of the struggle. Soon after, Baltimore erected America’s first War of 1812 memorial, the 52-foot-tall Battle Monument on Calvert Street, now depicted on the city’s official shield and flag. OPPOSITE PAGE CA562, COUR TESY MARYLAND HISTORICAL SOCIE T Y; THIS PAGE COUR TESY VISIT BALTIMORE 1812 The United States, enraged by British plunder and impressment of sailors, declares war against Great Britain. Baltimore, with no interest in a peace accord, immediately identifies itself as an anti-royalist hotbed. Citizens’ schooners seize British ships and cargo and earn the city a nickname—“nest of pirates.” JULY 26 A Federalist newspaper editor, opposing war, becomes the target of a pro-war Republican mob. After two nights of murder and mayhem, a citizen militia quells the riots. 1813 When British warships invade the Chesapeake region and burn towns and plantations, even pacifist Americans experience a change of heart. Baltimore’s citizens dig trenches around the eastern outskirts, load guns onto harbor barges and offer speedy, civilian ships as armed “privateers.” A Baltimore merchant, politician and Revolutionary War veteran Samuel Smith, as newly minted Major General, leads the defense preparations. Seamstress Mary Pickersgill, following Lieutenant General George Amistead’s instructions, sews a flag “so large that the British will have no trouble seeing it from a distance.” Pickersgill’s daughter, two nieces and Grace Wisher help her stitch the 30-by-42-foot banner that troops later raise at Fort McHenry. 1814 The Battle of Baltimore AUGUST 14 Baltimoreans see a red glow in the southern night sky. The British have set widespread fires in the capital of Washington. AUGUST 27 The British schooner Jane, sounding channel depth, sails into the Patapsco River within sight of Fort McHenry. Citizens ready for a British navy attack. SEPTEMBER 11 Cannon fire three shots from Federal Hill to warn the city that the British have landed at North Point, the mouth of the river. On this vantage point today rise monuments to Major General Smith and Fort McHenry commander Armistead. SEPTEMBER 12 British Major General Robert Ross, who ordered the capital burned, engages in battle. His 5,000 men overwhelm 3,000 Americans, but he falls from a sniper’s bullet, his death attributed to Daniel Wells and Henry McComas, young militiamen who died in the same skirmish. In east Baltimore’s Ashland Square, an obelisk rises above their graves. POW agent John Skinner and Francis Scott Key, a 35-year-old Washington lawyer, sail under a flag of truce on a mercy mission to a British flagship anchored in the Patapsco River, their goal: rescue captive William Beanes, an American physician who had nursed wounded British prisoners. With letters of petition from those soldiers, Key wins the doctor’s release but is detained, because the British assault begins. SEPTEMBER 13 Shortly after midnight, 19 vessels with apocalyptic names like Terror, Volcano and Devastation launch nearly 2,000 cannonballs at 1,000 soldiers defending Fort McHenry. For more than 25 hours, through thunder and rain torrents, the scene resembles, in one local’s words, the “portals of hell.” SEPTEMBER 14 In predawn gloom and eerie quiet, Key and Skinner peer toward Fort McHenry to determine which flag flies. A brief wind lifts and a streak of sunlight illuminates the Stars and Stripes. 1815 MARCH 10 The last of the British war ships, the HM frigate Orlando, leaves the Chesapeake Bay. MARCH 18 Citizens post signal flags on Federal Hill and gather to watch the sleek schooner Chasseur return to the harbor. The famed high-seas predator is soon rechristened The Pride of Baltimore. Since 1988 that name graces its near replica (above), a goodwill ambassador often docked at 1801 South Clinton Street. 1931 Key’s words, described by John Philip Sousa as “soul-stirring,” become the national anthem. 2014 At a press conference, Governor Martin O’Malley reminds, “In Baltimore, we’ve been doing homeland security since 1814.” w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m BLTWM_1407SF_WhereNow.indd 7 7 7/2/14 8:55:59 AM where now Baltimore • History quest Discover the War of 1812 along Very Visionary Sidewalk the Star-Spangled Banner Historic Trail (starspan gledtrail.net), a 560-mile land and water route that traces the movements of troops throughout D.C., Maryland and Virginia. Relive the drama of the British attacks around the Chesapeake Bay. • 2.5 Billion pixels At the Maryland Historical Society, enter a virtual city of 1815, generated by a 3D model built by the University of Maryland Baltimore County’s Imaging Research Center. With the help of touch screens and infrared technology, visitors summon sites of the past like the Indian Queen Hotel where Francis Scott Key likely finished his heartfelt lyrics. Super Salutes Spins on the flag Honoring Grace Wisher, an African-American indentured servant who helped sew the flag, the Reginald F. Lewis Museum shows art—from prayer rug to skateboard—inspired by the banner itself. Anthem Remix Beat box artist Shodekeh performs a version of the national anthem September 14 at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum in collaboration with hip-hop improv group the Baltimore Boom Bap Society and classicallytrained musicians Classic Revolution. Fort! Flag! Fire! At Fort McHenry, visitors take self-guided tours of the buildings, see cannon-firing demonstrations and help raise the flag over the ramparts of the fort. Narrated boat rides detail the events that inspired Key to pen the words that became the national anthem, and his original manuscript is on display here throughout the Star-Spangled Spectacular. The “By Dawn’s Early Light” raising of the 30-by-42-foot hand-stitched replica flag concludes celebrations at the fort September 14. 8 Surprise Sidewalk At the American Visionary Art Museum, 520 linear feet of sidewalk space along Key Highway becomes a grand illustration of the national anthem. Flag House Nineteenth-century objects fill the former home of flag maker Mary Pickersgill at The Star-Spangled Banner Flag House. StarSpangled Spectacular This free festival September 10 through 16 culminates the three-year bicentennial celebration with living history demonstrations, live music, fireworks and high patriotic spirit. • Tour by Sea Tall ships and Navy gray hulls sail into the Inner Harbor where guests hop aboard for guided deck tours. History lessons of topsail schooners offered September 11 through 15. • The Blue Angels The elite Navy flight squad repeats its 2012 Harbor flyover during air shows September 13 and 14. • Patriotic Pageantry The celebration goes out with a bang—patriotic starstudded concerts at Pier Six and at Fort McHenry followed by the largest fireworks and light show in Baltimore history September 13. For more details, see starspangled200.com. (FR OM top) ©Nick Pre vas; Cour tesy National Park Ser vice; cour tesy visit Baltimore Time Travel W H E R E b a lt i m o re I s u mm e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_WhereNow.indd 8 7/2/14 10:31:02 AM BLTWM_1407SF_WhereNow.indd 9 w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 9 7/1/14 4:00:45 PM where now Baltimore Q&A: Vince Vaise As Fort McHenry’s chief of interpretation, Vaise is a walking-talking encyclopedia of the Battle of Baltimore. Ever since his high school history teacher suggested he volunteer at the fort, Vaise has studied its stories. And he eagerly shares them, whether he’s in his NPS uniform or 19th-century attire as major in the Fort McHenry Guard.—Brooke Sabin Do reenactors audition for the job? There’s an interview, because of the unusual set of talents required: the ability to talk to visitors in an engaging way, do the marches and drills, handle a musket and be a historian. but was concerned about what would happen to freed slaves and how they would support themselves. He represented the young, conflicted United States. to pay ditch diggers to build entrenchments on the outskirts of the city. He used his political connections to bring guns and militia to Baltimore. So even though no shells landed in his lap, he was the linchpin. Do descendants of the defenders visit the fort? Yes, we have a lot of friends in the General Society of the War of 1812 and the U.S. Daughters of 1812. They come here and help pay for the annual commemoration of the battle, which has been held every year Who trains them? We do—the National Park Service at Fort McHenry. And there are degrees of specialty, like the fife and drum corps. Those folks have to be accomplished musicians too. We also have people who portray the civilians of Baltimore during the War of 1812. What’s a common misperception about the battle? One is that the large flag flew all night. A “storm” flag flew overnight, but troops hoisted a bigger one the morning after the battle, and that’s what Key saw. Any surprising facts about Francis Scott Key? He was an Anglophile who, at first, opposed the war. He would have watched “Downton Abbey.” As a lawyer, he recognized that a lot of our laws came from Great Britain. And even though he wrote “the land of the free,” he was a slaveholder. He opposed slavery Who’s the hero of the conflict? There are, pun intended, “key” individuals. Major Armistead, the fort’s commander, had a big responsibility. General Samuel Smith, a Maryland senator and leading businessman, was in charge of all Baltimore’s defenses. A year and a half before the battle, he mobilized the business community to contribute funds to improve the fort, since the war. I feel rather strongly about that. This bicentennial year everybody wants to participate. But there’s something to be said for the people who carried that torch in 1815 and through the Great Depression. The groups recently bought two full-scale replica cannons for the fort [due in early August]. We’ve nicknamed them “The Son” and “The Daughter,” and we’ll shoot them! Is the fort considered haunted? There are stories. On one of the bastions that took a direct hit, people over the years claimed they saw two men dressed in War of 1812 attire. And that was before we had reenactors here! Fort McHenry is the only park service property that’s a national monument and a historic shrine. Yes, and people’s perception of the park has evolved over the years. In the 1930s, 40s and 50s, Baltimoreans came here after church in their Sunday finery. There was no picnicking, no playing. Then in the 1960s, 70s and 80s, the ground around the fort opened for recreation. In the 1990s, visitors began to imagine themselves back in the day. They wanted to see people dressed in 1814style clothing, to walk into a barracks room and see it as it was then. For a lot of folks, the site is an oasis, but with what happened here, there’s power of place. You feel that when you come. What part of the bicentennial are you looking forward to most? On September 9, about 7,000 school kids will create a gigantic American flag. Each student will don a red, white or blue poncho and be strategically positioned. Then on September 14 at 9 a.m., we’ll hoist the handstitched replica flag, 200 years to the minute after Key saw the original. That’s going to be awesome. » For Vince Vaise’s full interview, go to wheretraveler.com ©br ooke sabin Manning the Fort 10 W H E R E b a lt i m o re I s u m m e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_WhereNow.indd 10 7/2/14 10:00:21 AM BLTWM_1407SF_FP.indd 11 6/26/14 3:00:14 PM where the guide Shopping Making a Mark At Brightside Boutique, two ex-pat New Yorkers have partnered to bring edgy clothing inspired by tattoo culture to Baltimore, a city that cherishes the offbeat. Marked by a sunny yellow storefront in Federal Hill, this vibrant boutique packs quite a surprise in the back—a tattoo parlor. While Kike Castillo puts the ink and needle to work, Christie Griffiths curates funky clothing and organizes events like a Casual Friday pop-up shop with refreshments from Union Craft Brewing Company.—Rachel Chism Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. www.brightsidebaltimore. com. 1133 S. Charles St., Federal Hill, 410.244.1133 Map C8 BABE Clothing, handbags, jewelry and gifts from a fashion industry veteran. Splendid, BCBGeneration, Ella Moss, Harper, Vintage Havana. Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Sun. till 5 p.m. www. babeaboutique.com. 1716 Aliceanna St., Fells Point, 410.244.5114 Map F7 CLOUD 9 CLOTHING Contemporary BRIGHTSIDE Two native New Yorkers curate funky clothing, jewelry and more inspired by “tattoo couture.” styles from brands like Free People, Yumi, Bluebird, Steve Madden, Big Buddha plus some men’s lines. Jewelry counter. Canton: Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. till 7 p.m. Hampden: Mon.Thurs. 11 a.m.-8 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 9 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-7 p.m. www.cloud9cloth ing.us. 2400 Boston St., Canton, 410.534.4200 Map G8; 111 W. 36th Street, Hampden, 410.889.1330 Map C3 DOUBLEDUTCH Women’s styles by well-known designers like Orla Kiely and locals like Pistol Stitched. Bags, sunglasses, jewelry, handmade apparel. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 7 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. www.doubledutchboutique. com. 1021 W. 36th St., Hampden, 410.554.0055 North of Map A1 HER HONOR Vanity Fair mag names Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake one of the top ten best-dressed mayors in the world. 12 ©JILL HUGHES Apparel W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S U M M E R / FA L L 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_g-shop.indd 12 7/2/14 10:34:23 AM Shopping Form— Art director-turned-owner stocks high-end consignment. Vera Wang and Bensoni, new house label. Thurs.-Fri. noon-7 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Sun. noon-4 p.m. www.formtheboutique.com. 2002 Clipper Park Rd., Clipper Mill, 410.889.3116 North of Map A1 Freesia— Casual to chic clothing from hard-to-find brands for women. Wholesale, affordable designer goods plus athletic apparel and shoes. Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Sun. noon-6 p.m. 1643 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.732.0017 Map F8 Handbags in the City— Designer bags and ready-to-wear women’s clothing. Labels like DVF, Tory Burch and Kate Spade. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-7 p.m., Sat. till 8 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. handbagsin thecity.com. 840 Aliceanna St., Harbor East, 410.528.1443 Map E7 Hunting Ground— Lesser-known brands and vintage in an old church with bohemian decor. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 8 p.m., Sun. noon-6 p.m. www.shophunting ground.com. 3649 Falls Rd., Hampden 410.243.0789 North of Map A1 Jean Pool— Local denim temple. Joe’s, Robins Jeans and Gold Sign, plus a selection of belts and T-shirts. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. noon-4 p.m. www. baltimorejeanpool.com. 92 Village Sq., Cross Keys, 410.466.1177 Katwalk— Mod rocker pieces with “bling” and Bohemian styles. Feminine dresses and blouses plus edgy leathers. Tues.-Sat. noon-8:30 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. 1709 Aliceanna St., Fells Point, 410.669.0600 Map F7 Samuel Parker Clothier— Since 1921, traditional menswear and furnishings. Hand-tailored Samuelsohn suits, Ralph Lauren footwear and Robert Talbott shirts and neckwear. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sat. till 5 p.m. www. samuelparker.com. 6080 Falls Rd., Lake Falls Village, 410.372.0078 Sixteen Tons— Vintage-inspired men’s shirts and denim, accessories, hats. Sun.-Mon. noon-5 p.m., Tues.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 7 p.m. www.shop16tons. com. 1021 W. 36th St., Hampden, 410.554.0101 North of Map A1 Sweet Elizabeth Jane— 04049In aIn own upholstered furniture line. Mon.Thurs., Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 8 p.m. www.sweetelizabethjane.com. 8125 Main St., Ellicott City, Md., 13 miles from Downtown, 410.465.6400 Under Armour Brand House— Flag- ship of Baltimore-based performance brand. Workout apparel (tanks,sweats, pullovers) plus footwear and accessories. In-store Innovation Center with newest products, some not yet released. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-7 p.m. www.underarmour. com. 700 S. President St., Harbor East, 410.528.5304 Map E7 Urban Chic— Fashions by Kara Janx, Ella Moss and Diane von Furstenberg. Plus maternity clothes, men’s apparel and shoes. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun noon-6 p.m. www.urbanchiconline. com. 811 Aliceanna St., Harbor East, 410.685.1601 Map E7 Art/Craft Galleries Art Gallery of Fells Point— Sculpture, photography, glass work, oils by local artists. Tues.-Fri. noon-6 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. www. fellspointgallery.org. 1716 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.327.1272 Map F7 Baltimore Clayworks— Non- profit gallery featuring ceramics from resident artists. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. www.baltimoreclayworks.org. 5707 Smith Ave., Mount Washington, 410.578.1919 North of Map C2 C. Grimaldis Gallery— Contemporary gallery of post-World War II art. Representing Anthony Caro, Grace Hartigan (estate), Raoul Middleman, Richard Serra, Chul Hyun Ahn, John Waters. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. www. cgrimaldisgallery.com. 523 N. Charles St., Mount Vernon, 410.539.1080 Map C4 Corradetti Glassblowing— In historic Clipper Mill, studio and gallery for vases, bowls, ornaments and jewelry. Mon.- Tues. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Wed. -Sat. till 9 p.m., Sun. till 3 p.m. www.cor radetti.com. 2010 Clipper Park Rd., Ste. 119, 410.243.2010 North of Map A1 Galerie Myrtis— Contemporary gallery showing social and historic landscapes. Ongoing “Tea with Myrtis” art salons. Thurs.-Sat. 2-6 p.m. www.galeriemyrtis. net. 2224 N. Charles St., Station North, 410.235.3711 North of Map C1 a former Caplan’s department store, a trove of vintage-inspired items plus w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 13 BLTWM_1407SF_g-shop.indd 13 7/2/14 8:53:54 AM Shopping Goya Contemporary— Fine prints including Baldessari, Chihuly, Condo, Hirst, Kusama, Lewitt, Stella. Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m., Sat. by appointment. Mill Center, Studio 214, 3000 Chestnut Ave., Hampden, 410.366.2001 North of Map A1 amaryllisjewelry.com. 830 Aliceanna St., Harbor East, 410.576.7622 Map C6 Bijoux— Antique, estate and contem- porary pieces. Jewelry from Georgian, Victorian and Edwardian to Art Nouveau and Art Deco. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m., Sat. till 5 p.m. www. bijouxjewels.com. 10749 Falls Road, Lutherville-Timonium, Md., 410.823.5545 Jordan Faye Contemporary— Con- temporary artists plus salon for special events in Mount Vernon. Eleven-artist show through Sept. 7, Edie Nadelhaft solo Sept. 7-Oct. 18. Tues.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., first and second Sat. noon-5 p.m. and by appt. www.jordanfayecontemporary.com. 823 Park Ave., Mount Vernon, 443.955.1547 Map C3 Emporium Collagia— Local artist Luana Kaufmann offers soaps, jewelry, glassware, stationery, botanicals, gifts plus own found-image art. Sun.-Mon., Wed.-Thurs. 10 a.m-7 p.m., Fri.-Sat. noon-10 p.m. Closed Tues. www. luanakaufmann.com. 1732 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.534.5340 Map F7 Light Street Gallery— Director David Quammen in row house with modeling sessions, limited edition prints, sculpture and figurative, surrealist, realistic and fantasy art. Wed.-Fri. 1-6 p.m., Sat. 1-5 p.m. Confirm open. www.light streetgallery.com. 1448 Light St., Federal Hill, 240.506.8943 South of Map C8 Women’s Exchange— Arts and crafts vendor for local women (mostly lowincome) since 1880. Consigners sell jewelry, knit scarves, journals, artwork, beeswax candles. Comfort food at adjoining Woman’s Industrial Kitchen. Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. till 4 p.m. www.womansindustrialexchange. org. 333 N. Charles St., Mount Vernon, 410.685.4388 Map C4 Books AIA Baltimore Architects Bookstore— Local haunt for rare architec- ture titles. Baltimore cityscape, interior and landscape design. Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. www.aiabalt.com. 11 1/2 W. Chase St., Mount Vernon, 410.625.2585 Map C2 Personal Care Baltimore Spa and Salon— At Ritz-Carlton Residences, massages, facials, waxing and body wraps, plus hair services. Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Mon. noon-4 p.m., Tues. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Wed. till 9 p.m., Thurs. till 8 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. www.baltimorespasalon. com. 801 Key Hwy., Inner Harbor, 410.625.2427 Map D8 Atomic Books— Obscure comics, mag- azines, DVDs. Native son John Waters a fan. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 8 p.m., Sun. till 6 p.m. www.atomic books.com. 3620 Falls Rd., Hampden, 410.662.4444 North of Map A1 Quinntessential Gentleman— Retro- The Ivy Bookshop— New fiction, non- inspired grooming parlor with billiards room. Hot leather shave, neck shave, haircut and wash, gray blending and highlights, scalp massage, shoe shine. Mon. 1:30 a.m.-8 p.m., Tues.- Fri. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. www.baltimorebar bershop.com. 31 S. Calvert St., Inner Harbor, 410.685.7428 Map C6 fiction titles, art and children’s books. Weekly events. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-7 p.m., Sat. till 6 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. www. theivybookshop.com. 6080 Falls Rd., Mount Washington, 410.377.2966 The Kelmscott Bookshop— Rare and fine books, manuscripts, prints and antique “book art.” Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. www.kelmscottbookshop. com. 34 W. 25th St., Charles Village, 410.235.6810 Map C1 Retail Centers Arundel Mills— Outlet and retail mall Jewelry & Gifts Amaryllis Handcrafted Jewelry— Since 1985, limited-edition pieces drawn from ateliers of more than 100 local and national designers. Alexis Bittar, Satya, Liztech. Mon.-Sat. 10 p.m.-7 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. www. with 200-plus retailers, restaurants and entertainment, Cinemark Egyptian 24 Theaters and Maryland Live! Casino. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9:30 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-7 p.m. www.arundelmillsmall. com. 7000 Arundel Mills Circle, Hanover, Md., 410.540.5110 Belvedere Square Market— Vendors like Atwater’s Bakery, Neopol Savory Smokery and Noveau Contemporary Goods. Retail: Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. Market: Mon.-Wed. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Thurs.-Sat. 10 a.m.- 10 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. www.belve deresquare.com. 529 E. Belvedere Ave., North Baltimore North of Map F1 Cross Street Market— Since 1846, fresh seafood, wings, ice cream, pastries, flowers, cheese, tobacco and fruit. Mon.-Sat. 7 a.m.-7 p.m. Light & Cross sts., Federal Hill, Map C8 The Gallery— Vertical mall with Brooks Brothers, Nine West, Banana Republic, Johnston & Murphy plus specialty stalls and independent shops. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun. noon-6 p.m. www.the galleryatharborplace.com. 200 E. Pratt St., Inner Harbor, 410.332.4191 Map D6 Hagerstown Premium Outlets— Outlet stores like Banana Republic, Kate Spade, Nike, J. Crew, Tommy Hilfiger and Coach. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. till 7 p.m. www.premiumout lets.com. 495 Premium Outlets Blvd., Hagerstown, Md., 301.790.0300 Lexington Market— Opened in 1782, now largest of the city’s six historic market buildings. Home of Faidley Seafood with famous crabcake. Produce from 130 merchants. Mon.-Sat. 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. www.lexington market.com. Lexington and Eutaw sts., 410.685.6169 Map C5 Queenstown Premium Outlets— Sav- ings at 65 stores, brands like Adidas, Banana Republic, Brooks Brothers, Calvin Klein, Coach, Gucci, Kors, Nike, Polo Ralph Lauren. Mon.- Sat. 10 a.m.- 9 p.m., Sun. till 8 p.m. www.premium outlets.com. 441 Outlet Center Dr., Queenstown, Md., 410.827.8699 Shoes Loafers & Laces— Fine shoes for men: Alden of New England, Rancourt & Co., Martin Dingman, cologne, accessories. Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. noon-6 p.m. www.loafersandlaces. com. 612 S. Exeter St., Harbor East, 410.244.5344 Map E7 Ma Petite Shoe— Casual and dressy pieces. Jeffrey Campbell, Dolce Vita, Seychelles, plus a vegan collection. Artisan chocolates. CHOUX cafe, next door annex of shop owner. Mon.Thurs., Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Fri. till 8 p.m. 1 4 W H E R E B a lt i m o re I S u m m e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_g-shop.indd 14 7/2/14 8:54:01 AM Shopping (Chocolate Happy Hour from 6 p.m.), Sun. noon-5 p.m. www.mapetiteshoe. com. 832 W. 36th St., Hampden, 410.235.3442 North of Map A1 Poppy and Stella— Shoe boutique stocks labels like Pour La Victoire, Oh Deer!, Jimmy Choo and Jeffrey Campbell. Handbags, accessories. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 8 p.m., Sun. noon-6 p.m. www.poppy andstella.com. 728 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 410.522.1970 Map F7 Sassanova— Pink walls, cheetah carpet, designer shoes and accessories. Kate Spade, The Printery. Mon.Sat. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. noon.- 5 p.m. www.sassanova.com. 805 Aliceanna St., Harbor East, 410.244.1114 Map E7 Wine/Gourmet Foods Charm City Cupcakes— Baltimore- themed cupcakes for every occasion. Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m.-6:30 p.m. www. charmcitycupcakes.com. Pratt Street Pavilion, 201 E. Pratt St., Inner Harbor, 410.244.8790 Map D6; 1340 Smith Ave., Mount Washington McCormick World of Flavors— Baltimore-based spice company’s first store, national and international brands. Cooking demos, history “wall.” Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. noon-6 p.m. www.facebook.com/mccormick worldofflavors. 301 Light St., Inner Harbor, 443.853.1355 Map D6 Milk & Honey Market— Groceries for locavores. Regional meat, cheese, produce (some organic), bread, pasta. Deli counter (breakfast, paninis, hoagies) plus espresso bar. Daily 7 a.m.-7 p.m. www.milkandhoney baltimore.com. 816 Cathedral St., Mount Vernon, 410.685.6455 Map C3 Randy & Steve’s — The self-proclaimed “new general store.” Renovated 127year-old Yates Market stocked with gourmet goods and sundries for the home. Deli, pastries and tea. Tues.Thurs., Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 8 p.m. www.randyandsteves.com. 8249 Main St., Ellicott City, Md., 410.461.5840 Urban Cellars Beer, Wine & Spirits— “Local libations” at Charles Plaza. Domestic and imported fine wines, craft beers, premium liquors plus the knowledgeable counsel of owner Jim Amato. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. www. urbancellarsmd.com. 222 N. Charles St., Downtown, 410.528.8088 Map C5 w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 15 BLTWM_1407SF_g-shop.indd 15 7/2/14 2:28:44 PM Museums+Attractions The Decisive Moment At 16, Neil Leifer sold his first photograph to Sports Illustrated. Baltimoreans may recall that iconic shot of Alan Ameche’s game-winning touchdown that made the Colts the 1958 NFL champions. The photograph, along with 53 other Leifer images, stars in an exhibition at the Sports Legends Museum (above). See page 22.—Rachel Chism a.m.-4 p.m., Sat. 1-4 p.m. Free. www. towson.edu/asianarts. Fine Arts Building, Towson University, 8000 York Rd., 410.704.2807 American Visionary Art Museum— Jim Rouse Visionary Center with two floors of art cars, the Cabaret Mechanical Theater, kinetic sculptures. Paintings from the Von Bruenchenhein Collection. Human, Soul & Machine: The Coming Singularity!, the impact of technology on 40+ artists through Aug. 31. Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. $15.95, seniors $13.95, students $9.95, 6 and under free. Gift shop and Mr. Rain’s Fun House for food. www.avam.org. 800 Key Hwy., 410.244.1900 Map D8 Baltimore Museum of Art— Housing Asian Arts and Culture Center— An ongoing display of objects from Korea, China, Japan and SE Asia. Mon.-Fri. 11 90,000-plus objects, ancient mosaics to contemporary art. Cone Collection features Renoir, Matisse, Gauguin and Picasso. German Expressionism: A Revolutionary Spirit, work by German artists from movements, like Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider). On Paper: Figure Drawings from the Thomas E. Benesch Memorial Collection, variations of the human figure by contemporary artists like David Hockney both through Sept. 14. Wed.-Fri. 10 a.m.- 5 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Free. www.artbma.org. 10 Art Museum Dr., 443.573.1700 North of Map D1 Maryland Art Place— A non-profit contemporary gallery at Power Plant Live! Registry of 1,600 regional artists. Young Blood, works from Baltimorearea Masters of Fine Art graduates, through August 16. Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m.5 p.m. Free. www.mdartplace.org. 8 Market Pl., 410.962.8565 Map D5 Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA)— Nation’s oldest fully accredited, four-year, degree-granting art college with gallery for works by national and international artists, faculty and students. Locally Sourced, variety of media documenting the interconnected cultural landscape of the Big Picture At the Maryland Science Center (page 18), visitors explore the origins of the national anthem from the big screen IMAX. Courtesy Babe Ruth Birthplace Foundation Art Museums 1 6 W H E R E B a lt i m o re I S u m m e r / fall 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_g-att.indd 16 7/2/14 8:41:18 AM Museums+Attractions arts and entertainment district. Sept. 2-21. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. Free. www.mica.edu. Fox Building, 1303 W. Mount Royal Ave., 410.669.9200 Map C1 School 33 Art Center— Renovated public school, now Baltimore’s original alternative space for contemporary galleries, studio facilities and classrooms for ceramics and print-making workshops. 35-33-35, 35th anniversary exhibit of 35 artists who have made an impact with their dedication and support of S33 over the years, through Aug. 21. Wed.-Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. www.school33.org. 1427 Light St., 443.263.4350 S of Map C8 Walters Art Museum— Art, jewelry, medieval armor and Egyptian collection (virtual autopsy of a mummy). Chamber of Wonders, the imaginary gallery of a fictional 17th-century Flemish noble. Small sculptures from Mesoamerica. Audio tours. The Janet and Walter Sondheim Artscape Prize 2014 Finalists, through Aug. 17. Seeing Music in Medieval Manuscripts, how music related to philosophy, religion and arts during the Middle Ages through Oct. 12. Wed.-Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Thurs. till 9 p.m. Free walk-in tours. Cafe. www. thewalters.org. 600 N. Charles St., 410.547.9000 Map C3 Attractions Fort McHenry— A strategic installa- tion protecting the city during the Revolution, War of 1812 and Civil War. War of 1812 battle here inspired Francis Scott Key to pen the words of The Star-Spangled Banner. Visitors center has films and exhibits. Narrated boat tour, presented from Key’s perspective through Sept. 30. Daily flag raising at 9:30 a.m., lowering at 4:20 p.m. Visitors center and fort 9 a.m.-4:45 p.m., park 9 a.m.-5 p.m. $7, 15 and under free. www.nps.gov/fomc. E. Fort Ave., 410.962.4290 S of Map F8 Historic Ships in Baltimore— The USS Constellation, from 1854, was the last Civil War-era vessel built by the Navy. After years of restoration, the 1,400-ton, 179-foot warship returned to the Inner Harbor in 1999. Other Inner Harbor ships to tour: Taney, the last surviving warship of Pearl Harbor; Torsk, a sub from World War II; Chesapeake, a lightship that guided early- w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 17 BLTWM_1407SF_g-att.indd 17 7/2/14 8:41:24 AM Museums+Attractions 1900s mariners across the Chesapeake Bay. Daily from 10 a.m. Hours vary by month; call to confirm. One ship: $5-11, two ships: $6-14, four ships: $7-18; 5 and under free. www.historicships.org. Pier 1, 301 E. Pratt St., 410.539.1797 Map D6 admission $34.95 (Fridays after 5 p.m. $12), seniors $29.95, children $21.95, under 3 free. www.aqua.org. 501 E. Pratt St., 410.576.3800 Map D6 Oriole Park at Camden Yards— A be- hind-the-scenes tour with a peek at the dugout, scoreboard control room and press box. Learn about the transformation of a railroad yard into a world-class ballpark. Tickets for tours at north end box office near Gate H. Hourly tours Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.- 1 p.m., Sun. noon-3 p.m. $9, seniors/children $6, 3 and under free. www.orioles.com. 333 W. Camden St., 888.848.2473 Map B6 M&T Bank Stadium— Home of Balti- more’s NFL franchise (and Super Bowl XLVII champions!) the Ravens since 1998. Stadium for 71,000 (119 suites and 8,196 club seats) west of the Inner Harbor. www.baltimoreravens.com. 1101 Russell St., 410.261.7283 Map B8 Maryland Science Center— Three levels of interactive exhibits. Live demos like Dinosaur Mysteries and Follow the Blue Crab. The Shed, DIY workshop for all ages. 50-foot domed Davis Planetarium, an IMAX theater with five-story-high movie screens, showing films like Born to be Wild, Penguins, Star Spangled Banner: Anthem of Liberty. Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. till 6 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Closed Mon. $18.95, seniors $17.95, children 3-12 $15.95, under 3 free. IMAX extra. First Fridays, $8 admission 5-8 p.m. to exhibits, planetarium and IMAX. Gift shop and cafe. www.mdsci.org. 601 Light St., 410.685.5225 Map C7 Patterson Park— One of the city’s old- est parks began as a six-acre donation in 1827 and now spans 137 acres with lake, ice rink in winter, ball fields, pool and tennis courts. Victorian Pagoda, open Sun, noon-6 p.m. www.pattersonpark.com. Eastern and Patterson Park aves. Map G5/6 Phoenix Shot Tower— Before D.C.’s Washington Monument, the tallest building in the United States. Take a tour of this bullet-producing site on the grounds of the Carroll Mansion, former residence of Charles Carroll, signer of the Declaration of Independence. National Historic Landmark. Sat.-Sun. noon-4 p.m. $5, children/seniors/students/military $4, under 6 free. www. carrollmuseums.org. 801 E. Fayette St., at President St., 410.605.2964 Map D5 Maryland Zoo in Baltimore— More than 1,500 animals on 160 acres. Raptor Garden, Giraffe Feeding Station, Polar Bear Watch underwater viewing area and Chimpanzee Forest. Rise and Conquer, official mascots of the NFL Ravens. Sat-Sun: Breakfast with the animals, buffet-style breakfast and animal feeding before Zoo opens, 8:30 a.m.-10 a.m. through Sept. 20. Daily 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $17.50, seniors $14.50, children $12.50, under 2 free. Free parking. www.marylandzoo.org. Druid Hill Park, 443.552.5296 North of Map B1 Pimlico Race Course— Storied home of the Preakness Stakes, second leg of the Triple Crown. Daily for simulcast racing, 350 betting windows. Mon.-Tues. 11:00 a.m.-6 p.m., Wed.-Thurs. till 11:30 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11:45 p.m., Sun. till 8:30 p.m. Grandstand/clubhouse admission $3, Sports Palace restaurant seats $5, $3 after 7:30 p.m. www.pimlico.com. 5201 Park Heights Ave., 410.542.9400 National Aquarium— More than 16,000 creatures housed in rain forest, marine mammal pavilion, river gorge and coral reef ecosystems. See jellies and animal feedings. 4D Immersion Theater and Harbor Market Kitchen. Ongoing exhibits like Animal Planet Australia. Blacktip Reef, a 260,000gallon Indo-Pacific faux coral reef for up-close views of sharks, stingrays and a 400-pound sea turtle. Dolphin Discovery, all-day access to dolphins and experts, featuring training, play, feeding times. Daily from 9 a.m. Hours vary by month; check online. Reserved tickets recommended. All-Aquarium Ripley’s Believe It or Not!— An 8,000-square-foot “odditorium” for experiencing the weird, wonderful world of Ripley. Outrageous and incredible artifacts from around the world, plus illusions in the Marvelous Mirror Maze and 4D Moving Theater. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. till 9 p.m. $17.99, children (ages 4-12) $11.99, plus fees for theater and maze. www.ripleys.com/baltimore. 301 Light St., 443.615.7878 Map C6 Top of the World— I.M. Pei-designed, 423-foot observation level and museum. Tallest pentagonal building in the world with a 360-degree view of the city from 27th floor. 9/11 Maryland Memorial Exhibit through Dec. 31. Wed.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 7 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. $5, seniors/ military $4, children $3, under 3 free. www.viewbaltimore.org. 401 E. Pratt St., 410.837.8439 Map D6 U.S. Naval Academy— College of the U.S. Navy. Guided walking tours daily; Ages 16 and older must bring photo ID. Gift shop. $9.50, seniors $8.50, students $7.50, under 5 free. Daily 9 a.m.-5 p.m. www.navyonline.com. 52 King George St., Annapolis, Md., 410.293.8687 Westminster Hall and Burying Ground— A restored historic church surrounded by one of Baltimore’s oldest cemeteries. Plots hold many public figures including Edgar Allan Poe. Burial grounds daily 8 a.m.-dusk. $5, seniors/children $3. www.westmin sterhall.org. Fayette & Greene sts., 410.706.2072 Map B5 Golf Course Bulle Rock— Named for America’s first Thoroughbred horse. Pete Dye-designed, top-ranked course approximately 30 miles northeast of Baltimore. Five sets of tees on long and short holes. Clubhouse with restaurant and views of Chesapeake Bay. Full locker room service. Caddies available. www. bullerockgolf.com. 320 Blenheim Ln., Havre de Grace, Md., 410.939.8887 Historic Religious Sites Baltimore Basilica— National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. In 1806, Bishop John Carroll placed the cornerstone of this landmark site, Mother Church of Roman Catholicism. Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat.-Sun. till end of mass. Guided tours Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m., 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., Sun. noon. Gift shop: Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Sat. 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m., Sun. 8:30 a.m.-9;4:30 p.m. www. baltimorebasilica.org. 409 Cathedral St., 410.727.3565 Map C4 Lloyd Street Synagogue— Baltimore Hebrew Congregation began building Maryland’s first synagogue in 1845, now the third-oldest in the country. Site of the Jewish Museum of Maryland. Gift shop and library. Synagogue guided tours on the hour Sun.-Thurs. 11 am., 1-4 p.m. Sun.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. $8, seniors $6, students $4, under 1 8 W H E R E B a lt i m o re I S u m m e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_g-att.indd 18 7/2/14 8:41:34 AM Museums+Attractions 12 $3. www.jhsm.org. 15 Lloyd St., 410.732.6400 Map E5 Mother Seton House and Historic Seminary Chapel— Site of the first Catholic seminary in the United States and home of first American saint Elizabeth Seton. Known today as St. Mary’s Spiritual Center & Historic Site. Mon.Fri. noon-3:30 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 1-3 p.m. Free. www.stmarysspiritualcenter.org. 600 N. Paca St., 410.728.6464 Map B4 Old St. Paul’s Church— The Anglican community’s “Mother Church of Baltimore” founded in 1692. Current building, one of the city’s architectural gems, dates to 1856. Sunday services (8, 9 and 11 a.m.) plus Thurs. 12:15 p.m. Eucharist service. www. stpaulsbaltimore.org. 309 Cathedral St., 410.685.3404 Map C5 St. Alphonsus Church— Designed by architect Robert Cary Long in 1845 in Southern German neo-Gothic style. Sun. Mass: Lithuanian (8:30 a.m.), English (10 a.m.), city’s only Tridentine Mass (11:30 a.m.). Mon.-Sat. Mass 7 a.m., 12:10 p.m. Call to arrange tours. www. stalphonsusbalt.org. 114 W. Saratoga St., 410.685.6090 Map C4 St. Jude Shrine— A center of devotions to St. Jude, patron saint of hopeless causes. Mass Sun. 8, 9, 11:30 a.m.; Mon.Tues., Thurs.-Fri. 7 a.m., noon; Wed. 7, 7:45 a.m., noon; Sat. 7:45 a.m., noon, 4:30 p.m. Check online for additional services. www.stjudeshrine.org. 512 W. Saratoga St., 410.685.6026 Map B4 Museums & Libraries Babe Ruth Birthplace Museum— The childhood residence of George Herman Ruth Jr. showcases Babe’s early years. Exhibits include Babe Batted Here; Babe: Husband, Father, Friend; and “O” Say Can You See: The Star Spangled Banner in Sports. Daily 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Gift shop daily. $6, seniors $4, children $3, under 3 free. Combo tickets with Sports Legends Museum at Camden Yards $12, $8, $5. www. baberuthmuseum.com. 216 Emory St., 410.727.1539 Map B6 B&O Railroad Museum— Smithsonian Institution affiliate with the oldest, most comprehensive collection of railroad artifacts in the Western Hemisphere. Site (40 acres) features the 1851 Mount Clare Station, 1884 Baldwin Roundhouse and first mile of commercial w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 19 BLTWM_1407SF_g-att.indd 19 7/2/14 8:41:39 AM Museums+Attractions railroad track in the United States. The War Came By Train, rail artifacts and locomotives commemorating the Civil War’s 150th anniversary, ongoing. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. $16, seniors (60+) $14, children $10, under 2 free. www.borail.org. 901 W. Pratt St., 410.752.2490 Map A6 Mon.- Fri. 10 a.m. 4 p.m., Sat.-Sun. noon-4 p.m. $5, seniors $4, students $2, 5 and under free. Guided group tours $8. www.douglassmyers.org. 1417 Thames St., 410.685.0295 Map E8 George Peabody Library— The noted philanthropist built library, a celebrated architectural achievement in 1866. More than 300,000 volumes, mostly from 18th to early 20th centuries. Tues.Thurs. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Fri. till 3 p.m. www. peabodyevents.library.jhu.edu. 17 E. Mount Vernon Pl., 410.659.8179 Map C3 Baltimore Museum of Industry— On waterfront site of 1865 oyster cannery, theme galleries like “pharmacy” and “machine shop.” Artifacts: a Linotype, a steam pump and 1930s spice grinder used to concoct Old Bay seasoning. Making Music: The Banjo in Baltimore & Beyond, exploring the city’s role in popularizing and mass-producing the title instrument, ongoing. Workshops and exhibits re: machinery. Popular with school groups. Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $12, seniors $9, students $7, under 6 free. www.thebmi.org. 1415 Key Hwy., 410.727.4808 South of Map D8 Geppi’s Entertainment Museum— A history of pop culture explored through collectibles, toys, music and ephemera at Camden Station (near Camden Yards). Milestones: African Americans in Comics, Pop Culture, and Beyond, showcase of black comic book superheroes and their creators, through Dec. Ongoing exhibitions: Baltimore Heroes, the city’s cultural pioneers; A Story in Four Colors, comic books in pop culture; Extra! Extra!, newspaper comics as social and ethnic commentary; Revolution, rock and roll’s impact on American culture between 1961 and 1970. Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. $10, seniors (55+) $9, students $7, under 4 free. www.geppismuseum.com. 301 W. Camden St., 410.625.7060 Map C7 Baltimore Streetcar Museum— Ride an authentic streetcar plus vehicles dating from 1859 to 1963. Sat.-Sun. noon-5 p.m. $7, seniors/children $5, under 4 free; maximum $24 for family. www.baltimorestreetcar.org. 1901 Falls Rd., 410.547.0264 North of Map C1 Enoch Pratt Free Library— Crown jewel of the city’s library system and one of the oldest in the country, dating from 1882. Featuring soaring architecture as well as cozy reading nooks. Benefactor Pratt mandated it serve both rich and poor of all races. Mon.-Wed. 10 a.m.-7 p.m., Thurs.Sat. till 5 p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m. www. prattlibrary.org. 400 Cathedral St., 410.396.5430 Map C4 Havre de Grace Maritime Museum— Items like a replica of a shad shack tell the port’s history. Also home to Chesapeake Wooden Boat Builders School, which teaches construction and restoration of wooden craft. Beyond Jamestown: Life 400 Years Ago, a journey with Capt. John Smith and crew in the New World, ongoing. Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m. Free. www.hdgmaritimemuseum.org. 100 Lafayette St., Havre de Grace, Md., 410.939.4800 Evergreen Museum & Library— Ambassador John Work Garrett’s 48-room Gilded Age mansion. Art, rare books, opulent furnishings, Léon Bakst decor. En Plein Air Printmaking images reveal Evergreen during different seasons and times of day through Aug. 31. Tues.-Fri. 11 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat.-Sun. noon-4 p.m. Tours on the hour, final tour 3 p.m. $8, seniors $7, students/ children $5, under 5 free. www. museums.jhu.edu. 4545 N. Charles St., 410.516.0341 North of Map D1 Homewood Museum— Built in 1801 Frederick Douglass-Isaac Myers Maritime Park— Dedicated to African American ship builders who, like orator Douglass, toiled on the docks of Fells Point. Gallery space featuring learning centers and ship restoration workshop. on what is now a campus of Johns Hopkins University, the Palladianstyle, Federal-period mansion was a wedding gift from Declaration signer Charles Carroll to his son. Tues.- Fri. 11 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat.-Sun. noon-4 p.m. Tours on the half hour, last at 3:30 p.m. $8, seniors $7, students/ children $5, under 5 free. www. museums.jhu.edu. 3400 N. Charles St., 410.516.5589 North of Map C1 2 0 W H E R E B a lt i m o re I S u m m e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_g-att.indd 20 7/2/14 8:41:50 AM Museums+Attractions Irish Railroad Workers Museum— Visit this pair of 1848 row houses to learn about the Irish laborers who helped build the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. One house re-creates the life of a family of eight (plus one boarder), while the other serves as a tribute to Baltimore’s Irish citizens. Open Sat.; call to confirm. Tours (by request) include Lemmon Street, St. Peter’s Church and the Hollins Street Market. Free. www.irishshrine.org. 1325 Bolton St., 410.669.8154 Map A6 Jewish Museum of Maryland— One of the largest Jewish museums in the country. Two exhibition galleries, library, research center containing more than 1.1 million documents, artifacts and photos. Three-building complex includes the B’nai Israel Synagogue built in 1876. The A-Maze-ing Mendes Cohen, tracing the adventures of this Baltimorean who fought in the War of 1812 and raised an American flag on the Nile River through Aug. 2015. Tues.-Thurs., Sun. noon-4 p.m. $8, students with ID $4, under 12 $3. www. jewishmuseummd.org. 15 Lloyd St., 410.732.6400 Map E5 Johns Hopkins Archaeological Museum— More than 700 objects in newly renovated university building’s atrium. Drawers for cuneiform tablets, stamped bricks from Rome. On loan: Goucher College’s Egyptian mummy. Mon.-Fri. 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. First Sat. of month noon-4 p.m. Free. archaeologicalmuseum.jhu.edu. 150 Gilman Hall, 3400 N. Charles St., 410.516.0383 N of Map C1 Lacrosse Museum and National Hall of Fame— The famed sports programs of Maryland and Johns Hopkins universities plus teams nationwide recalled through photographs, sculpture, historic equipment, uniforms and film. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. $3, children (5-15) $2, under 5 free. www. uslacrosse.org. 113 W. University Pkwy., 410.235.6882 North of Map C1 Maryland Historical Society— A 150-plus-year-old society with more than 100,000 artifacts and a library of nearly 7 million items, including original manuscript of The Star-Spangled Banner and the original Lady Baltimore statue from the Battle Monument, the city’s official emblem. Woman of Two Worlds: Elizabeth Patterson Bonaparte and the Quest for an Imperial Legacy, 800 items chronicling this wealthy free w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 21 BLTWM_1407SF_g-att.indd 21 7/2/14 8:41:55 AM Museums+Attractions spirit who married Napoleon’s brother through June 2015. Ongoing: In Full Glory Reflected: Maryland During the War of 1812, Inventing a Nation: Maryland in the Revolutionary Era; The Star-Spangled Banner Gallery; Divided Voices: Maryland in the Civil War. Wed.Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. $9, seniors $7, students/children $6, under 3 free. First Thurs. of month free. www.mdhs.org. 201 W. Monument St., 410.685.3750 Map C3 Mount Clare Museum— A 1760s Geor- gian mansion, home of Charles Carroll and Maryland’s first house museum. Views of city skyline, 18th- and 19thcentury family furnishings, silver, china, jewelry, portraits plus Mount Clare Library. Thurs.-Sun. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. (final tour 3 p.m.) $6, seniors $5, children $4. Tickets available for train ride from B&O Railroad Museum to Carroll Park ($5, children $4). www.mountclare.org. 1500 Washington Blvd., Carroll Park, 410.837.3262 East of Map A7 inwax.org. 1601-03 E. North Ave., 410.563.3404 North of Map E1 Port Discovery— Ranked among top five U.S. children’s museums, three levels of activities to educate and entertain. Kids get soaked (slickers and Crocs provided) in Wonders of Water (daily except Mon.) Tues.-Fri. 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. $13.95, military/under 2 free. www.portdiscovery.org. 35 Market Pl., 410.727.8120 Map D6 Reginald F. Lewis Museum of African American History & Culture— The East Coast’s largest African-American museum with three galleries, a two-level theater, an oral history recording studio, workshops, classrooms and cafe. Lydia Douglas: Cultural Reflections of the African Diaspora, photographs with globalized vision of African-American history and culture, through Sept. 7. For Whom It Stands, investigating the broader history and representation of the flag, through Feb. 28. Wed.-Sat. 10 a.m.- 5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. $8, seniors/children/students $6, under 6 free. www. rflewismuseum.org. 830 E. Pratt St., 443.263.1800 Map D6 National Cryptologic Museum— From the National Security Agency, America’s cryptologic history with code-making and code-breaking artifacts. Highlights: WWII Enigma cipher machine and the 60 Years of Cryptologic Excellence exhibit. Gift shop and library. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. First and third Sat. of month 10 a.m.- 2 p.m. Free. www.nsa.gov/about/cryptologic_heritage/museum/index.shtml. 20 miles south of Baltimore. NSA, off Route 32, Ft. Meade, Md., 301.688.5849 Sports Legends at Camden Yards— The history of the Orioles, Ravens, Colts, Blast, Negro League Black Sox and collegiate sports. Exhibits including Babe Ruth: An American Icon; Orioles Hall of Fame and The Locker Room: Kids Discovery Zone. Sports photography of Neil Leifer, through Oct. Daily 10 a.m.-5 p.m. $8, seniors $6, children (3-12) $4, under 3 free. Gift shop. Combo tickets with Babe Ruth Museum $12, $8, $5. www.sports legendsatcamdenyards.com. 301 W. Camden St., 410.727.1539 Map C7 National Electronics Museum— Approximately 10,000 artifacts celebrating science and engineering. Nike Ajax, radar, radios, vacuum tubes, manuscripts. Among the galleries: Cold War, Early Radar and Under Seas. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. $3, students/seniors $1, 5 and under free. www.nationalelectronics museum.org. 1745 W. Nursery Rd., Linthicum Heights, Md., 410.765.0230 The Star-Spangled Banner Flag House— Home of Mary Pickersgill, National Great Blacks in Wax Museum— Tableaux of 100 figures: civil rights leaders, athletes, African citizens, ministers, politicians and notables like Langston Hughes and Baltimorean Billie Holiday. Exhibits on slavery and the Middle Passage. Tues.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon5 p.m. $13, seniors/students $12, ages 3-11 $11, under 3 free. www.greatblacks who sewed the flag that inspired Francis Scott Key’s lyrics to The StarSpangled Banner. Period furniture, war artifacts and a glass replica of the banner. Discovery gallery for kids. Orientation film. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Tours Tues.-Fri. 11 a.m., 2 p.m.; Sat. 11 a.m., 2 p.m., 3:15 p.m. Self-guided audio tours 10:30 a.m.-3:15 p.m. $8, seniors (55+)/ military $7, students $6, under 6 free. www.flaghouse.org. 844 E. Pratt St., 410.837.1793 Map D6 2 2 W H E R E B a lt i m o re I S u m m e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_g-att.indd 22 7/2/14 2:08:52 PM Dining In Season for 75 Years A yellow and blue tin holding a secret mix of 18 spices and herbs, Old Bay seasoning has graced the tables of Baltimore rowhouse kitchens and seafood restaurants since 1939. At chef Mo Manocheh’s two Little Italy spots (see Mo’s, page 30), the spice sparks most uses of crab, from Maryland soup and steamers to sautéed soft shells. Take home a can from McCormick World of Flavors (page 15); at 125, it’s even older than Old Bay.—JLC Belvedere Square Grand Cru— Wine Bar. Laid-back Belve- dere Square spot for Alsatian tartes flambé and “snacks”: cheeses, antipasto, poached shrimp and pheasant sausage. Cocktails, (open daily) wine shop. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 1 a.m., Sun. noon-8 p.m. www.grandcrubaltimore.com. 527 E. Belvedere Ave., 410.464.1944 North of Map C1 courtesy old bay Shoo-fly— American. Spike Gjerde’s “farmhouse diner” with butchery and local-source cooking: sourdough pancakes, crab salad, chipped beef with gravy. Split-level space with serpentine counter, bar.Daily 4 p.m.-1 a.m., Sat.-Sun. brunch 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Valet. To confirm 410.464.8000. 510 E. Belvedere Ave. $$ North of Map D1 Canton Annabel Lee— American. Homage to local poet Edgar Allan Poe, a tavern for “upscale comfort” food: Jack Daniels baby back ribs, duck breast with honey grits, crab cakes. Darts. Watch the Os (on TV) by candlelight. “Literary” cocktails. Mon.-Sat. 4 p.m.-1 a.m. www. annabelleetavern.com. 601 S. Clinton St., 410.522.2929 $$ Map H7 Canton Dockside— Seafood. Known for its “blues” (crabs, that is) served indoors or on the shaded patio at this popular crab house. Seafood-topped pastas, “city wings,” sandwiches, entrée salads, shrimp, ribs, crab cakes. Also crabs to go. Daily 11 a.m.-close. www.cantondockside.com. 3301 Boston St., 410.276.8900 $$ Map G8 Fork & Wrench— American. “Working class” vintage decor but “four-star attitudes,” an indoor courtyard and chef Cyrus Keefer putting global influences to regional fare: charcuterie, calamari, crispy half duck, “Bar-B-Quail,” lamb chops with savory broth, vegan tastings. Cocktails. Mon.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5-11 p.m., Sun. brunch/supper 10 a.m. 10 p.m. Bar till 2 a.m. www. theforkandwrench.com. 2322 Boston St., 443.759.9360 $$-$$$ Map G7 Origin of Old Bay Gustav Brunn, after time in Buchenwald, escaped from Germany with his family, a recipe and a spice grinder. w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 23 BLTWM_1407SF_g-dine.indd 23 7/2/14 10:19:41 AM Dining Jack’s Bistro— American. Chef haunt with coastal fare in French style. Buffalo sweetbreads, sous vide duck breast curry, Guinness-braised steak and corvina fillet. International wines, craft beers. Bar till 2 a.m. Wed.-Sun. 5-10 p.m. www.jacksbistro.net. 3123 Elliott St., 410.878.6542 $$ Map H8 Langermann’s— Southern. Chef Neal Langermann sends out beef medallions, shrimp and grits, yellowfin with spicy yellow mole, candied yams, mac and cheese, fried green tomatoes. Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri. till 11 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.-11 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. www.langermanns. com. 2400 Boston St., 410.534.3287 $$-$$$ Map G7; 1542 Light St 410.528.1200 Map South of D8 Shields. Cocktails, wines. Tues.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-9 p.m., Sat. 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m. www.gertrudes baltimore.com. 10 Art Museum Dr., 410.889.3399 $$$ North of Map A1 Federal Hill Blue Agave— Mexican. Spot named for the plant used in tequila. Margaritas, 100-plus Mexican liquors. Inventive tacos, regional and coastal dishes. Daily 11 a.m.-2 a.m., 3-7 p.m. happy hour. www.blueagaverestaurant.com. 1032 Light St., 410.576.3938 $$ Map C8 Bluegrass— American. Sophisticated bistro-bar with floor-to-ceiling windows and Ray Kumm’s charcuterie, entrées like rabbit, kobe sirloin and light fare ($$). Sustainable ingredients, herbs grown on-site. Mon.-Wed. 5 p.m.-10 p.m., Thurs-Fri 11 a.m.- 11 p.m., Sat.Sun. 10 a.m.- 11 p.m. www.blue grasstavern.com. 1500 S. Hanover St., 410.244.5101 $$$ South of Map C8 Mama’s on the Half Shell— Seafood. Old-style bistro for chowder, authentic Maryland crab soup, crab cakes, steamed shrimp, oyster stew. Raw bar on the first floor, dining room upstairs. Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-2 a.m., Sun. 9 a.m.-2 a.m. 2901 O’Donnell St., 410.276.3160 $$ Map G8 C&R Pub— Pubs & Taverns. Country- western music, cattle horns and 15 flat screens for sports plus sliders, sandwiches (crab cake, veggie burger), ginger soy tuna, shrimp kebabs. Specials: Mon. steaks, Tues. tacos, Wed. smokehouse BBQ. Beers, cocktails, spirits. Daily 11 a.m.-2 a.m. www.cnr pub.com. 1117 S. Charles St., Federal Hill, 410.223.2269 $$ Map C8 Tavern on the Square— American. Fried oysters, BBQ brisket, paninis, sandwiches (wild boar burrito), pizzas, international entrées. Drafts, cocktails. Weekend p.m. DJs. Mon. 4 p.m.-2 a.m., Tues.-Sun. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. www.tavern oncantonsquare.com. 2903 O’Donnell St., 410.675.1880 $$ Map G8 Charles Village SoBo Café— American. Colorful spot for comfort food: poblano corn chowder, chicken pot pie, mac and cheese, shrimp and scallop risotto. Draft beer, cocktails. Buy art by locals off the walls. Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m., Mon.-Sat. 5-10 p.m., Sun. 10:30 a.m.-2 p.m., 5-9 p.m. www.sobocafe.net. 6 W. Cross St., 410.752.1518 $$ Map C8 alizée— Southern. Boutique bistro and wine bar with dishes like banana, lobster and shrimp sushi, pan-seared duck and steak with charred edamame. Wine cellar with communal tasting table. Light fare menu (salads, entrées $$). Mon.-Thurs. 7 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. till 9 p.m. Happy hour snacks 5-7 p.m. Inn at the Colonnade. www.alizeebaltimore.com. 4 West University Pkwy., 443.449.6200 $$$ North of Map C3 Thai Yum— Thai. Mrs. Chungkasoon cooking Thai with French influences and European dishes with Asian: tempura-battered fried crab, yumbeef, ostrich medallion, rack of boar, frogs legs, curry hot pot. Wed.-Mon. 11:30 a.m-2 p.m. (closed Tues.), dinner till close. www.thaiyum.com. 1006 Light St., 410.528.2146 $$ Map C8 Charles Village Pub— Pubs & Taverns. Burgers, sandwiches, cheese and pepper poppers, Cajun tuna steak. Drink specials, trivia, ladies night and college nights. Daily 11 a.m.-2 a.m. www. charlesvillagepub.net. 3107 St. Paul St., 410.243.1611 $ North of Map D1 Fells Point Bertha’s— Seafood. Neighborhood Gertrude’s— American. Inside Balti- more Museum of Art, Chesapeake crab cakes and steaks by celeb chef John spot with bar and intimate rooms. Tea (Mon.-Sat. 3-4:30 p.m.), a dozen preps of mussels and seafood. Jazz or blues most evenings. www.berthas.com. 734 S. Broadway, 410.327.5795 $$ Map F7 The Black Olive— Greek. On a cobble- stone street, hospitality by the Spiliadis family: seafood, rack of lamb, crab cakes, vegetarian and small plates like stuffed calamari. Organic ingredients, sustainable wines. Private wine cellar dining. Mon.-Fri. noon-2:30 p.m., nightly 5-10 p.m. Olive Room -rooftop for Greek and Turkish fare Fri.-Sat. 5-10 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m. www. theblackolive.com. 814 S. Bond St., 410.276.7141 $$$$ Map E8 Blue Moon Cafe— American. Popular spot in the mornings, i.e., often a wait for a table. Breakfast anytime. Regulars rave about house-made cinnamon rolls and Cap ’n Crunch French toast. Mon.Fri. 7 a.m.-3 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 24 hours. www.bluemoonbaltimore.com. 1621 Aliceanna St., 410.522.3940 $ Map E7 Darbar— Indian. Tandoori kababs, biryanis, thali and vegetarian fare in an intimate dining room. Crab masala, goat curry, chicken 11 ways, lamb. Lunch buffet. Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Sat.-Sun. noon-3 p.m., Sun.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5-11 p.m. www. darbarbaltimore.com. 1911 Aliceanna St., 410.563.8008 $$-$$$ Map F7 Kooper’s Tavern— Pubs & Taverns. Neighborhood bar for sliders, sandwiches, pizza, meatloaf, pastas, short ribs, a dozen drafts. Specials: Mon. fajitas, Tues. burgers, Wed. crab cakes, Thurs. Belgian beers, Fri. happy hour buffet, Sat.-Sunday casual brunch. Fri.-Sat. live music. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-midnight, Sat.-Sun. 9 a.m.-1 a.m. www.koopers.com. 1702 Thames St., 410.563.5423 $$ Map E8 Liquid Earth— Vegetarian. Local vegans rate this a favorite (“intelligent nutrition”) spot. Sandwiches, freshsqueezed juices like apple-lemonade, sweets. No credit cards. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-7 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Sun. till 7 p.m. www.liquidearth.com. 1626 Aliceanna St., 410.276.6606 $$ Map E7 Max’s Taphouse— Pubs & Taverns. With 102 beers and five casks on tap plus 1,200 bottled beers, brews rule here. But folks find sustenance beyond foamy elixirs—huge burgers, creative wraps and salads. Pool tables on the first floor, chill lounge upstairs. Daily 11 a.m.-2 a.m. www.maxs.com. 737 S. Broadway, 410.675.6297 $ Map F7 2 4 W H E R E B a lt i m o re I S u m m e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_g-dine.indd 24 7/2/14 8:45:36 AM Dining Pierpoint Restaurant— American. Maryland- and Italian-accented dishes by celebs’ chef Nancy Longo. Smoked crab cakes, tenderloin and oysters plus crème brûlée trio. Bar. Tues.-Thurs. 5-9:30 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5:30-10:30 p.m., Sun. 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m., 4-9 p.m. www.pierpointrestaurant.com. 1822 Aliceanna St., 410.675.2080 $$$ Map F7 Red Star Bar & Grill— American. Named for a long-ago (brothel!) signal to sailors, now a wood- and brick-lined gathering place. Sandwiches, salads, desserts, martinis and margaritas. Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-midnight, Fri. till 2 a.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-2 a.m., Sun. till midnight. www.redstarbar.us. 906 S. Wolfe St., 410.675.0212 $ Map F8 Sláinte Irish Pub & Restaurant— Irish. “Sláinte” is Gaelic for good health and prosperity plus Guinness onion soup, bangers and mash, corned beef and cabbage. Specials: Mon. mussels, Tues. Irish fare, Wed. lobster, Fri. fish n’ chips, oysters. Sports TVs, Tues. music. Daily from 7 a.m. breakfast, happy hours 4-7 p.m., 10 p.m.-close. www.slaintepub.com. 1702 Thames St., 410.563.6600 $$ Map E8 Waterfront Kitchen— American. At water taxi stop #8, spot with its own greenhouse for farm-sourced cooking: Jerry Pellegrino’s oyster stew, Maryland rockfish, Marcho Farm veal, steaks, Tues.-Sat. 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Tues.Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. & 5-9 p.m. At Douglass-Myers museum. Valet p.m. www. waterfrontkitchen.com. 1417 Thames St., 443.681.5310 $$$-$$$$ Map E8 Willow— Latin. Airy, two-story spot with bar and lounge plus “modernist” (tapas-style) Mexican fare (like deconstructed tacos, adobo lamb quesadillas, Korean bbq) and cocktail “infusions.” Hotel delivery. Mon.-Tues. 5 p.m.-2 a.m., Wed.-Sun. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. www.willowbaltimore.com. 811 S. Broadway, 443.835.4086 $$ Map F7 Hampden courtesy prime Rib 13.5%— Wine Bar. Cozy lounge with beer, cocktails, pork belly tacos, PEI mussels, pork chops and pizza. Daily specials. Wine flights, 40+ by the glass, 200 by the bottle. Mon. 4-10 p.m., Tues.-Thurs. 4-11 p.m., Fri. till 2 a.m., Sat. 1 p.m.-2 a.m., Sun. 1-10 p.m. Bar late. www.13.5winebar.com. 1117 W. 36th St., 410.889.1064 $$ Birroteca— Italian. In an 1883 structure, new family-style trattoria whose name means “nice place for beer” but also for bruschetta, pastas, salumi and artisan pizza (duck confit, escargot, mussels). Cocktails, wine plus 24 taps and 25+ craft beers. Lively bar. Mon.Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri. 5-11 p.m., Sat. noon-11 p.m., Sun. noon-10 p.m. www. bmorebirroteca.com. 1520 Clipper Rd., 443.708.1934 $$ The Food Market— American. New, industrial-chic space with open kitchen for chef Chad Gauss and his fried oysters, lobster fingers, bison hanger steak, wagyu rib eye, crab cake, truffle fries. Sun.-Thurs. 5-11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight, Fri.-Sun. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Free valet. www.thefoodmarketbaltimore. com. 1017 W. 36th St., 410.366.0606 $$$-$$$$ a.m.-11 p.m., Sat. noon-11 p.m., Sun. 3-10 p.m. www.chiussushi.com. 608 S. Exeter St., 410.752.9666 $$ Map E7 James Joyce— Irish. Welcoming restau- rant and pub, interiors shipped from Eire. Classic fare with American twist: shepherd’s pie, mussels, sandwiches, rack of lamb, beef and Guinness stew, Bailey’s chocolate cake. Live music from 10 p.m. Fri.-Sat. Major spirits and cigars. Patio deck. Irish decor and Joyce tee-shirts. Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-2 a.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-2 a.m. www.the SPOTLIGHT Woodberry Kitchen— American. Beard nominee chef Spike Gjerde in rustic spaces with farm-to-table deviled eggs, trout salad, short ribs, brick-oven chicken, soft shells, Chesapeake oysters. Mezzanine for people watching. Kids menu. Mon.-Thurs 5-10 p.m., Fri.Sat. 5-11 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-2 p.m., 5-9 p.m. www.woodberrykitchen.com. 2010 Clipper Park Rd., 410.464.8000 $$$ Harbor East Charleston— American. Cindy Wolf’s cuisine with a Southern accent (cornmeal-fried oysters, smoked salmon, lamb or buffalo tenderloin) in three to six courses ($76-$111). Wine pairings by Tony Foreman. Mon.-Sat. 5:30-10 p.m. www.charlestonrestaurant. com. 1000 Lancaster St., Sylvan Bldg., 410.332.7373 $$$$ Map E8 Chazz: A Bronx Original— Italian. Co- owned by the Vitales and actor Chazz Palminteri, a stop inspired by Chazz’s movie “A Bronx Tale.” Pastas, risottos, mozzarella and antipasto bar. Osso bucco, veal, filet mignon. At the “pizza altar,” see pies prepped in the coal oven. Wine and housemade limoncello. Mon.-Tues. 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m., Wed.Thurs. till 11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight, Sun. 5-10 p.m. www.chazzbronxoriginal. com. 1415 Aliceanna St., 410.522.5511 $$$ Map E7 Chiu’s Sushi— Japanese. Quality sushi and sashimi (plus tempura and teriyaki) served by kimono-clad waitresses. Sushi counter chefs. Lunch specials. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri. 11 Come on in... In 1965, Nick and Buzz Beler opened Prime Rib (page 31). Today the elegant steakhouse, still “overseen” by Buzz (above), has three more locations. The supper club setting, tuxedoed waiters and diners (“business casual” to Mad Man) may signal nostalgia, but Petrossian caviar, filet mignon and oysters Rockefeller are timeless comforts. When Arnold Schwarzenegger couldn’t fit into a jacket offered by the restaurant, Buzz said, “Come on in.” w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 25 BLTWM_1407SF_g-dine.indd 25 7/2/14 8:45:43 AM Dining jamesjoycepub.com. 616 S. President St., 410.727.5107 $$ Map E7 p.m. www.talarabaltimore.com. 615 President St., 410.528.9883 Map E7 Oceanaire Seafood Room— Seafood. Wit and Wisdom— American. Creden- Swank ocean-liner interior à la the 1930s with fresh-catch menu (often live Maine lobster) plus escargots, steaks, rich sides. Raw bar supplied by both coasts. Award-winning chowder. Prixfixe four courses $37. Wine pairings. Sun.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5-11 p.m. www.theoceanaire.com. 801 Aliceanna St., 443.872.0000 $$$ Map E7 tialed chef Zack Mills at Michael Mina’s “modern tavern.” East Coast comfort food: roasted bone marrow, peanut soup, oyster stew, Bourbon Steak burger, Maine lobster. Harbor view. Daily from 7 a.m., break after lunch; Sun.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 10:30 p.m. www.witandwisdom baltimore.com. Four Seasons Hotel, 200 International Dr., 410.576.5800 $$$-$$$$ Map D7 Ouzo Bay— Greek. Hot new kouzina with dramatic lighting, posh bar (open late) and patio, handsome setting for global fresh catches, classics like spanakopita, mussels with feta, charcoal-grilled calamari, moussaka plus whole fish and chops. Cocktails, eight ouzos. Sun.Thurs. 4-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 4-midnight. www.ouzobay.com. 1000 Lancaster St., 443.708.5818 $$$-$$$$ Map E7 Howard County Gadsby’s— American. Award-winning chef Robert Gadsby’s “progressive” cuisine with international inspiration: tuna tartare, butternut squash ravioli, red snapper with artichokes, barbequed lamb shank, berry-coconut trifle. Cocktails, lagers, ales, American wines. Mon. 11:30 a.m.-9 p.m., Tues.-Fri. till 10 p.m., Sat. 4-10 p.m., Sun. 4-8 p.m. www.gadsbysbaramerican.com. 8850 Columbia 100 Pkwy., Columbia, Md., 410.715.4739 $$$-$$$$ Pazo— Mediterranean. See-and-be- seen restaurant-lounge in cavernous digs. Cindy Wolf’s fare of Spanish coast and Italy’s isles: tapas, seafood, game and Neapolitan pizza plus 100-label wine list. Complimentary valet parking. Mon.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5-11 p.m. (bar till 2 a.m.), Sun. 5-9 p.m. www. pazorestaurant.com. 1425 Aliceanna St., 410.534.7296 $$$-$$$$ Map E7 Victoria— Gastropub. Named for a London tube station and the owners’ daughter, a spot for sophisticated yet unpretentious fare: charcuterie, duck fat fries, crab cake, flat iron steak, salmon with shiitakes, fish and chips. Kids menu $. Draft beers, wines. Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5-11 p.m., Sat.-Sun. brunch 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Bar menu later. 8201 Snowden River Pkwy., Columbia, Md., 410.750.1880 $$$ RA Sushi— Japanese. Club/lounge both contemporary and traditional. Sushi and sashimi plus sides like wasabi mashed potatoes. Happy hour Mon.-Sat. 3-7 p.m., Sun. 8-11 p.m. with 1/2 off some appetizers and sushi. Daily 11 a.m.-11 p.m., bar until 1 a.m. www.rasushi.com. 1390 Lancaster St., 410.522.3200 $$ Map E8 Roy’s— Hawaiian Fusion. Beard- winner Yamaguchi’s mai tais, sushi and sashimi, maple pork dim sum, blackened ahi, macadamia-crusted mahi mahi, misoyaki-seared butterfish plus short ribs, Thai lemongrass chicken. Prix-fixe or à la carte. Bar. Valet parking. Mon.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5-10:30 p.m., Sun. 5-9 p.m. www.roysrestaurant. com. 720-B Aliceanna St., 410.659.0099 $$$-$$$$ Map D7 Inner Harbor/Downtown Attman’s— Deli. “New York” family-run deli since 1915 for hot corned beef, hot pastrami, kosher hot dogs, bagels and lox, knishes and matzo ball soup. Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-6:30 p.m., Sun. till 5 p.m. www.attmansdeli.com. 1019 E. Lombard St., 410.563.2666 $ Map E5 B’more Bistro— American. Within the Embassy Suites, a stylish spot serving Chesapeake Bay fare: crab cake sliders, rockfish risotto, plus hamburgers and bar bites. Bloody Marys with Old Bay. Daily 6:30 a.m.-10 p.m. www.embas sysuitesbaltimore.com. 222 St. Paul St., 410.528.8800 Map C5 Talara— Latin. South Beach atmo- sphere (Art Deco neon, Cuban art), pulsing salsa music, Nuevo-Latino small plates ($-$$), entrées ($$$). Seviche bar (15 fish, seven preps). Mojitos, “island” cocktails. Mon.-Thurs. 4-11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight, Sun. 4-10 B&O American Brasserie— American. Stylin’ space in Beaux Arts structure now Hotel Monaco. Charcuterie, small plates, Maryland rockfish with almonds, duck fat fries, scallops with ginger. Artisan wines. Breakfast, lunch, Sun.Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5-11 p.m. Bar later. www.bandorestaurant.com. 2 N. Charles St., 443.692.6172 $$$ Map C5 Bistro 300— American. In airy, col- umned spaces, find crab soup, Arctic char with ginger soy glaze, dry-aged NY strip, apple tart tatin. Daily 6:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Wine list by intensity. Lounge with TVs 3 p.m.-midnight, bar food late. In Hyatt Regency. www. baltimore.hyatt.com. 300 Light St., 410.528.1234 $$$ Map C6 Bubba Gump Shrimp Co.— Seafood. National “shrimp company” with waterfront views and patio for crab cakes, hush “pups” (fish), salads, sandwiches, “bourbon” skewers, jambalaya, Dixie ribs, Key lime pie. Kids menu. Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight. www.bubbagump.com. 301 Light St., 410.244.0838 $$ Map D7 Capital Grille— Steakhouse. Clubby rooms and sophisticated bar lit by Art Deco chandeliers. Wagyu beef, lobster and crab cakes, cedar-plank salmon, dry-aged steaks and 5,000 wines. Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m., Mon.-Thurs. 5-11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5-11 p.m., Sun. 4-9 p.m. www.thecapitalgrille.com. 500 E. Pratt St., 443.703.4064 $$$ Map D6 Dempsey’s— Pubs & Taverns. At the ball park, brew pub (four drafts on-site) of former Oriole Rick D. with team decor, memorablia and menu: “Starting Pitchers,” Camden Yard crab cakes, “black and orange” burger, “O’s” flatbread. Bottle beers plus drafts (some brewed on-site). Kids menu. Daily 11 a.m.-3 p.m., 5-10 p.m.; bar menu 3-5 p.m., bar late game days. www.dempseysbalti more.com. 555 Russell St., 410.843.7901 $-$$ Map B6 Diamond Tavern— American. Sleek, contemporary spot with patio at the Hilton Baltimore for mussels in white wine, lump crab cake, corn bisque, pastas, scallop risotto, steak frites and dessert martinis. HD TVs. Daily 6 a.m.midnight. www.diamondtavern.com. Hilton, 401 W. Pratt St., 443.573.8777 $$-$$$ Map C6 Dick’s Last Resort— Pubs & Taverns. “Eat, drink and be wary” (of the outspoken staff) says this spot on the pier at Power Plant. Lunch till late. Nautical decor (huge anchor), beer and “porch” 2 6 W H E R E B a lt i m o re I S u m m e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_g-dine.indd 26 7/2/14 8:46:15 AM Dining for nightly live rock. “Firecracker” salmon, fried shrimp and scallops, “crabby” cakes and (served in steel buckets) ribs, other “grub and booze.” www.dickslastresort.com. 621 E. Pratt St., 443.453.5961 $ Map D6 Fogo De Chão— Brazilian. Steak house or “churrascaria” with 15 slow-roast cuts (all-you-can-eat) of pork, beef and chicken by gaucho chefs. Salad bar. Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m., Mon.Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri. 5-10:30 p.m., Sat. 4-10:30 p.m., Sun. 3:30-9 p.m. www. fogo.com. 600 E. Pratt St., 410.528.9292 $$$ Map D6 Frank & Nic’s — American. Near Cam- den Yards, “West End Grille” draws sports fans with 15 TVs. Scallops, crab cakes, chops, filet and lo mein. Kids menu, game day specials, happy hours. Some nights DJ, live music. Daily 11:30 a.m. till closing. www.frankandnics. com. 511 W. Pratt St., 410.685.6800 $$ Map B6 French Kitchen— French. In Lord Baltimore Hotel’s Versailles Room, bistro overseen by chef Jordan Miller. Charcuterie, onion soup, mussels, monkfish, beef bourguignon, duck and steak frites. Tues,-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Tues.-Sat. 5:30-9 p.m. www.lord baltimorehotel.com. 20 W. Baltimore St., 410.539.8400 $$-$$$ Map C5 Harbor Market Kitchen— American. The National Aquarium’s main cafe with farm-to-table cooking by Joseph Cotton. Artisanal cheeses, grass-fed beef, sustainable seafood (like crabstuffed oysters). www.aqua.org. 501 E. Pratt St., 410.576.3800 Map D6 Hard Rock Café— American. London- born “hamburger joint” with rock n’ roll motif, sounds and memorabilia (rocker gear) in Power Plant Live! Fajitas, steaks, smokehouse ribs and chicken. Kids menu, Rock Shop merch. Sun.Thurs. 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight, bar late. www.hardrockcafe. com. 601 E. Pratt St., 410.347.7625 $$ Map D6 M&S Grill— American. From patio, views of the USS Constellation; in clubby dining room, sandwiches, seafood, aged steaks, crab cake or soft shells platter, rich sides. Good wines, bar. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight, Sun. till 9 p.m. www.mc cormickandschmicks.com. 201 E. Pratt St., 410.547.9333 $$ Map D6; 711 Eastern Ave., 410.234.1300 Map D6 w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 27 BLTWM_1407SF_g-dine.indd 27 7/2/14 8:46:20 AM Dining McCormick & Schmick’s— Seafood. Daily catches from Pacific Northwest (Alaskan king salmon, Oregon petrale sole) and East Coast (Maine lobster, Chesapeake blue crab). Tablecloths, dark wood paneling, chandeliers, mosaic floors and mahogany bar. Patio by lighthouse. Daily 11:30 a.m.-11 p.m. www.mccormickandschmicks.com. 711 Eastern Ave., adjacent to Pier 5, 410.234.1300 $$ Map D7 Miss Shirley’s— Southern. Named for a late, sassy, influential cook and honoring her with fried green tomatoes, sliders, soft-shell Benedict, griddle cakes, omelets, crab cakes, shrimp n’ grit cake po’boy, soup and sandwich combos. Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-3 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 7:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. www.missshirleys. com. 750 E. Pratt St., 410.528.5373 $$ Map D6; Roland Park, 513 W. Cold Spring Ln., 410.889.5272; Annapolis, 1 Park Place, 410.268.5171 Morton’s the Steakhouse— Steakhouse. Respected spot where power- lunchers dig into porterhouse, New York strip, filet mignon, lobster, shrimp Alexander. Cocktails, bar and sommelier team. Mon.-Fri. 5:30-11 p.m., Sat. 5-11 p.m., Sun. 5-10 p.m. www.mortons. com. 300 S. Charles St., 410.547.8255 $$$$ Map C7 Phillips Seafood— Seafood. In the Power Plant, Eastern shore favorites (crab cakes) plus clams, mahi mahi, lobster since 1956. Sandwiches, steak, chicken too. Kids menu. Waterfront view, crab deck and live entertainment. Half-price wine Thurs. Shipping. Mon.Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. till 9 p.m. www.phillipssea food.com. 601 E. Pratt St., 410.685.6600 $$$ Map D6; 7002 Arundel Mills Circle, Hanover, 443.842.7000 Pratt Street Ale House— Microbrewery. Great traditions, new name and new owners for this brewpub reopened in 2009 with draft system (42 taps, Oliver ales), food from starters and burgers to steaks and crab cakes and 25 HD TVs. Sidewalk tables. Steps from Convention Center and Camden Yards. Mon.-Sun. 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Bar till 2 a.m. www.prattstreetalehouse.com. 206 W. Pratt St., 410.244.8900 $$ Map C7 Rusty Scupper— Seafood. Fresh fish and shellfish prepared many ways. Fine view of harbor from the rooftop deck and promenade. Cocktails, light fare and steamed crabs. Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 2 8 W H E R E B a lt i m o re I S u m m e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_g-dine.indd 28 7/2/14 3:02:46 PM Dining a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. 10:45 a.m.-10 p.m. www.rusty-scupper. com. 402 Key Hwy., 410.727.3678 $$$ Map D7 Ruth’s Chris Steak House— Steakhouse. Two locations within blocks of each other, serving upscale prime cuts and rich sides with a New Orleans touch. Mon.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5-11 p.m., Sun. 4-9 p.m. www.ruthschris. com. Pier V Hotel, 711 Eastern Ave., 410.230.0033 Map D7; 600 Water St., 410.783.0033 $$$ Map D6 Sullivan’s Steakhouse— Steak & Seafood. Sully’s meatloaf, chili-crusted rib eye, Picatta chicken and lobster tail in an Art Deco-inspired space. Three courses $39. Extensive wines, cocktails, hand-shaken martinis. Patio with cigar humidor. Lounge with live jazz late. Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-3 p.m., Mon.Sat. 5-11 p.m., Sun. 4-10 p.m. www. sullivansteakhouse.com. 1 E. Pratt St., 410.962.5503 $$$ Map C6 Uno Chicago Grill— American. At Harborplace, popular spot for deepdish and thin-crust pizza, pasta, steak, seafood, burgers, beers and wines plus sundaes and “double deal” specials. Sun. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Mon.-Thurs. till 11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till midnight. Also Columbia and Ellicott City. www.unos.com. 201 E. Pratt St., 410.625.5900 Map D6 Little Italy Chiapparelli’s— Italian. Since 1940, a beloved Little Italy destination. Rustic brick walls, white tablecloth service. Generous pastas ($$), classic veal dishes, famous salad, mussels in white wine, crab cake Castillo. Wine bar. Sun.Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-9 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 10 p.m. www.chiapparellis.com. 237 S. High St., 410.837.0309 $$$ Map E6 Heavy Seas Alehouse— Pubs & Taverns. Former Confederate hospital and tack factory, now beer lover’s haven with bold “victuals” to match the namesake drafts and other ales. Raw bar, wines, rum and “pirate” cocktails. Local oysters, small plates or crab cakes, short rib, mussels. Mon.-Thurs. 4 p.m.-closing, Fri.-Sun. from noon. www. heavyseasalehouse.com. 1300 Bank St., 410.522.0850 $$$ Map E6 La Scala— Italian. Chef-owner Nino’s shellfish, veal (cutlets, chops, herbed or stuffed with prosciutto and fontina), steaks, salumi, 17 pastas ($$), Caesar w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 29 BLTWM_1407SF_g-dine.indd 29 7/2/14 8:46:35 AM Dining salad. Indoor bocce court (at happy hours Sun.-Fri.), wine tasting room and terrace. Valet daily. Mon.-Thurs. 4:30-10 p.m, Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. 2-10 p.m. www.lascaladining.com. 1012 Eastern Ave., 410.783.9209 $$ Map E6 Mo’s Crab & Pasta Factory— Seafood. Crabs year-round with unique seasoning plus backfin crab cakes, stuffed shrimp, lobster, mussels, combos, steamers, chicken and surf-and-turf, linguine with six sauces. Free hotel shuttle. Also 1528 E. Joppa Rd., 7600 Eastern Ave., 7146 Ritchie Hwy. www. mosseafood.com. 502 Albemarle St., 410.837.1600 $$$ Map E7 Mo’s Fisherman’s Wharf— Seafood. Part of chef Mo Manocheh’s empire with its own wholesale market/carryout nearby. Steamed crabs, lobster, Cajun combo, spiced shrimp, chicken parmesan, Cajun combo, steaks. Daily 11 a.m.-1 a.m. www.mosseafood. com. 219 S. President St., 410.837.8600 $$-$$$ Map D6 Ozra— Mediterranean. Stylish new, two- level destination with minimalist decor and glowing silk flowers. Persia-meetsMediterranean fare: eggplant three ways, calamari with garlic citrus sauce, tabouleh, salad and vegetable entrées, grilled and skewered meats, marinated lamb chops, baklava and Persian ice cream. Select wines. Bar and secondfloor terrace. Tues.-Sun. 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m. www.ozrarestaurant.com. 806 Stiles St., 410.528.2710 $$-$$$ Map E6 Mount Vernon Brewer’s Art— American. Innovative fare and house-made Belgian-style ales served in opulent turn-of-the-century Mount Vernon mansion. Seasonal meat, seafood and vegetarian items plus international wines, spirits and beers. Daily 4 p.m.-2 a.m., Sun. 5 p.m.-2 a.m. www.thebrewersart.com. 1106 N. Charles St., 410.547.6925 $$ Map C2 City Café— American. Pre- and post- theater favorite. Straightforward dishes like N.Y. strip (Tues.-Wed. special), sandwiches, salads and pasta, frozen cappuccino. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri. till 10:30 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-10:30 p.m., Sun. till 8:00 p.m. Coffee shop Mon.-Fri. 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. www. citycafebaltimore.com. 1001 Cathedral St., 410.539.4252 $$ Map C2 3 0 W H E R E B a lt i m o re I S u m m e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_g-dine.indd 30 7/2/14 8:46:43 AM Dining George’s— American. An elegant set- ting for French-accented cuisine, its name honoring three Georges (Washington, Peabody and Babe Ruth). Mussels, seafood, steaks, sandwiches. Daily 6:30 a.m.-10 p.m., Sun. brunch 11 a.m.-3 p.m. In Peabody Court hotel. www. peabodycourthotel.com. 101 W. Monument St., 410.727.1314 $$$. Map C3 The Helmand— Afghan. Surrounded by textiles (on the wall), dine on traditional fare (callow, kababs) in this restaurant (open since 1989) owned by the brother of the president of Afghanistan. Lamb and vegetarian dishes, tea service. Sun.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 5-11 p.m. www.helmand.com. 806 N. Charles St., 410.752.0311 $$ Map C3 Prime Rib— Steakhouse. Since 1965, an elegant supper club for lobster, filet mignon, chops, Imperial crab. Business casual, jackets (preferred) for men (more casual lounge or patio). Pianist. Bar. Complimentary valet. Mon.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m., Sun. 4-9 p.m. www.theprimerib.com. 1101 N. Calvert St., 410.539.1804 $$$$ Map C2 Sammy’s Trattoria— Italian. In turret- ed town house, many pastas, chicken, veal, shrimp. Also family-style dinner ($30), all Southern Italian. California and Italian wines. Mon. 5-9 p.m. Tues.-Wed. 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m., Thurs.-Fri. till 11 p.m., Sat. 5-11 p.m., Sun. 4-9 p.m. www.sammystrattoria.com. 1200 N. Charles St., 410.837.9999 $$-$$$ Map C2 Sotto Sopra— Italian. High ceilings, murals and mosaic floors set a scene for Ricardo Bosio’s gigli pasta with halibut, speck tirolesse, bresaola, wild boar cacciatorini. Opera dinners one Sun. a month (call). Mon.-Sat. 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m., Mon. 5:30-9:30 p.m., Tues.-Wed. till 10:30 pm., Thurs. till midnight, Fri.Sat. till 11:30 p.m., Sun. 5-9 p.m. www. sottosoprainc.com. 405 N. Charles St., 410.625.0534 $$$ Map C4 Tio Pepe— Spanish. Since 1968, softly lit, subterranean bistro known for its sangria, paella and zarzuela. Catalan wines plus seafood bisque, Segovia suckling pig, Serrano with melon, red snapper, beef tournedos with sherry sauce. Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri. till 11:30 p.m., Sat. 5-11:30 p.m., Sun. 4-10 p.m. www.tiopepebaltimore.com. 10 E. Franklin St., 410.539.4675 $$$ Map C4 Woman’s Industrial Kitchen— American. Home cooking here for 130 years: sweet potato casserole, Flo’s chili, tuna melt, pot pies, charlotte russe. Sodas, lemonade, tea and coffee. Mon.-Fri. and Sun. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. www. womansindustrialkitchen.com. 333 N. Charles St., 410.244.6450 $ Map C4 Station North Bottega— Italian. Intimate, candlelit 15- seater with Tuscan-simple pork shank, hanger steak, roast chicken, beef cheeks, housemade pastas, blueberry custard. BYOB. Reservation recommended. Tues.-Wed. 5-10:30 p.m., Thurs.-Sat. 5-11 p.m. www.bottega1729. com. 1729 Maryland Ave., 443.708.5709 $$$ North of Map C1 Joe Squared— Italian. Coal-fired piz- zas, sandwiches, risottos (clam and zucchini or arugula and venison) and 16 drafts on tap. Weekly specials. Nightly live music, art shows. Weekend brunches. Sun.-Mon. 11 a.m.-midnight, Tues.-Sat. till 2 a.m. www.joesquared. com. 133 W. North Ave., 410.545.0444 $$ North of Map C1; 30 Market Place, 410.962.5566 Map D5 w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 31 BLTWM_1407SF_g-dine.indd 31 7/2/14 8:46:47 AM BLTWM_1407SF_FP.indd 32 6/26/14 3:02:46 PM Entertainment All Things Weird and Wonderful The city that takes pride in its quirky side seems just the right latitude for an outpost of Ripley’s Believe It or Not! (page 18). What began in 1919 as a New York Globe cartoon feature has inspired books, radio shows, TV series and dozens of “odditoriums.” The one at Baltimore’s Inner Harbor offers 8,000 square feet of delightful eccentricities like a mirror maze, replica skyscrapers built with millions of wooden matchsticks (above) and Michelangelo’s The Creation of Adam done in (what else?) laundry lint.—Brooke Sabin Concert Venues See websites for full schedules. Courtesy ripley’s believe it or not! odditorium The 8x10— Venue for live music runs the gamut with bluegrass, blues, jazz, rock, alternative, hip-hop, funk and more. Live acts nightly. Ages 18 and up. TAUK, Freedom Enterprise July 23; Nelly’s Echo, Greasy Hands, Andrea Aug. 16; The New Mastersounds, Higher Hands Sept. 6. www.the8x10. com. 10 E. Cross St., Federal Hill, 410.625.2000 Map C8 Baltimore Arena— Home of the Baltimore Blast soccer team, this cityowned facility hosts 800,000 guests and 120 events each year. New Edition July 19; Lil Boosie Aug. 16; Demi Lovato Sept. 6; WWE Monday Night Raw Sept. 8. www.baltimorearena. com. 201 W. Baltimore St., Downtown, 410.347.2020 Map C6 Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall— Home of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, this Mount Vernon landmark also hosts touring performers and companies. Its unique architecture means no flat walls or 90-degree angles. BSO with Ben Folds July 17; BSO: All Beethoven July 25; BSO Celebration Gala with American music (Copland, Gershwin) and narration by Center Stage director Kwame Kwei-Armah Sept. 20. www.bsomusic. org. 1212 Cathedral St., Mount Vernon, 410.783.8000 Map C2 Merriweather Post Pavilion— Amphitheater in 40 acres of forest, about 20 miles southwest of Baltimore. Queen, Adam Lambert July 20; Beck July 24; Phish July 26-27; David Gray Aug. 7; ZZ Top, Jeff Beck, Gary Clark Jr. Sept. 3; Jack White Sept. 14. www.merriweathermusic.com. 10475 Little Patuxent Pkwy., Columbia, Md., 410.715.5550 Modell Performing Arts Center at the Lyric— Opened in 1894 as a music hall, now a 2,564-seat theater in Mount Royal and on the National Register of Historic Places. Excellent acoustics. Theresa Caputo Live! The Experience, readings and personal stories Aug. 2223; Sesame Street Live “Let’s Dance!,” ALL CAP LEADTune IN Myriad bold own condensed 7.5pt dummy text profiling here for dummy text here for dummy textand herehot for spots dummy(charmtv.tv). text BEWITCHED in to ProSemi Baltimore’s “CharmTV” for shows local neighborhoods, chefs w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 33 BLTWM_1407SF_g-ent.indd 33 7/1/14 12:45:31 PM Entertainment interactive dance parties Sept. 12-14; Kathleen Madigan, stand-up comedy Oct. 10. www.lyricoperahouse.com. 140 W. Mount Royal Ave., Mount Vernon, 410.900.1150 Map C1 Oct. 8-Nov. 16. www.centerstage. org. 700 N. Calvert St., Mount Vernon, 410.332.0033 Map C3 Creative Alliance— Cultural venue at the historic Patterson Theater (circa 1910) with music, films, exhibits. Charm City Ukulele Festival July 26; The Last Flapper, Kate Erin Gibson as F. Scott Fitzgerald’s wife Zelda Aug. 2; The Collective: Tailor-Made SHORTS, modern dance works of less than five minutes each Aug. 15; Charm City Original Soul, jazz-inspired soul music Aug. 29. www. creativealliance.org. 3134 Eastern Ave., Highlandtown, 410.276.1651 Map H6 Pier Six Concert Pavilion— Fabulous view of the Inner Harbor from this 4,000-capacity, outdoor concert venue. Dirty Heads, Pepper July 27; John Legend Aug. 5; Heart Aug. 9; Gavin DeGraw, Matt Nathanson Aug. 12; Boston Aug. 26; Daryl Hall and John Oates Sept. 18. www.piersixpavilion.com. 731 Eastern Ave., 410.244.1131 Map D7 Power Plant Live!— Entertainment complex near the Inner Harbor. More than 15 restaurants, nightclubs and concert venues plus an art gallery. Options range from sophisticated Mosaic Lounge to the rock ‘n’ roll scene at Angels. www.powerplantlive.com. Market Pl. and Water St., Downtown Map D5 Everyman Theatre— Local performers dedicated to making theater accessible to all. Moved to new digs in a historic building. The Understudy, a dark comedy about backstage tension from the creator of TV’s Smash Aug. 27Sept. 28. www.everymantheatre. org. 315 W. Fayette St., Westside, 410.752.2208 Map C5 Rams Head Live!— In Power Plant Live!, top touring acts, emerging artists, tribute bands and local favorites. Most shows standing room only; all ages. The Funk Junkies July 18; Yonder Mountain String Band Aug. 22; Kix Sept. 20; Within Temptation Oct. 7. www.ramsheadlive.com. 20 Market Pl., Downtown, 410.244.8854. Box office: 410.244.1131 Map D5 Fells Point Corner Theatre — Community theater with local performers and writers. Heinie Goochems, a comedy about a laid-off marketer turned stay-at-home dad written by Baltimore actor Larry Malkus July 1727; Under the Poplar Trees, the story of two concentration camp prisoners with different outlooks and fates Aug. 14-31. www.fpct.org. 251 S. Ann St., 410.276.7837 Map F6 Windup Space— Edgy art/music/film/ performance space with casual bar. Every Tues.: the Out of Your Head collective of improvising musicians. Every first Thurs.: MONDOBaltimore: Trash Flicks and Cult Epics. Tues.-Sat. from 5 p.m. www.thewindupspace.com. 12 W. North Ave., Station North, 410.244.8855 North of Map C1 France-Merrick Performing Arts Center— A 2004 renovation transformed the Hippodrome Theatre (circa 1914), two late-1800s banks and a new building into a state-of-the-art complex. Once, the Tony-winning musical following a Dublin street performer inspired by a deep connection with a young woman Sept. 9-14; I Love Lucy Live On Stage, new stage show adapted from the hit TV series Oct. 14-26. www.france-merrickpac. com. 12 N. Eutaw St., Westside, 410.837.7400 Map B5 Theater Baltimore Theatre Project— Lovers of stagecraft head here for original works, music and dance performances. THINK: An Evening of Mind Reading and Magic, Max Major’s popular oneman show July 25-26. www.theatre project.org. 45 W. Preston St., Mount Vernon, 410.752.8558 Map C2 Center Stage— Kwame Kwei-Armah Bars & Nightclubs 13th Floor— Atop the 1903 Belvedere, oversees classic and new productions at Maryland’s state theater. Amadeus, the Tony-winning drama of music and madness in 18th-century Vienna Sept. 10-Oct. 12; Next to Normal, the Pulitzer-winning musical of a family’s struggle with mental illness an elegant lounge with panoramic views of the cityscape, plus high-end cocktails and live jazz. Happy hour specials and full dinner menu. Wed. 510 p.m., Thurs. till 11 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 1:30 a.m., Sun. till 10 p.m. www.the13thfloor.com. 1 E. Chase St., Mount Vernon, 410.347.0880 Map C2 Bad Decisions— Unassuming decor but sophistication in its hand-crafted cocktails like s’mores martinis and mead-spiked cider. Monthly bacon happy hour (free bowls of bacon, habanero-bacon mojitos) draws crowds; call for date. www.makeabad decision.com. 1928 Fleet St., Fells Point, 410.979.5161 Map F7 Birds of a Feather— With nautical decor and soft music, a cozy spot pouring 120 single malt scotches. Also light fare. Tues.-Sat. 4 p.m.-1 a.m. www.abs. net/~scotchjh/. 1712 Aliceanna St., Fells Point, 410.675.8466 Map F7 Bond Street Social— Handsome space lives up to its name with plates and pours that encourage sharing. “Social drinks” like grilled pineapple mojitos served in 80-ounce infusion jars or liquid nitrogen martinis. Mon.-Sat. 4 p.m.-2 a.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. www. bondstreetsocial.com. 901 S. Bond St., Fells Point, 443.449.6234 Map E8 Brewers Cask— With “Love Thy Beer” as its slogan, bar with 50 bottles and 20 drafts like New Belgium amber ale and Devil’s Milk barleywine. Full menu with emphasis on comfort appetizers (tater tots, boardwalk fries). Mon.-Thurs. 3 p.m.-1 a.m., Fri.-Sat. noon-1 a.m. www.brewerscask.com. 1236 Light St., Federal Hill, 410.273.9377 Map D8 Cat’s Eye Pub— Friendly Irish watering hole with 40 beers on tap, 40 more in bottles and a full bar. Live music nightly. Second bar opens on weekends to handle crowds. Daily noon-1:30 a.m. www.catseyepub.com. 1730 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.276.9866 Map F7 Club Charles— Art deco decor and bohemian vibe. A John Waters favorite near The Charles Theatre. www.theclubcharles.com. 1724 N. Charles St., Station North, 410.727.8815 North of Map C1 The Get Down— In a two-story space, a sleek but unpretentious dance club with industrial décor, walls of LED lights and DJs spinning house, funk, disco, reggae. Table reservations with bottle service. Thurs.-Sun. 8 p.m.-2 a.m. ($10 cover Fri.-Sat. after 10 p.m.) www.get downbaltimore.com. 701 S. Bond St., Fells Point, 443.708.3564 Map F7 The Horse You Came In On— This historic waterfront institution (in operation since 1775) counts Edgar Allan Poe among former patrons. Live, straight- 3 4 W H E R E b a lt i m o re I s u m m e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_g-ent.indd 34 7/1/14 12:45:40 PM Entertainment forward rock ’n’ roll cover bands every night. Bonus: free peanuts and popcorn. Mon.-Sun. noon-1:30 a.m. www. thehorsebaltimore.com. 1626 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.327.8111 Map E8 Howl at the Moon— Power Plant Live! institution features a rock ’n’ roll dueling piano bar, happy hours and theme nights. Call to hear what’s on. Flip-flop casual. Wed.-Thurs. 7 p.m.2 a.m., Fri. 5 p.m.-2 a.m., Sat. 5:30 p.m.2 a.m. www.howlatthemoon.com. 22 Market Pl., Downtown/Inner Harbor, 410.783.5111 Map D5 Illusions Bar & Theater— Spencer Horsman, co-owner and professional magician, mingles on weekends with card tricks and an impressive escape act. A chic crowd orders Magic Hat beer and magic-themed cocktails. Fri.-Sat. 5 p.m.-1 a.m. www.illusions magicbar.com. 1025 S. Charles St., Federal Hill, 410.727.5811 Map C8 Johnny Rad’s— Laid-back spot with artsy skateboard decor, nearly 70 eclectic brews plus pizza and unusual bar fare (fried edamame). Mon.-Thurs. 5 p.m.-2 a.m., Fri.-Sun. noon-2 a.m. www.johnnyrads.com. 2108 Eastern Ave., Fells Point, 443.759.6464 Map F7 Max’s Taphouse— Beer mecca attracts raucous crowd with 102 beers and five casks on tap plus 1,200 bottled beers. Pool tables on the first floor with a chill lounge upstairs. Daily 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Themed happy hours weekdays. www. maxs.com. 735 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 410.675.6297 Map F7 Mosaic Lounge— A fashionable crowd flocks here for martinis and steady music. Décor features mirror balls and mood lighting. Fri.-Sat. 10 p.m.2 a.m. www.mosaic-baltimore.com. 4 Market Pl., Downtown/Inner Harbor, 443.468.5308 Map D5 Mustang Alley’s— In a stylin’ space, 12 lanes of bowling with four reserved for duckpin bowling (a favorite native pastime). Lengthy cocktail list, full menu. Tues. 4:30-11 p.m., Wed.-Sat. noonmidnight, Sun. noon-10 p.m. www. mustangalleys.com. 1300 Bank St., 2nd floor, Little Italy, 410.522.2695 Map E6 Myth and Moonshine— With modern “hooch,” toasting the rebellious spirit of early distillers. Twenty varieties like Firefly White Lightning and Midnight Moon Cherry solo or in cocktails. Also brunch and dinner menus. Mon., Thurs., Fri. 4 p.m.-2 a.m., Tues.-Wed. till midnight, Sat. 10 a.m.-2 a.m., Sun. till midnight. bmoreshine.com. 2300 Boston St., Canton, 410.327.6455 Map G7 Of Love and Regret— From the brewer of Stillwater Ales, a cheery pub with 20-plus draft beers plus small plates, entrees and gourmet burgers. Upstairs lounge with cocktails on tap. Mon.Thurs. 4-10 p.m., Fri. till 1 a.m., Sat. 11 a.m.-1 a.m., Sun. till 10 p.m. www.oflove andregret.com. 1028 S. Conkling St., Canton, 410.327.0760 East of Map H8 The Owl Bar— Dark wood, cozy corners and a friendly bar staff that serves yards of beer and brick-fired pizzas. Dates to pre-Prohibition when it was an F. Scott Fitzgerald hangout. Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m. to close, Sat. noon-close, Sun. 11 a.m.close. www.theowlbar.com. Inside the Belvedere Hotel, 1 E. Chase St., Mount Vernon, 410.347.0888 Map C2 Quigley’s Half-Irish Pub— Named for the owner’s heritage (a mix of Irish and Peruvian), the bar is Irish spiked with a bit of Latin flavor. Think Guinness drafts and mojitos. www.quigleyshalfirishpub. com. 633 Portland St., Downtown, 410.539.9052 Map B6 Rye— From the man behind Stuggy’s hot dogs, a cozy and candle-lit space with ambitious cocktails using locally sourced and house-made ingredients. Short food menu (charcuterie, poutine, flatbread). Daily 5 p.m.-2 a.m. www. ryebaltimore.com. 807 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 443.438.3296 Map F7 Tatu— Inside Power Plant Live!, a swanky Asian restaurant with a lounge for cocktails, sake and (Fri.-Sat.) live entertainment like DJs, aerialists and fire-eaters. Wed.-Sat. 5 p.m.-close. www.tatubaltimore.com. 614 Water St., Inner Harbor, 410.244.7385 Map D6 Woody’s Rum Bar— Extensive rum selection plus seafood in a relaxed setting with harbor view and live music. Tables made from steel drums. Fri. 5 p.m.-2 a.m., Sat.-Sun. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. (hours vary seasonally). www.woodys rumbar.com. 1700 Thames St., Fells Point, 410.563.6800 Map F7 Gay Bars Grand Central— A massive space with six bars, pool tables and a video pub. ”Hi-tech” dance floor with a fog machine and lasers Wed.-Sun. 9 p.m.2 a.m. Bar Mon.-Sat. 4 p.m.-2 a.m., Sun. 3 p.m.-2 a.m. www.centralstationpub. com. 1001 N. Charles St., Mount Vernon, 410.752.7133 Map C2 The Hippo— Since 1972, “where every- one is welcome” in a building that housed a 1930s club that once booked Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. House and techno music pulses throughout three rooms. Pool tables, a dance floor and video games. Daily 4 p.m.-2 a.m. www.clubhippo.com. 1 W. Eager St., Mount Vernon, 410.547.0069 Map C2 Sports Bars Greene Turtle— Flat screens in every booth bring new meaning to dinner in front of the TV. Hearty pub food (burgers, wings). Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.2 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-2 a.m. www. greeneturtle.com. 718-722 S. Broadway, Fells Point, 410.342.4222 Map E7 Looney’s Pub— One of the anchors of O’Donnell Square, a casual, twostory corner pub. More than 40 TVs broadcast sports. www.looneyspub. com. 2900 O’Donnell St., Canton, 410.675.9235 Map G8 Pickles Pub— A stop for grub and pints before and after Orioles and Ravens games. Steamed shrimp with Old Bay-marinated grilled onions, Maryland crab soup and fried pickles. Daily 11 a.m.-2 a.m. www.picklespub.com. 520 Washington Blvd., Downtown, 410.752.1784 Map B6 Wine Bars & Wineries Linganore Winecellars— About 30 miles west of Baltimore, a family-owned vineyard on 230 acres producing 30plus wines. Tasting room in a renovated 19th-century barn. Hosts popular festivals and events throughout the year. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. till 6 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. Tasting $5, wine and food pairing $10. Free tours. www.linganorewines.com. 13601 Glissans Mill Rd., Mt. Airy, Md., 410.795.6432 The Wine Market— Once a foundry, now a wine bar, bistro and shop with exposed brick walls. Eight hundred wines by the bottle and 25 by the glass. Mon. 5-10 p.m., Tues.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-4 p.m., 5-10 p.m., Fri. 11:30 a.m.4 p.m., 5-11 p.m., Sat. 5-11 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. www.the-wine-market. com. 921 E. Fort Ave., Locust Point, 410.244.6166 South of Map E8 w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 35 BLTWM_1407SF_g-ent.indd 35 7/1/14 12:45:45 PM Navigate Park and Recreation A few blocks east of bustling Fells Point, find a 137-acre oasis of tranquility. Patterson Park (page 18) offers leisure seekers grassy expanses, playgrounds and a lake visited by elegant wading birds. On Sunday afternoons, visitors climb the spiral staircase of the 1891 pagoda (left) for city and harbor views. Summer evenings bring free outdoor concerts. But it wasn’t always peaceful here. Cannons and the Star-Spangled Banner Centennial Monument recall the site’s defensive position during the War of 1812.—Brooke Sabin Water Taxi— Canopied craft crisscross the harbor, making stops at Canton, Fells Point, Inner Harbor, Federal Hill and Fort McHenry. Through Sept. 1: Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-11 p.m., Sun. till 9 p.m. From Sept. 2: Sun.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Fri.-Sat. till 11 p.m. All-day passes $12, under 11 $6, under 3 free. Buy onboard with cash, or charge online or at visitor center (401 Light St.). Weather permitting. www.baltimore watertaxi.com. 410.563.3900 Spirit Cruises— Scenic cruise and buf- fet on two enclosed, climate-controlled decks. Open-air top deck, DJ and dancing. Lunch, dinner, moonlight cruises. Times vary by day. $39.90$72.90. www.spiritcruisesbaltimore. com. 561 Light St., 888.957.2323 Map D7 Urban Pirates— “Pirate” ship docked in Fells Point for kid-friendly adventure on the Inner Harbor. Dress up, hunt for treasure, shoot water cannons on a one-hour cruise. Also adult BYOG (grog) cruises. Check schedule online. $22-$25, under 3 $11. www. urbanpirates.com. 913 S. Ann St., 410.327.8378 Map F7 Watermark— Climate-controlled lower deck with full bar, open upper deck. Narrated tours of Inner Harbor, War of 1812 bicentennial tour, twilight/ cocktail cruises. All dog-friendly. Times vary by day. $18-$25, under 11 $6-$12 (free on Mon.). Purchase tickets online, at visitor center or at ticket kiosk on dock. www.baltimoreboatcruises.com. Departs from Light St. Finger Piers, 410.268.7601 Map C7 Neighborhoods Canton— More than 200 years ago, Captain John O’Donnell sailed into Baltimore from China and named his plantation for the Chinese port that brought him wealth. This once mostly Polish neighborhood remains connected to its working-class roots. Find shops, lively bars and cafes a few blocks east of Fells Point. Map G7/H7 YO HO HO! On board Fearless, tall tales delight little ones during Urban Pirates free story time through August (urbanpirates.com). ©laureen miles Cruises 3 6 W H E R E B a lt i m o re I S u mm e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_g-nav.indd 36 7/1/14 12:46:36 PM Navigate Charles Village— Home of the “paint- iZWdW hfbhg$ BVSQWbgWabVScZbW[ObS TOaVW]\OQQSaa]`g =\ZW\SO\R ]\g]c`W>V]\S ed ladies,” Victorian-era row houses in bold colors, this neighborhood attracts artists and young professionals. Johns Hopkins University and Baltimore Museum of Art add to the cultural, intellectual vibe. North of Map C1 Federal Hill— The clay dome that rises just south of the Inner Harbor, bordered by Key Highway, Hanover and Cross streets, served as an observatory from 1795 to 1895. Home to pubs, eateries and Cross Street Market. Map D8 Fells Point— William Fell, a Quaker shipbuilder, founded this maritime community in 1730. Today the 14-block area bustles with young residents who like its architectural history, cafes and taverns. www.fellspoint.us. Map F6/7 Hampden— The city’s center of kitsch and favorite location for off-beat film director John Waters. Pink flamingos adorn row house yards; eccentric shops line main drag “The Avenue” (W. 36th Street). North of Map A1 Harbor East— Attention foodies: lots to discover in this affluent community within walking distance of the Inner Harbor. Look for the gleaming Katyn Memorial landmark sculpture. www. harboreast.com. Map E7 Inner Harbor— An urban revitalization success story, now the city’s popular maritime zone thanks to National Aquarium, Maryland Science Center, historic ships, cruises and paths for waterfront strolling. Map D6/7 Little Italy— Just 12 blocks long at the BVSPSab]TbVSQWbg T`][bVSSRWb]`a ]TEVS`S;OUOhW\S eVS`Sb`OdSZS`Q][ 7\T]]\ZgbVSZ]QOZaY\]e harbor’s southeast corner. Known for its bocce courts, colorful citizens and Old World food at many trattorias. www.littleitalymd.com. Map E6 Mount Vernon— Cultural enclave with fashionable residences, The Walters Art Museum, Enoch Pratt Free Library, Peabody Institute, Baltimore Basilica and the Washington Monument. Five blocks north of Inner Harbor. Map C3/4 Westside— Multimillion-dollar renova- tions to this historic neighborhood just west of downtown, now a dynamic, mixed-use urban district. Visit historic Lexington Market, Edgar Allan Poe’s grave or the spectacular Roundhouse of the B&O Railroad Museum. Theaters include Everyman and France-Merrick Performing Arts Center. Map B4 Tours & Transport Baltimore National Heritage Area— Historic sites, cultural institutions, arts venues, parks. Visitors track stops at War of 1812-related sites with a commemorative “passport.” Guided tours of Inner Harbor, Fells Point, Little Italy. $10, under 13 free. www.explorebalti more.org. 410.878.6411 Charm City Circulator— Free! Fleet of low-emission buses running daily along four routes at 10-minute intervals. Stops include Inner Harbor, Fells Point, Hopkins hospital, B&O Railroad Museum, Penn Station and Fort McHenry. www.charmcity circulator.com. 410.350.0456 Map D5 ExecuCar— At more than 55 airports around the country, sedan and SUV service with flat rates, meet-and-greet and group services plus frequent flier points and miles with select airlines. www.execucar.com. 800.410.4444 Maryland Transit Administration (mta)— Provides local and express bus- es, light rail, subway and special sports service to the Baltimore metropolitan area and the Baltimore-D.C. corridor. Open daily. Day pass $3.50. www.mtamaryland.com. 410.539.5000 Map C5 SuperShuttle— Serving more than 40 airports nationwide with affordable, 24/7 transport. Door-to-door service, group rates, charters and frequent flier points and miles with select airlines. www.supershuttle.com. 800.258.3826 vino 301— Tours of Maryland wineries with transportation provided. Options include regional, chocolate pairing, special occasion, corporate or custom tours. Lasts 4-5.5 hours. From $87. www.vino301.com. 301.807.2683 Visitor Centers Authentic Baltimore— Online resource operated by the Baltimore National Heritage Area. Highlights “best-kept secrets” (museums, parks, restaurants) in historic neighborhoods. www.authenticbaltimore.org. Baltimore Visitor Center— Provides shopping information, dining reservations and touch-screen kiosks for instant guides plus tickets for events and attractions. Daily 9 a.m.-6 p.m. (seasonal hour changes). www.visitbaltimore.org. 401 Light St., 877.225.8466 Map C7 w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m 37 BLTWM_1407SF_g-nav.indd 37 7/2/14 8:27:17 AM CALVERT ST PAUL WILCOX HILLMAN VALLEY HOMEWOOD AV BRENTWOOD GUILFORD MCKIM HA RFO RD COM Shot Tower CONSTITUTION Shot Tower/ SOUTH COMMERCE CALVERT GAY HOLIDAY ST PAUL D EL MC FORREST CHARLES HARGROVE POLY CATHEDRAL PARK AV TYSON STATE HOWARD ENSOR ASH LAN D JONES FALL EXPY EUTAW LINDEN AV GREENE ENSOR GUILFORD CALVERT HUNTER GUILFORD HARGROVE ST PAUL LOVEGROVE BRENTWOOD LOVEGROVE MORTON CHARLES CHARLES MARYLAND AV MORTON C TY HA SO SE N TYSON 3 READ CALLENDER BALT HARBORVIEW KEY HWY AV FORT 6/24/14 3:08:33 PM B o KEY HW Y OY LE HA HY RVEY SO N EBS TER BATTERY AV COVINGTON GIT TINGS CLEMENT JACKSON OSTEND GITTINGS CLEMENT BIRCKHEAD D BELT CLEMENT WEST KSON ROPEWALK OSTEND Ka Mem American Visionary Art Museum ELT CLARKSON C YRD OLIVE BEVAN KEY HWY FEDERAL HILL CROSS Cross St. Market ANOVER LIVE ARLES ARDEN TAPSCO ARSHALL IGHT 395 2 ACE LARKSON HOW ARD Baltimore R NE AR W Maryland Science Rash Field MONTGOMERY Center/IMAX Federal Hill CHURCHILL Park HENRIETTA WARREN WHEELING HAMBURG LASANA GRINDALL POULTNEY WILLIAMS PEA CH BUR GUN DY STE RR PAC ETT A BLTWM_1407SF_g-maps.indd 38 ES IN HA 295 E SS RU STO CKH OLM WES T 2 Pier Six Pavilion HENRY GE RID LEE RIVERSIDE AV W H E R E B A LT I M O R E I S U M M ELYR / FA L L 2014 LL B Street INNER HARBOR BARRE LIGHT CAMDEN PARKIN ARCHER WYETH L Hamburg ADENHALL SCOTT CAREY JASPER EUTAW ARLINGTON AV SCHROEDER GILBERT SCHROEDER AMITY STOCKTON CALHOUN WOODYEAR STRICKER DIAMOND STOCKTON CARROLLTON AV STRICKER CARROLLTON AV MOUNT VINCENT MOUNT VINCENT GILMOR 2 BAT TERY AV DURST N VIO LU AL ER ST CE OR W RN VE SE Camden Station Sports Legends Museum at Camden Yards YORK Christ HILL Lutheran Church HUGHES RD YA BE SH BU OE NR A 38 MOUNT VERNON Washington ICIA FEL ER RN WA AV ONT FREM nt Clare um House E CA WASHINGTON BLVD Y PA UND ER IM RG WAY K U CARROLL B ON N R 7 HE DO C YN T LEE MANGOLD GL MES AN E D JA RG BLV HAMBURG SA N Carroll O GT RD L 295 Park IN WA ROL ND H R HAM E LA AS CA EVE OK BUR W C G CL NTI G W M&T Bank R EST NA U O B Stadium C I M M HA Ravens 8 ICO W OST END S OS CR LE Eubie Blake National Jazz Institute & Cultural Center EAGER Hippodrome L University Center BALTIMOREMarket Pl M M BALTIMORE Theatre M Charles Center M Balto Street Power BOOTH REDWOOD REDWOOD Bromo 1st REDWOOD Plant Port Discovery HOLLINS University of Maryland National Seltzer Mariner WATER Live! 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PRA H LE HIG MAR E ALB ENT SID PRE Flag House & 1812 Museum NBY GRA Library Train Station (MARC) Bus Station ORLEANS 2 ROBINSON EAST AV MONUMENT B'nai Israel Synagogue EDEN Port Discovery Children’s Museum er t SPRING The Jewish Museum LOMBARD of Maryland FEDERAL DUNCANWOOD 1 CLINTON 1 NT AV FAIRMOU ORE Lloyd St. BALTIM Synagogue LLOYD r Shot Tower CENTRAL AV er/ Pl M M EDISON HWY Museum/ Gallery University/ College Monument COMET TTE FAYE LUZERNE U.S. Highway BOND EDEN 40 KENWOOD AV NT 40 Theater DECKER AV WOLFE AISQUTH FORREST AY ORLEANS MULIKIN MAY Johns M Hopkins Medical Campus & Hospital BOND ST TT EA IN T MO LV ES CA RR FO ST EA IN LV CA TER GH HI E EX RY DE EL C M EN LL HI MADISON Johns Hopkins Hospital M MONUMENT Interstate CHESTER MADISON ASHLAND AV WASHINGTON ASHLAND AV 83 DECKER AV ELLWOOD AV BARNES BEREA STREEPER LINWOOD AV EAGER OLIVER Information RUTLAND AV DURHAM MCDONOGH BIDDLE EDEN CENTRAL AV SOMERSET AISQUTH STIRLING MCKIM HA RFO RD ENSOR ASH LAN D FEDERAL POTOMAC GA Y SPRING HOLBROOK WILCOX BIDDLE H SINCLAIR LEGEND ELLSWORTH PRESTON CHASE HILLMAN VALLEY HOMEWOOD AV HOFFMAN Baltimore Cemetery LAFAYETTE AV G LANVALE CHESTER RUTLAND AV DURHAM WOLFE CHAPEL WASHINGTON REGESTER OLIVER BROADWAY SPRING CAROLINE DALLAS BOND ENSOR HOLBROOK AISQUITH FEDERAL BETHEL F HAR FOR D EDEN E LANVALE CASTLE Great Blacks in Wax Museum Map 1 NORTH AV PATTERSON PARK AV BRADFORD MONTFORD PORT MILTON AV ROSE 1 LAFAYETTE AV Greenmount Cemetery GA Y COLLINGTON AV NORTH AV 39 6/24/14 3:08:39 PM [the view from here] My Baltimore My perfect day Morning Blender Breakfast At nearby Milk and Honey, a deli/market/cafe, I pick up ingredients for my green smoothie: avocado, cucumber, kale, banana and coconut water. 816 Cathedral Ave. Midday Mount Vernon I love my neighborhood. It’s walkable and filled with coffeehouses and cafes. I visit the Conservancy, which has four different parks, and then the Walters Art Museum at the foot of the hill. [Gallerist , curator, entrepreneur and impresario] Block, a Chicago native, now calls Baltimore “home.” She lives in the culture-focused Mount Vernon neighborhood, steps from the historic brownstone that holds her gallery (jordanfayecontemporary.com). At 823 Park Avenue, she shows regional, New York and L.A. artists.—JLC What brought you to Baltimore? I came to interview for graduate school at MICA, Maryland Institute College of Art. That first night here I walked out for dinner and into lightly falling snow. That began my love affair with this city, and I’ve stayed for 11 years, even after getting my MFA. The back story of your business? I had my first commercial gallery in South Baltimore next to the Wine Market. I’ve had four venues since, each in a wonderful neighborhood, even one set in a former library. And today? I established myself as Jordan Faye Contemporary in 2006 with a mission: to find an audience for emerging and mid-career artists. I host Afternoon Creative Alliance I check on Kate MacKinnon, one of eight who live and work in studios here. Visitors can wander through galleries, see live performances and sip craft cocktails in the Marquee Lounge. 3134 Eastern Ave. Dinnertime Casual and Cool salons, represent 15 artists and show at major international art fairs. Is this a good city for making art? My artists make phenomenal work, and though I don’t often put paint to canvas, I create by seeing and making connections. I believe curation is an art form, a practice that I’ve embraced for the past 15 years. Where do you send foodie friends? Bottega in Station North. It’s small and charming, a BYOB with delectable food, but you need a reservation. What travel is on your wish list? I want to go back to London and explore the city. On my way home from Art Basel, I spent a short time there and realized that was not enough. I head to Joe Squared, a hipsterlike spot for (yes, it’s square) pizza. The Inner Harbor branch is near the pier concerts, and the Station North branch most nights has live music. Both display work by local artists. 30 Market Pl., 133 W. North Ave. Nighttime Station North I check out the art spaces—Area 405, Springsteen, Grey Matter, then see a play at Single Carrot Theatre or catch an indie flick at The Charles. » For Jordan Faye Block’s full interview and itinerary, go to wheretraveler.com where ® Local Guides. Worldwide. ©Errol Webber Jordan Faye Block 40 W H E R E b a lt i m o re I s u m m e r / fa l l 2014 BLTWM_1407SF_MyCity.indd 40 7/2/14 10:34:59 AM BLTM_1407SS_FP.indd 3 6/19/14 5:32:56 PM BLTM_1407SS_FP.indd 4 6/19/14 5:33:26 PM