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Tag: Detroit restaurants

  • Enjoy 7 days of $8 burgers during Detroit Burger Week 2024

    Enjoy 7 days of $8 burgers during Detroit Burger Week 2024

    Your stomach should be growling: Detroit Burger Week is back in 2024, and it’s almost here.

    From Monday, July 22, to Sunday, July 28, you can enjoy $8 burgers at restaurants in and around the city. Each participating spot will create a specialty burger for the week, and the event is both omnivore and vegetarian friendly.

    click to enlarge

    Metro Times file image

    Download the app to participate in the game.

    Plus, it’s not only a delicious event but a game with a serious prize — $250 in restaurant gift cards.

    To enter the contest, download the new Detroit Burger Week app. Check in for every burger consumed, and once you have five recorded, you’ll be entered to win that grand prize. In addition, whoever has the most points at the end of the week will also be entered in the drawing.

    And even if you don’t win, the app is well worth your while. On it, you can view the list and a map of the participating restaurants. As of right now, that includes CK Diggs, Gus’ Snug Irish Pub, Hamilton’s at Godfrey Hotel, IceBurg, J’s Penalty Box, Kelly’s Bar Hamtramck, McVee’s Pub and Grub, O’Connor’s, Pine Coast, and Rock On Third. More will be announced, and this list is subject to change.

    To get the most out of your Burger week Experience, remember the event’s commandments:
    The restaurants could run out of the special — this is a popular event.
    There might be waits — see above!
    Tip like a pro — figure your burger costs the restaurant at least $10.
    Buy other drinks and food — not a requirement, but it’s nice for the participating restaurants.
    Check social media — keep up with the Burger Week Facebook and Instagram.
    Double check for dine-in or carryout — most places will only be doing the former. Check the app to confirm if you want to pick up.

    For the most up-to-date information, go to burgerweekdetroit.com.

    Jessica Rogen

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  • Baobab Fare’s Waka is moving into Eastern Market’s former Russell Street Deli space

    Baobab Fare’s Waka is moving into Eastern Market’s former Russell Street Deli space

    Detroit’s East African food truck Waka, a sister brand of the Baobab Fare restaurant in the New center area, just announced the establishment of a permanent location in Eastern Market, taking over the former beloved Russell Street Deli space.

    Waka initially launched during Detroit’s Noel Night celebration in 2022, serving as a street food offshoot of Baobab Fare, which Hamissi Mamba and his wife Nadia Nijimbere, both refugees from Burundi, opened in February 2021. Since its debut, the vibrant yellow Waka food truck has made monthly appearances outside Shed 5 at Eastern Market, but once-a-month visits are definitely not enough.

    Later this summer, Waka by Baobab Fare will open at 2465 Russell St., bringing the community back to the gathering place that was home to Russell Street Deli for over three decades.

    “We didn’t want to go anywhere else to start this,” co-owner Hamissi Mamba says. “People here in Detroit take care of us, so this idea of bringing East African street food to America has to start here. This is home, and we are so thankful to be able to grow our business and build on our story right here in Eastern Market.”

    Reflecting on his childhood in Burundi, Mamba remembers his mother selling chapati and brochettes in the bustling markets of Bujumbura to support their family. He sees Eastern Market as a fitting location for the first brick-and-mortar iteration of Waka.

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    Courtesy of Waka / Booth One Creative

    The Waka food truck serving customers during the NFL Draft.

    Mamba and Nijimbere are ambitious as of late, as the couple purchased a building on Detroit’s east side for a second location of Baobab Fare in March. However, Waka Eastern Market will be a distinct concept, still paying homage to the couple’s heritage, but in a more fast-casual way.

    The new spot will feature flavorful stewed meats and vegetables wrapped in chapati, a flaky East African flatbread. Expanding from the food truck’s offerings, Waka will also include traditional street food dishes like brochettes — East African-style skewered meat grilled over charcoal.

    Waka will accommodate around 30 guests with fast-casual counter service for both dine-in and takeout. Additionally, it will offer a curated selection of coffee, chocolate, beverages, and other items from the couple’s retail line, Soko.

    “All of the flavors that people love from Baobab Fare are here, but Waka is even more fast and accessible,” Nijimbere says. “We are proud of what we’ve done with the food truck, but a permanent kitchen and a place you can always find Waka is so important. We are so excited to bring even more tastes of our culture to Detroit.”

    Layla McMurtrie

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  • At Detroit’s Kalahari African Cuisine, get ready to go off-menu

    At Detroit’s Kalahari African Cuisine, get ready to go off-menu

    If the chef at Tiliani recommends a restaurant, take heed. I am a fan of Hisham Diab, who helms the stellar new spot in Dearborn, and he’s the one who told me to try Detroit’s Kalahari African Cuisine.

    You should take Kalahari’s printed menu with a grain of salt (not that the food needs salting) — what’s actually available varies. Both times I dropped in, I was disappointed to find Kalahari out of maffe yap, a lamb and peanut butter stew, as that is Diab’s go-to dish. The owner says you can call ahead to find whether it will be offered on a given day (but go early). Otherwise, you may be greeted with “I have lamb, chicken, and fish.” Turkey wings, fufu, jerk chicken, stuffed roast lamb, fataya (fish patties), and steak with white sauce (!) are also listed. I wanted to try the ginger drink and the bissap drink, from hibiscus, but no go. Green tea in a footed glass was offered for free when the meal was over.

    I am always happy to order lamb, though, and enjoyed a big pile of crusty kabobs, many with the fat on, served with jollof rice. This was under the heading of “Dibi (Lamb),” whose description reads “kabob chicken, beef, or shrimps.” Like I said, trust not the printed word. On one occasion they substituted spring rolls for another dish and then undercharged us both for that item and for another one.

    Jollof rice is one of those dishes with infinite variations, country by country and cook by cook, involving tomatoes, onions, spices and whatever vegetables or proteins the maker desires that day, all cooked in one pot. In the mid-2010s West Africa saw friendly “jollof wars” over whose was best. Washington, D.C. holds an annual jollof contest that’s judged blind, to head off accusations of native-son favoritism.

    Kalahari’s chestnut-brown version appears simple, without visible additives, and it has a nutty flavor. Quantities were bountiful.

    We also enjoyed a crisp whole grilled red snapper, well done, easy to detach from its skeleton and worth the effort, served with spiced grilled onions.

    If you order the whole chicken, it will be chopped into square pieces, except for the drumsticks, warmly spiced and grilled a dark red brown. It’s not as tender or juicy as American fried chicken but worthy for the crunch and the spicing.

    Perhaps even more than these hefty main dishes, I liked Kalahari’s spring rolls, called “nems,” with nuoc mam sauce. The wrapper is a dream of lightness and crunchiness, delicately browned, stuffed with cilantro, shrimp, vermicelli, mushrooms, and onions. And they’re just three for $7. Sticking with the roll theme, chicken shawarma comes in a lightly crisped, thin pita, stuffed with well-spiced chicken chunks. Both of these would be good for takeout or for when you don’t want a heavy meal. Or just because they’re so good.

    Fried plantains varied from visit to visit, one night crisper and less sweet, but always served in a big delicious heap.

    Kalahari is very informal. Paper towels serve as napkins, though plates and silverware are real, not plastic (plastic forks being a regrettable growing trend). Walls are painted orange, tablecloths are bright, place mats are shiny gold. A mural of charismatic African fauna is the main decoration.

    Jane Slaughter

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  • From mussels to feather bowling, Detroit’s Cadieux Café exudes charm

    From mussels to feather bowling, Detroit’s Cadieux Café exudes charm

    Michelle Gerard

    The Cadieux Café draws an eclectic crowd.

    Cool is a quality difficult to define. There’s a feel to it, hard to put a finger on. If Cadieux Café is anything, it’s kinda cool, and my job here is to do that description justice. In response to one of our readers who recently took me to task over my love for the alliterative (sorry, still struggling, sir) and a penchant for “clunky,” run-on sentences (again, my apologies here), I’m resolved to write this review as clearly and concisely as I can.

    Bear with me. I’ll get better.

    Cool’s unknown quantity aside, Cadieux Café boasts one quality all bars and restaurants work hard hoping to emulate: it’s busy as can be. Walking in for dinner without a reservation on a recent Saturday evening, we were nearly turned away at the door.

    “Sorry, every table’s already taken,” a server let us know as though we should have known better than to just pop-in. Who knew? This place looks corner bar casual, inside and out. Being told Cadieux’s quaint and still mostly empty space was booked solid surprised me. Suddenly stopped in our tracks, sure enough, we noticed “reserved” signage atop every table, and felt instantly excluded. “You might find seats at the bar,” the server offered what consolation he could. Luckily, we did.

    Squeezing ourselves in, we sat down and ordered mussels, Belgium’s signature seafood and something Cadieux serves a la “Citroen” (bathed in lemon and fresh dill), “Forte Di Marmi” (garlic-white wine fume), and “Spicy” (subtly so, in Provencal-style tomato-basil broth). Like pros, we polished off impressively generous half-orders of all three ($15.95-$16.95, full orders $21.95); probably four dozen fresh, plump, moules served in big, steaming bowls with a choice of sides. Of those, crispy, longer-cooked fries paired classically well with our shellfish medley. Almost burnt to a crisp brussels sprouts ($2.00 upcharge) and mashed potatoes — made no better than average for their folding-in with wilted spinach — didn’t make as good an impression.

    As we segued into soups, Cadieux started filling up fast. Turned around in my barstool by all the buzz and bustle behind us, I took in the café’s vintage beer garden vibe: a close-quartered communal space framed with Old World and industrial Detroit-era photography of former Tour de France cyclists, Belgian street scenes, Great Lakes industry, iconic Detroit architecture, and such. With quirky-cool feather bowling happening in an adjacent space (think Italian bocce meets Scottish-Canadian curling with a curvy twist), and a live band booked to entertain a big following, we started feeling lively and lucky in our catbird seats at the bar. Before we’d finished good-as-gold onion soup (sherry-kissed? $7.25) and fewer spoonfuls of tapioca-thick and floury clam chowder ($4.95), we’d chatted up everyone around us. Bartender Brian (also a chef around town) was good enough to pen me a short list of his personal restaurant recommendations. A guy from North Carolina and I struck up conversation over the Duke baseball jersey I was wearing, and a woman to my left allowed harmless me some fairly innocent flirtations over the elbows we kept literally rubbing as she tipped hers with a friend.

    click to enlarge Cadieux Cafe is known for its feather bowling, something like a Belgian version of Italian bocce meets Scottish-Canadian curling. - Michelle Gerard

    Michelle Gerard

    Cadieux Cafe is known for its feather bowling, something like a Belgian version of Italian bocce meets Scottish-Canadian curling.

    “Keep drinking till you find me attractive,” I teased her. “But I’m 61, so from small talk to foreplay and beyond, we’ll need to be finished by 9:30.”

    By the time our main courses arrived, people were lined-up three-deep behind us to order drinks. Hands waving credit cards came between us. Loud voices barking beer, wine, and cocktail orders started ringing in our ears. Some helped drown out thoughts of buyer’s remorse over my Belgian Beer Stew ($16.95). Though its brothy, Belgian Ale-laced sauce (not nearly a gravy) packed plenty of beefy punch, it offered precious little substance besides; three or four bites of meat, maybe as many cut carrots, a single forkful of potato, and a preponderance of peas. Friend’s fish and chips ($15.95) proved a far better choice, with crispy, beer-battered cod fried just right and sided with crunchy-creamy slaw and another pile of pommes frites we appreciated as much as the first. And a plate of Belgian sausage ($12.95) brought mixed reviews. I liked the simple salt-and-pepper-seasoned links for their leanness and the snap of nicely browned and crisped skins, while friend who ordered them found them “dry and dull.” To each, his and her own. As to the braised red cabbage and mashed taters (hold the spinach by request), I failed to even try the former but rather liked the latter for both their buttery flavor and a slightly browned quality that reminded me of homemade mashed potatoes reheated in a frying pan. One wonders if that’s part of the process at Cadieux. If so, I’ve no complaint whatsoever.

    After bar staff informed us that Cadieux’s desserts were limited to Sander’s hot fudge Sundaes with or without cream puff ($6.95 and $4.95 respectively), we declined, deciding instead to surrender our seats to those who, by then, were pressing in to the point of breathing on our necks. With a friend feeling a bit claustrophobic and me hearing the siren song of a just-reopened Froyo shop back in Dearborn, we settled-up and said goodnight. I thanked Brian for the restaurant suggestions he’d jotted down (get ready, Mr. Paul’s, we’re coming in for Chateaubriand soon) and said goodnight to the strangers we’d had such fun making friends with at cool, convivial Cadieux. Then I left thinking I’d be back again for sure. For more mussels. For another seat at the bar and the service. For conversations with a crowd that seems to enjoy shooting the shit with strangers as much as I do, and for another taste of a watering hole space that satisfies the social animal in me to no end.

    This is that kind of place. So, go have some mussels. Broaden your horizons with feather bowling. Mix it up with an eclectic crowd. And stay for the show. I will next time. Cadieux’s just too cool.

    Location Details

    Robert Stempkowski

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