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Tag: Lakewood Restaurants

  • West End Tavern in Lakewood Gets a Refresh and Full Menu With New Ownership

    West End Tavern in Lakewood Gets a Refresh and Full Menu With New Ownership

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    Courtesy TEG Properties

    The revamped West End Tavern

    While the West End Tavern is celebrating a grand reopening of sorts, it’s actually been about three months since a new ownership team closed on the purchase of the 38-year-old Lakewood tavern and began making noticeable improvements.

    Steve Stopko of All Saints Public House was brought on as operator after the landlord of his Battery Park pub bought the Lakewood building that included West End.

    After closing the doors at the end of May, the new team got to work refreshing the space, adding an extension to make the bar wrap around one side of the space, adding a 10-line draft system, renovating the kitchen and bringing in new equipment, redoing the floors, adding new pictures, stripping coverings from windows to brighten the space and offering a full bar menu.

    “The place, I don’t think, has changed very much in the past 38 years,” he said. “And I think Covid hit that bar hard. The kitchen was barely open. We were anxios to get it open again, it just took this long.”

    In addition to that bar menu — which features appetizers, sandwiches and burgers, including what Stopko says is a dynamite version of the Romanburger — the team also imported Map Room pizza thanks to Stopko’s business partner, whose family runs the venerable Warehouse District joint.

    “They were happy to do it,” he said. “They gave us their chef for a week, we bought the same equipment, the exact oven, the exact dough, the exact recipes, we order what they do. It’s Map Room pizza.”

    Which is already a hit, he said.

    Talking to Scene, Stpoko wanted to make clear that while some things have changed (and for the better), one key component hasn’t: Longtime part owner Parnell Egan, despite selling the business, remains on the management team.

    “That’s how we were able to get the deal done,” he said.

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    Vince Grzegorek

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  • Owner of Mahall’s, Cloak & Dagger Acquires Rood Food and Pie

    Owner of Mahall’s, Cloak & Dagger Acquires Rood Food and Pie

    Courtesy Photo

    Rood Food is changing hands

    Cory Hajde, co-owner of Vessel Hospitality, had only eaten at Rood Food once or twice when he got a long email from its owner, who he’d never met, in February. Brian Ruthsatz, the 60-year-old who founded the fine dining-adjacent Lakewood eatery in 2018, was ready to retire. He’d explored other buyers but thought they were more interested in the property than the restaurant. He wanted to find an owner who could maintain the standard that had earned Rood accolades and a loyal following.

    Initially, Hajde was reluctant to take on another new project. After all, since co-founding music promotion company BravoArtist in 2011, he opened the acclaimed Tremont cocktail bar Cloak and Dagger in 2020 and, in 2021, purchased the 100-year-old entertainment complex Mahall’s in Lakewood, in which he subsequently launched Pins & Needles cocktail bar and an 800-person music venue called The Roxy. He is also involved with the vegan deli Black Market Meats in Lakewood and the music venue Ace of Cups in Columbus. This year, he announced another new cocktail bar, the member’s only Writer’s Room, is coming to the space above Cloak and Dagger.

    But the more he studied the restaurant’s books and process and understood the food’s rabid fan base, which pulls from Cleveland, Lakewood and Rocky River, the more he realized that the opportunity was too good to pass up.

    “I was completely won over. The business is in such a healthy, thriving place and has a lot of room to grow,” says Hajde. “They have taken it slow and tackled things in the right ways. They’ve set a higher standard for themselves. I’m really impressed with the food they’re putting out.”

    Hajde officially takes control of the Madison Avenue eatery on Aug. 1. He plans to change little, especially at first. Sure, Hajde has thoughts of tweaking the presentation of the menu, adding brunch and refreshing the brand, but those moves are on the back burner to housekeeping and updating systems for now. Chef Josh Erickson, who joined the team about a year ago, is staying on, and the restaurant is continuing its exploration of seasonal American fare.

    And don’t worry, those seasonal pies aren’t going anywhere.

    “I’m excited because I think Cloak and Dagger is very much like Rood — very unique and different — and what he’s doing with Mahall’s,” Ruthsatz says. “I’m sure they’ll do their own things to it, but it’s fun when you can find someone that likes the concept.”

    Rood Food has been a lesson in resilience. While signature pies (salt and honey, most notably) have stayed central to the concept since its opening, the restaurant originally offered elevated sliders. Diners would build their own mini sandwiches from shared bowls of Malaysian chicken or Korean barbecue pulled pork and non-protein toppings. The menu was pretty well received, but it wasn’t pandemic-proof. Ruthsatz survived 2020 by offering brunch as he planned his next move.

    He found that next move in Rachelle Murphy. The then-23-year-old Michigan native had already run her own restaurant, appeared on multiple food TV shows and competed in cooking competitions on the national stage when Ruthsatz approached her about the executive chef position. When Rood reopened in March 2021, Murphy’s revamped offerings — a chaos menu of pastas, seafood, Southern comfort and whatever else she could create with local, seasonal ingredients — quickly built a following.

    “We’ve always tried to do things that aren’t being done at any other Cleveland restaurants,” says Ruthsatz. “We’re having a record week this week. It’s really great to leave Rood on a high.”

    Though Murphy left for Aladdin’s Eatery’s Seasoned Brands in 2023, Erickson, who previously worked at Blue Pointe Grille, has honored the roots of what Murphy developed while putting his spin on the dishes.

    “Chef Josh and the rest of the management team run a really impressive operation. It’s rare to find. It’s just such a gem,” Hajde says. “Everyone that works there seems like they really want to be there.”

    As his family of entertainment venues quickly becomes an empire, Hajde is glad to have that foundation in his newest endeavor — a foundation for which he credits Ruthsatz.

    “[Rood] is very vibrant,” he says. “Brian, he cares so much, man. This was his thing. It was his full-time focus. I feel confident because the team he built is so interesting and exciting and passionate about what they’re doing.”

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    Dillon Stewart

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  • After Restructuring Ownership Group, Solstice in Lakewood Moves Forward

    After Restructuring Ownership Group, Solstice in Lakewood Moves Forward

    Douglas Trattner

    Solstice

    When Solstice opened in downtown Lakewood less than a year ago, Annabella Andricks was content to focus on the dessert side of things. After all, it was work she knew well, as the owner of the successful small baking company Dramatic Snax (and one bite of Solstice’s sweet offerings demonstrates her massive talent for it).

    But less than a year later, quite a lot has changed. Though Andricks still helms the dessert menu, she’s now got a hand in the rest of it, too, stepping into the role of back-of-house manager after the departure of founding chef Cory Miess.

    In March, the restaurant’s seven-person ownership team splintered, as first announced online by LBM, the Viking-themed bar with which three of Solstice’s original owners were associated. An Instagram post shared on LBM’s feed announced that Miess, Eric Ho and Ben Lebovic had “stepped away from the restaurant due to differences in management styles,” while front-of-house manager Bradley Kaczmarski officially departed in June.

    Now, Solstice is fully woman-owned, with Andricks joined by general manager Andrea Tsiros and events manager Rachel Rosen (both former employees of Deagan’s Kitchen and Bar, which previously occupied the restaurant’s space). Though everyone is mum on the nitty-gritty details of the split, Andricks says everyone agrees that it’s for the best.

    “You go into something with multiple people and big ideas, and you do the best you can to make everyone’s vision happen,” she says, “but sometimes you have to pivot.”

    Having done exactly that, Solstice’s newly slimmed-down team of co-owners is focused entirely on the future. In the kitchen, Andricks works alongside one-time sous chef KC Carty, who has stepped into the role of head chef, to continually tweak and revamp Solstice’s menu. Together, they’re finding the restaurant’s culinary footing — and feedback from the community has helped.

    “We heard that the original menu was a little too complicated,” Andricks says. “We’re still making elevated bar food with a twist, but it’s been simplified to be more inviting.”

    Indeed, many of Solstice’s new offerings are more familiar than before, with unexpected ingredients here and there to keep things interesting. Starters include wings in a smoky brown sugar jalapeno sauce ($10) and banh mi sliders on Japanese milk buns ($15); entrees range from a straightforward burger with the works ($18) and an 8-ounce with cheddar potato cakes ($32) to cold sesame noodles with marinated tofu ($16) and a grilled cobia sandwich with pickled fennel ($20).

    Also of note are Solstice’s French fries. Once perfectly tasty but largely unmemorable, they’ve gotten a serious upgrade. Now, they just might be among the best in the city.

    “We were trying to get them as close to light and airy as possible,” Andricks says, “so one of our staffers did a ton of research and found this method of boiling them in a water-vinegar solution, like some kind of mad scientist.”

    Despite Solstice’s newly streamlined management team, that collaborative, everyone-gets-a-say work style continues to be representative of the restaurant’s overall approach to food and to business in general.

    “I think the best ideas come from people feeling like they have a say in things and being able to express their ideas and opinions,” Andricks says. “We have an all-star staff, and we’re definitely including them in our processes.”

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    Kate Bigam Kaput

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  • El Carnicero in Lakewood to Permanently Close

    El Carnicero in Lakewood to Permanently Close

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    Photo by Karin McKenna

    El C out

    Opened 11 years ago by Momocho chef/owner Eric Wiliams, El Carnicero carved out its own niche in Lakewood as far more than a dupe of its Ohio City sister.

    But after a decade, it will be closing its doors in May.

    “It’s time to say adios,” an announcement posted to social media read. “Thanks to all our wonderful guests, amazing coworkers and skillful purveyors for the great memories, experiences and support. We are extremely humbled that so many embraced El Carnicero and that we were able to celebrate with you and succeed as long as we have. It’s been an honor being a small part of the Lakewood community, and for a restaurant to survive and thrive for 11 years is an accomplishment for whie we can all be proud. But it’s time for a change.”

    There are still a few weeks left to sample Chef Williams’ mod-mex stylings in Lakewood.

    “El Carnicero will remain open for regular business hours thru Sunday May 5th, as CINCO de MAYO will be our final service and celebration.”

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    Vince Grzegorek

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