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Duluth local at Sir Benedict's Tavern on the Lake
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Bienvenido a Duluth, Minnesota

En esta ciudad porteña pequeña e histórica en las faldas de Iron Range, el puerto de Duluth es el corazón de la zona norte de Minnesota: desde él se envían mineral de hierro y productos agrícolas locales hacia los mercados de todas partes del mundo. Su torre Enger de cinco pisos, construida de piedra azul local en 1939, se erige ante el puerto que en algún momento fue el más concurrido del país. En los últimos años, el carácter industrial de Duluth (por sus edificaciones en piedra, calles con ladrillos rojos y techos de tejas), se ha convertido en la base de la segunda vida de la ciudad como centro turístico de la región, con sus otrora ajetreadas fábricas y almacenes transformados en salas de conciertos, cervecerías, destilerías, y pequeños fabricantes de productos de gama alta. Es una historia de éxito de preservación histórica y un buen lugar para tomar una cerveza, escuchar música en vivo y disfrutar de los encantos de la ribera del Lake Superior. Para darte una perspectiva interna de la ciudad, les preguntamos a los lugareños qué tienes que hacer cuando vengas. Aquí encontrarás algunas de las actividades más populares.

Local Legends

Bob Dylan’s hometown is a surprisingly swinging small city. For a live show nearly every night of the week, The Red Herring Lounge—the 130-year-old former fish company building—is a retro-styled cocktail bar with well-worn wood floors, exposed brick, and a local following. For occasional big, ticketed events West Duluth’s Clyde Iron Works is housed in a massive, 11,000-square-meter (36,000-square-foot) former steel foundry that’s been transformed into a restaurant, bar and venue in a cavernous space that honors its industrial heritage. And, during the warm months, the waterfront Bayfront Festival Park hosts annual book festivals, beer festivals, and lots of live music, including some big-name acts. But it’s Sir Benedict’s Tavern on the Lake—known to locals as simply “Sir Ben’s—that many Duluthians call the “most chill place in town.” They love the outdoor seating in the summer and the bar’s open piano, where someone is always willing to take a turn at the keys. Live music starts every day at 5pm, but jam sessions can break out at any time. Bring your favorite instrument and play along, or sit back and take it all in!

Duluth musicians
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Haute Dish

Among Minnesota’s distinctive food traditions is the state’s love affair with the “hot dish.” A staple of home entertaining and potlucks, the hot dish is just another name for a casserole—a hearty one-dish meal, baked in the oven, and perfect for feeding a hungry crowd. The Rambler food truck (their slogan: “Roam. Eat. Repeat.”) serves a contemporary take on the concept, called “tatchos,” which is a mash-up of nachos and tater tots, with plenty of cheese, plus black beans, jalapeño, sour cream, pico de gallo and guacamole. Locals “hunt them down” wherever the Rambler roams.

The Rambler food truck
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Get Crafty

The up-and-coming Lincoln Park Crafts District is a formerly industrial area that has exploded with new businesses—breweries, restaurants and “makers,” including the Duluth Folk School, which offers classes in everything from eco-friendly silk screening to soapmaking to chainsaw safety. Nearby, Frost River manufactures high-end canvas “canoe bags,” satchels, pack baskets more using Minnesota leather and waxed canvas from high-quality, old-school tanners and textile-makers. These new-school manufacturers take craftsmanship seriously, but it’s all in the service of a good time.

sewing at Lincoln Park Crafts District
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The Canal Zone

Locals suggest a visit to Canal Park, a lakefront area near downtown that’s connected to the 11-kilometer-long (seven-mile) Minnesota Point—the world’s longest freshwater sandbar (known locally as “Park Point”)—by a unique 1905 aerial lift bridge. For an impressive beer in an equally impressive setting, head to Hoops Brewery, where longtime brewmaster for legendary local brewery Fitgers branched out and opened his own passion project, a nouveau beer hall in a historic 1889 building on the shores of Lake Superior. Down the street, the Northern Waters Smoke Haus offers house-made smoked fish—from salmon to whitefish—and cured meats, including bison pastrami. Try the Northern Water sandwich, featuring the deli’s smoked bison shoulder braised in Schlitz beer. For something else straight from the waters of Lake Superior, Vikre Distillery is a mom-and-pop distillery and cocktail lounge in an old lakefront warehouse. Sample four of Vikre’s (Pronounced: Veek-Ruh) spirits in a flight or try them mixed in a complex cocktail featuring Minnesota-inspired liquor like Vikre’s Boreal Spruce Gin or their highly-praised Aquavit, the quintessential Scandinavian liquor.

bartender at Hoops Brewery
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Everybody Get Together Now

“We love to collaborate in Duluth,” say locals. And that spirit of a shared purpose is everywhere—from the snack plate at Vikre’s, which is prepared with products from Northern Waters Smokehaus, to Duluth Coffee Company and Bent Paddle Brewing, who have come together to make an intriguing cold-pressed beer. At Sara's Table Chester Creek Café collaboration takes another form: this beloved farm-to-fork restaurant serves delicious tastes-like-homemade dishes three meals a day using heritage pork products from a nearby farm and nurturing a small farm/community improvement project, Chester Gardens, in a lot kitty corner to the restaurant. It takes a village!

Duluth Coffee Company
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