Douglas County announced ARPA funds for restaurant assistance

Douglas County is putting aside $700,000 to help local restaurants impacted by the pandemic. The assistance program comes from commissioner James Cavanaugh’s allocation of the federal American Rescue Plan Act — ARPA funds. It will be given on a first-come, first-served basis to restaurants. They must have made less than $1.25 million in revenue in either 2019 or 2020 and lost money due to COVID-19. Commissioner Cavanaugh called small businesses “the backbone” of the economy. “They employ more people, they pay more taxes, and they provide more services than really any other sector of the economy, and particularly the restaurant segment of the small business community has been hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic because many of them simply had to close their doors for some period of time,” Cavanaugh said. Each restaurant will get a grant of up to $10,000. Restaurant owners can look at the qualifications through the online portal at lutz.us/rap, but applications can’t be submitted until Dec. 12.

Douglas County is putting aside $700,000 to help local restaurants impacted by the pandemic.

The assistance program comes from commissioner James Cavanaugh’s allocation of the federal American Rescue Plan Act — ARPA funds.

It will be given on a first-come, first-served basis to restaurants.

They must have made less than $1.25 million in revenue in either 2019 or 2020 and lost money due to COVID-19.

Commissioner Cavanaugh called small businesses “the backbone” of the economy.

“They employ more people, they pay more taxes, and they provide more services than really any other sector of the economy, and particularly the restaurant segment of the small business community has been hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic because many of them simply had to close their doors for some period of time,” Cavanaugh said.

Each restaurant will get a grant of up to $10,000.

Restaurant owners can look at the qualifications through the online portal at lutz.us/rap, but applications can’t be submitted until Dec. 12.

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New Orleans’s 2022 Eater Awards Winners for Best New Restaurant, Bar, and More

Today, Eater New Orleans announces its winners of the 2022 Eater Awards, celebrating the restaurants that have most impacted New Orleans’s dining scene this year (as well as in Eater’s other cities).

This year’s Eater Awards highlight five standouts that made a mark on New Orleans cuisine in late 2021 and throughout 2022: places that established Caribbean comfort food as an integral part of the city’s cuisine, took vegetables to new heights, and put forth unexpected, genre- expanding renditions of Indian street food, among others. Some of these winners began their journeys in the city’s dining scene as pop-ups; their new restaurants offer fresh confidence in the survival and growth of small, resourceful independent food businesses in New Orleans. Others serve to carry on the best of the city’s traditions, like a neighborhood gathering spot with a convivial but eccentric vibe and a fine dining den that demands celebration.

With that, please join us in celebrating the winners for Restaurant of the Year, Reinvention of the Year, Bar of the Year, Pop-Up-Turned-Restaurant of the Year, and Fine Dining Restaurant of the Year.

Restaurant of the Year

Queen Trini Lisa

A plate of fried flatbreads topped with a curried chickpea filling next to three sauces.

Doubles from Queen Trini Lisa.
Randy Schmidt/Eater NOLA

Chef Lisa Nelson at her restaurant, Queen Trini Lisa.
Randy Schmidt/Eater NOLA

At a serene corner shop painted with familiar banana leaves in Mid City, Chef Lisa Nelson brings Trinbagonian soul food to what she, and others, call the Northernmost Caribbean city. It may be her first restaurant, but Nelson has been known to New Orleans for years for serving specialties from her native village of Hardbargain, Trinidad at food festivals and markets, as well as through her pop-up and chef collaborations. Nelson’s jerk and curry chicken, coco bread fried fish sandwich, and Caribbean-style spinach are standouts, becoming staples for many New Orleanians since Queen Trini Lisa opened in January. But the unquestionable star of the show is Nelson’s doubles, fried flatbreads spiced with turmeric topped with a curried chickpea filling (it’s vegan), which can be enjoyed for breakfast, lunch, dinner, or a second dinner.

Reinvention of the Year

Bar Brine

The plant-filled entrance at Sneaky Pickle.

Sneaky Pickles/Brine Bars.
Randy Schmidt/Eater NOLA

The dining room and bar at Sneaky Pickle.

Sneaky Pickles/Brine Bars.
Randy Schmidt/Eater NOLA

Walk into Bar Brine and feel instantly invigorated by its subtle but warm multi-colored lighting elements, its high-ceilinged, intimate dining room, and a welcoming, vibrant bar — and then prepare to be six colored of the food and drinks. Bar Brine is the nighttime version of Sneaky Pickle, a longtime St. Claude Avenue favorite for vegetarian and vegan-friendly, picnic-style dishes. It was relocated in fall 2021 to a corner Bywater space that had long sat empty and added Bar Brine — a more upscale dinnertime restaurant that offers a notably different vibe from its daytime counterpart. The menu is as invigorating as the space, the beauty in its seeming simplicity — dishes of Hakurei turnips, spaghetti squash, or eggplant; fresh pasta like gnocchi with walnuts and blue cheese, squid ink with crab and daikon, or rice cakes paired with smoked squash and mapo tofu; and a few entrées, featuring products like tilefish, king trumpet mushrooms, or confit goose. A modern wine list of natural and orange varieties, savory and herb cocktails, a rotating frozen drink option that can change the common perceptions of frozen drinks, and some of the best non-alcoholic cocktails around have made it one of the most consistently hot destinations in New Orleans this past year.

Bar of the Year

Velveteen Lounge

The bar at Velveteen Lounge.
Randy Schmidt/Eater NOLA

Velveteen Lounge.
Randy Schmidt/Eater NOLA

When the Bayou Road neighborhood bar Pirogues closed early on in the pandemic, it was the kind of loss that stirred up a sense of doom. But the new incarnation of the simple corner space, Velveteen Lounge and Restaurant, invoked the reverse — a sense of hope for new, sustainable opportunities in New Orleans’ restaurant landscape that also honors tradition and legacy. The 100 percent worker-owned Velveteen Lounge opened in May 2022, with an eclectic, vintage feel and walls in soothing colors displaying works by local artists — all available for purchase — and a unique bar program. Velveteen has a small menu of straightforward cocktails, but can do just about anything — depending on the drink, however, it might be made with a small spirit brand customers have never seen before. Beers all come in a can or bottle only, and wine options are unexpected for a neighborhood dive — small producers and natural options line the bar, though everything is reasonably priced, including the food: salads, tacos, quesadillas, empanadas, a burger, and more are all $12 and under. It all goes hand in hand with the name: “Velvet is a luxury material,” co-owner Brendan Gordon says. “Velveteen is a knockoff material. Because everyone should be able to have nice things

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Kansas City Tanner’s Bar & Grill’s new server is a robot

Sonny loads up with trays of grilled chicken sandwiches, fries and salad as he heads to table 42 at Tanner’s Bar & Grill in Red Bridge Shopping Center. Dishes delivered, Sonny turns and heads back to the kitchen.

But customer Bond Faulwell of Overland Park wonders aloud, “Do we leave WD-40 for the tip?”

Sonny is a new robot server at the south Kansas City restaurant.

Trade magazine Nation’s Restaurant News said robots are uniquely positioned to support restaurants through the current wave of labor shortages. They are best used for tasks that are physical and repetitive, freeing up employees for more important tasks such as interacting with customers. It said the robot should always be escorted by a human.

Tanner’s, at 11134 Holmes Road, pays an undisclosed monthly fee for Sonny, but a spokeswoman said they will not pass the cost on to customers by increasing prices.

KCM_TannersRobotcityscape12
Robots like Sonny are best used for tasks that are physical and repetitive, freeing up employees to talk to customers. Rich Sugg [email protected]

Kitchen employees place orders on Sonny’s two trays, plug in the table number and send it off to the dining room.

Servers meet Sonny at the table and hand the dishes to customers. Then they plug in a code to send the robot back to the kitchen.

“We’re amazed by the little robot running around,” said Jim Ogden of Overland Park.

Sonny, created by California’s Bear Robotics Inc., can also be loaded with dirty plates to take back to the kitchen, then it is cleaned and sanitized before making another delivery. It tends to spill drinks when maneuvering from tile to carpet, so for now it is just taking plates.

“It does help, especially with the bigger tables,” said Tiffany Hearld, manager. “And the kids love it. They want it to bring their food.”

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Joyce Smith has covered restaurant and retail news for The Star since 1989 under the brand Cityscape. She appreciates news tips.

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