Bidens dine out with French President Emmanuel Macron, wife at DC restaurant

President Biden and first lady Jill Biden dined out at an expensive Washington, DC, restaurant on Wednesday with French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife, Brigitte, ahead of Thursday’s White House state dinner.

The Bidens and the Macrons went out to Fiola Mare, an Italian restaurant on the Georgetown Waterfront overlooking the Potomac River that boasts of its “see and be seen ambiance.”

The world leaders and their wives headed to dinner after the Bidens preceded over the lighting of the National Christmas Tree Wednesday night.

“Welcoming some friends to town,” a tweets read from the 80-year-old president’s Twitter account Wednesday that included a photo of the two power couples sitting at a table in the restaurant with a window view.

Fiola Mare is the same DC restaurant where the president and his wife flouted local indoor masking requirements last year.

The Bidens will host the White House state dinner Thursday.
The dinner took place after the Bidens preceded over the lighting of the National Christmas Tree Wednesday night.
AP
Fiola Mare is the same DC restaurant where the president and his wife flouted local indoor masking requirements last year.
Thursday’s state dinner will celebrate France as the US’ oldest ally.
AP

In October of 2021, the first couple were filmed walking maskless through a high-end seafood establishment with masked-up Secret Service agents in tow.

The White House will host a state dinner Thursday in recognition of France’s status as America’s oldest ally.

It’s the first state dinner Biden has hosted as president. The formal affairs have been on hold because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Macron will visit New Orleans following tomorrow night’s state dinner to become the first French leader to set foot in the Big Easy in 45 years.

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Office holiday parties are back in the Twin Cities

Grab that Santa hat. Holiday office parties are back.

After two years of pandemic shut downs and distancing, Twin Cities companies are shoving aside worry and rolling out celebratory red carpets instead.

The holiday teas at the exquisitely decorated St. Paul Hotel are sold out and “we are getting a lot of ticket sales” for showings of its annual live December radio show, “It’s a Wonderful Life,” said Leslie Ingiald, the hotel’s director of sales and marketing.

Ingiald said the past two years of show and party cancellations, mask mandates and vaccination checks have been hard on employees.

“It will be a big relief and much more fun [to party this year]. It’s already definitely much more of a joyful holiday season,” he said.

That sentiment is echoing statewide as employers inject some fun — and financial heft — into the holidays after fretful years characterized by empty restaurants, unemployed chefs and restaurant workers, as well as worries over the war in Ukraine, inflation and lurking COVID-19 variants.

To be sure, COVID-19 is still around, but its punch is lessening. So, holiday elves are busy stringing lights and polishing cocktail glasses while caterers, bartenders and restaurants eagerly await the buzz of cash registers. No one group tracks exact numbers, but event planners and chamber officials generally agree that holiday parties funnel millions into Minnesota’s economy.

That’s why it hurt when D’Amico Catering had to lay off all employees in 2020. But now 250 workers are back catering 100 revived holiday parties in clients’ offices and venues such as the Mill City Museum, Walker Art Center, Metropolitan Ballroom, McNamara Alumni Center and Loring Park’s Café and Bar Lurcat.

“The corporate holiday party is, in fact, back,” said Christie Altendorf, D’Amico Catering’s senior event planner. “We have been waiting a really long time to say that.”

Corporations generally spend $50 to $250 per holiday guest depending on whether it’s an intimate function, an office luncheon or an extravagant affair, Altendorf said.

Holiday revenue is a lifeline, especially during the slow, pre-wedding months of January, February and March, said D’Amico operations director Cathy Bovard. “To have those types of holiday events back is not only important financially [for the company] but for the retention of workers.”

Things tilted toward normal earlier this year. In September, D’Amico held a winter tasting event during which Fortune 500 clients could try new dishes that might tempt their holiday party planning instincts.

“We definitely were getting a sense that our corporate partners were looking at possibly getting events budgets together again,” Altendorf said. “We saw that was an opportunity.”

And why not?

“Who doesn’t love office parties?” said Joe Spencer, president of the St. Paul Downtown Alliance. “My inbox has a fair number of holiday parities, so from my perspective, it feels like we are 80% back to ‘normal.'”

The 1,600-member St. Paul Area Chamber, which counts Ecolab, 3M, Medtronic, Securian Financial, Travelers, Xcel Energy and others among its members, is bringing back its Holiday Chamber Connect extravaganza, a $5,000 event that traditionally has 900 guests sampling donated fare from St. Paul’s finest chefs.

“Two years ago, we canceled. Last year, we had it small and masked” with about 200 guests, said the Chamber’s marketing vice president Megan Ryan. “This year, we are indeed returning to our tradition at the Landmark Center … [and] are expecting 400 to 500 guests.”

Cheer is similarly bubbling in Minneapolis.

“No ‘bah, humbug’ to be found here,” said Steve Cramer, CEO of the Minneapolis Downtown Council. “The restaurants we talk to are seeing a big increase in restaurant bookings for holiday gatherings and private events.”

Separately, downtown human resource leaders told the Council they are reviving Christmas and New Year celebrations as a way to reconnect remote workers and restore office culture.

“This [holiday party] is seen as [one] of the way to encourage people to come in and be together,” Cramer said.

Gordon Braun, a managing director at internal audit and IT consulting firm Protiviti, said his 110 Minneapolis staffers will have a pot of luck in December and a fancy holiday party in January at the Walker Art Center.

It’s the first big get-together since the pandemic started, and the first with spouses.

“Our people are excited and looking forward to it after a couple of years of hiatus,” Braun said, noting that they were expecting to spend more than $10,000. “We see this as a good investment. Our culture is real important.”

Restauranteur Erik Forsberg is seeing that same sentiment prevail at his Dan Kelly’s Broadway Pizza and Devil’s Advocate in downtown Minneapolis and Joseph’s Family Restaurant in Stillwater. Each had two company holiday parties or happy hours booked for customers such as Ameriprise, SPS, Henson Efron and other law firms through December and January. More reservation inquiries

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French fusion in Boston’s Back Bay, and seafood specialties in Cambridge

French fusion in Boston’s Back Bay, and seafood specialties in Cambridge

Local restaurants build a following in the wake of the pandemic



REFINED FRENCH AIR WITH A TWIST. TUCKED AWAY IN BOSTON’S BACK BAY IS A PASSPORT TO PARIS. NO PLANE REQUIRED. WE WANTED A SPACE WHERE YOU WILL FEEL WELCOME. YOU COME IN HERE AND IT IS WARM. NICE AND — ARE THE PROPRIETORS OF CAP FACE ABOLISHED. — OF CAFE SAUVAGE. ANTOINE STARTED A CAREER IN THE RESTAURANT INDUSTRY, WORKING HIS WAY UP IN THE SOUTH END, THEN CAMBRIDGE IS CO-LED –COLLETT. HE VENTURED OUT ON HIS OWN AND OPEN THE CAFE WITH HIS WIFE WHO WORKS IN DIGITAL MARKETING. WE WILL TAKE OUR KNOWLEDGE AND PUT IT TOGETHER. SO WE ARE JUST TRYING TO PLAY WITH THE FRENCH DISHES AND THEN TRYING TO ADD SOME EXPERIENCE FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD. WE HAVE A CROQUE BY DOM. IT COMES WITH A CLASSIC SAUCE BUT WITH A LESS TRADITIONAL LAYER OF MUSTARD INSIDE THE TOASTED BRIOCHE BREAD. IT IS A DIFFERENT VERSION THEN YOU CAN FIND. THE MENU INCLUDES A NOD TO HER WEST AFRICAN ROOTS. MY MOM IS FROM THE CONGO. OF ROASTED CHICKEN IS MY MOM’S RECIPE. THE MARINATED CHICKEN IS SERVED WITH PLAN TEENS AND RICE AND TOP WITH CRISPY SHALLOTS. EVERYBODY SHOULD TRY IT ONCE IN THEIR LIFE. A MORE RECENT ROUGHEST STAPLE, AVOCADO TOAST COMES WITH A GARNISH OF PICKLED MUSTARD SEED AND A HARLEM BOILED A — HARD-BOILED EGG. THE FUSION FARE HAS BEEN A WELCOME ADDITION TO THE NEIGHBORHOOD. SINCE IT OPENED IN OCTOBER OF 2021. WHEN WE FIRST OPENED, ALL OF THE NEIGHBORS SHOWED UP FOR US AND THEY WERE LIKE WE ARE SO HAPPY YOU ARE HERE. THE FRENCH WORD FOR IT WILD, THE DECOR IS SOPHISTICATED, YET SOFT LIKE THE GREEN VELVET SOFAS. I THINK THE RESTAURANT IS ELEGANT BUT CASUAL AT THE SAME TIME. A WILD IDEA DEVELOPED FROM A DREAM INTO REALITY WITH COMMUNITY SUPPORT AND ENCOURAGEMENT. WE REALLY WANTED TO BE THE GOOD NEIGHBOR RESTAURANT. IT MAKES ALL THE DIFFERENCE TO HAVE THOSE PEOPLE BEING LIKE OK, WE WERE WAITING FOR YOU. THE OWNERS OF SOMERVILLE’S FIELD AND VINE RESTAURANT AND REBEL REBEL WINE BAR HAVE A NEW JOINT VENTURE. IT’S A NEIGHBORHOOD BAR THAT HAPPENS TO SERVE NATURAL WIND AND PESKY CARRION FOOD. THE CO-OWNERS OPENED DEAR ANNIE IN CAMBRIDGE IN NOVEMBER 2020 ONE. IT IS WHATEVER YOU WANTED TO BE. IT IS JUST A FAMILIAR SOUNDING NAME. HERE, THE COZY COMMUNAL DINING AREA FEELS LIKE YOU HAVE BEEN INVITED INTO SOMEONE’S HOME, WHERE THE WIND BEING POURED IS ALL NATURAL. WITHOUT ANY MANIPULATION, A LOT OF THE GRAPES ARE ALLOWED TO BE THEMSELVES WITHOUT FUSS. THE CAREFULLY CURATED WINE LIST IS COMPLICATED BY A MORE SUSTAINABLE LOCALLY SOURCED SEAFOOD MENU. BECAUSE IT IS A WINE BAR WE GO WITH SMALLER OPTIONS. ONE OF THOSE SIGNATURE SNACKS IS A SEASONAL NOT ATTENDED FISH REPAIRED AND PRESERVED IN ALL OF OIL. WE HAVE HAD OCTOPUS, BLUEFISH, MACKEREL, COD. MUSCLES. NOW ON THE MENU A SMOKED SPANISH MACKEREL. GARNISHED WITH PICKLED MUSTARD SEEDS WHICH GIVES IT AN INTERESTING BARBECUE FLAVOR. THEY ALSO OFFER AC DOG AND AN AQUATIC TAKE ON A HOT DOG. SEAFOOD SAUSAGE. WE USE SHRIMP, SCALLOPS AND WHITEFISH. THERE IS ALSO A CRUNCHY SALAD AND A ROTATING SELECTION OF SMALLBATCH CHEESES, SERVED ALONGSIDE THE MENUS CORNERSTONE, HOUSE MADE BREAD. WE BEG A LOT OF SOURDOUGH IN-HOUSE. IF YOU ARE LOOKING TO VISIT, MAKE SURE TO KEEP YOUR EYES PEELED. THERE IS NO SIGN IT WITH THE DEER ANY NAME. ONLY THIS SET OF NEON PEEPERS IN THE WINDOW. WHEN WE ARE CLOSED, THE EYES WILL BE SHUT AND WHEN WE ARE OPEN, THEY ARE OPEN. AND SOMETIMES YOU HAVE THEM A WINKING, WHICH MEANS THAT WE ARE OPEN EARLIER. AND THIS YEAR DEAR ANNIE WAS NAMED ONE OF THE 50 BEST NEW RESTAURANTS BY THE NEW YORK TIMES AND BON APPETIT. SINCE WE VISITED THE CAFE THEY HAVE TOLD US THAT THE

French fusion in Boston’s Back Bay, and seafood specialties in Cambridge

Local restaurants build a following in the wake of the pandemic

There’s a restaurant tucked into Boston’s Back Bay neighborhood that offers a passport to Paris – no plane required. Cafe Sauvage features a chic French fusion menu courtesy of its Parisian proprietors — husband and wife — Antoine and Anaïs Lambert. The owners of Somerville’s Field and Vine restaurant and Rebel Rebel wine bar have a joint venture: Dear Annie. Co-owners Andrew Brady and Lauren Friel opened the Cambridge eatery in November 2021 – offering cozy, communal dining with a more sustainable, locally sourced seafood menu and an all-natural wine list.

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