Disgraceful Fine Dining Restaurant Willows Inn Permanently Closes

More than a year after allegations of a toxic workplace culture surfaced, one of America’s (seemingly) most idyllic restaurants has closed. The Willows Inn property, one inspiration for the recent chef-y horror film The Menus, has been donated to a non-profit, The Seattle Times reported on Monday.

Since the restaurant opened on Lummi Island in 2010, a flood of diners from around the world made the two-hour drive and ferry ride from Seattle, Washington, for a taste of its rustic-chic menu and lush surroundings. But over the past five years, the Willows Inn has faced a series of lawsuits, plus an April 2021 New York Times investigation outlining accusations of wage theft, sexual harassment, and racist bullying. Despite the allegations, droves of employee resignations, and various protests by locals, the restaurant managed to stay open until November of this year, finally serving its last meal the week before Thanksgiving.

The new owner of the property, which is valued at an estimated $2 million, is the Christian nonprofit Lighthouse Mission Ministries, located in the nearby city of Bellingham. Previous owners Tim and Marcia McEvoy donated the sprawling hotel, farm, and dining room to the social services organization, which primarily seeks to end homelessness, according to The Seattle Times. It’s still unclear if and when the Mission will seek a new owner for the property, but the sale could theoretically raise a lot of money for its work. “It’s too early to know if a potential new owner would want to operate the restaurant and hotel rooms in a similar manner,” the organization said in a statement.

The restaurant gained esteem in its early years, mostly for its hyperlocal menu from former Noma chef Blaine Wetzel, which earned rave reviews on virtually every national best-of restaurant list (including a 2013 mention by Bon Apétit). Yet the Willows Inn has been clouded in controversy for the past half-decade. Here are some of the reasons why:

  • In 2017, the restaurant was ordered to pay $149,000 in damages and unpaid wages to kitchen employees. According to a 2017 Eater report, the Inn required its entry-level employees to work a one-month long unpaid trial. Once hired, they were allegedly paid daily rates as low as $50 with no overtime and 14-hour shifts.
  • In early 2021, the restaurant paid $600,000 to settle a class action lawsuit riddled with similar accusations. At the time, Wetzel denied any wrongdoing.
  • Later that same year, a New York Times investigation uncovered allegations from 35 employees of verbal and sexual harassment, brutal 16- to 18-hour days, and sexist and racist bullying by Wetzel and manager Reid Johnson. According to the Times, workers accused Wetzel of pressuring young female employees “to drink alcohol, use illegal drugs and have sex with male kitchen staff members and visiting chefs.” The piece also alleged that the restaurant was passing off store-bought ingredients as being island-harvested. The owners denied the accusations then; the resulting class-action lawsuit, featuring 137 former employees, was settled this year for $1.37 million.
  • According to The Seattle Times, the Willows Inn also faced three other individual civil cases of over wage theft and wrongful termination this year. the New York Times reports that those have since been resolved.
Read More

Non-alcoholic cocktails to give you holiday cheer without the buzz

The holiday season comes with plenty of festivities every year — many of which involve alcohol.

“I think during the holidays, there are so many parties and dinners and gatherings for friends and family so obviously alcohol is everywhere,” says Hilary Sheinbaum, author of “The Dry Challenge: How to Lose the Booze for Dry January, Sober October, and Any Other Alcohol-Free Month.”

For whatever reason you or your friends choose not to consume alcohol (and, really, whose business is it anyway?), it’s nice to have drink options other than soda at holiday get togethers.

So, if you’re not drinking, looking to cut back or just don’t feel like having alcohol there are plenty of cocktails that can satisfy the festive-cup-quota without the buzz.

USA TODAY has gathered a few fun, holiday-themed NA cocktails that you can add to your holiday spread.

How sober are these ‘sober’ drinks? And why are they so popular?

Forget ‘Dry January’:Alcohol-free beer, wine, cocktails are available year round and are gaining popularity

Holiday gone sour

Holiday gone sour

Sheinbaum has a few cocktails of her own up her sleeve this holiday season. One includes sparkling water sweetened with simple syrup, lime juice and rosemary that sounds oh-so-refreshing for holiday functions.

Ingredients:

  • 12 ounces of water or sparkling water
  • .5 ounces of simple syrup
  • 2 ounces of lime juice
  • Ice
  • Rosemary sprigs (for garnish)

Instructions:

  1. Pour simple syrup into water, stir.
  2. Pour lime juice into the simple syrup water mixture, stir.
  3. Pour contents into a rock glass over ice.
  4. Garnish with rosemary sprigs.
  5. Enjoy!

Makes: 1 NA cocktail.

Sangria sweaters

Sangria sweaters

This recipe is fruity and fun and makes a few drinks.

Ingredients:

  • 16 ounces of sparkling white grape juice
  • 16 ounces ginger beer
  • Ice
  • Choice of garnishes, including:
    • 1/4 pineapple, peeled, cut into wedges
    • 1/2 small orange, cut into wedges
    • 1 passionfruit, quartered
    • 1/2 cup fresh mint leaves
    • Pomegranate seeds
    • Strawberries, sliced
    • Red and White grapes
    • Apple slices

Instructions:

  1. Pour equal amounts of juice and ginger beer in a pitcher.
  2. Stir.
  3. Serve over ice in festive glassware (or in a wine glass).
  4. Top with your choice of garnishes.
  5. Steer back and enjoy!

Makes: 4 NA cocktails.

Lyre’s Apertif

Lyre's Apertif

Mixer brand Fever Tree shared this NA cocktail recipe with USA TODAY from its Fever-Tree Easy Mixing Recipe Book.

Ingredients:

  • 2 ounces of Lyre’s Apéritif Dry
  • 6.8 ounces Fever-Tree Mediterranean Tonic Water​
  • 3 lemon wedges
  • Thyme sprigs, for garnish​

​Instructions:

  1. Pour the Lyre’s Apéritif Dry into a highball glass filled with ice cubes.
  2. Squeeze over and then drop in the lemon wedges.
  3. Top off with the tonic water.
  4. Garnish with a thyme sprig.

Makes: 1 NA cocktail.

Hot Non-Ginger Toddy

Hot Non-Ginger Toddy

Fever Tree shared a hot cocktail to warm party-attendees featuring hot apple cider, honey and ginger beer.

Ingredients:

  • 4 ounces of hot apple cider
  • .5 ounces of honey
  • 1 ounce of freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • Top with Fever-Tree ginger beer (or ginger beer of your choice)
  • Garnish with dusted apple slices and cinnamon stick

Instructions:

  1. Combine Hot cider, lemon juice and honey syrup in the mug.
  2. Top with Fever-Tree Ginger Beer.
  3. Garnish with an apple fan & cinnamon stick.

Makes: 1 NA cocktail.

The Lyre & The Blood Orange

The Lyre & The Blood Orange

Fever-Tree shared another recipe for “The Lyre & The Blood Orange” crafted by Rhett Hornberger of La Cuevita in Los Angeles.

Ingredients:

  • 1.5 ounces of Lyre’s AM Whiskey
  • .75 ounces of lemon juice
  • .75 ounces Liquid Alchemist Blood Orange Syrup
  • Fever-Tree’s Blood Orange Ginger Beer

Instructions:

  1. Shake ingredients in a shaker.
  2. Pour over ice in a Collins glass.
  3. Top with Fever-Tree’s Blood Orange Ginger Beer.
  4. Garnish with a blood orange half wheel.

Makes: 1 NA cocktail.

Mulled Jukes 6

Mulled Jukes 6

Jukes Cordialities, which sells apple cider-vinegar based non-alcoholic beverages that are meant to taste similar to wine, provided a cocktail made with Jukes 6, to USA TODAY.

Jukes 6 has a blackcurrant and blackberry base combined with layers of other red fruits including strawberries, plums and raspberries. When mixed with hot water and orange, the drink is meant to be sipped like a mulled wine.

Ingredients:

  • .5 ounces of Jukes 6, approximately half the bottle
  • 8 ounces of hot water
  • 1 slice of fresh or dried orange, for garnish

Instructions:

  1. Pour half a bottle of Jukes 6 – The Dark Red – into your favorite mug.
  2. Top with hot water.
  3. Garnish with a slice of fresh or dried orange and enjoy!

Makes: 1 NA cocktail.

Check out these recipes to up your kitchen game:

Read More

Riverwest apartments, food center look to spring construction start

The Riverwest Food Accelerator would use street-level commercial space within a four-story, 91-unit apartment building.

An affordable apartment development with a commercial-grade kitchen to help launch new food businesses is hoping for a spring construction start now that’s securing additional public funding.

The 2,500-square-foot Riverwest Food Accelerator would be developed on East North Avenue, just across North Commerce Street from University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s RiverView Residence Hall. It would be on the ground floor of a four-story, 91-unit affordable apartment building.

The accelerator will host food-oriented activities — recognizing the neighborhood’s need for access to healthy foods and food education.

Developers General Capital Group and KG Development Group LLC announced their plans two years ago, with the project later securing federal affordable housing tax credits.

Developers who receive tax credits must generally provide at least 85% of a building’s apartments at below-market rents to people earning no higher than 60% of the local median income. Those credits are sold to generate cash, with the developers securing commercial loans and other funds to complete their financing packages.

But the Riverwest development, like many others throughout Wisconsin, has been delayed because it needs more funding as inflation drives up construction costs − and as interest rates on commercial loans increase.

The project recently got some good news with Milwaukee’s Housing Trust Fund set to provide $1 million for the $26.7 million development.

That grant requires Common Council approval, with the council’s Zoning, Neighborhoods and Development Committee to review the trust fund recommendations at its Tuesday meeting.

“We are working on filling the remaining financing gap and are optimistic now that we are that much closer,” Linda Gorens-Levey, a General Capital partner, told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

A spring construction start would result in the food accelerator and apartments being completed by roughly late summer or early fall of 2024, said David Weiss, a General Capital partner.

Along with helping launch food-oriented businesses, the accelerator will also provide cooking classes for residents and other community residents.

Milwaukee’s Housing Trust Fund Advisory Board is recommending $8.8 million for 12 projects − leveraging more than $121 million in local construction and rehabilitation work over the next year, said Ald. Michael Murphy, advisory board chair. The grants are coming from $10 million in federal American Rescue Plan Act funding.

The largest grant, $1.5 million, would be provided for the 93-unit King Library Apartments, in the 2900 block of North King Drive. That $32.2 million development, which is being done by General Capital and Emem Group LLC, includes replacing the current King Library with a new library branch.

Also, Milwaukee Habitat for Humanity, Revitalize Milwaukee and ACTS Housing, which would each receive $1.25 million for their work on buying and renovating homes for people with low incomes.

Other recommended grants include $783,765 to Movin’ Out Inc. and Rule Enterprises for a $21.4 million, 79-unit apartment building under construction at 1887 N. Water St.; $500,000 to KG Development LLC for its planned $6.6 million rehabilitation of a 40-unit building at 2436 N. 50th St., and $500,000 for the $13.4 million Bronzeville Creative Arts and Technology Hub, featuring 54 apartments and production space for filmmakers, musicians and other creatives that Fit Investment Group LLC and Cinnaire Solutions Corp. plan to develop north of West North Avenue and west of North Sixth Street.

“The Housing Trust Fund has made a significant difference for Milwaukee families and neighborhoods, by making supportive housing, home ownership and rental housing more affordable for people who want to live here,” Murphy said, in a statement.

Tom Daykin can be emailed at [email protected] and followed on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Read More