gypsy queen cafe
- Balitmoreans can chow down on cocoa, cookies and chestnuts roasted on an open fire next Thursday in Monument Park. If they take a moment to look up from their plates, they’ll also see the Washington Monument brighten the sky with holiday lights.
- Maryland Food Truck Week, a foodie celebration and promotion of local trucks, will give residents and visitors a chance to try out mobile food offerings from around the state this month.
- The Gypsy Queen Cafe's permanent restaurant, Gypsy's Truckstaurant, is preparing to open in Hampden.
- There will be over 20 local food and drink vendors at the annual holiday Monument lighting in Mount Vernon on Thursday.
- Select your Baltimore-area favorites: Dining, drinks, shopping, services, activities, arts and people.
- The owners of the Gypsy Queen Cafe food truck are getting back to their roots with a new restaurant planned near Hampden.
- The 45th annual lighting of Mount Vernon's Washington Monument won't be without plenty of food and drink options to keep onlookers full and warm.
- You can catch some classical music -- and a little Radiohead -- during your lunch hour today: Symphony Number One, under the direction of Jordan Randall Smith,
- The food truck festival that's become a summer fixture in Charm City will return in June for a fifth celebration of mobile foods.
- From Blue Moon Cafe's cinnamon rolls to turducken gumbo from Warehouse 518, Thursday's Washington Monument lighting will have a spread of local delicacies for attendees to sample.
- Chefs from Maggie's Farm, Gypsy Queen Cafe, Parts & Labor, Bistro Lunchbox, Corner Pantry and Herb & Soul will join together Sept. 3 for a six-course wine-paired dinner to benefit Meals on Wheels.
- Benn Ray, who owns Atomic book store, writes about events in Hampden community.
- A cocktail bar in South Baltimore new to the scene, Bar Liquorice recently had a soft opening.
- Food trucks from Baltimore, Washington and Philadelphia selling everything form crab cakes and cheese curds to cupcakes and cookies were the featured attraction at Baltimore's third-annual food truck festival, held on Saturday at M&T Bank Stadium.
- Food truck operators packed into Baltimore City Council chambers on Tuesday to testify on an administration bill that would change the way food trucks operate in the city. The food-truck vendors told the committee they are concerned about new parking restrictions and other provisions in the bill, which would turn over turn over the supervision of food trucks to the city¿s department of general services.
- Furloughed workers welcomed by restaurants with support and specials.