Chain restaurants make a mint providing the same thing coast to coast, or continent to continent. B-o-r-i-n-g. When my wife and I hit the roads, we like to hunt down what’s different–a one-of-a-kind restaurant in a quaint little town.
Life in Harmony is a long way from a Jackie Chan/Chris Tucker police romp in Paris.
|
On a recent run to the deep south–south Minn, that is–we pointed the wheels at Harmony. Its short main street, lined with 1900-era buildings, is a welcome respite from the thrown-up-in-a-month architecture that squats along so many thoroughfares. We ducked into a joint called The Village Square, right on Main Street, after hearing that their homemade pies were worth a visit.
Good tip. While our BBQ beef and pork tenderloin sandwiches were OK, the blueberry rhubarb pie with locally made vanilla ice cream kicked the bejeebers out of anything available in a chain restaurant. This dish alone made the turn into Harmony well worth the time and modest dollars spent.
Village Square pies–worth a turn off the beaten path.
|
Up a few doors was an old but decorative facade, probably once a bank. The windows were dusty and the tiled front room empty but for a long unused desk. Looked like a great structure for another interesting sole proprietorship, something else to distinguish the town as unique. Yet a hand-scrawled note on a piece of cardboard below the windowsill heralded a different direction for Main Street: “Coming Soon — Starbucks.”
Nice article about our town. I wanted to point out that the Starbuck’s sign was only a joke, apparently locals asked one too many times about the future use of the building to the building’s owner…
I thought it could be a joke, but it was near impossible for a visitor to tell…. I wanted to get a pic of it but because of the way it was lying, I couldn’t frame the sign and the place in one shot.
Glad to hear it’s a gag, not because Starbucks has bad coffee–their Sumatra is pretty darn good–but because Harmony has gobs of charm best served by an establishment run by and for Harmonians.
My wife bought some huckleberry jam and pickled brussels sprouts at the little gift shop at the end of the street and it was excellent–consumed within days. Thanks for your note.
MotorMouth Kris Palmer, freelance auto writer and editor, blogs about vintage cars, the collectible auto scene and just about anything else that goes vroom.
Have a collectible car to sell?
Try an enhanced classified listing for "Antiques, Classic & Customized" where you can upload photos of your vehicle, provide contact information, and filter through inquiries with ease. Sell your collectible classic online.
Learn more about RSS
Search Yellow Pages: