Experience the beauty of Maryland’s natural resources by partaking in the New Year’s Day tradition.
The most memorable movies this year encouraged us to open our hearts and minds.
The best ways to spend your weekend in Charm City.
Find the Best in Baltimore
Mt. Vernon
The menu travels the globe as much as chef/owner Minh Quang Vo did before he got into the restaurant business.
At the Mt. Vernon shop, owner Quincy Goldsmith encourages visitors to plant themselves at the bar, learn about the greenery for sale, and linger for some good old-fashioned conversation.
With its top-notch cocktails and stimulating atmosphere, we have a feeling the bar won’t be a secret for long.
While it might be one of Baltimore’s darkest bars, the stylish Mt. Vernon spot is a beacon.
From rainbows and sunflowers to cats and pandas, Jaycee Quitiquit crafts a wide array of colorful coffee designs.
Throughout its 43-year lifetime, the Mt. Vernon club was known as a welcoming drag and karaoke spot, a place to come together during the AIDS crisis, and a site to celebrate the advances in gay rights.
This all-day cafe, set inside the hip new hotel Ulysses, has a flair for drama.
Meet Ryan and Aaron Fini of Perrin & Associates Fine Violins in Mount Vernon.
Dulkerian’s Persian Rug Co. Inc. on Calvert Street is as weathered as its owner’s favorite carpets—and, like them, it endures.
A mainstay for decades, O’Shea’s is a wonderful blend of traditional Irish pub and Charm City neighborhood bar.
Chef Casey Jenkins discusses reviving his Southern comfort food cafe, which closed its Waverly location in 2015.
We chat with the owner about the new social media-friendly space.
The restaurant and “ultra-lounge” has revived the spot’s status as destination dining.
A visit to the former home of one of the city’s most preeminent artists, now complete with a shrine-like studio and rotating gallery.
Grab a seat—and a bowl of pasta—at the new bistro from the team behind Liliahna catering.
A historical musical takes an encore in Mount Vernon.
Qayum and Pat Karzai reminisce about their beloved Afghani restaurant.
For 15 years, Henry Wong and An die Musik have been quietly making music history in Mt. Vernon.
From drive-in movies to waterfront features, catch these flicks around town.
As LGBTQ-friendly bars close, we examine what safe spaces will look like in Baltimore.
Inveterate travelers polish off the Brass Elephant.
After a second devastating fire, Indigma rises again in Mt. Vernon.