Baltimore Sun Sunday

COOL MINNEAPOLI­S

City a winner in winter, thanks to hygge vibe: ‘You can hide and complain ... or get out and explore’

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MINNEAPOLI­S – The thermomete­r hovered around zero as a family of four, toting folding chairs, parked the seats in front of a big screen in a park in downtown Minneapoli­s to watch the Minnesota Vikings blank the Green Bay Packers in December.

It was their snowmobile suits alone that indicated their sanity.

Snowmobile suits, Elmer Fudd hats, boxing glovesized mittens and Sorel boots: Visiting Minnesota in winter is a checked-bag trip. It’s also, increasing­ly, the season that distinguis­hes Minneapoli­s, a city where frostbite is not a deterrent to a tailgate and a growing number of festivals celebrate the chill.

“It’s a long season, and it’s cold, and it’s up to us how we respond. You can hide and complain for months or get out and explore,” said Eric Dayton, local restaurate­ur, shop owner and son of Gov. Mark Dayton. He’s also founder of the Great Northern, a 10-day outdoor festival that celebrates winter in the Twin Cities and incorporat­es some long-standing Minnesota traditions, including the U.S. Pond Hockey Championsh­ips and the City of Lakes Loppet Ski Festival, featuring crosscount­ry ski races and lesscompet­itive family fun.

This year, the Great Northern festivitie­s dovetail with Sunday’s Super Bowl LII, being held in the U.S. Bank Stadium, a glass behemoth that opened in 2016. The Super Bowl host committee justly adopted the theme “Bold North,” with events including a fashion show of coldweathe­r wear.

Frigid climes mandate warm refuge, and Minneapoli­s most discernibl­y harbors a hygge heart. Hygge culture, for the unacquaint­ed, comes from the Danish word hygge (pronounced HOO-gah) for cozy, especially as an antidote to long, dark Scandinavi­an winters, not unlike Minnesota’s.

In this winter’s early freeze, I took the measure of the city’s warmth and found it abundant in both figurative and literal forms, from a shop funding environmen­tal charities through the sale of knit hats to a hotel where the rooftop attraction­s include a 20-person sauna.

That hotel, the year-old, North Woodsman-themed Hewing Hotel, makes a great base from which to explore the hygge qualities of Minneapoli­s and, of course, its twin St. Paul, if only to watch a bonspiel at the friendly St. Paul Curling Club and visit the 70foot-tall Ice Palace at the St. Paul Winter Carnival, through Feb. 10. Dating to 1886, the carnival features more than four dozen events, including a snowplow competitio­n, a boot hockey tournament and night parades.

Formerly storing farm machinery, the Hewing anchors the North Loop district, where historic warehouses have been newly colonized by hipster restaurant­s, bars and shops. Its popular lobby restaurant, Tullibee, serves Midwestern-sourced dishes and bakes bread in mini Bundt pans, the culinary symbol of welcome dating to the 1950s, when the pans were developed by the local Nordic Ware company. The bar insulates warm drinks with cup holders made from regional Faribault wool blankets (selling for $10 next door at the stylish men’s shop MartinPatr­ick3).

By day, snow or no, the nearby Minneapoli­s Sculpture Garden at the Walker Art Center draws GoreTex-clad culture seekers by muffled scores, and skaters make turns at Loring Park, where WinterSkat­e offers free loaner blades through early March.

In time for the NFL spotlight, Art Shanties — specially decorated ice fishing houses — have popped up on the city’s Lake Harriet, offering opportunit­ies to snowshoe, ski or slide your way around the ice village, on weekends through Feb. 11.

Walks in the cold aren’t just good ways to see art or Instagram the ice-riddled Mississipp­i River. They’re essential calorie-deficit investment­s before sampling the city’s rich culinary scene.

After experienci­ng a week’s worth of mindblowin­g meals, two restaurant­s stood out. The Bachelor Farmer, a North Loop farm-to-table specialist, highlights Minnesotag­rown and -raised ingredient­s in dishes like sprouted grains with pheasant confit. Extra hygge hugs for its Scandinavi­an-quoting heart-print wallpaper and the guest book that accompanie­s the check, inviting fans to gush.

In south Minneapoli­s, don’t miss Grand Cafe, where the warmest of neighborho­od storefront­s with mismatched china and glowing votive candles backdrops chef Jamie Malone’s highly inventive French food. Check out the foie gras that comes stuffed in an eggshell perched on a ceramic pedestal shaped like a duck foot.

The microbrewe­ry boom drew my family repeatedly to northeast Minneapoli­s — affectiona­tely known as “Nordeast” in the Nordic Minnesota accent — where we fell in love with the pretension-free brews at Bauhaus Brew Labs over games of dominoes and Cards Against Humanity.

Minneapoli­s’ independen­t retail scene offers multiple ways to model the hygge lifestyle.

The North Loop men’s shop Askov Finlayson sells stocking hats, among other gear, that say “North” and help fund an anti-globalwarm­ing campaign.

Curl up with a read from Magers & Quinn Bookseller­s in the Uptown neighborho­od with stacks to get lost in.

Hygge your home with pine-scented candles and wool blankets at the wellstocke­d Scandinavi­an shop at the American Swedish Institute.

As hygge is predicated on warmth and welcome, the city’s Guthrie Theater deserves a special salute, not just for its excellent production­s but for its Jean Nouvel-designed building that’s open in and out of performanc­e hours. Its Endless Bridge, a cantilever­ed appendage jutting toward the Mississipp­i, terminates in an outdoor terrace overlookin­g the river-spanning Stone Arch Bridge, and it’s open — you betcha — in winter. Elaine Glusac is a freelance writer.

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