Here in the Mini Apple, we can take pride in how different our city is from New York. Streets are clean, public transit works, and cocktails don't cost a mortgage payment. The City That Never Sleeps might have something to learn about our way of life in the North.
When it comes to food, it seems, New Yorkers are taking notes.
It is now easier than ever to eat like an Upper Midwesterner in the Big Apple, as restaurants incorporate some of our region's beloved culinary traditions. (Whether they get them right is another matter.)
No, you can't get lutefisk beneath the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree. But some of our more, shall we say, palatable dishes are making inroads in the outer boroughs.
On a recent New York City visit, I tried three spots with a serving of Minnesota (and a dash of Wisconsin) on the menu.
My first stop was Juicy Lucy BBQ, which sits across a six-lane boulevard from Staten Island's golden shore. Dining outside, on a deck outfitted like a beach shack, I didn't feel like I was in Minnesota or New York.
Ordering the restaurant's take on Minneapolis' signature burger didn't transport me back home, either.
"We recommend the Velveeta," said the server, going over the cheese options for my Juicy Lucy. That's a choice one doesn't get at Matt's Bar, the Minneapolis dive that inspired Juicy Lucy BBQ owner Rich Holmes to stake his business on our homegrown inverted cheeseburger.