There was no instant replay of 2020's pandemic-induced avalanche of closings (when 90-plus restaurants disappeared), thank goodness. Still, the Twin Cities dining scene witnessed a number of departures.
The talker was four-star Burch. Chef/co-owner Isaac Becker called it quits in February, after keeping the steakhouse-pizzeria dark for the preceding year. Following similar pandemic-induced slumbers, he reopened his 112 Eatery, Bar La Grassa and Snack Bar properties a few months later.
Several downtown Minneapolis restaurants, quiet since the start of the pandemic, also disappeared in 2021, including the long-running Atlas Grill, along with Bus Stop Brewhouse and Cargo Food Authority.
Richfield lost its best restaurant, Lyn 65. The Wedge Co-op shuttered its short-lived excursion to Eat Street, Wedge Table.
A number of closings were quickly replaced with newcomers. When chef Justin Sutherland pulled the plug on Obachan and Chickpea, his two outlets at Potluck, Rosedale Center's food hall, the leases went to chef Josh Hedquist for the third iteration of his Joey Meatballs, along with a new concept, Salad Slayer.
Northeast Minneapolis lost Sikora's Polish Market and Deli after seven years, and chef Kale Thome packed up the smoker at Minnesota Barbecue Co.
The Walker Art Center replaced its Esker Grove with Cardamom, a collaboration by chefs Daniel del Prado and Shawn McKenzie. The Minnetonka location of Christos morphed into Duke's on Seven, another Craft and Crew venture.
Several long-running operations had their final years. Angela Fida, the third-generation owner of St. Paul's beloved Dari-ette Drive-In, sold the 70-year-old business in October.