Uncle Harry at the Sandwich Room
After 18 years at the pinnacle of park concessions, Sea Salt did something new last month: the Minnehaha Falls spot for fish and seafood added a sandwich stand. The Sandwich Room is located inside the pavilion, on the other side of Sea Salt’s kitchen, where for the past few years the eatery sold beer and wine to help alleviate some of the mega-long lines at the main counter.
“At some point we were like, well, we should think about putting some type of food capabilities in here,” said Kait Ziemer-Davis, one of Sea Salt’s three owners. They just had to figure out what to serve. Co-owner Bill Blood had the answer, Ziemer-Davis said. “He just has this sandwich obsession, so from the beginning Bill was like, sandwiches — it should be sandwiches. We were like, sure, we’ll figure it out as we go. And then Bill came with just this beautiful array of sandwiches that had, I think, always been in his brain.”
The menu hints to the endless combinations Blood has devised. There’s a #1 and a #2, followed by a #4, #10, #28 and #30. “That is Bill letting everybody know that he has infinite amounts of sandwiches,” Ziemer-Davis laughed.
The combinations, while seafood-free, match the rest of Sea Salt’s concept of “simple, basic food with a little added touch to it,” Ziemer-Davis said. Each sandwich (all $15, except a kids’ basic ham and cheese for $8) is served on Patisserie 46 bread, and meats and cheeses are only the beginning of what’s possible when it comes to fillings. I loved the sweet-salty-spicy-smoky-crunchy harmony of the #1, Uncle Harry, which combines grilled slices of sausage containing smoky brisket burnt ends, pimento cheese, sweet pepper slaw, arugula, bacon-habanero jam and a squirt of Cry Baby Craig’s hot honey. The others are equally well thought out. By the time you get to the #30, the Nateorious P (named after this guy), you’re looking at roasted pork loin, cheese curds and “million dollar sauce.”
The first few menu items will probably stay put, with others rotating in and out. It’s all a way to make sure there’s something at Sea Salt for everybody — even non-seafood-eaters. (Sharyn Jackson)
4825 Minnehaha Av. S., Mpls., seasaltmpls.com

The Rachel at French Meadow Bakery & Cafe
One of the great moments of summer bliss is realizing you’ve been sitting on the same patio with a dear friend for a couple of hours and the conversation never dipped, even for a moment. We were still chatting between last bites at St. Paul’s French Meadow, tucked off Grand Avenue, its back patio built into a little secret garden eatery. Lined with flower boxes of annuals and mostly sheltered from the midday sun by umbrellas, it really is a lovely place to sit a spell.
French Meadow opened as the area’s first organic bakery in 1985, but the menu has since expanded by leaps and bounds. The East Side outpost has an all-day menu, but I still love a bread-based dish. The Rachel ($16) includes Ferndale turkey with cabbage pulling double duty: in a tangy sauerkraut and a bright, purple slaw. The buttery, toasty bread is studded with seeds, and there’s a good amount of melted cheese pulling everything together. It’s a gorgeous kind of picnic, without having to spread a blanket. (Joy Summers)