Although we have created this contest a week before the end of 2023 pro football season, last yearâs âBig Game Squaresâ contest was so popular we decided to run it back again for our readers. So, hereâs how you can win FREE dining in our 2024 âBig Gameâ Squares Contest. Simply click HERE and fill out the formby Friday, February 9. On Saturday, February 10, I will first assign random squares on the grid below for each entrant. Then, I will randomly assign numbers 0-9 along the top row under the AFC Championâs name and in the far left column next to the NFC Champâs name. Then, when the âbig gameâ is played, whoeverâs name is in the box that matches up with the last digit of the score for each team wins a FREE gift card to the restaurant of their choice. For example, if the score is NFC 10, AFC 7 at the end of the first quarter and your name is in the box that corresponds to both NFC 0 & AFC 7, you would win a $25 gift card as the first quarter winner. If the score is 13-13 at the end of the first half and your name is in the box that corresponds to both NFC 3, AFC 3, you would win a $50 gift card. We also will offer a $25 gift card to whoever has the correct box at the end of the third quarter and a $100 gift card for the correct score at the end of the game, whether at the end of the 4th quarter or overtime. See all of our official contest rules and fill out the form for your chance to win by clicking HERE. â GNÂ
Congrats go out to Christos Paradisis and Colleen Gallagher, who recently opened the new Sausage King in the former location of TJâs Hot Dogs at the KRATE Container Park.
Although we also enjoyed TJâs, Sausage King not only has a greater variety of tasty options, Chris also grills his hot dogs, sweet and hot Italian sausages and Polska kielbasas, and Sausage King is already attracting new fans.Â
I can vouch for the foot-long hot dog with spicy brown mustard and sauerkraut (left photo), as well as the sweet Italian sausage sandwich with grilled onions and peppers. I also enjoyed the crispy fried mozzarella sticks with house-made marinara dipping sauce.
Chris, who moved to this area from his native Greece, says the marinara is his âmamaâs own recipe.â Colleen, who is from Philadelphia, says their goal for Sausage King is to remind folks of the flavors they love from back home in the Northeast. For more info, search âSausage Kingâ on Facebook.Â
The âHoliday Birdâ plate. (Photos by Charmaine George).
Although Iâm pretty sure that even most of you non-beer drinkers have at least heard of Yuengling beer, you may or may not realize that Yuengling is the oldest brewery in America. It was established in 1829, when David G. Yuengling arrived from Wuerttemberg, Germany, to settle in the sleepy, coal-mining town of Pottsville, PA.
And, even though a fire completely destroyed Dickâs original brewery on Centre. St., the newer brewery built on Mahantongo St. in Pottsville in 1831 is still the site of the oldest brewery in the U.S.
With demand for its beers growing, the Yuengling family, led by Davidâs great-great grandson Dick Yuengling, Jr. (who first took over ownership of the brewery in 1985) purchased the former Strohâs brewery on N. 30th St. (south of Fowler Ave.) in 1999.
For most of the time that Yuengling has owned the brewery in Tampa, there was only a small tasting room to sample the different beers the brewery brewed and sold.Â
Yuengling Draft Haus & Kitchen Executive Chef Sean Eckman (left) and VP of Hospitality Brent Wertz.
VP of hospitality Brent Wertz, says that changed in 2020, when the Yuengling family became part of Tampa Innovation, a group that includes most of the major businesses in North Tampa (including USF, Busch Gardens, the Moffitt Cancer Center and AdventHealth Tampa) and was seeking to modernize this area. That was the year the Yuengling family began working on opening what is now called the Yuengling Draft Haus & Kitchen, a 42,000-sq.-ft. building with a 1.5-acre outdoor patio area.
The Draft Haus, which opened under Wertzâs leadership in June of this year, offers unique chef-created food and 11 of the 12 Yuengling brews available to go with the beer-inspired menu. The Draft Haus also is home to the First Brew coffee bar and Mayday Ice Cream concession stand, as well as a 100 (or so)-seat private banquet hall and the coming-soon Brewhouse Bistro, located on the outdoor patio, which will feature its own menu to be compatible with the patioâs cornhole and other outdoor games and entertainment.
Bring On The Food!
Wertz, who has spent his entire 30-year career in the food and beverage departments of 4- and 5-star resorts (most recently with Hershey Park in Hershey, PA), says that the menu created by the Draft Haus & Kitchenâs executive chef Sean Eckman (whose previous experience also is mainly at top-level resorts, including The Inn on Biltmore Estate in Asheville, NC) is not only designed to pair with beer, but many of the food recipes also include different Yuengling beers.Â
Our editorâs favorite potato-crusted Gulf snapper at the Yuengling Draft Haus on N. 30th St. in Tampa. (Photo by: Gary Nager).
For example, my favorite item at the Draft Haus is the potato-crusted Gulf snapper, which sits on a bed of mac & beer cheese, served with white BBQ slaw and mayo-ketchup tartar sauce, and is made to pair with the Yuengling Traditional Lager or Golden Pilsner.
âWe change the menu every couple of months,â Wertz says, âright now, we have a few holiday-themed menu items.â
My favorite among those new items is the âHoliday Bird,â a crispy buttermilk fried chicken breast atop a giant scoop of skin-on redskin mashed potatoes and âGrandma-styleâ brown gravy, Itâs served with two crispy waffles that are made from tasty stuffing and topped with a zesty cranberry relish.
âWe actually pour the stuffing into a waffle maker,â Wertz says. âItâs perfect for those who like the crisp edges of stuffing from the oven.âÂ
The new âColors of Christmasâ salad.
I also really enjoyed the âColors of Christmasâ salad â with mixed greens, goat cheese, pomegranate, orange sections, wassail vinaigrette and topped with crispy onions â and the âTampa Style Pulled Porkâ sandwich, which features shredded mojo-roasted pork shoulder on a toasted brioche bun, topped with beer cheese and white BBQ slaw and crispy onions.
And, although I donât love mushrooms, photographer Charmaine George said she loved the new âFungi Burger,â which features two smash burger-style patties on a garlic butter croissant, with truffle hop aioli, marinated âshrooms and fontina and gruyere cheeses. I can vouch for the other burgers, as the âYDH&K Cheeseburger,â with American cheese, pork jam, house-made 1000 Island dressing, dill pickles and lettuce, tomato & onion on a Kaiser bun, is another of my favorite Draft Haus items.Â
The âTampa Style Pulled Porkâ sandwich.
Wertz says, âWe also feature traditional food items most beer drinkers love â like âMrs. Tâsâ Pierogies (served with beer cheese), âDIY Deviled Eggsâ (made with beer mustard) and âBlack & Tan Chili Cheese Friesâ â and items like YDH&K âSignature Lobster Bisque,â a grilled turkey paillard club sandwich and smoked Angus short ribs.âÂ
The holiday dessert manu includes a super-unique âGingerbread Whoopie Pie Cake,â made with an eggnog ganache.
The Yuengling Draft Haus & Kitchen (11109 N. 30th St.) is closed Tues.-Wed., but is open 4 p.m.-10 p.m. on Mon. & Thur., 11 a.m.-11 p.m. on Fri. & Sat. & 11 a.m.-10 p.m. on Sun. For more info, call (813) 488-6444, visit Yuengling.com.Â
The Draft Hausâ huge retail store. The private 100-seat banquet room at the Draft Haus is available for your private parties beginning in January., as it is booked through Dec.The variety of âHop-Tailsâ at the Draft Haus. (Photo by: Yuengling Draft Haus)
* Since not everyone who voted for 900Âș Woodfired Pizza & 900Âș NY Pizza specified which place they were voting for, we combined all of their votes for this category.Â
YOUR FAVORITE MEXICAN/SWÂ RESTAURANTS IN NT/WCÂ Â Â
1. Azteca DâOro
2. Cantina
3. Vallartaâs
4. Señor Tequila
5. Chuyâs Tex-MexÂ
Unfortunately, the categories that we didnât include until October got a lot less votes than those we started in September.
For example, we had fewer than 100 votes in the âFavorite Barâ category, but more than 200 votes in the âFavorite Pizzaâ category â and every pizza place in the top-10 (left) received at least 20 votes.
We congratulate all of this yearâs winning restaurants, but will likely change up the categories again next year, as we ran out of time to include all of the categories we intended to have this year. â GN
Sarah Walkerâs Flamingo Donuts are huge & come in a variety of unique flavors. (photo by Andrea Radford Photography [@andrearadfordphotography])Â
On Thursdays, when Sarah Wallace is pulling an all-nighter making donuts so they will be fresh for her customers the next morning, she sometimes hears the Food Network judgesâ voices in her head.
So, when she comes up with ideas for her Flamingo Donuts â a business she launched in Wesley Chapel just a couple of months ago â sheâs always thinking about how to be sure the flavor is strong enough to come through on the donut itself.
Thatâs just one of the lessons she has learned from her time on âHoliday Baking Championshipâ and other Food Network shows.
After making it all the way to the finals of the âHoliday Baking Championshipâ (Season 6), which aired in 2019, she has participated in other Food Network shows, too. She served as a judge on âBuddy vs. Duffâ (Season 3) and most recently was a contestant on âGuyâs Grocery Gamesâ (Season 31).
As a contestant on âHoliday Baking Championship,â Sarah jumped at the chance to test her skills on the show just two weeks after her wedding. At the time, she was the general manager of the Magnolia Bakery in Boston.
She told her job she didnât know how long sheâd be gone.
She also told her new husband she was sorry they had to postpone their honeymoon. It didnât faze him, though.
âItâs the Food Network,â she says Daniel told her. âIf the Food Network calls, you go.âÂ
Sarah was a finalist on the Holiday Baking Championship in 2019. (photo courtesy of Food Network)Â
So she did, and made it all the way to the final round, where she competed with two other bakers. Her plaid cake ultimately came up just shy of the big win.
Four years later, Sarah and her husband, Daniel Belisle, have moved to Wesley Chapel to be closer to her parents and other family members.
The couple now lives in Union Park and are parents to Jonah, age two, and four-month-old Jude. Sarah sometimes uses Belisle as her last name.
She calls donuts âthe love of her life,â even though her early career revolved around cakes. She says if she ever had a hard day at Magnolia Bakery, like if she had to fire someone, she would walk down to nearby Union Square Donuts and cheer herself up with a donut.
âThey had this brown butter hazelnut donut that was the best donut Iâve ever had in my entire life,â Sarah says.
When Magnolia had to shut its doors during the pandemic and didnât know if it would reopen, Sarah was thrilled to land a new job as the executive pastry chef for Union Square Donuts.
âI made 238 different donuts during my time with them,â says Sarah.
She calls donuts a fun challenge, where she tries to reimagine any and every kind of dessert.
Sarah says donuts are just as versatile as a cake in that she can flavor the batter, flavor the glaze, and garnish with any topping or decoration she can imagine.
âThere are so many different ways to pack flavor into a donut,â she says. âAnd itâs better than a cake because itâs deep fried.â
She says it was âexcruciatingâ to leave what she calls her dream job with Union Square to move to Florida.
âI loved my team,â she says, âand we made the best donuts in Boston.â
But, Sarah and Daniel made the decision to move to Wesley Chapel to raise their family. When they arrived, they embarked on something of a donut tour, finding all the places they could, evaluating Tampaâs âdonut game.â
âWe tried a lot of mini donuts, cake donuts, donuts made using a depositor, but there were no giant, yeasted artisan donuts,â she says.
She figured, âIf anyoneâs going to bring those donuts here, itâs got to be me.â
Sarah says she named her business Flamingo Donuts because she wanted a symbol that reminds people of Tampa without using the name. Her mom is something of a flamingo collector (âher whole house is bejeweled flamingoes,â she says) and when Sarah saw Phoebe, the giant flamingo at Tampa International Airport, she knew it was the perfect symbol for her new business.
With the name chosen, Sarah says she set out to bring âthe biggest, most beautiful donuts people are ever going to seeâ to Wesley Chapel.
âEvery donut is an experience,â she says. âIâm taking a donut and elevating it.â
She says everything is made from scratch, every dough and every topping, and nothing is made ahead of time.
For now, Sarah rents a commercial kitchen and works overnight to ensure her donuts are fresh.Â
Sarah sells her Flamingo Donuts at the Market Elaine at The Grove. (Photo by Andrea Radford Photography)Â
Flamingo Donuts are delivered every Friday morning to The Bean Bar Co. in Tampa Palms (17018 Palm Pointe Dr., near Cali restaurant). Sarah also sells them at the Market Elaine at the Grove the first Friday of every month (the next one is Jan. 5) and at the Ybor City Saturday Market (1901 N 19th St.) every Saturday. She also recently added the Tampa Bay Marketsâ Fresh Market at the Shops at Wiregrass the first Saturday of every month and the Second Sunday Harvest Market at The Grove.
âWhen I show up at the market with 200 donuts, itâs kind of like putting on a show,â she says. âI want to tell people, âI hand made every donut here for you.ââ
She says her favorite thing is when someone takes a donut and she can see the look on their face when they realize itâs unlike any donut theyâve ever had before.
âI had a guy recently who took a bite and his eyebrows just shot up,â she says.Â
âI hadnât slept in two days but it was totally worth it to see his face when he bit into that donut.â
And she is constantly trying to outdo herself. âI need to step it up a notch,â she says, âjust like when I was trying to beat out nine other bakers.â
For example, everyone has to have a glazed donut, she says, but why would someone choose hers? Sarah explains that most glazed donuts are honey-based.
âI found wildflower honey and decided to add a fondant black-eyed Susan,â she says. âNow Iâm giving this big, giant brioche-y donut, covered in wildflower honey glaze, a handmade wildflower made of sugar. So, I still have the classics that people look for, but elevated in a different way.â
Another example is her âSouth of Boston CrĂšmeâ donut, which has more of a pudding filling than just pastry crĂšme, topped with a dark chocolate glaze.
Her holiday flavors â available at the markets in December â include chocolate peppermint brownie batter (peppermint brownie batter filling, chocolate glaze, topped with candy cane bits), brown butter pecan praline (nutty brown butter glaze covered with brown sugar pecan praline crumbles), eggnog float (a little gingerbread man in the middle with his arms behind his head who looks like heâs floating on a donut inner tube), and traditional strawberry sufganiyot for Hanukkah.
As the holidays approach, Sarah and her family have developed a somewhat unusual twist on a Christmas tradition.
âWe watch âHome Alone,â âDie Hard,â and my season of âHoliday Baking Championship,ââ she laughs.
You can find Flamingo Donuts at the markets mentioned above or by visiting her Flamingo-Donuts.com website or on Instagram @eatflamingodonuts and Facebook @flamingodonuts.Â