Many couples in Portland’s restaurant industry have started families while starting or maintaining eateries.
Meredith Goad
Many people tell Meredith Goad that she has the best job in Maine, and most of the time she agrees.
Maine has a crazy appetite for food stories, and it’s Meredith’s job to satisfy those cravings with juicy tales from chefs, food producers, local farms, and the state’s fast-growing restaurant scene. Her work appears in Wednesday’s Food & Dining section and the Sunday Source section, and occasionally, but not as often as she’d like, on the front page.
A native of Memphis, Tenn., Meredith shamelessly flaunts her knowledge of good barbecue in front of her Yankee friends. She earned a bachelor of science degree in wildlife biology from Colorado State University, then studied science writing at the University of Missouri, where she received a master’s degree in journalism. She spent the first 20 years of her career covering science and environmental news, then switched to features in 2004, just as Portland’s food scene was taking off.
Her own most memorable meal? Back in the 1980s, on assignment in Finland, she shared a dinner of reindeer and Russian vodka with Maryland’s governor and a bunch of hungry scientists.
Meredith lives in Portland, but spends much of her time off back in Tennessee - either visiting family, or in online archives, researching her family’s history.
Pick Pretty Flours to dry your dishes
Molly Thompson’s artisanal dish towels made from flour sacks will make cleaning up anything but dreary.
Palace Diner co-owner announces plans for his Portland cafe
Chad Conley said the cafe and bagel shop will sell ‘New York Jewish cuisine.’
Here are 10 tips to help you with spring cleaning, done sustainably
What to do about old paint cans and how to wash the windows.
Shipyard Brewing Co. making local beer even more local
The company is brewing its beer with local malted barley from Maine Malt House, a division of Buck Farms in Mapleton.
No-tipping experiment fails to pay off at 2 popular Maine restaurants
Owner/chef Cara Stadler drops the policy, at least for now, after profits decline at Bao Bao in Portland and Tao Yuan in Brunswick, but legislation may offer another option.
Beloved Le Garage bids adieu to Wiscasset
The restaurant closes Sunday after 40 years, and its staff and customers feel as if they’re losing family.
Don’t eat these peas, wear them
Ronna Lugosch’s “peapods” are beautiful jewelry.
Cousins Maine Lobster is coming home
Five years after the TV show ‘Shark Tank’ helped launch the business, it is opening its first Maine food truck.
Portland’s robust restaurant scene about to get a lot more crowded
Residents and visitors will be served a big helping of new places to try this spring and summer.