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Baltimore’s Highway of Pit Beef and Asphalt Smoke
A lot of cities are famous for their street food — crema-lathered elote on Avenida Michoacán, dirty-water dogs from a cart sitting at Broadway and 42nd, crispy arancini peddled by fruit vendors through the narrow alleyways of Palermo. But only Baltimore is known for its highway food. The Pulaski Highway, to be exact. Since the early 1970s, this 35-mile stretch from “East Bawlmor” to Abingdon has been Maryland’s open-air food court — a smoky corridor of roadside shacks carving

Adam Horvath
Nov 93 min read


Beam Me Up Coddie
Faidley's In a city blessed with many indigenous foods, coddies might be Baltimore Maryland’s most under-appreciated foodigenous. But...

Adam Horvath
Dec 11, 20243 min read


Lake Trout, Like Rocky Mountain Oysters But Not Really
I don’t know what's more intriguing, the fact that there’s a Baltimore foodigenous named lake trout that’s neither from a lake nor trout...

Adam Horvath
Feb 27, 20243 min read
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