On Thursday, the winners were revealed for The Baltimore Sun’s Best: Readers’ Choice 2025 poll. Naturally, I had to try some of the front-running spots in the Best Food & Drink category — from Ethiopian platters to Baltimore’s classic frozen delight: the snowball.
Dukem Ethiopian Restaurant in Mid-Town Beledere won in the Ethiopian restaurant category. I opted for the Dukem combo #3, which contains the kitfo — a velvety raw beef tartare zhuzhed up with cardamom and other warming spices. They’ll cook it for you if you want, but you’ll miss out on the raw beef’s mildly sweet flavor and delicate texture, both of which are harmonious complements to the slightly sour and bouncy injera flatbread (which also doubles as your eating utensil).
Next, I headed to Taco Love Grill in Federal Hill, which took home first place in both the Latin and taco restaurant categories. You can’t go wrong with the restaurant’s well-seasoned al pastor taco, which balances caramelized morsels of spicy pork with warm and juicy bursts of fresh pineapple.
For an elegant intermission (and certainly not because I was already getting full on this packed tour), my next stop was tea house category winner Emma’s Tea Spot, which, with a Hamilton Hills dining room full of three-tiered tea and pastry stands, gilded cups and plenty of frills, looks like it comes right from a children’s storybook. Sipping its cinnamon-plum tea only reinforced that feeling of nostalgia — and made me very prematurely yearn for the fall season.
Next came Towson’s Spice and Dice Thai Kitchen, which won in the Thai restaurant category. I opted for lighter fare that (fortunately or unfortunately) proved to be just as filling: the larb gai, a minced-chicken salad packing plenty of vinegary, Thai chile heat, as well as a coconut-and-galangal-based tom kha soup, which was more refreshing and less creamy than other versions I’ve had across the country. Spongey pieces of fried tofu soaked up the comforting broth with ease.

Finally, I rounded off the day in Brewers Hill with (Don’t laugh at my inexperience!) my first snowball at Icy Delights, which won for the category. I went for one of my timeless frozen treat flavor combinations: coconut ice topped with caramel drizzle, though I did also sneak a bite of that bright-orange egg custard flavor topped with marshmallow sauce. On a 90-degree day, these ultra-sweet concoctions were the perfect remedy.
If you want to see the journey for yourself, check out our video on Instagram. Here’s what else I’ve discovered lately.
Chat Thai is officially open for business in The Shops at Quarry Lake. Owner Punnathorn Chaiphongrattana said that the restaurant’s successful soft and grand opening events make her optimistic about its reception by the Quarry Lake dining body.
“People here are very nice,” she said. “I think they are very excited, and they’ve been waiting for us to open.”
One learning curve, said Chaiphongrattana? Turning down the heat.
“Some of our food is kind of spicy, and some of our customers cannot eat spice,” she said. “Mostly, we make the food fresh, so we can just adjust the taste to how they like it.”
From the first week of business at 2592 Quarry Lake Drive, Chaiphongrattana reported an unsurprising most-ordered dish: pad Thai. She encourages diners to look out for rotating and improved menu items in the coming months.
“We will adjust the food, adjust the menu and improve the food for our customers so that everyone can eat,” she said.
In an industry where longevity seems to be getting rarer by the year, three institutions in the Baltimore area have celebrated milestone anniversaries in recent months with fanfare: Miss Shirley’s Cafe, Petit Louis Bistro and the Bel Air Farmers’ Market.
Miss Shirley’s — winner of The Baltimore Sun’s Best breakfast/brunch and gluten-free restaurant categories — celebrated its 20th birthday in May. To commemorate the occasion, employees received custom cookies from Owings Mills baker Steller Cookies, and guests participated in charity-centric giveaways, according to Facebook posts.

Later this month, Petit Louis will celebrate a landmark birthday. Helmed by longtime Baltimore restaurateur Tony Foreman, previously of the Foreman Wolf restaurant group with his former business partner Cindy Wolf, Petit Louis will celebrate 25 years of operation on Sunday.
When Foreman first opened the bistro, he had initial trepidations about curating an authentic French menu and ambiance — after all, he said, when he first put French words on the menu, “people were terrified of it.” Now, however, Foreman doesn’t shy away from his Francophilia, from his daily greeting of “bonjour” to waitstaff to the French-language menu, from poitrine du poulet (chicken breast) to the ever-favorite mousse au chocolat.
To celebrate the big birthday, Petit Louis will hold a “Joyeux Anniversaire” celebration Sunday from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the restaurant’s 4800 Roland Ave. location. Tickets are $65 and are available on Toast.

Finally, the Bel Air Farmers’ Market turned 50 years old on Saturday.
“What does it mean to be 50 years?” mused Jennifer Sekowski, board chair of the market. “It just shows the enduring value of community-supported agriculture. Agriculture supports healthy choices available to the community and the whole agricultural ecosystem locally.”
Every Saturday, the market buzzes with Harford County shoppers and over 60 vendors, slinging specialties like local beer and coffee brews, fresh produce and jarred goods.
“The farmers market customers appreciate food, and they understand the importance of buying local food,” said Betsy Depman, owner of the vendor Coffee Coffee. “I think that the people that go to the market know what they want.”
In case you missed it, here’s a bite-sized roundup of recent food happenings in the Baltimore area.
Covering the James Beard Foundation Awards weekend was eventful, to say the least. It was my first time attending, and I was immediately gobsmacked by the sheer amount of free-flowing food and drink available. The after party was stacked with samples from restaurants and chefs across the country. I covered both the Restaurant & Chef Awards and the Media Awards. (Spoiler: Maryland saw winners in both.)
Also in recent weeks, we reported on a handful of restaurant openings, resurrections and new developments, including brunch chain Eggspectation in the Baltimore Peninsula and fast-casual Indian fusion concept Tikka Shack in Owings Mills. As if this news isn’t tantalizing enough, My Mamas Vegan chef Debonette Wyatt has also taken over restaurant Swadi, which specializes in American, Italian, Indian and Nepalese cuisines. Wyatt will also be operating weekly pop-ups at her new digs, as well as showcasing new vegan dishes with South Asian influences.
Have a news tip? Contact Jane Godiner at jgodiner@baltsun.com or on Instagram as @JaneCraves.
]]>In The Baltimore Sun’s Best: Readers’ Choice 2025 poll, our readers voted on what’s best in the region, from wedding venues and roofers to pediatricians and hair salons. This year’s winners highlight people and businesses recognized for outstanding service and customer satisfaction over the last year.
The poll includes more than 550 winners in nearly 200 categories in six areas — Arts & Entertainment, Home & Garden, Food & Drink, Lifestyles & Shopping, Personal Services and People & Media. More than 47,000 ballots were cast, cultivating a list of your favorite museums, pizza joints, boutiques, TV anchors, radio hosts and more.
Best Clothing boutique, Menswear, Shoe store: Gian Marco Menswear
517 N. Charles St. 410-347-7974. gian-marco-menswear.com.
For what it’s worth, everyone gripes about the prices at this trendy men’s shop.
“They’re entitled,” said Marc Sklar, CEO of the Charles Street boutique that deals in luxury clothing and footwear.
Who would pay $100 for a bow tie, $260 for a cotton shirt or $400 for a pair of crocodile-and-python sneakers?
“Someone who appreciates quality,” Sklar said. “People who come here want a good product. It’s like eating fine steak rather than something from McDonald’s.”
Well-heeled patrons agree. For 35 years, they’ve been buying European dress and casual wear off the fashionable racks at Gian Marco, while touting the top-notch fabrics and customized apparel.
“This stuff is so well made that it will go out of style, and then come back in, before it wears out,” one reviewer wrote online.
“That’s almost true,” Sklar said. “Except that the merchandise we buy is so timeless that it never goes out of style.”
Twice a year, he and co-owner John Massey fly to Italy and browse the high-end clothing factories, awaiting that Eureka! moment.
“We’ve literally climbed through vaults of fabric to find things that are really unique,” Sklar said. “We’re looking for buried treasure.”
Fabric found, they make their orders, mindful of their customers’ breadth.
“Sometimes we have Italian manufacturers produce sizes they would normally not produce,” he said. “They have to understand that there are a lot of big Americans.”
How old are Gian Marco’s clients?
“Age 25 to death,” Sklar said. “We’ve done many of their burials.”
Also weddings, graduations, confirmations and Bar Mitzvahs.
“We’ll go to people’s homes to fit them, or to redo their wardrobes,” the owner said. Truth be told, customers like to peruse the shop in Mount Vernon, if only to hear the good-natured banter between Sklar and Massey. Said the former, “We’ve been in this business so long that John used to dress Moses.”
Have a news tip? Contact Mike Klingaman at jklingaman@baltsun.com and 410-332-6456.
Antiques: Second Chance
Honorable mentions:
The Painted Mill
Vintage Treasures
Cornerstone Antiques and Consignments
Barbershop: Old Line Barbers
Honorable mentions:
Two Bits barbershop
Ernesto’s Barber Shop
Westminster Barbershop
Bicycle shop: Joe’s Bike Shop
Honorable mention:
Bicycle Connection
Bookstore: Barnes & Noble
Honorable mentions:
Ivy Bookshop
Greedy Reeds
Old Fox Books & Coffeehouse
Braiding: The River Oshun
Bridal shop: Gamberdella
Honorable mentions:
Amanda Ritchey Bridal Loft
Elegant Touch Bridal and Tuxedo
Love It! at Stella’s Bridal & Fashions
Brow threading: Beautiful Eyebrow Threading and Sabita’s Threading & Spa (tie)
Honorable mention:
Rhea Eyebrow Threading
Cannabis grower: SunMed Growers
Honorable mentions:
Curio
Curaleaf
Car dealership: Jones Junction
Honorable mentions:
Heritage
Anderson Automotive
Jimmy The Boxer Auto Mall
Clothing boutique: Gian Marco Menswear
Honorable mentions:
Brightside Boutique
Fells Point Surf Co.
Mason-Mayes (tie)
My Fancy Finds Boutique (tie)
Consignment/resale shop: Habitat for Humanity Restore
Honorable mentions:
Second Chance
Uptown Cheapskate
Goodwill

Day spa: Eeyah Holistic Spa
Honorable mentions:
THE pearl spa
FX Studios
Mindful Moon
Dispensary: GreenLabs
Honorable mentions:
Health for Life
Green Point Wellness
Curaleaf
Gifts: Smyth Jewelers
Honorable mentions:
The Nest on Main
Becket Hitch
Tra CigarDiva
Grocery store: Giant Food
Honorable mentions:
Sprouts
Whole Foods
Green Valley
Gym: Krav Maga Maryland
Honorable mentions:
Club Pilates, Ellicott City
Brick Bodies
YMCA of Central Maryland
Hair salon: Lavish Salon
Honorable mentions:
Jordan Thomas Salon & Spa
K. Co Design Salon
Thirty Hair
Health food/supplement store: MOM’s Organic Market

Jeweler: Smyth Jewelers
Honorable mentions:
Radcliffe Jewelers
Saxons
Charles Nusinov & Sons Jewelers
Liquor store: The Wine Source
Honorable mentions:
Cranbrook Liquors
Bel Air Liquors
Christo’s Discount Liquors
Martial arts: Krav Maga Maryland
Honorable mentions:
US Martial Arts Academy
Monroe Hall Brazilian Jiu Jitsu
US Kuo Shu Academy
Maryland made shatter/wax (cannabis): Sunnies by SunMed Growers
Honorable mention:
Curaleaf
Maryland produced pre roll (cannabis): SunMed Growers
Honorable mentions:
Curio
Curaleaf
Medispa: LUXMODE Aesthetics
Honorable mentions:
Seidenberg, Protzko Eye Associates
Allure Aesthetics
Mason & Friends (tie)
ProMD Tox Bar (tie)
Menswear: Gian Marco Menswear
Honorable mention:
Marcia’s Luxury
Music lessons: Baltimore School of Music
Honorable mentions:
Stages Music Arts
Lutherville Music School
Music Land
Pet goods store: The Mill
Honorable mention:
Howl, McHenry Row

Pool: Padonia Park
Honorable mention:
Jewish Community Center of Greater Baltimore
Produced Maryland edible (cannabis): Sunnies by SunMed Growers
Honorable mention:
Curaleaf
Retirement community: Broadmead
Honorable mentions:
Miller’s Grant
Mercy Ridge
Stella Maris
Shoe store: Gian Marco Menswear
Honorable mentions:
The Good Feet Store
Run Moore
Ma Petite Shoe
Spin class: Rev cycle
Honorable mentions:
Jen McColigan, YMCA of Kent
Resistance Cycle
Yoga studio: Pilates House
Honorable mentions:
THE pearl spa
Yoga Center of Columbia
CorePower Yoga
Editor’s note: Winners and honorable mentions were determined by popular vote. Readers were invited to nominate and vote online from April to May. The ballot and results are generated solely by readers’ votes. The Baltimore Sun does not take responsibility for the services offered or advertised by those listed.
More winners
Food & Drink
Personal Services
Arts & Entertainment
People & Media
Home & Garden
Lifestyles & Shopping
In The Baltimore Sun’s Best: Readers’ Choice 2025 poll, our readers voted on what’s best in the region, from wedding venues and roofers to pediatricians and hair salons. This year’s winners highlight people and businesses recognized for outstanding service and customer satisfaction over the last year.
The poll includes more than 550 winners in nearly 200 categories in six areas — Arts & Entertainment, Home & Garden, Food & Drink, Lifestyles & Shopping, Personal Services and People & Media. More than 47,000 ballots were cast, cultivating a list of your favorite museums, pizza joints, boutiques, TV anchors, radio hosts and more.
Best Pet day care and Pet groomer: Wagging Lounge Dog Resort
9315 Snowden River Pkwy, Columbia. 443-546-3391. wagginglounge.com
When dogs need a spa day or luxury retreat, Wagging Lounge Dog Resort is there. For nearly 10 years, the business has offered grooming, daycare, boarding and other services for dog parents looking to give their “furry kids” the best experience.
Since he was young, General Manager Jimmy Kim has loved dogs, feeling most incomplete during times he didn’t have a dog. Running the business doesn’t feel like work for him as he’s been “blessed” to work in his passion, he said.
Inspired by their shelter dog, Kim and his wife opened the dog resort in Columbia after previously dog-sitting from their home. With a focus on service, the facility also features spacious glass kennels, outdoor space, self-service bath stations, and enrichment or cuddle time.
“It’s not customer service, it’s more of a culture for us,” Kim said. “We just think that serving the community, serving the customers, is really the biggest thing that we can do, and I think we do a great job of it.”
One of the most popular products is the luxury villas, which often sell out, Kim said. The luxury villas fit up to three dogs from the same family and offer fully-furnished rooms with beds, blankets and pillows.
The dog resort provides a high level of care for dogs and their owners, whom they call “parents,” as well as the community, donating to local high schools and animal shelters. There have been thoughts of expanding, Kim said, but it would be tough to maintain the same level of service.

“We wouldn’t be anything without our staff, who are training and training over and over. And the parents are so wonderful and loving. I mean, it’s great when you have parents who love, they don’t look at their dogs as dogs, I mean, it’s their kids.”
Have a news tip? Contact Kiersten Hacker at khacker@baltsun.com, 443-721-5109 or @KierstenHacker on X.
Acupuncturist: Hyeon-Jin Kwon, Redesign Acupuncture
Honorable mentions:
Tom Ingegno, Charm City Integrative Health
Brian Jackson & Marcos Hsu, University of Maryland Orthopaedics | The Warehouse at Camden Yards
The Well Acupuncture
Audiologist: University of Maryland Faculty Physicians
Honorable mentions:
Bay Area Audiology
Emily Taylor, Taylor Listening Center
Auto glass: Dave’s Auto Repair
Auto repair: Hollenshade’s Auto Services
Honorable mentions:
Dave’s Auto Repair
McCormick Auto Body
Hamilton Service Center (tie)
Rebuli Auto Service (tie)
Bank/credit union: First Financial Federal Credit Union of Maryland
Honorable mentions:
SECU – State Employees Credit Union of Maryland
M&T Bank
APG Federal Credit Union
Car wash: Canton Carwash
Honorable mentions:
Royal Farms
Gary’s Auto Detailing
Child care: Embark Education
Honorable mentions:
Beth El Schools
La Petite Academy
Miss Ann’s Day Care
Chiropractor: First Step Chiropractic
Honorable mentions:
Muneses Chiropractic Center
Mary Steiner
Thrive Chiropractic
Computer repair: Cheaper Than A Geek
Honorable mention:
Byte Right Support
Dentist: Dental Designs of Maryland
Honorable mentions:
University of Maryland School of Dentistry
RZ Dental Group
Laurel Bush Family Dentistry
Dog trainer/facility: The Coventry School for Dogs & their People
Honorable mentions:
Sit Means Sit
Camp Bow Wow
Best Friends Fur Ever
Dog walker: The Coventry School for Dogs & their People
Honorable mentions:
Camp Bow Wow, Towson
See Spot Walk, Ashley Woodall
Dry cleaner: ZIPS Cleaners
Honorable mention:
Ruxton Cleaners
Eye/vision care: Seidenberg Protzko Eye Associates
Honorable mentions:
The Wilmer Eye Institute
University of Maryland Eye Associates
Baltimore Eye Center (tie)
GBMC Eye Center (tie)
Financial advisor: Williams Asset Management
Honorable mentions:
Harford Financial Group
The Kelly Group
Legacy Financial

Florist: Radebaugh Florist
Honorable mentions:
Richardson’s Florist
Fleurs D’Ave
The Modest Florist
Funeral home: Sol Levinson & Bros.
Honorable mentions:
Mitchell-Wiedefeld Funeral Home
Singleton Funeral & Cremation Services
Haight Funeral Home and Chapel
General practitioner: University of Maryland Family & Community Medicine
Honorable mentions:
Lifebridge Health
Alexa F. Faraday, GBMC
Danny and Gail Jones Primary Care

Hospital: The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Honorable mentions:
University of Maryland Medical Center
Greater Baltimore Medical Center
University of Maryland St. Joseph Medical Center
Insurance company: AAG Insurance Enterprises
Honorable mentions:
Baltimore Equitable Insurance
Greg Marsh, Allstate Insurance
Locksmith: Schott & Son Locksmith Service
Marina: Bowleys Marina
Honorable mentions:
Anchorage Marina
Jim’s Marine
Nail salon: Polished Nails
Honorable mention:
Enchanted Studios
Ob/gyn practice: Capital Women’s Care
Honorable mentions:
University of Maryland Women’s Health Center
Dr. Aimee Jacobs, Aurora Women’s Health
Hoffman and Associates
Orthodontist: University of Maryland School of Dentistry
Honorable mentions:
Bel Air Orthodontics
David Ross Orthodontics
OX Orthodontix
Pediatric dentist: University of Maryland School of Dentistry
Honorable mentions:
Growing Smiles
Joppa Green Pediatric Dentistry
Pediatric practice: University of Maryland Children’s Hospital
Honorable mentions:
University of Maryland Family & Community Medicine
Next Step Pediatrics
Pavilion Pediatrics
Pest control: Atlantic Pest Control
Honorable mentions:
Brody Brothers
EcoShield Pest Solutions
Pet day care: Wagging Lounge Dog Resort
Honorable mentions:
The Coventry School for Dogs & their People
Woofotel
Camp Bow Wow
Pet groomer: Wagging Lounge Dog Resort
Honorable mentions:
The Coventry School for Dogs & their People
Camp Bow Wow
Emily’s Mobile Grooming
Physical therapist: FX Physical Therapy
Honorable mentions:
Mandy Rose, Indigo Physiotherapy
University of Maryland Orthopaedics
Towson Orthopaedic Associates
Tax preparer: Friedman & Associates
Urgent care: Patient First
Honorable mentions:
University of Maryland Urgent Care
MedStar Health Urgent Care
ExpressCare
Veterinary practice: Belvedere Veterinary Center
Honorable mentions:
Falls Road Animal Hospital
Cat and Dog Hospital of Columbia
Homeward Bound Veterinary Services
Editor’s note: Winners and honorable mentions were determined by popular vote. Readers were invited to nominate and vote online from April to May. The ballot and results are generated solely by readers’ votes. The Baltimore Sun does not take responsibility for the services offered or advertised by those listed.
More winners
Food & Drink
Personal Services
Arts & Entertainment
People & Media
Home & Garden
Lifestyles & Shopping
In The Baltimore Sun’s Best: Readers’ Choice 2025 poll, our readers voted on what’s best in the region, from wedding venues and roofers to pediatricians and hair salons. This year’s winners highlight people and businesses recognized for outstanding service and customer satisfaction over the last year.
The poll includes more than 550 winners in nearly 200 categories in six areas — Arts & Entertainment, Home & Garden, Food & Drink, Lifestyles & Shopping, Personal Services and People & Media.
More than 47,000 ballots were cast, cultivating a list of your favorite museums, pizza joints, boutiques, TV anchors, radio hosts and so much more.
Best Hardware store: Costello’s Ace Hardware
4167 Mountain Road, Pasadena. 410-437-4300. costellosace.com
Customer service puts this hardware store over the top, its manager says. That’s the nuts and bolts of it.
“If someone comes in with a broken plumbing part, or a faucet stem that’s not working, we have people with the experience to show them how to fix it, step by step,” said Brian Fleshman, who oversees a staff of 32 at Costello’s Ace Hardware. “We might spend an hour replacing a key fob in the parking lot. You can’t get help like that in big box stores.”
With 14,000 square feet of space, Costello’s is packed with paints, tools, pipes and wires. So are the chain stores. Here, the staff listens straight-faced (“You won’t believe what got flushed down the toilet”) and walks folks through each step of repairs.
Did the cat shred a screen? Did a ball bust a window? Bring them in for a fix.
“There’s a Home Depot two miles down the road, so good service is a must,” Fleshman said.
Barbecue grills are big sellers; ditto, the sauces and rubs that go with them. Garden supplies move briskly; there’s stuff for all ages, like in an old-time general store.
“Kids come in and head straight for the hot tubs,” the manager said. “We’re family-oriented here.”
Civic-minded, too. Costello’s donates products to community raffles and fundraisers, allowing chosen charities to select any item in the store worth up to $100 for their events.
There are new products to come, the manager says:
“We want to get some sporting goods in here, like fishing rods and tackle, because we’re only three miles from [the Patapsco River].”
After 42 years, the business hasn’t slowed.

“Stuff at home is always breaking,” Fleshman said. “That’s one thing that Amazon is not going to be able to conquer.”
Have a news tip? Contact Mike Klingaman at jklingaman@baltsun.com and 410-332-6456.
Cleaning service: Dave’s Cleaning Consultants
Honorable mentions:
Ivania’s Cleaning Service
Cornerstone Cleaning
Keona’s Cleaning and Janitorial Services
Electrician: Tim Kyle Company
Honorable mentions:
Haas & Sons Electric
Tag Electric
Fence installation: Fence & Deck Connection
Honorable mentions:
C & C Fencing Inc.
Freedom Fence & Deck
Mid-Atlantic Deck & Fence
Flooring and carpeting: Baltimore Floor Supply
Honorable mentions:
Lady Baltimore Floors
Fishman Flooring Solutions
Furniture store: Wolf Furniture
Honorable mentions:
Sofas ETC
Twin Brook Furniture
Mattress Firm
Garden center: Valley View Farms
Honorable mentions:
The Mill
Poor Boy’s Garden Center
Homestead Gardens
Handyman: Today’s Home Renovations
Honorable mention:
Rotondo Construction Company

Hardware store: Costello’s Ace Hardware
Honorable mentions:
Atlantic Tractor
ACE Hardware Canton
Falkenhans Hardware
Home staging: Kate Wunder Interiors
Honorable mention:
Studio A Staging
Homebuilder: Sage Homes
Honorable mentions:
Bob Ward Trademark Homes
Beazer Homes
Huskins Builders

HVAC repair: SM Mechanical
Honorable mentions:
Clarksville Heating and Air
Perry Hall Heating & Air Conditioning
AJ Michaels (tie)
Environmental System Associates (tie)
Interior design: Cornerstone Remodeling
Honorable mentions:
Kate Wunder Interiors
Home by Heather
Landscaper: TDH Landscaping
Honorable mentions:
Lazo Outdoors
The Stone Store
Bay Ridge Landscaping
Moving company: Von Paris Moving & Storage
Honorable mentions:
Making Moves
Childs Express
Painter: Malcolm Stoll
Plumbing: Clarksville Plumbing
Honorable mentions:
Apple Plumbing
Ken Griffin Plumbing Services
Real estate agent: Elisabeth Yeager, Homes and Farms Real Estate
Honorable mentions:
Kelsey Judge, Iron Valley Real Estate Charm City
Kelly Rumbaugh, Homes and Farms Real Estate
Dan McGhee, The Victory Team (tie)
Garceau Realty (tie)

Remodeling: Tar Heel Construction Group
Honorable mentions:
Cornerstone Remodeling
Clarksville Construction
Bearded Builders
Roofer: Tar Heel Construction Group
Honorable mentions:
Allied Remodeling
Cole Roofing
Badger Contracting
Rug cleaner: Kleenize Rug Cleaners
Honorable mention:
Borhani Rug Co.
Solar installation: Solar Energy World
Honorable mentions:
Maryland Solar Solutions
American Sentry Solar
Editor’s note: Winners and honorable mentions were determined by popular vote. Readers were invited to nominate and vote online from April to May. The ballot and results are generated solely by readers’ votes. The Baltimore Sun does not take responsibility for the services offered or advertised by those listed.
More winners
Food & Drink
Personal Services
Arts & Entertainment
People & Media
Home & Garden
Lifestyles & Shopping
In The Baltimore Sun’s Best: Readers’ Choice 2025 poll, our readers voted on what’s best in the region, from wedding venues and roofers to pediatricians and hair salons. This year’s winners highlight people and businesses recognized for outstanding service and customer satisfaction over the last year.
The poll includes more than 550 winners in nearly 200 categories in six areas — Arts & Entertainment, Home & Garden, Food & Drink, Lifestyles & Shopping, Personal Services and People & Media.
More than 47,000 ballots were cast, cultivating a list of your favorite museums, pizza joints, boutiques, TV anchors, radio hosts and so much more.
Best Meteorologist: Justin Berk
justinweather.com
After years in television broadcasting as a meteorologist, Justin Berk has managed to navigate the emerging online and social media space, delivering weather news to millions in the Maryland region.
Berk took the online space by storm, building a platform where he shares forecasts, weather information and unique tidbits throughout the day, uplifting media content from others, too. He sticks to a schedule, with his first post of the day hitting the web by about 6:30 a.m., and holds himself with an air of humility and accountability.
“If there’s anything that I can see, that I can help in my way, my twist, my take, my version of presenting the weather to help people prepare for their stuff, then I feel like I’ve accomplished something,” he said.
Getting the weather “bug” as a child in New York eventually led him to a career on TV, and then to online, in schools and as a weather consultant or adjunct professor. But in building his platform, he’s also been able to focus on the “greater good” through a nonprofit for children’s oncology that he leads, and a trek he hikes and bikes each summer from Wisp Resort to Ocean City, where he honors one child’s story each day.
No one is perfect when predicting the future, Berk said. Whether he gets a forecast right or it’s not quite accurate, he follows the lessons he teaches his son’s baseball team: to be proud and humble when doing something well, because that might not happen all the time.
“And there’s going to be a next time when I don’t hit the forecast right, but I will always go back and look at what happened and try to learn from it,” Berk said. “And that’s the kind of information I share online.”
Have a news tip? Contact Kiersten Hacker at khacker@baltsun.com or @KierstenHacker on X.
Activist: Frank Neighoff, Chesapeake Bay Association
Honorable mentions:
Erricka Bridgeford, Baltimore Peace Movement
Terence O. Hanley, Harford County Parks & Recreation
Juanita Cage Lewis, MD Department of Housing
Reena Shah, MD Access to Justice
Author: Jessica Correnti
Honorable mentions:
C. L. Merklinger
Tom Ingegno
Sara Goodman Confino
Clergyperson: Rabbi Steven Schwartz, Beth El Congregation
Honorable mentions:
Father John Bilenki, Mount Saint Joseph High School
Rabbi Daniel Burg, Beth Am Synagogue
Pastor Rev Ryan E. Spence, New Horizon Baptist Church
College professor: Stacy Knight, Towson University
DJ: Intern John
Honorable mentions:
DJ Steezy
DJ Shay Shanae Chambers
DJ Mike On The Mic
Instagram account: @internjohnradio
Honorable mentions:
@shelbysos
@BaltimoreFoodScene
@calverthallcollege
Meteorologist: Justin Berk
Honorable mention:
Jasmine Lomax, Fox45

Oriole: Gunnar Henderson
Honorable mentions:
Cedric Mullins
Colton Cowser
Personal trainer: Wendy Abboud, Club Pilates
Honorable mentions:
Joshua Buchbinder, Brick Bodies
Rachel Brenowitz, BodyByBren Fitness
Heather Rockhill, Snap Fitness Fallston
Podcast: The Thought Shower
Honorable mentions:
Crisis on Infinite Podcasts
Healthy Living by Giant
Politician/government: Tony Giangiordano, Harford County Council
Honorable mentions:
Zeke Cohen, Baltimore City Council President
Bob Cassilly, Harford County County Executive
Radio host: Intern John, Z104.3
Honorable mentions:
Greg Carpenter, 101.9
Shelby Sos, Z104.3
Radio station: Z104.3 Baltimore
Honorable mentions:
101.9 FM Baltimore
WYPR 88.1 FM Baltimore
WTMD 89.7 FM Baltimore

Raven: Lamar Jackson
Honorable mention:
Zay Flowers
School principal: Andy Moore, Calvert Hall College High School
Honorable mentions:
Brad Spence, Havre de Grace High School
Chris Hughes, Garrison Forest
Edward Trusty Jr., The St Paul’s School for Boys
Stage actor: Megan Anderson, Everyman Theatre
Visual artist: Rebecca Scheuerman
Honorable mentions:
Reed Bmore
Charlotte Hager
Sonny Lacey
Editor’s note: Winners and honorable mentions were determined by popular vote. Readers were invited to nominate and vote online from April to May. The ballot and results are generated solely by readers’ votes. The Baltimore Sun does not take responsibility for the services offered or advertised by those listed.
More winners
Food & Drink
Personal Services
Arts & Entertainment
People & Media
Home & Garden
Lifestyles & Shopping
In The Baltimore Sun’s Best: Readers’ Choice 2025 poll, our readers voted on what’s best in the region, from wedding venues and roofers to pediatricians and hair salons. This year’s winners highlight people and businesses recognized for outstanding service and customer satisfaction over the last year.
The poll includes more than 550 winners in nearly 200 categories in six areas — Arts & Entertainment, Home & Garden, Food & Drink, Lifestyles & Shopping, Personal Services and People & Media.
More than 47,000 ballots were cast, cultivating a list of your favorite museums, pizza joints, boutiques, TV anchors, radio hosts and so much more.
Best Bakery: Woodlea Bakery
4905 Belair Road, Baltimore. 410-488-7717. woodleabakery.com.
Eighty-three years ago, this shop sold its first doughnuts. The kitchen has been bustling ever since, baking buns, breads and birthday cakes from scratch for its devotees, some of whom have been coming almost from the start.
“Every year, we make a couple of birthday cakes for [centenarians],” said Charles Hergenroeder, whose family opened the bakery on this spot during World War II and has owned it for four generations (a second Woodlea opened in Bel Air in 2020). That the shop has indulged families for decades speaks to its constancy.
“People tell us, ‘I used to go to church down the road on Sundays and always came in here after for a doughnut,’ ” the owner said. “Or they’ll say, ‘We got every one of our kids’ birthday cakes here, and now we’re getting her wedding cake.’ It’s cool to have a following.”
What’s the draw? Strawberry shortcakes, chocolate honey-dipped doughnuts and tasty danish (apple, cheese and lemon). Customers swear by the peach cake; all fruit comes from local orchards. Some of the goodies don’t make it off the premises.
“I’ve seen guys eating cupcakes on their way out the door,” said Hergenroeder, 33.
Special orders test Woodlea’s mettle: Its staff of 38 has cranked out everything from two-foot sub rolls to a 10-tier wedding cake. Years ago, the director of a film being shot in Baltimore sought the bakery’s help: One scene called for an actor to eat a lump of coal, or facsimile thereof. Woodlea produced a yummy meringue cookie, colored black.
One perk of the job is dealing with an upbeat clientele, Hergenroeder said:
“The good thing about running a bakery is that people don’t come here because they need to. We’re not the dentist or the auto repair shop. People come because they’re happy and they want a treat. They’re in a good mood when they get here.”
And, presumably, when they leave.
Have a news tip? Contact Mike Klingaman at jklingaman@baltsun.com and 410-332-6456.
Asian: Peter Chang Baltimore
Honorable mentions:
Spice and Dice
Azumi
Red Pepper Sichuan Bistro

Bakery: Woodlea Bakery
Honorable mentions:
Cake By Jason Hinsley
Towson Hot Bagel
Dangerously Delicious Pies
Barbecue: Andy Nelson’s
Honorable mentions:
Boog’s BBQ
Bar-B-Q Pit
KOHO
Bartender: Marty, Ryleigh’s Oyster
Honorable mentions:
Nikkea Turner, Rocksalt Grille
Carlos, Maximon
Rodney Henry, Dangerously Delicious HQ-Test Kitchen-BAR
Breakfast/brunch: Miss Shirley’s Cafe
Honorable mentions:
Blue Moon Cafe
Towson Hot Bagel (THB)
Easy Like Sunday
Brewery: Independent Brewing Co.
Honorable mentions:
Union Brewery
Heavy Seas
Peabody Heights
Burger: Kooper’s Tavern
Honorable mentions:
Abbey Burger
Clark Burger
Fuzzies Burgers
Caterer: Liberatore’s Bel Air
Honorable mentions:
Nick’s Fish House
Beefalo Bob’s
Michael’s Cafe, White Marsh
Caribbean: Chef Bobby D’s Restaurant
Chef: Tony Minadakis, Jimmy’s Famous Seafood
Honorable mentions:
Julian Marucci, Tagliata
Zuri Coles, Miss Shirley’s Cafe
Andy Thomas, Schola

Chicken box: Royal Farms
Honorable mentions:
Park’s Fried Chicken
The Original Chicken Box
Chinese: Joey Chu
Honorable mentions:
Chopstix Gourmet
Red Pepper Sichuan Bistro
Luk Fu
Cocktails: Nick’s Fish House
Honorable mentions:
Bluebird Cocktail Room
WC Harlan
Thames Street Oyster House (tie)
The Elk Room (tie)
Coffee: Zeke’s Coffee
Honorable mentions:
Coffee Coffee
Cafe De Leon
Pitango
Crabcake: Pappas Restaurant & Sports Bar
Honorable mentions:
Koco’s Pub
G & M Restaurant
Box Hill Pizzeria and Crab Cakes
Deli: Attman’s Delicatessen
Honorable mentions:
Lenny’s Delicatessen
Ravage Deli
Harbor East Delicatessen & Pizzeria
Dessert: Vaccaro’s Italian Pastry
Honorable mentions:
Baltimore Bomb, Dangerously Delicious
Tagliata

Diner: Double T Diner
Honorable mentions:
Pete’s Grille
Nostalgia Diner
Distillery: Baltimore Spirits Co.
Ethiopian: Dukem Ethiopian Restaurant
Honorable mention:
Tabor Ethiopian Restaurant
Farmers’ market: Pennsylvania Dutch Market
Honorable mentions:
32nd Street Farmers Market
Anne Arundel County Farmers’ Market
Farmers’ market stand: George’s Farm Market
Honorable mention:
Zook’s Family Pretzels
Food hall: R House
Honorable mentions:
Cross Street Market
Belvedere Square
Food truck: Mr. Souvlaki Food Truck
Honorable mentions:
Fuzzies Burgers
Kooper’s Chowhound
Top Nach
Gluten-free: Miss Shirley’s Cafe
Honorable mentions:
Sweet 27
Alexander’s
Happy hour: Claddagh Pub
Honorable mentions:
Birroteca
Tagliata
Michael’s Cafe, White Marsh
Ice cream: Taharka Brothers
Honorable mentions:
Prigel Family Creamery
Bmore Licks
Cold Stone Creamery
Indian: Harbor Tandoor
Honorable mentions:
Namaste
Mint Leaf
Italian: Liberatore’s Bel Air
Honorable mentions:
Amicci’s of Little Italy
Tagliata
Vinny’s Italian Cafe
Japanese: Azumi
Honorable mentions:
Sushi Hana
Arigato Hibachi
Umai Sushi House
Korean: Motte Restaurant
Latin: Taco Love Grill
Honorable mentions:
El Gran Pollo
Maximón
JesseJay’s Latin Inspired Kitchen
Lunch: Frank’s Pizza & Pasta
Honorable mentions:
Kooper’s Tavern
Koco’s Pub
Miss Shirley’s Cafe
Mediterranean: Cava
Honorable mentions:
Ouzo Bay
Yasou Greek Bistro
Estiatorio Plaka

Outdoor dining: Nick’s Fish House
Honorable mentions:
The Oregon Grille
The Choptank
Miss Shirley’s Cafe
Pizza: Frank’s Pizza and Pasta
Honorable mentions:
Ledo Pizza
Underground Pizza Co.
Maria’s
Ramen: Toki Underground
Raw bar: Nick’s Fish House and Ryleigh’s Oyster (tie)
Honorable mentions:
Lib’s Grill Perry Hall
Thames Street Oyster House
Snowball: Icy Delights
Soul food: Granny’s
Honorable mention:
The Reserve Restaurant
Soup: Soup’s On
Honorable mention:
Monarque

Steamed crabs: Conrad’s Seafood
Honorable mentions:
Nick’s Fish House
Ocean Pride
LP Steamers
Taco: Taco Love Grill
Honorable mentions:
La Tolteca
Clavel
Papi’s Tacos
Tea house: Emma’s Tea Spot
Honorable mentions:
Baltimore Tea and Coffee
Cuples Tea House
Thai: Spice and Dice
Vegan: Land of Kush
Honorable mention:
Hue Cafe & Apothecary
View: Nick’s Fish House
Honorable mentions:
Bygone
Barcocina
McFaul’s Ironhorse Tavern
Wedding cake: Sugar Bakers
Honorable mention:
Graul’s Market
Wine list: The Prime Rib
Honorable mention:
Tagliata
Wings: Kislings Tavern
Honorable mentions:
iBar
State Fare
The Local Fry
Editor’s note: Winners and honorable mentions were determined by popular vote. Readers were invited to nominate and vote online from April to May. The ballot and results are generated solely by readers’ votes. The Baltimore Sun does not take responsibility for the services offered or advertised by those listed.
More winners
Food & Drink
Personal Services
Arts & Entertainment
People & Media
Home & Garden
Lifestyles & Shopping
In The Baltimore Sun’s Best: Readers’ Choice 2025 poll, our readers voted on what’s best in the region, from wedding venues and roofers to pediatricians and hair salons. This year’s winners highlight people and businesses recognized for outstanding service and customer satisfaction over the last year.
The poll includes more than 550 winners in nearly 200 categories in six areas — Arts & Entertainment, Home & Garden, Food & Drink, Lifestyles & Shopping, Personal Services and People & Media.
More than 47,000 ballots were cast, cultivating a list of your favorite museums, pizza joints, boutiques, TV anchors, radio hosts and so much more.
Best Tourist attraction: National Aquarium
501 E. Pratt St. 410-576-3800. aqua.org
There’s something fishy about the numbers. Last year, 1.3 million people visited the National Aquarium, eager to see the sharks, dolphins and other critters that call it home. In August, the venue logged its 60 millionth guest as one of America’s foremost displays of marine exhibits — from the barramundi, an Asian sea bass that changes sex as it grows, to the Australian lungfish, whose ancestral DNA harks back more than 400 million years.
Here, visitors with otherwise short attention spans may gaze at the watery offerings for hours, giggling at the antics of Atlantic puffins, gasping at the sight of blacktip reef sharks and basking in the biodiversity of the 13,000 organisms that have captivated crowds for 44 years.
“We’re always wiping nose prints and fingerprints off the glass, and not just from kids,” said Emma Wesoloski, the Aquarium’s vice president of marketing. “That speaks to the power of water, and to the animals that live there. People use [their visit] as a time to slow down, to not be on their phones. They have ‘zen moments’ here.”
Routinely, Wesoloski said, the aquarium draws out-of-towners, in Baltimore on business, seeking respites from their work.

“They take time away from the hustle and bustle of their everyday lives,” she said. 80% of visitors hail from outside the Baltimore area, and their habitats are as far-reaching as those of the animals and plants themselves.
A favorite attraction is the jellyfish exhibit, a hands-on display of nine alien-like jellies swimming in a touch pool, along with sting rays and horseshoe crabs.
“People come and fall in love with our animals,” Wesoloski said. Also, with each other. Couples hold engagement parties at the aquarium where, in a tank at the Atlantic Coral Reef exhibit, amid the eels, sharks and turtles, a diver will tap on the glass and hold up a sign from the groom-to-be asking, “Will you marry me?”
Have a news tip? Contact Mike Klingaman at jklingaman@baltsun.com and 410-332-6456.
Bowling: Greenmount Bowl
Honorable mentions:
Parkville Lanes
Perry Hall Lanes
Casino: Live! Casino & Hotel Maryland
Honorable mention:
Horseshoe Casino Baltimore
Charity/nonprofit: Greater North Point Association
Honorable mentions:
Chesapeake Bay Association
Meals on Wheels
Helping Up Mission

College/university: Towson University
Honorable mentions:
University of Maryland, College Park
Loyola University Maryland
Harford Community College
Dog park: Locust Point Dog Park at Latrobe Park
Gallery: Baltimore Museum of Art
Honorable mentions:
Walter’s Art Museum
American Visionary Arts
The Baltimore Art Gallery
Golf course: Mountain Branch Golf Club
Honorable mentions:
Eagle’s Nest Country Club
Bay Hills Golf Club
Museum: B&O Railroad Museum
Honorable mentions:
Baltimore Museum of Art
American Visionary Arts
The Walters Art Museum

Park: Sherwood Gardens
Honorable mentions:
Patterson Park
Cromwell Valley Park
Riverside Park
Private school: Loyola Blakefield
Honorable mentions:
Calvert Hall College High School
Mount Saint Joseph High School
The John Carroll School
Public school: Hereford High School
Honorable mentions:
George Washington Carver Center for Arts and Technology
Baltimore School for the Arts
Centennial High School
Suburb: Columbia
Honorable mentions:
Parkville
Bowleys Quarters
Pasadena
Theater company: Hippodrome Theatre at the France-Merrick Performing Arts Center
Honorable mentions:
Baltimore Center Stage
Toby’s Dinner Theatre
Everyman Theatre
Tourist attraction: The National Aquarium
Honorable mentions:
Fort McHenry
CFG Bank Arena
Live! Casino & Hotel Maryland
Wedding venue: GreyRock Mansion and The Liriodendron Mansion (tie)
Honorable mentions:
Rockfield Manor
Padonia Park
Overhills Mansion (tie)
The Hall at Live! Casino (tie)
Editor’s note: Winners and honorable mentions were determined by popular vote. Readers were invited to nominate and vote online from April to May. The ballot and results are generated solely by readers’ votes. The Baltimore Sun does not take responsibility for the services offered or advertised by those listed.
More winners
Food & Drink
Personal Services
Arts & Entertainment
People & Media
Home & Garden
Lifestyles & Shopping
Voting for The Baltimore Sun’s Best 2025 Readers’ Choice contest closes at 5 p.m. May 16.
Results will appear online and in print in June at baltimoresun.com.
Thanks for your participation.
Editor’s note: The nominations and results are generated solely by readers’ votes. Winners and honorable mentions (listed alphabetically) are determined by popular vote. The Baltimore Sun does not take responsibility for the services offered or advertised by those listed.
]]>The Most Rev. Bruce Lewandowski made his mark on Baltimore’s Catholic community by serving as pastor of its largest Spanish-speaking church, Sacred Heart of Jesus-Sagrado Corazon de Jesus Parish in Highlandtown, amid a boom in the city’s Latino population between 2016 and 2021. He also helped direct the archdiocese’s historic realignment plan, Seek the City to Come, from 2022 through last year.
“There is so much I love about the Church of Baltimore,” Lewandowski, 57, said in a statement Tuesday. “I will especially miss the Hispanic community. From the start, they welcomed me as one of their own. We’ve been through so much together. It will be hard to leave them.”
The Most Rev. William E. Lori, the archbishop of Baltimore, made it clear he would miss his second-in-command, a Redemptorist priest who grew up on a farm in rural Lima, Ohio.
“As Auxiliary Bishop, he preached the Gospel far and wide with zeal and effectiveness, greatly strengthened ministry to and among our growing Hispanic community and effectively conducted the Seek to City to Come parish realignment process – and much more,” Lori said in a statement.
“Fluent in Spanish and Portuguese, Bishop Bruce will bring his many gifts, his energy, and his pastoral heart to the People of God in the Providence Diocese.”
Lewandowski will become the tenth bishop of the New England diocese, which serves the entire state of Rhode Island. The diocese includes more than 160 churches, schools and other ministries and features a rapidly growing Hispanic population.
Providence’s leadership seat has been vacant since October 2024, when Bishop Richard Henning became the archbishop of Boston.
Before coming to Baltimore, Lewandowski served as a priest, pastor and vicar in New York, the West Indies and Pennsylvania.
Francis named Lewandowski to the position of auxiliary bishop amid the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, even as the priest was advocating for help for the city’s Spanish-speaking communities and partnering with the city health department and Johns Hopkins Hospital to operate free testing sites at Sacred Heart of Jesus.
Seek the City to Come, a process that drew on feedback from parishioners, clerics and parish leaders, cut the number of parishes in Baltimore and nearby communities from 61 to 23 amid losses in Mass attendance and donations, as well as high maintenance costs, mostly through closures and mergers. Most of the mergers took place in late 2024.
Have a news tip? Contact Jonathan M. Pitts at jonpitts@baltsun.com.
]]>Nominations for The Baltimore Sun’s Best 2025 Readers’ Choice contest close at 5 p.m. April 11.
Voting will take place from 9 a.m. April 28 to 5 p.m. May 16.
Results will appear online and in print in June at baltimoresun.com/best.
Thanks for your participation.
Editor’s note: The nominations and results are generated solely by readers’ votes. Winners and honorable mentions (listed alphabetically) are determined by popular vote. The Baltimore Sun does not take responsibility for the services offered or advertised by those listed.
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