A fair argument, but enough to keep TC from being the number one foodie town?
And us Traverse City residents will be surprised to see the population listed as 142,000.
See: Best Midwest Food Towns: #2 Traverse City: an established food reputation

Northern Michigan, especially Traverse City, is an emerging culinary capital. This web site is to let the secret out.
San Francisco Chronicle Wine Competition
* Gold - Hard Cider
* Bronze - 2007 Pinot Gris
* Bronze - 2007 Reserve Chardonnay
Finger Lakes International Wine Competition
* Gold - 2008 Nouveau Pinot Noir Rosé
* Gold - 2008 Select-Harvest Riesling
* Silver - 2007 Cabernet Franc
* Silver - 2008 Pinot Gris
* Silver - 2008 Semi-Dry Riesling
* Bronze - 2008 Unwooded Chardonnay
Pacific Rim International Wine Competition
* Best of Class - 2008 Pinot Noir Rosé
* Gold - 2007 Reserve Chardonnay
* Gold - Peach Crémant
* Silver - 2008 Pinot Gris
* Silver - 2008 Select-Harvest Riesling
* Silver - 2008 Semi-Dry Riesling
* Silver - 2008 Unwooded Chardonnay
When the Bay freezes, nearby land loses the open water's moderating influence on temperature. Nighttime temperatures can quickly plummet, killing buds for the upcoming growing season.
Craig Cunningham, owner of Cunningham Viticultural Service, told MichWine that vineyard samples from the "cold belt" west of Lake Leelanau showed "100% damage" to Chardonnay, Riesling and Merlot buds. Recording devices in the vineyard indicated temperatures tumbled to lows of -10 to -14 for three consecutive nights.
The winery, at the Grand Traverse Commons, will also use beeswax to seal its bottles.
The winery plans to sell one-liter, refillable "Little Green Jug" growlers. Customers can also bring in their own bottles...
...On tap, Left Food Charley will start with Pinot Grigio and Riesling and a hard cider.
We said, 'Where do we want to live?' Up north. 'What do we want to do?' Work outside." And the prospect of starting a winery, where their sons also could work if they wished, was enticing.
The burgers at the Cherry Hut restaurant in Beulah, Mich., are a hit with customers. But these aren't ordinary hamburgers. Every summer, when tourists come to sample the state's bumper crop of cherries, the restaurant's co-owner Andy Case starts taking orders for the restaurant's popular burger. After broiling the patties in the kitchen, he slides them onto a bun and tops them with fixings. It's in this moment, before the first bite, that customers stir with anticipation because the Cherry Hut is home to an unlikely specialty – the cherry burger.
The burgers are filled with tart, or sour, cherries grown in northern Michigan – the cherry capital of the world.
Although people come to the Cherry Hut for the restaurant's cherry pies, the cherry burger has become a popular seller and a conversation starter. Mr. Case says he probably sells more cherry burgers than regular burgers. "People want to be more health conscious," he says. The cherry burger is "tasty, juicy, healthier."
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12 FROM 5-9 PM
Join us at TASTES of Black Star Farms for the Village at Grand Traverse Commons Holiday Open House. Enjoy complimentary wine tasting and get creative with a paint your own wine stopper - a perfect stocking stuffer!