Let me get this straight. Before cheap refrigeration was invented, companies would hire men to "harvest" ice off Minnesota lakes to keep food and beer cold? That is crazy, I say!
I bring this random fact to your attention only because I was forced to do a little bit of homework after visiting the brand-new Icehouse last week. The bar's name, you see, is an allusion to its building's original purpose more than a century ago. Icehouse is located in a portion of what used to be Cedar Lake Ice & Fuel Co. (Cedar Lake being the ice harvesting locale, I presume).
OK, history lesson over.
Icehouse is a part of a mini-resurgence happening at 26th and Nicollet. It joins Eat Street Social, Vertical Endeavors, a new Dunn Bros. and the soon-to-open Azia Kitchen. The whole corner has that new-car smell.
Icehouse arrived last week as a triple threat: a foodie destination, a cocktail den and Eat Street's first bona fide music club. The owners are calling it a "live music restaurant," a rare breed in the Twin Cities. I would place Icehouse somewhere between the more intimate Aster Cafe and the more affluent Dakota Jazz Club.
The two guys running the show are Matt Bickford and Brian Liebeck. Bickford is the owner of the North Loop sandwich emporium Be'Wiched (his partner there, Mike Ryan, is also an owner at Icehouse). Liebeck is known in the music scene as an expert lighting designer. They've assembled a team of bar scene all-stars, chief among them bartender demigod Johnny Michaels and former Turf Club ringleader Dave Wiegardt.
The venue is virtually unrecognizable from its last incarnation (Sindbad's Middle-Eastern deli). The interior was gutted to reveal its ice factory origins, complete with rusty patina, cracked brick walls and soaring ceilings. Bickford and Liebeck loved the rawness.
"We just didn't want to screw it up," Bickford said.