For a hearty Midwestern appetite, Ann Arbor

Ann Arbor is known for a lot of things. This time it’s food.Excerpt:ANN ARBOR, Mich. — The first time I heard that people lived in Orlando, I couldn’t shake the idea: Where would such people sleep? The Magic Kingdom? There’s a government? A mayor who doesn’t wear a mouse head and pose for pictures?This is an occupied territory. Not a city.To that list, add Ann Arbor.If you’ve ever lived in this bucolic college town (population 114,000), gone to school here (at the University of Michigan), worked here (home to Domino’s Pizza and Borders world headquarters) or dreamed of living here (Ann Arbor routinely lands on those Best Places To Live lists), you might take umbrage — but never has a nice Midwestern town been so dominated by a delicatessen.Read the rest of the story here.

Ann Arbor is known for a lot of things. This time it’s food.

Excerpt:

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — The first time I heard that people lived in Orlando, I couldn’t shake the idea: Where would such people sleep? The Magic Kingdom? There’s a government? A mayor who doesn’t wear a mouse head and pose for pictures?

This is an occupied territory. Not a city.

To that list, add Ann Arbor.

If you’ve ever lived in this bucolic college town (population 114,000), gone to school here (at the University of Michigan), worked here (home to Domino’s Pizza and Borders world headquarters) or dreamed of living here (Ann Arbor routinely lands on those Best Places To Live lists), you might take umbrage — but never has a nice Midwestern town been so dominated by a delicatessen.

Read the rest of the story here.

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