2024 Taste of Minnesota will be back in downtown Minneapolis

The food festival is officially set for July 6 and 7 on Nicollet Mall.

January 24, 2024 at 1:58AM
The crowd sings "Hey Jude" along with the Fabulous Armadillo's during their performance at the Taste of Minnesota in Minneapolis Sunday afternoon. This is the two day festival's first year back since 2015 and the first time in Minneapolis.
The crowd sang "Hey Jude" along with the Fabulous Armadillos during their performance at the Taste of Minnesota in Minneapolis this summer as the two day festival returned for the first time since 2015 and made its Minneapolis debut. (Angelina Katsanis/Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Taste of Minnesota has made it official: It will return to downtown Minneapolis in 2024 after moving around and even disappearing for a few years.

The big food and music festival, which traditionally revolved around Independence Day, is set for July 6 and 7 on Nicollet Mall.

Some 100,000 attended last year’s free two-day event, which took place on a three-block stretch of Nicollet Mall in downtown Minneapolis and was judged a hit by attendees and supporters alike.

Taste of Minnesota had been dormant for seven years. First staged in 1983 on the grounds of the State Capitol in St. Paul, the event ultimately became the state’s second-largest festival, behind only the State Fair. It moved to St. Paul’s Harriet Island in 2003. Taste eventually declared bankruptcy. It emerged briefly in Waconia, in Carver County, in 2014 and 2015.

The Legislature allocated a $1.8 million state tourism grant to help stage the event and some of that money could apply to this year’s event too.

No major crimes were reported during last year’s Taste — an important marker for Minneapolis boosters hoping to curb the perception that downtown remains troubled since the pandemic and wanting to reinvent the city’s core as a destination for fun.

Last year’s festival offered concerts, goods ranging from art to marijuana pipes, and eats from caterers, restaurants and food trucks.

Staff writers Dave Orrick and Susan Du contributed to this article.

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