Lots of Brooklyn changes this weekend.
What's happening this weekend in and around Park Slope.
Cattle were kept largely for milk and cheese, and although they were scarce at first, they reproduced prolifically in the Northeast. In fact, the Reverend John Cotton once remarked “milk and ministers were the only things cheap in New England.”
Top links, pics, and tweets from Thursday in this vibrant Brooklyn neighborhood. Curated by Park Slope Patch.
Moms with game prove kids shouldn't have all the fun.
Sister shop in Carroll Gardens still open.
Help your little one get a good start to the day with these easy-to-make, healthy morning meals.
Home of "original gentrifiers" up for sale.
A look at some of the headlines across the borough Thursday.
The Chocolate Room is moving, but owners grateful for chance to stay in Park Slope.
What's happening in and around Park Slope Thursday.
The abundance of meat in America was a major change in the diet of the early settlers. Rabbits and squirrels were available year-round nearly everywhere, plus deer and other large game in many regions.
New website features videos, footage from the destructive 1938 storm.
If cooking is your jam (and your peanut butter and your perfectly cooked steak dinner)...let us know!
Open blog a great place to sound off on all things road-related.
A look at four Brooklyn cheeseburgers to try out on this special day.
Quality usually comes with a hefty price tag when it comes to clothing, but resale and vintage shops can save your family big bucks on name-brand and one-of-a-kind items.
Join Mama Donna Henes, Urban Shaman, for her 2nd Annual Brooklyn Blessing of the Animals
Actress from new show Brooklyn Nine-Nine names Park Slope's Naidre's her favorite Brooklyn eatery.
Find homes for sale in the region on this page every week, from our partners at Zillow.
The Mayflower provisions were typical – brown biscuits and hard white crackers, oatmeal, and black-eyed peas, plus bacon, dried salted codfish and smoked herring for animal protein.