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Main Street Bakery closes after three decades

Patrick Fort
/
Aspen Public Radio

 
Owner Bill Dinsmoor sat at the community table Wednesday, taking in the sights and sounds of his last week in business. The Main Street Bakery and Cafe closes today after 27 years in business.

Alongside Dinsmoor is Anthony Rizzuto. He has been coming to the little shop on the corner for nearly his entire life. When he was a kid, he ran up a huge bill for his dad through the course of a month.

 

“I think there were like 200 and something donuts that I had consumed in a one-month time period, cause I was basically taking the whole second grade and buying them all donuts,” Rizzuto said. “I didn’t realize that a house account actually charges money.”

Credit Patrick Fort / Aspen Public Radio
/
Aspen Public Radio
Bill Dinsmoor, owner of the restaurant.

Dinsmoor had been looking for someone to buy the restaurant business as his retirement loomed, but there were no takers. The bakery has served as the community’s gathering place for nearly three decades. So it’s memories, like Rizzuto’s, that patrons will be able to hold on to, when the bakery closes at the end of today.

Patrick Fort grew up in the suburbs of Pittsburgh, nurturing a love for ice hockey and deli sandwiches. After moving to Colorado in 2010 to attend the University of Colorado to study music, Patrick discovered his love for journalism. In 2013, Patrick created and hosted the award-winning radio program Colorado Stories, a news program that covered CU and the surrounding community. An avid mountain and road cyclist, Patrick also referees youth ice hockey. He loves '60s pop bands and and trying new recipes ranging from milk-braised carnitas to flourless cakes.
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