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Gustavo Cruz and Yuridiana Zaragoza with a tray of her tamales.

Yury's Kitchen Brings Traditional Oaxacan Food to Pittsfield

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Yury's Kitchen, located at 496 Tyler St., opened on Feb. 18 and began selling traditional Mexican dishes from Oaxaca as well as some American cuisine.
 
The owners, Yuridiana Zaragoza and Gustavo Cruz, are originally from Oaxaca and wanted to bring the culture and tradition to Berkshire County. 
 
Cruz's sister, Sheyla Cruz, who also works at the restaurant helped translate for this article.
 
"They wanted to share what is the tradition because it's not just food, it's a whole tradition so they wanted to share that with Berkshire County people so they can try technically how Oaxaca tastes," said Cruz.
 
Zaragoza moved to Berkshire County five years ago and started selling tamales from her house, hoping to one day open her own restaurant like her mom and grandmother before her. 
 
"They've been dedicated to the kitchen for a long time so it was a dream to open up their own," Gustavo Cruz said. 
 
Zaragoza said her customers wanted to have a place to go to enjoy more of her food. 
 
"When they started they only did delivery so a lot of other customers asked for a place and a place for them to come and have dinner and breakfast and so now that they have it they feel really happy and being here they say it makes them feel at home," Zaragoza said.
 
 Zaragoza said she is the third generation in her family to have a restaurant. 
 
"She especially feels really happy and proud of herself to have a restaurant here in the United States and her mom also has a restaurant in Oaxaca, Mexico," Zaragoza said. 
 
Yury's Kitchen not only has Mexican dishes but also some American favorites, as they wanted to make sure anyone could come to Yury's Kitchen and have options to enjoy.
 
"For their own experience when they go to a restaurant from their own experience one might want to have American food and the other one probably wants to have Mexican food so they said once they opened their restaurant they then will think about their customers and for them to have options," Cruz said. 
 
Yuridiana Zaragoza and Gustavo Cruz, who are married and have two kids, said their 9-year-old son said he feels famous now that the restaurant is up and running. 
 
"He's like really happy because a lot of people post them on social media and now he says that he's famous," Cruz said.
 
In the future they want to be able to open another restaurant that's bigger and where they can have social events. For this year they hope to win Best of the Berkshires for Mexican food. 
 
Yury's Kitchen is closed on Wednesdays but open Monday through Saturday from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. closing at 7 p.m. on Sundays. They serve American breakfast from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. and Mexican dishes noon to 8 p.m. Find the menu and more information on their Facebook page

Tags: new business,   mexican food,   restaurants,   

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Pittsfield Works to Update Open Space & Recreation Plan

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass.— The city's Open Space and Recreation Plan is due for an update to guide the next five years.

Parks, Open Space, and Natural Resources Manager James McGrath and Seth Jenkins, senior planner at the Berkshire Regional Planning Commission, have worked on the effort over the past year so that the city remains eligible for state grant funding. The last approved plan ran from 2019 to 2024.

"We want to make certain that our strategies are attainable and that we have a clear path of funding to get them implemented," McGrath told the Parks Commission on last week.

"Because there's nothing worse than sort of creating this excitement over something and then not having the resources to implement or not having the funding."

Open space and recreation plans are a tool communities use to plan for conservation and recreation needs and are reviewed by the Division of Conservation Services. Open spaces go beyond city parks, as preserves and land trusts, waterbodies, farms, forests, and more fall under that category.

A survey garnered nearly 300 responses last summer and results were presented during a public forum in October.  At the meeting last year, the most popular words attendees used to describe Pittsfield parks were "clean" and "beautiful" and nearly 60 percent of survey respondents want to see bathroom improvements.

"We heard a lot from folks in terms of satisfaction with the city's parks but also maybe some desires to see," Jenkins said.

"Some bathroom improvements, some security and lighting improvements, maybe some additional programming but for the most part, people sounded like they were happy. So now we're looking at the old plan, the 2017 plan, to say, 'Where are we with these goals that were in that plan? Are some of them maybe no longer necessary? Are some of them requiring an update? Are some of them needing a complete revision?"

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