Like its residents, the small businesses of Denver are pretty cool.
They're finding clever new ways to bring a unique, local flavor to the city's food, retail, and services businesses.
The aptly named Mile High City is also a pioneer, sparking debate and new ways of thinking about America's drug culture. On January 1 it became legal to buy marijuana in Colorado without a prescription, which has inspired a growing number of cannabis-friendly companies and services.
From food trucks to barbershops, Denver's laid-back attitude is exemplified in its small businesses.
Atomic Cowboy/Denver Biscuit Co./Fat Sully's Pizza
3237 E. Colfax Avenue and 141 S. Broadway
What it is: A split personality bar/biscuit joint/pizzeria.
Why it's cool: Satisfying all your needs under one roof, Atomic Cowboy opens at 8 a.m. and starts serving "Denver's Best Bloody Mary" until the moment they close. But from opening until 2 p.m., customers can also enjoy crazy biscuit creations made by their "morning personality," the Denver Biscuit Company.
Then from 11 a.m. until close they become Fat Sully's Pizza and serve ultra-large New York-style pies, while Atomic Cowboy's happy hour goes on from 4-7 p.m. Now operating from two locations in Denver, guests can enjoy all three personalities from each.
Denver Kush Club
2615 Welton Street
What it is: A marijuana retailer that makes customer service a priority.
Why it's cool: Established in 2009 as a medical marijuana dispensary, Denver Kush Club began also selling marijuana for recreational use beginning January 1. A line of customers was waiting on its "opening day" to peruse their 60+ strains of the plant, as well as apparel, vaporizers and pipes, and edibles that they sell to customers with attention and discretion. Denver Kush Club prides itself on customer service, and offers customers who make them their primary center a $35 store credit plus one $10 eighth per month.
EVOO Marketplace
1338 15th Street
What it is: A specialty store for olive oil aficionados.
Why it's cool: Rachael Ray must love this place. With additional locations in Littleton and Aspen, EVOO Marketplace is the spot in Denver to get premium, infused, and other specialty olive oils and vinegars. Many of their products are imported from the biggest olive-producing regions in the world, but others, like some of their vinegars, jams, chutneys, and tapenades, are locally made and delicious.
Hey PB&J
Follow them on Twitter for locations in Denver
What it is: A food truck that concocts odd peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.
Why it's cool: This big purple food truck is hard to miss and too irresistible to avoid. Hey PB&J sells grilled, gourmet peanut butter and jelly sandwiches that run from sweet to savory to spicy. Satisfy your craving for grade school lunches with the King sandwich — made with Applewood smoked bacon, clover honey, sliced bananas, and house-made peanut butter — or the more traditional Nutella Banana sandwich.
Humble Pie
300 Elati Street
What it is: A simple shop that perfects the craft of making pies.
Why it's cool: Winner of CBS Denver's top apple pie award, the Humble Pie Store has perfected its sweet and savory pies with recipes like the Classic Farm Chicken Pot Pie or the Western Slope Peach. Pies are available in regular and mini sizes, and some are gluten-free.
If you prefer your apple pie through a straw, try the delicious pie shake made from a slice of Humble Pie blended with Sweet Action ice cream.
Indyink
84 S. Broadway
What it is: A badass print and silkscreen shop.
Why it's cool: Not only does Indyink design and print original posters, clothing, glassware, and other promotional products for individuals and businesses, it also does custom embroidery work in a variety of cool designs and images. They specialize in the alternative and the badass, creating work that everyone from hipsters to skaters are proud to sport.
Linger
2030 W 30th Avenue
What it is: A mortuary-turned-multicultural restaurant.
Why it's cool: Housed inside a stylish, expansive room that used to be Olinger Mortuary, this small-plate-style restaurant is anything but a ghost town. Its knowledgeable waitstaff and chef-owner Justin Cucci set out to connect people through the diversity of food and culture. The result is an eclectic menu of "global street food," representing regional specialties in multiple continents. For a little worldliness, try the Mongolian BBQ duck bun, or shishito peppers paired with cheddar curds and an orange-habanero jam.
Little Man Ice Cream
2620 16th Street
What it is: A philanthropic ice cream shop.
Why it's cool: Inspired by vintage Coney Island hot dog-shaped stands, Little Man Ice Cream operates out of 28-foot-tall, 14,000-pound cream can. The owners ensure every sugary indulgence counts — for every scoop of ice cream purchased, Little Man matches it with a donated scoop of rice or beans to a community in need. They've given back more than $100,000 to date.
Mile High Organics
Online, based in Denver
What it is: America's first certified organic online grocer.
Why it's cool: Like Peapod or FreshDirect, Mile High Organics lets you pick your produce online and chill out on the couch while they arrange it to be delivered to your door. But unlike other online grocers, MHO is 100% organic and GMO-free — the first certified organic online grocer in the U.S.
MHO also tries to support local and sustainable food businesses whenever possible, and stocks many specialty food and household items so you can do all your shopping in one place.
My 420 Tours
1996 S. Cherry Street
What it is: A tour guide company that centers on marijuana-themed activities.
Why it's cool: My 420 Tours, the first devoted marijuana-themed tour operator in the U.S., arranges outings for participants to experience Colorado's renowned tourist attractions while high. Already 4,000 people have signed up for tours, which include visits with pot growers, chefs who cook with tobacco, and some of the dozens of shops in and around Denver where it’s now legal for anyone 21 or older to buy marijuana without a prescription.
Pink Tank
Follow them on Twitter for locations in Denver
What it is: A pink truck that spins new versions of traditional food cart creations.
Why it's cool: These aren't your standard food cart hot dogs and burgers — at Pink Tank inventions like "The F-bomb" (a hot dog with scrambled eggs, thick-cut bacon, cheddar cheese, and caramel-maple syrup on a French toast bun) are what you'll be getting. Pink Tank hopes to optimize the ultimate eating experience, which is partly where their truck comes in. The pink and black monster sports their mohawked robot logo, and throws flames more than five feet up in the air.
Progresh
9499 Washington Street #50, Thornton, CO
What it is: An indoor, no-snow-needed training center for skiers and snowboarders.
Why it's cool: On its synthetic foam "snow" cliffs with 10-foot drops and multiple drop-in platforms, Progresh offers classes and group activities for those looking to shred during the off-season. Customers who just want to wing it can ski or board on their own. The training center's best feature is perhaps the Progresh airbag, the first indoor action sports airbag in the country, which absorbs impacts and feels like "landing on a cloud."
Punch Bowl – Social Food & Drink
65 Broadway
What it is: A bar that doubles as an entertainment emporium.
Why it's cool: This cavernous bar, gastro-diner, coffee house, and entertainment and private party venue is open 'til 2 a.m. daily. Sip at a classic cocktail punch bowl while challenging your friends to bowling, shuffleboard, or video gaming. Apparently, it's also a great place to call it quits with your significant other — Denver Westward voted Punch Bowl the Best Breakup Restaurant of 2013.
Rockmount Ranch Wear
Headquartered at 1626 Wazee Street
What it is: A pioneering shop full of Western-style fashion.
Why it's cool: In cowboy country, Rockmount remains a symbol of how the West was "worn." In the 1940s, founder Jack A. Weil introduced the first commercially-made, Western-style shirts with snap fasteners — designed to offset obstacles presented by the ranch lifestyle — and is credited with popularizing the bolo tie. His distinctive shirts became a staple for celebrities such as Eric Clapton, Ronald Reagan, Elvis, Bruce Springsteen, and Paul McCartney, and they remain a staple of Western fashion today.
Snooze, an A.M. Eatery
Multiple locations
What it is: A sustainable breakfast and lunch-only restaurant.
Why it's cool: Snooze gives "green eggs and ham" new meaning. This retro-future-style diner recycles and composts more than 90% of its waste, works with farmers to create dishes from "real" food, and established partnerships with local government to improve efficiency. This sustainable eatery serves farm raised, free range, and local food products, and imports organic coffee from Guatemala every week.
Stranahan's Colorado Rockies
200 South Kalamath Street
What it is: A distillery that infuses the Rockies in its whiskey recipe.
Why it's cool: Colorado's first micro-distillery uses the purest, freshest ingredients from the top of the Rockies, such as crisp, clean water from the snow-packed peaks and mountain-grown barley. Stranahan's — the product of a chance meeting between a volunteer firefighter and a long-time liquor connoisseur whose barn caught fire — produces about five minutes worth of whiskey production made at some of the mass producing distilleries.
The 1Up
1925 Blake Street
What it is: A vintage arcade and bar.
Why it's cool: Opening its doors for business in 2011, this "barcade" packs the basement space nearly every night of the week, enticing gamers and foodies alike. The 1Up offers more than 45 classic arcade-style games as well as Skee-Ball, pinball, and sets of giant Jenga, and serves 14 beers from taps custom built into a classic arcade game.
The 1Up recently added 22 meticulously restored Donkey Kong machines to its collection, in anticipation of hosting its third annual "Kong Off," the Donkey Kong world championship.
The Wizard's Chest
230 Fillmore Street
What it is: A kooky magic and novelty shop.
Why it's cool: Inside the walls of the castle-like magic shop, visitors find a hands-on play environment full of games, puzzles, magic tricks, and costumes. It's a kitschy store perfect for gifts, but it's also a place that a kid (or a grown-up) could go and play for hours on end. And many days they can, as the shop hosts different game nights nearly seven days a week.
Voodoo Doughnut Mile High
1520 E. Colfax Avenue
What it is: An outlandish doughnut shop and wedding chapel.
Why it's cool: The people of Denver begged Voodoo Doughnut, the crazy-cool doughnut shop born out of Portland, Ore., to come to their city, and their prayers were recently answered. The new location had a soft opening in December and its grand opening earlier this month, and already people are raving about the intense flavors and oddball doughnut names. Like its Oregonian counterparts, the Denver location is also performing weddings on-site in the Voodoo Doughnut chapel.