Why Maria’s Pasta Shop Will Always Be a Utica Staple


Some places don’t need flashy signs or trends to stay relevant they just keep doing things the right way. Maria’s Pasta Shop in Utica is one of those places.

Maria’s isn’t a sit-down restaurant. It’s better than that. It’s the kind of place you stop at on your way home, knowing dinner is already taken care of and knowing it’s going to be good. Homemade pasta, sauces, and prepared Italian dishes made with care, the way food is supposed to be made.

This shop has been a part of the Utica community for years, and you can feel that the moment you walk in. It’s a true local staple the kind of place families rely on for weeknight meals, Sunday traditions, and special occasions. No shortcuts. No fuss. Just really solid, comforting Italian food.

Personally, I can’t say enough about the lobster ravioli, hands down my favorite. Rich, flavorful, and perfectly done every time. The stuffed breads are another must have. Warm, hearty, and dangerously easy to eat more than you planned. You have choices like sausage, lasagna, spinach, and more. I ordered them for Christmas. Everyone went berserk over them.

And next on my list? Their daily “bullets.” Each day of the week features a different stuffed bullet, and I honestly can’t wait to try them. It’s little things like that rotating specials, traditions, consistency that make places like Maria’s feel special.

What really sets Maria’s apart is the homemade quality of their pasta. You can taste the difference immediately the texture, the freshness, the care behind it. This isn’t pasta that’s meant to sit on a shelf; it’s pasta made to be cooked, shared, and enjoyed. Every bite feels intentional, like someone actually took the time to get it right. It’s the kind of food that reminds you why homemade will always matter more than convenient.

In a world where everything seems rushed and mass-produced, Maria’s Pasta Shop is a reminder of what happens when food is made with pride and roots in the community. If you haven’t been, you’re missing out. And if you have you already know exactly what I mean.

You will not be dissapointed. I promise.

Maria’s Pasta Shop 2520 Oneida St, Utica, NY 13501 315-797-6835

When Students Slip Through the Cracks


There are many teachings and expectations in education that I struggle to fully wrap my head around. Education is supposed to be a systematic, regulated structure formats, frameworks, and standards we are expected to follow. Yet the reality is, not everything fits neatly into those boxes, and not every student does either.

I am a special education teacher in an alternative education school. Our school serves students from ten surrounding districts within our county. We work with students in grades 7 through 12, and the classified disabilities we support include emotional disturbance, learning disabilities, other health impairments (OHI), Tourette’s syndrome, and others.

Our special education classrooms are structured as 8:1:1, while our general education classes can include up to twelve students. We serve students with high-incidence disabilities in one program and students with low-incidence or more severe disabilities in another, based on instructional and support needs. These decisions are not arbitrary they are intentional, because the needs are real and complex.

Every facet of education matters. Curriculum matters. Standards matter. Data matters. But what matters just as much are the students sitting in those classrooms students who come in carrying trauma, instability, frustration, and often a long history of feeling misunderstood or dismissed.

And this is the part that weighs heavy.

If we, as educators, do not do a thorough job if we allow these students to slip through the cracks of the education system the impact does not end at graduation or aging out. These are the same students who are eventually sent out into the real world without the tools, coping skills, or supports they needed all along. The struggle doesn’t disappear; it just shifts. And when it does, it affects all of society.

Education is not just about passing classes or checking off requirements. For many of these students, school is the last structured support system they will have. It is where they learn how to regulate emotions, resolve conflict, communicate, and survive in a world that often isn’t built for them.

The Quiet Permission to Let Go


If you think about it, winter forces stillness. It’s something we have no control over, it simply is. The snow softens everything around us. It hides the letting go of the temporary, vibrant life we’re given in the spring and throughout the summer. But even this form of life gets tired. It grows weary of the heat, the wind, and the rainstorms.

The same goes for people. We get tired of the challenges life puts us through. The difference is, we can break those cycles. We have the ability to shelter ourselves from what damages us.

Protect yourself, and let go of the things, and the people that do you no justice. When you feel worn down or cornered, remember to protect yourself and your peace.