
Business Profile: Innovating dining
May 18—COLFAX — The smell of garlic sauteing on the stove permeated the dining room of Wild Ember Kitchen in Colfax at midday.
The staff was preparing garlic to season tacos the restaurant had planned for a special Cinco de Mayo dinner that evening.
The tacos are among the many dishes Colfax High School graduate Trevor Miller has developed for the restaurant with fellow chef and significant other Amanda Packer since the business's debut about a year ago.
"I don't like to lean toward anything specific," Miller said. "I just like to have freedom to do whatever food I would like. So that's what I like about the name. It doesn't make you think of any one thing."
Often that freedom leads him to put tacos on the menu. Street tacos ($18) with seared pork belly are one of the biggest sellers. They come in corn tortillas with cabbage, corn salsa, jalapenos, cotija (a type of cheese) and aji verde (a Peruvian sauce).
For Cinco de Mayo, Miller was trying a new taco with beef tongue, curious to see how it would be received.
"We've got a pretty good following," he said. "People come here and try new things they might not try anywhere else because they know it's going to be good."
The innovation at Wild Ember Kitchen extends beyond the food. The Colfax Downtown Association renovated the former bank in a single-story, 3,521-square-foot building into a restaurant incubator. The majority of the money for the upgrade came from a $2.26 million grant from the Washington State Department of Commerce.
Miller and Packer earned the opportunity to use the space through a competitive process and are leasing it at a subsidized rate.
I spoke with Miller and Packer about how they developed the restaurant, what their plans are for the venture and what led them to Colfax.
An edited version of our conversation follows:
Elaine Williams: The availability of an incubator restaurant space with subsidized rent prompted you to scrap your plans for a food truck and open here. Could you share more about how that happened?
Trevor Miller: We moved to Colfax because our oldest son was 5 years old and we wanted him to attend school here. We were going to open a food truck. I started doing food at The Cellar Wine and Beer Bar in Colfax. The downtown association kept hounding me to apply for this.
This is a dream. I always wanted to have a restaurant like this in Colfax, but it's expensive. The buildings are old. It's just a daunting idea to come in with a few million dollars to remodel. But since it's a downtown association that owns and it was a government grant, I was like "All right. Now I'll give it a shot now because there's not a whole bunch on the line." We just order the food, the plates and the liquor and get all the licensing for it. If we had to come in and buy a building and remodel it — I love Colfax, but I wouldn't have picked Colfax.
EW: Let's switch gears and talk about your career backgrounds. Trevor, you discovered your love of cooking at Arby's in Colfax and completed your training at Le Cordon Bleu of Culinary Arts in Portland, Ore. Amanda, you earned your culinary credentials at the Le Cordon Bleu of Culinary Arts in Scottsdale, Ariz. How did your paths first cross?
Daily headlines, straight to your inboxRead it online first and stay up-to-date, delivered daily at 7 AM
TM: We were both working at a high-end resort about 45 minutes north of Missoula. The average vacation there is about a quarter of a million dollars for high-end clientele. I was a line cook because I wasn't going to stay more than one summer. When I met her, she kept me there.
Amanda Packer: I was the private chef for any clients that wanted a private dining experience. I'd create a menu either to their specifications or I would surprise them. When I was doing that, I was the pastry chef. Working at that resort was one of the assignments we had over about five years.
EW: That sounds glamorous. How did you decide to return to Colfax?
TM: It comes with its own headaches and very little time off. We were in a high-demand side of the industry. It was fun, but once you have two boys, you just kind of take a step back and make it easier to have more of a work-life balance.
EW: Let's talk more about what you're doing at Wild Ember Kitchen. Besides tacos, what can diners expect?
TM: We serve a lot of hamburgers. The Whitman County burger is a sirloin, brisket patty with seared ham, American cheese and garlic aioli. I try to keep the ingredients as simple as possible and make sure they work well together. We have a full bar. We have about a dozen drinks that we change seasonally. One is the Golden Paradise with bourbon, house-made pineapple simple syrup, cardamom bitters and orange peel.
EW: You mentioned this business plays a broader role than just being a restaurant. What do you mean by that?
TM: It's pretty diverse. We get a lot of locals. We get a lot of people from all over, including Lewiston and Spokane. They come and meet. We had four ladies sit here that hadn't seen each other in 10 years. They sat and chit-chatted for five hours. They love that there's a new place they can come in and sit and have some good drinks and good food.
EW: Now that you're hitting your stride, how long do you think you'll be here?
TM: I don't know. We're planning to do catering. We could extend the lease as long as five years or stay longer if no one is interested in the space. My parents live 15 minutes outside of town on a farm. Our two sons spend a lot of time with them in the summer. There's no rush to decide.
Williams is the business editor of the Tribune and Moscow-Pullman Daily News. She may be contacted at ewilliam@lmtribune.com or (208) 848-2261.
About Wild Ember Kitchen
Address: 102 N. Main St., Colfax
Hours: 3-9 p.m. Sunday, Monday and Wednesday; and 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Thursday through Saturday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
AI Can't Replace Education
Credit - Tingting Ji—Getty Images As commencement ceremonies celebrate the promise of a new generation of graduates, one question looms: will AI make their education pointless? Many CEOs think so. They describe a future where AI will replace engineers, doctors, and teachers. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg recently predicted AI will replace mid-level engineers who write the company's computer code. NVIDIA's Jensen Huang has even declared coding itself obsolete. While Bill Gates admits the breakneck pace of AI development is 'profound and even a little bit scary,' he celebrates how it could make elite knowledge universally accessible. He, too, foresees a world where AI replaces coders, doctors, and teachers, offering free high-quality medical advice and tutoring. Despite the hype, AI cannot 'think' for itself or act without humans—for now. Indeed, whether AI enhances learning or undermines understanding hinges on a crucial decision: Will we allow AI to just predict patterns? Or will we require it to explain, justify, and stay grounded in the laws of our world? AI needs human judgment, not just to supervise its output but also to embed scientific guardrails that give it direction, grounding, and interpretability. Physicist Alan Sokal recently compared AI chatbots to a moderately good student taking an oral exam. 'When they know the answer, they'll tell it to you, and when they don't know the answer they're really good at bullsh*tting,' he said at an event at the University of Pennsylvania. So, unless a user knows a lot about a given subject, according to Sokal, one might not catch a 'bullsh*tting' chatbot. That, to me, perfectly captures AI's so-called 'knowledge.' It mimics understanding by predicting word sequences but lacks the conceptual grounding. That's why 'creative' AI systems struggle to distinguish real from fake, and debates have emerged about whether large language models truly grasp cultural nuance. When teachers worry that AI tutors may hinder students' critical thinking, or doctors fear algorithmic misdiagnosis, they identify the same flaw: machine learning is brilliant at pattern recognition, but lacks the deep knowledge born of systematic, cumulative human experience and the scientific method. That is where a growing movement in AI offers a path forward. It focuses on embedding human knowledge directly into how machines learn. PINNs (Physics-Informed Neural Networks) and MINNs (Mechanistically Informed Neural Networks) are examples. The names might sound technical, but the idea is simple: AI gets better when it follows the rules, whether they are laws of physics, biological systems, or social dynamics. That means we still need humans not just to use knowledge, but to create it. AI works best when it learns from us. I see this in my own work with MINNs. Instead of letting an algorithm guess what works based on past data, we program it to follow established scientific principles. Take a local family lavender farm in Indiana. For this kind of business, blooming time is everything. Harvesting too early or late reduces essential oil potency, hurting quality and profits. An AI may waste time combing through irrelevant patterns. However, a MINN starts with plant biology. It uses equations linking heat, light, frost, and water to blooming to make timely and financially meaningful predictions. But it only works when it knows how the physical, chemical, and biological world works. That knowledge comes from science, which humans develop. Imagine applying this approach to cancer detection: breast tumors emit heat from increased blood flow and metabolism, and predictive AI could analyze thousands of thermal images to identify tumors based solely on data patterns. However, a MINN, like the one recently developed by researchers at the Rochester Institute of Technology, uses body-surface temperature data and embeds bioheat transfer laws directly into the model. That means, instead of guessing, it understands how heat moves through the body, allowing it to identify what's wrong, what's causing it, why, and precisely where it is by utilizing the physics of heat flow through tissue. In one case, a MINN predicted a tumor's location and size within a few millimeters, grounded entirely in how cancer disrupts the body's heat signature. The takeaway is simple: humans are still essential. As AI becomes sophisticated, our role is not disappearing. It is shifting. Humans need to 'call bullsh*t' when an algorithm produces something bizarre, biased, or wrong. That isn't just a weakness of AI. It is humans' greatest strength. It means our knowledge also needs to grow so we can steer the technology, keep it in check, ensure it does what we think it does, and help people in the process. The real threat isn't that AI is getting smarter. It is that we might stop using our intelligence. If we treat AI as an oracle, we risk forgetting how to question, reason, and recognize when something doesn't make sense. Fortunately, the future doesn't have to play out like this. We can build systems that are transparent, interpretable, and grounded in the accumulated human knowledge of science, ethics, and culture. Policymakers can fund research into interpretable AI. Universities can train students who blend domain knowledge with technical skills. Developers can adopt frameworks like MINNs and PINNs that require models to stay true to reality. And all of us—users, voters, citizens—can demand that AI serve science and objective truth, not just correlations. After more than a decade of teaching university-level statistics and scientific modeling, I now focus on helping students understand how algorithms work 'under the hood' by learning the systems themselves, rather than using them by rote. The goal is to raise literacy across the interconnected languages of math, science, and coding. This approach is necessary today. We don't need more users clicking 'generate' on black-box models. We need people who can understand the AI's logic, its code and math, and catch its 'bullsh*t.' AI will not make education irrelevant or replace humans. But we might replace ourselves if we forget how to think independently, and why science and deep understanding matter. The choice is not whether to reject or embrace AI. It's whether we'll stay educated and smart enough to guide it. Contact us at letters@
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Cantor Says These 2 SaaS Stocks Are Top Picks as AI Rewrites the Software Playbook
AI and cloud services have already made their mark on the tech landscape, and the next iteration is taking shape: artificial intelligence software as a service, or AI SaaS. Simply put, it refers to the use of cloud technology to deliver advanced AI tools while minimizing cost and resource demands for end users. Easily unpack a company's performance with TipRanks' new KPI Data for smart investment decisions Receive undervalued, market resilient stocks right to your inbox with TipRanks' Smart Value Newsletter The cloud can already reach a wide range of customers, users who require high-end computing but can't support the infrastructure themselves. Adding AI to the mix will put advanced functions – think machine learning and natural language processing – into the cloud's toolbox. From a user perspective, putting AI tools into the subscription-based SaaS model will also give advantages in flexibility and scalability. The opportunity here is substantial. According to Zion Market Research, last year, the AI SaaS market was estimated to be worth $115.22 billion – and it's predicted to see a CAGR of 38% or more over the next decade, to reach $2.97 trillion by 2034. Covering the AI/SaaS segment from Cantor, analyst Matthew VanVliet sees major upside in this space – and in the stocks poised to benefit. 'We believe there is ample upside for the group ahead, as AI represents a much greater catalyst than anything in the past couple of years, more significant and sustainable than pandemic-era work-from-anywhere investments. Our view is the opportunity for growth to re-accelerate points to upside for the AI winners, unlocking multiple expansion if this plays out as we are expecting,' VanVliet opined. Building on that bullish outlook, the analyst has singled out two top picks he believes are especially well-positioned to ride this next wave of AI-driven growth – a view echoed by the broader analyst community. According to the TipRanks database, both stocks carry Strong Buy consensus ratings from the Street. Let's take a closer look. Klaviyo, Inc. (KVYO) The first company we'll look at here is Klaviyo, a software firm that brings CRM (customer relationship management) to the B2C world. The company fields a proprietary data platform with AI insights, to give its customers effective marketing automation, data analysis, and customer service. The aim here is personalized service – Klaviyo's customers can use the company's software packages to improve their own customers' interactions: customer profiles, omnichannel campaigns, web forms, and more. Klaviyo has built its operations and reputation on the quality of its data-based services – which positioned the company well to integrate AI into its offerings. The company's email and SMS marketing services already make use of AI tech to smooth out customization and targeting, to automate content generation, and to optimize send times. Klaviyo's clean data library is a key support for the AI services. Strong services have allowed this company to build a solid customer base. In its last financial release, Klaviyo defined a customer as 'a distinct paid subscription to our platform;' by that definition, the company stated that it had over 169,000 customers as of this past March 31. Within that customer base, the number of large customers – defined as those generating more than $50,000 in annual recurring revenue (ARR) came to 3,030, up 40% year-over-year. In addition to building a strong customer base, Klaviyo's 1Q25 financial release also showed quarterly revenue of $279.8 million, up 33% year-over-year and $11.89 million ahead of the forecasts. The company ran a net loss in the quarter, of 5 cents per share, but that was one cent per share better than had been anticipated. Turning to Cantor's VanVliet, we find the analyst upbeat on Klaviyo, citing the company's strong position and its large total addressable markets and potential for growth. He writes of the stock, 'KVYO's core ecommerce/retail SAM is ~$16b, with a clear eye to more of the market as the platform expands, uptake of its CRM increases, such that it becomes a true system of record, and AI broadens its reach. KVYO's TAM also keeps expanding as it moves upmarket and diversifies across new industries and geographies. Within the US, it sizes the TAM at $34b and the global opportunity at $68b. At $1b+ of revenue today, KVYO's penetration remains low, providing it a long runway of potential future growth.' VanVliet's comments back up his Overweight (i.e., Buy) rating here, and his $48 price target implies a potential gain of 41% for the shares in the year ahead. (To watch VanVliet's track record, click here) The Strong Buy consensus rating on KVYO shares is based on 18 recent Wall Street recommendations, which break down to 15 Buys and 3 Holds. The stock's $33.95 current trading price and $43.41 average target together suggest a one-year upside of 28%. (See KVYO stock forecast) HubSpot, Inc. (HUBS) Next on our list of Cantor's Top Picks is HubSpot, the well-known marketing software platform. The company has a reputation for innovation and has developed a solid stable of marketing software packages offered through a unified platform. HubSpot's software solves problems and smooths out processes in CRM, content management, social media management, and SEO – in fact, in pretty much any area of online direct marketing, inbound sales, and customer service. HubSpot introduced its Breeze AI toolkit last year as an AI enhancement of the company's existing services – and as an independent set of AI-powered marketing tools. The company's Breeze Customer Agent is billed as a '24/7 AI concierge,' capable of independently automating features in marketing, sales, and service. The system is designed to act on the human operator's instruction, with the AI agent handling the implementation. HubSpot claims that client teams using the AI agent see a 10% higher close rate on work orders, a 39% faster ticket resolution, and upwards of 50% of customer contact conversations resolved automatically – with the top users reaching 90%. In addition to streamlining marketing outreach, HubSpot also makes AI systems available in the content field. The company's Breeze Content Agent can scale content marketing efforts, create and publish landing pages, and generate search-optimized blog posts – and all in minutes rather than hours. The AI can even handle scripting and voiceover for video content. In its 1Q25 financial report, HubSpot reported what it described as a 'solid start' to the year. The company's customer count as of March 31 was up 19% year-over-year, a growth figure that offset a 4% decline in average subscription revenue per customer. At the top line, HubSpot reported $714.1 million in revenue, up 16% year-over-year and $13.7 million ahead of the pre-release estimates. HubSpot runs a quarterly profit, and in Q1 it realized a non-GAAP EPS of $1.84 – 8 cents better than expected. The company finished Q1 with $2.2 billion in cash and liquid assets on hand. Checking in again with VanVliet and the Cantor view of this CRM firm, we find him impressed by HubSpot's record of success. The analyst says of the company, 'HUBS is one of the few CRM industry players that has successfully moved into adjacent sub-categories (started in Marketing, expanded to Sales, Service, Content, and increasingly Commerce). We think this is a testament to HUBS's mgmt., which we view as best-of-breed. By methodically building the platform breadth and depth, HUBS is now gaining traction upmarket, which is key to sustaining mid-to-high teens growth over the medium term. HUBS is also building a more robust partner network, which is further accelerating upmarket traction.' Looking ahead, and specifically looking at HubSpot's use of AI to chart a new path ahead, the Cantor analyst remains upbeat, adding to his comments above, 'HUBS' organically built platform is well-positioned to leverage AI and strengthen its competitive edge. Breeze AI is already driving higher Content Hub attach rates (tripled y/y in 1Q). Further, we think Breeze will play an important role in unlocking Service Hub traction, which is critical to HUBS' next leg of growth.' Unsurprisingly, VanVliet rates HUBS stock as Overweight (i.e., Buy). His price target, set at $775, indicates room for an upside potential of 28.5% on the one-year horizon. HubSpot has picked up 28 recent analyst recommendations, which include 24 to Buy against just 4 to Hold, for a Strong Buy consensus rating. The stock is selling for $602.61, and its $749.32 average price target implies a potential one-year gain of 24%. (See HUBS stock forecast) To find good ideas for stocks trading at attractive valuations, visit TipRanks' Best Stocks to Buy, a tool that unites all of TipRanks' equity insights. Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the featured analyst. The content is intended to be used for informational purposes only. It is very important to do your own analysis before making any investment. Disclaimer & DisclosureReport an Issue Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The Weekend: Tesla's problems mount as Trump-Musk 'bromance' hits the rocks
It was a moment many had predicted from the outset, a question of when rather than if. The wheel finally came off the Trump-Musk "bromance" in spectacular fashion on Thursday, wiping more than $150 billion off the value of Tesla and dragging down the broader market. The world's richest man kicked things off by describing Trump's signature "big, beautiful bill" aimed at extending tax cuts a "disgusting abomination." Trump responded by calling his electoral backer "CRAZY!", threatening to slash government contracts and subsidies key to Musk's business interests and telling reporters he was "disappointed" in him. Things only got more heated from there. The very public spat only adds to Tesla's woes. The electric vehicle maker's market capitalisation has fallen almost 30%, or $380 billion so far this year, the biggest drop of any large company globally. Elon Musk is at war with whole swaths of Trump's agenda Elon Musk cemented his break-up with Donald Trump this week with a move against the president's signature legislative priority: the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. But the scope of his attack broadened on Thursday with Musk making a case not just against that bill but with ever-widening critiques that now span significant chunks of Trump's political agenda. Musk's posts have seen him floating everything from the concept of impeachment to calling the president a liar to the false accusation that Trump 'is in the Epstein files' and covering it up. Trump, unsurprisingly, was quick to retaliate, calling his former friend "CRAZY!" and threatened to terminate Musk's governmental subsidies and contracts. ECB cuts interest rates for eighth time in a year In what ECB president Christine Lagarde described as an "almost unanimous decision" the central bank chopped rates by a quarter of a percentage point for the eighth time in a year. The move, which was widely expected, follows a drop in eurozone inflation to 1.9% last month, just below the 2% target for the first time since last September. Investors are now pricing in a pause in rate cuts in July, and some conservative policymakers have also advocated for a break to give the bank a chance to reassess uncertainty and the future outlook. UK house prices rise as higher wages, low unemployment boost market Property prices gained some momentum in May, with annual growth increasing to 3.5%, according to figures from Nationwide. The uptick comes amid signs that activity in the housing market is holding up well, despite the end of a stamp duty break. Low unemployment, rising real wages, strong household balance sheets, and the potential for lower borrowing costs were among the factors buoying the market. BoE governor expects interest rates and pay to decrease this year When quizzed along with other members of the Monetary Policy Committee in a Treasury Committee meeting, Andrew Bailey said his main consideration for the most recent rate cut was the question of domestic inflation. He also cited the loosening of the UK's labour market as a key indicator in the decision to cut rates by 25 basis points. On the question of future cuts, external MPC member Catherine Mann said the bank could not yet say how fast or how far it would look to cut. Another member, Swati Dhingra, said there was a "general view that we don't need to weigh down on living standards as much as we have been." To personal finance now. As the government's spending review looms large, speculation about what will change is ramping up. Heavily debated taxes, such as rules around gifting and inheritance tax, could be in the crosshairs. Yahoo Finance's Lucy Harley-McKeown examined the possibilities: How next week's spending review could impact your finances There was bad news for home-seekers this week. No major lender cut its rates, with the majority hiking mortgages for first-time buyers as the market moves away from a mini price war that had pushed deals deep into sub-4% territory. Vicky McKeever brought us the best mortgage deals on the market right now: Mortgage lenders raise rates amid uncertainty over BoE interest rate cuts Find more personal finance gems here: Money Matters On the company results calendar, TSMC ( TSM) will release its latest sales figures after the CEO saying that demand remained strong for artificial intelligence chips. Tesco (TSCO.L) is set to provide a bellwether update for the UK grocery market. Its first-quarter report comes with supermarket price wars on the horizon, as shops fight to retain customers. In the housebuilding sector, investors will want to see how Bellway (BWY.L) is performing against key targets set out by the company's CEO earlier this year. Zara owner Inditex ( reports results on Wednesday, with investors' eyes on its margins following a disappointing report in in to access your portfolio