Categories
News

What’s coming up in Charlottesville the week of 1/7

Each week, the news team takes a look at upcoming meetings and events in Charlottesville and Albemarle we think you should know about. Consider it a look into our datebook, and be sure to share newsworthy happenings, too.

  • After a holiday hiatus, local governing bodies are getting back to normal with the first meetings of the new year. Charlottesville’s City Council gathers tonight at 7pm. On the agenda is Mayor Satyendra Huja’s State of the City address, reports on stormwater utilities and Region Ten, and the reallocation of $400,000 from the Charlottesville Housing and Redevelopment Authority.
  • The City Planning Commission meets at 5:30pm Tuesday in City Council chambers, and will discuss the Planned Unit Development application for a mixed-income neighborhood on land near the Oakwood Cemetery near Elliott Avenue formerly owned by the city.
  • The Albemarle County Planning Commission meets the same night from 6-8pm in Lane Auditorium, and is expected to hear a proposal for the installation of a backup power system for an expanded wireless facility in the county, and will hold a hearing on the expansion of Christian daycare center.
  • The Albemarle County Board of Supervisors holds its first meeting of 2013 on Wednesday, January 9. No agenda for the meeting has been posted yet, but we’ll note highlights once it’s up.
  • “Our Town Charlottesville,” a town hall-style meeting series, returns Thursday, January 10 with a gathering from 6-8pm at Tonsler Recreation Center. This installment is targeted at Fifeville and Starr Hill residents, and while all city residents are encouraged to attend, priorities for discussion will focus on those neighborhoods. Come hungry—dinner will be provided.
Categories
Living

Foodie classes for the New Year: This week’s restaurant news

Many of the spring classes offered by PVCC’s Workforce Series will focus specifically on cooking and food. Here’s a look at what you can expect this semester. (Bonus: Many of the classes will be held in the newly renovated Jefferson School City Center!)

Jack Hanny, former White House visiting chef and author of Secrets from the White House Kitchens, will teach “From the White House to Your House” on Mondays from 6-9pm. Unlock the secrets of official White House recipes (and favorite dishes of former presidents!) for $89.

Learn the fundamentals of soups, stocks, and sauces with Chef Dean Maupin of C&O Restaurant in a two-part class on Tuesday, March 5 and 26 from 6-8pm for $159.

Keep it local with CIA graduate and Darden food and beverage director Tom Cervelloni, who is instructing on creative ways to prepare local foods throughout the year. The $99 classes are taught on Monday, February 25 and Tuesday, February 26, from 5:30-7:30pm.

If oenology and viticulture pique your interest, join godfather of Virginia wine Gabriele Rausse in a part-lecture, part-field study of how to start a vineyard. Learn the principles and practices of grapevine production from the best throughout the semester. Cost for four classes is $109 on select Tuesdays from March-June.

Winemaker Matthieu Finot will lead a one-day class on the tasting and analysis of wine from 9am-5pm on May 18 for $109 at King Family Vineyards. The basis of the class is to develop the palate for describing the taste and aromas of wine.

The full class schedule can be found online at digital.pvcc.edu/i/97583 or by e-mailing workforce@pvcc.edu.

Beyond champagne
Greg Hirson, assistant winemaker at Blenheim Vineyards, will teach a sparkling wine class in the tasting room that goes beyond just the realm of champagne. He has selected sparkling wines from around the world to be tasted, discussed, and analyzed. He will address the fundamentals of sparkling wine production, where it comes from, and what exists outside the small appellation of Champagne. The class is on Monday, January 28 from 6-8pm and costs $40 ($35 for wine club members). E-mail greg@blenheim vineyards.com for reservations.

Got a tip for us? E-mail bites@c-ville.com.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Downton Abbey Season 3 Premiere

British steel

The snarky, gossipy family and the conniving house staff you know and love are returning to T.V., and to the Paramount. The theater kicks off 2013 with a screening of the Season 3 premiere of “Downton Abbey.” The show will broadcast on the jumbo screen, and there’s a ticket option for a reception featuring period cocktails and snacks, a lecture by Gwenyth West, and prizes for the night’s best-dressed man and woman.

Sunday 1/6 $50 VIP, 7pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 979-1333.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Cody Purvis

Pick up tuner

According to Cody Purvis, you can’t have too much of a good thing, except maybe “Too Much Truck.” The soulfully deep-voiced 18-year-old is country through and through, capturing the outlaw spirit of Merle Haggard and the contemporary energy of Toby Keith. His tunes bounce with charisma, and at 6’5″ Purvis is a stage presence to be reckoned with. With enthusiasm and heart, his Southern rock keeps folks on their feet and moving all night. After all, Purvis plans to put the “Rednecks in the Ryman.”

Saturday 1/5 $15, 8pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

Categories
Living

Five Finds on Friday: Jennifer Keevil of Brookville

On Fridays, we feature five food finds selected by local chefs and personalities.  This week’s picks come from Jennifer Keevil, manager of Brookville Restaurant, which she co-owns with her husband and chef Harrison.  On the last day of 2012, the Keevils welcomed their first child, a beautiful baby girl named Caroline.  With pregnancy behind Jennifer, we asked her what she is most excited to eat again.  “Here are the things I am most looking forward to,” says Jennifer, “now that our beautiful Caroline is with us.”  Welcome Caroline!

1)  “Omakase sashimi, sushi, and sake at TEN Sushi.”

2)  “A refreshing  Greyhound and grazing off the late night menu at C&O.”

3)  “Shopping and tasting all the raw milk cheeses and charcuterie at Feast!.”

4)  “Gambas al’ parilla  smothered in aioli and homemade sangria at Mas.”

5)  “A perfect runny egg on anything at Brookville.”

The Charlottesville 29 is a publication that asks: if there were just 29 restaurants in Charlottesville, what would be the ideal 29? Follow along with regular updates on Facebook and Twitter.

Categories
News

Green happenings: Charlottesville environmental news and events

Each week, C-VILLE’s Green Scene page takes a look at local environmental news. The section’s bulletin board has information on local green events and keeps you up to date on statewide happenings. Got an event or a tip you’d like to see here and in the paper? Write us at news@c-ville.com.

Winter woods walk: Wild Virginia will host its next outing January 13, 2-and-a-half-mile winter hike from the Braley Pond Recreation Area in the North River Ranger District of the George Washington National Forest. The quiet spot is on the gentle eastern slopes of Shenandoah Mountain, not far from the Ramsey’s Draft Wilderness. Group size is limited, so register before January 6 to save a spot. Contact Ron Fandetti at fanjet50@gmail.com or 401-529-8025.

Keep truckin’: The Virginia Chapter of the Nature Conservancy, based here in Charlottesville, is seeking vehicle donations. Reliable trucks and SUVs are vital to the organization’s field staff as they work to maintain access to nature preserves and other important natural areas all over the Commonwealth. Read more about what they need and how to help here.

Green pages: In case you missed it, last month saw the release of the winter 2012 Piedmont View, the Piedmont Environmental Council’s quarterly publication highlighting important conservation topics and news in central Virginia. In this issue: The organization’s take on cell tower regulation, watershed restoration projects, and efforts to get food service providers in on the locavore movement.

And a reminder of some other upcoming events we told you about last week: 

Teddy trek: Bundle the kids and their favorite plush pals up for the Rivanna Trail Foundation’s annual Teddy Bear Hike on Saturday, January 5. RTF board member Diana Foster will lead the hike, which is for children of all ages and their families. Gather in the Riverview Park at 11am, and prepare yourself and your furry friend for a fun and educational winter hike.

For the birds: The Ivy Creek Foundation is not fazed by the cold, and its weekly and monthly events are up and running again. Saturday, January 5, join Gabriel Mapel of the Monticello Bird Club for the new year’s first Saturday Bird Walk, an informative hike through the woods with fellow bird lovers. Meet in the parking lot of the Ivy Creek Natural Area at 7:30am.

Coal goals: Environmentalists are adding to their list of reasons to put an end to coal mining in Virginia. According to a report on NPR’s American University Radio, the nonprofit environmental organization Appalachian Voices said the Commonwealth gives coal companies more in tax breaks than it receives from them in taxes. Director Tom Cormons said he recommended the state end tax breaks for coal companies and use the money to promote additional economic development.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: abstractreal realabstract

Whiter shade of pale

Abstract art is all about blurring boundaries, but pushing two seemingly oppositional modes toward one another takes skill. The pieces in the McGuffey Art Center’s “abstractreal realabstract” exhibit drag realism into the realm of the abstract, and vice versa. In mostly oil-based paintings, five associate members—Nancy Bass, Robin Braun, Margaret Embree, Lindsay Freedman, and Tamra Harrison Kirschnick—incorporate both elements for strange and unique effects.

Friday 1/4 Opening 5:30pm. McGuffey Art Center, 201 Second St. NW. 295-7973.

Categories
Living

You say kabobs, I say kebabs

They go by many names. Some are so elusive, the names may as well be aliases. But they could be what saves us. They are, after all, where everyone comes together. Greeks and Turks, Muslims and Christians alike can all get behind the kebab (anglicized Turkish spelling), the kabob (Afghan version), the döner, and the gyro.

Michael Turk and his business partner, Tony, serve excellent döner kebabs (the Turkish grandfather of the Greek gyro) at Bazlamas, a trailer that they park between the amphitheater and Garrett Hall on Grounds at lunchtime, when school is in. You can also catch them outside of the brand new Champion Brewing Company on Sixth Street SE, Thursday through Saturday evenings. They use halal beef and lamb ground together and seasoned with oregano, thyme, black and marash pepper, and paprika. They pile in crisp vegetables and ladle on the thing that sets them apart —their sauce: a garlic yogurt base with Turkish olive oil, Turkish tahini, and four Turkish spices. It all gets rolled up in a warm homemade pita for $6.49 or served open face with side and drink for $9.99. There’s also a veggie option. Make it a point to find these guys. They’re on Twitter @bazlamas.

At the wise behest of the other occupant of this newsprint, Megan J. Headley, I sought out Angelo Vangelopoulos at the Ivy Inn, who it turns out is the direct descendent of gyro royalty. His father used to have the great gyro shop Icarus in Georgetown, D.C., before throwing in with Angelo to buy the Ivy Inn in 1995. The Ivy serves a small gyro as part of a lamb platter entrée. Angelo grinds pork, beef, and lamb together, spices it just so, bakes it in a pâté mold, then slices it into gyro units. Then there’s tomato, onion, cilantro, feta, and creamy tzatziki on pita. It’s marvelous. Only thing is, it’s $30.

Strict Virginia health regulations deter most döner and gyro purveyors from setting up rotisserie spits—which are common in big cities and across Europe—and carving the meat off the spit to order. “If the health inspector sticks a thermometer in the meat and it’s above 41 or below 135 degrees,” one chef told me, “you’ll have to throw it out.” So most make due with pre-cooked meats that they reheat on a griddle.

Ariana Grill Kabob House on West Main puts out a right fine gyro, but last time I was there I went for the kofta kabob, an Afghan delight of seasoned ground beef packed into links, skewered, and grilled. It comes on basmati rice with hot greens and fresh bread for $9.95.

Three months ago, Mansur and Mustafa, brothers of Turkish descent from Caucasus Russia, opened M&M Lounge and Restaurant where the Outback Lounge used to sit. They serve beef and chicken kebabs, chunks of meat marinated overnight in vinegar with onions, pepper, and “secret ingredients.” They don’t serve lamb kebabs because, Mansur reckons, “Americans tend to eat too slow for lamb. Lamb isn’t as good after it’s been sitting.”

Wait, Americans eat slow? I will pull the last flap of flesh that I just burned off of the roof of my mouth and, without so much as taking another breath, sink my teeth right back into the piping hot gyro that scalded me in the first place.

Anyway, the kebabs are grilled over charcoal and served on rice with a salad, homemade bread, and a dipping bowl of lemon juice and olive oil. As a platter, it’s $12.95, but you can get it in a wrap for $8.75.

Sultan Kebab is a Turkish restaurant tucked into a stealthy little strip mall at 1710 Seminole Trail. There is almost no chance you’ll happen to just notice this place as you’re whizzing up 29N, but it’s there serving up excellent halal lamb, chicken, and döner kebabs, plus a full menu of Turkish fare.

Categories
News

For outdoor enthusiasts, specialized first aid course could be a lifesaver

Matt Rosefsky was on a Washington mountaintop on a 70-mile stretch of trail last September when everything went wrong. One of the group of four he was leading on an excursion with the local Outdoor Adventure Social Club injured his knee and had to slow to a hobble. Another hiker started to get hypothermic as ice and snow began to fall —the first flakes of a coming blizzard. The trail was rough and hard to follow. As the group leader, he had to decide whether to hunker down and risk getting stranded, or try to keep the suffering group moving to escape the storm.
“Any way I looked at it, there was no magical right action where everybody was going to be set,” Rosefsky said. “There was a risk in any possible answer.”
Fortunately, that’s what he’s trained for. Rosefsky, 40, a UVA alum who founded the OASC after graduating in 2004, is a certified wilderness EMT, and now teaches classes in disaster and wilderness first aid all over Virginia and elsewhere. His next two-day instructional course starts January 12 here in Charlottesville.
Rosefsky first got interested in wilderness first aid when he started leading hiking trips. In 2007, he got certified as an EMT and instructor by SOLO, the country’s oldest wilderness medical school, and soon forged a partnership with Charlottesville-based Blue Ridge Mountain Sports to offer affordable classes in the communities where the outdoor apparel company has stores. The course costs $175, and Rosefsky and BRMS team up to donate 10 percent of the proceeds to a local charity­—in this case, the Piedmont Group of the Sierra Club.
The 18-hour course is about half lecture, half hands-on work, said Rosefsky. It goes a lot further than your basic first aid instruction, because it’s designed to teach you what to do when you might be the only help a victim will get for a long time. The obvious application is in the backcountry, so the course is popular with local hikers and outdoors enthusiasts. But the skills you learn could be just as applicable in a city hit by an earthquake or a hurricane, said Rosefsky.
“Imagine if some big disaster happens,” he said. “First of all, your cell phone probably doesn’t work. There are 300 people who are hurt, and there’s 10 ambulances. Do the math. They’re not coming anytime soon. So you need to know what to do until that help arrives.”
For that reason, SOLO trainees learn to do some things even most ambulance crews don’t, he said, like set broken bones and do a spine test to see if even a severely injured victim might be able to walk out, instead of being backboarded. The instructional process is intense—think fake blood and a screaming actor who can’t tell you what’s wrong. At its core is a method called the patient assessment system—an observation-based recipe for dealing with any crisis.
It might come in handy some day, as it did for Rosefsky and his hiking companions on that snowy peak. What he’d learned helped him know what to do then: wrap the injured knee, get the hypothermic hiker bundled up as best as possible, and head out of the storm to find a safe place to camp and get warm. Eventually, he said, “everyone was fine.”
Categories
Arts

Film review: Django Unchained

Spaghetti southern: Django Unchained is a lawless, violent romp marked by stellar performances

First, the cynical: One wonders whether making a movie that takes place in the pre-Civil War American South is Quentin Tarantino’s way of getting around criticism for using the n-word. Second, the straight-up: Django Unchained is loads of fun.

For years, I’ve railed against Tarantino. I don’t like his dialogue (all his characters sound the same); I don’t like his derivations from better (and worse) directors; I don’t like his fanboys.

But something in Django Unchained clicks. Maybe it’s because a lot of white, racist, asshole rednecks get the snot killed out of them. Or maybe this cast is Tarantino’s best ever, with delicious (yes, delicious) performances from Christoph Waltz (who may be the greatest acting find of the early 21st century), Leonardo DiCaprio, and Samuel L. Jackson. Jamie Foxx is an appropriately stoic man-with-no-nameish title character, and the role, by its nature, is less flamboyant than the others.

Waltz and DiCaprio are having so much fun the giddiness is infectious. Tarantino movies seem to invite two things from some actors. Many of them use it to do their best work (see: Bruce Willis, Ving Rhames, Tim Roth, Diane Kruger), and others do their best work while leaving the scenery in tatters (Uma Thurman, Jackson, Waltz, DiCaprio).
http://youtu.be/s8CZKbDzP1E

Another thing Django Unchained has is a bunch of cameos by really famous people, or long-forgotten actors making a brief, triumphant return. The opening scene alone features James Russo and James Remar, and honestly, is a movie featuring either of those guys in the same scene really going to be bad?

The story takes many twists and turns, but it’s more or less about one man, Django, trying to reunite with his wife (Kerry Washington). All the other stuff that comes along with it—plot twists, tangents, brouhaha—is gravy.

Know this going in: Django is shockingly violent, even for Tarantino. The gunshots are cartoonish and the blood explodes, appropriately for a cartoon, as if the squibs on each body were filled with a half-gallon of fake blood. In fact, the gun wounds explode with a force not seen since Tarantino pal Robert Rodriguez’s movie Planet Terror in their ill-advised double feature Grindhouse.

With all the cartoonery comes realism, though. There are scenes—two men fight brutally to the death; one man is torn apart by dogs—that are gut-churning in their verisimilitude. At the heart of Django Unchained is slavery, after all.

That leads to the other piece of news the movie has generated in the last few weeks. There has been much grousing that Django Unchained encourages violence against white people. Don’t get caught up in that nonsense. It’s hype and butt-hurt masquerading as social criticism. The film is, quite simply, the western according to Tarantino, and if you’ve seen any of the Italian-made westerns that inspired it, you’ll see more than a few nods to them.

Django Unchained is a hoot, even if it’s 30 minutes too long, and may be the escape you need, if your family gives you the gift of driving you nuts for the holidays.

Django Unchained

R, 165 minutes/Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Playing this week

Anna Karenina
Regal Downtown Mall 6

Argo
Regal Downtown Mall 6

Chasing Ice
Vinegar Hill Theatre

Cirque du Soleil:
Worlds Away 3D
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Dabangg 2
Regal Downtown Mall 6

End of Watch
Carmike Cinema 6

Finding Nemo 3D
Carmike Cinema 6

Frankenweenie
Carmike Cinema 6

The Guilt Trip
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Here Comes the Boom
Carmike Cinema 6

Hitchcock
Regal Downtown Mall 6

Hotel Transylvania
Carmike Cinema 6

The Hobbit:
An Unexpected Journey
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Jack Reacher
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Les Miserables
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Life of Pi
Regal Downtown Mall 6

Lincoln
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Monsters, Inc.
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Parental Guidance
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Perks of Being
a Wallflower
Carmike Cinema 6

Silver Linings Playbook
Regal Downtown Mall 6

Skyfall
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

This is 40
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Movie houses

Carmike Cinema 6
973-4294

Regal Downtown
Mall Cinema 6
979-7669

Regal Stonefield 14
and IMAX
244-3213

Vinegar Hill Theatre
977-4911