Categories
Living

Five Finds on Friday: Brooke Fedora of Horse & Hound

On Fridays, we and The Charlottesville 29 feature five food finds from local chefs and personalities.  Today’s picks come from Brooke Fedora, the Culinary Institute of America graduate who runs Horse & Hound Gastropub with her husband Luther.  Every year, Horse & Hound is one of the best places in Charlottesville to celebrate Oktoberfest.  This year’s party will last from September 14 through October 31, and will include Oktoberfest beer specials, prizes, live entertainment, and, best of all, a menu of German specialties like Kartoffelpuffer, Wurst, Jager-Schnitzel, and Linzer Torte.  Details here.  Fedora’s picks:

1)  Bun Thit Nuong (Pork Vermicelli) at Moto Pho Co.  “This dish is light, healthy, and delicious.  I could eat it everyday. “

2)  Pulled Pork BBQ Platter at Buttz BBQ.  “Chris does a great job with all of his sauces, meats and sides.”

3)  Pan Fried Dumplings at Kyoto.  “My 5 year old son is obsessed with dumplings and these are his and my favorite in town.”

4)  Pistachio Cupcake at SweetHaus.  “These cupcakes are fresh daily and perfect for celebrations or a sweet snack.”

5)  Vella Jack Cheese Fritters at Zocalo.  “These hit all the flavor points on your tongue and leave you wanting more.”

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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
Arts

Pun Picks: Chris Eldridge of The Punch Brothers

With the Lockn’ Festival happening this weekend, I decided to post a session I did with The Punch Brothers’ guitarist, Chris Eldridge from back in April.

Jay’s “Pun Picks” – Chris Eldridge – “The Mean Mother Blues” (Ep. 8) from Pun Picks on Vimeo.

I first heard about Chris (aka Critter) when I first moved back to Charlottesville in 2004.  His name had been floating around the acoustic scene a lot as a wonderful, lightning fast guitarist.  He came through town a few times and played at The Prism Coffeehouse, but I never got a chance to actually catch him live.  Through the years I kept hearing about him and realized that we had many similar friends and acquaintances.  Chris primarily plays as the guitarist for the progressive bluegrass group, The Punch Brothers, but he is also involved in many other projects as well, including a collaboration with one of my favorite modern jazz guitarists, Julian Lage.  The two recently released an E.P. called “Close to Picture,” a collection of original duets and a fiddle tune.


Click above to hear & purchase “Close To Picture.”

Chris was one of the first people that I reached out to when I first started my “Pun Picks” idea.  He kindly responded not too long after saying that he would love to be a part of the project the next time we crossed paths. That “next time” happened serendipitously one rainy afternoon at the Mountain Cove Music Festival in Lovingston, VA.  Headlining this year was Tony Trischka and Territory, one of the world’s top banjo players along with a rotating cast of stellar musicians.  I had no idea who Tony was bringing with him, but I knew it would be a great band.  The supporting members turned out to be Mike Barnett on FiddleJared Engel on Upright and Chris Eldridge on Guitar. After their set, I caught up with Chris in the tasting room of Mountain Cove Vineyards to film this session below.

Catch Chris performing with The Punch Brothers on Saturday, September 7th at Oak Ridge Estate as one of the many acts involved with the 2013 Lockn’ Festival.

If you like what you see and hear, please visit the official Pun Picks website: www.punpicks.com

 

 

Categories
News

What’s Happening at the Jefferson School City Center?

Vinegar Hill Cafe Manager Joel Schectman struggled to put a definition on September’s Chill’n & Grill’n band. “They’re definitely not your average band,” he said, referring to the collaboration of veteran Charlottesville musicians.

The band agrees that they defy naming, though for now they’re calling themselves The C-Ville Reggae Funk Band. The five-member group shares vocals and includes Scottie B on drums, Willits Bowditch on lead guitar, Blake Campbell on guitar, Jason McLeod on guitar, and Greta von Kirchmann on bass and guitar.

As the sun dipped behind the Jefferson School City Center and reggae-funk jams grooved through the air, diners trickled onto the Jefferson School front patio and by 6:00 pm every table was full. Vinegar Hill Cafe chef Sean Connelly led his team of Garry Wallis and Herbert Hawkins in making sure the crowd was well fed.

Chill’n & Grill’n occurs on the first Thursday of the month at the cafe. For ten dollars, guests can enjoy food fresh from the grill, including homemade barbeque ribs, chicken, or hamburgers, complete with sides, such as coleslaw and cornbread, and dessert. A kid’s menu with reduced pricing is also available.

African American Heritage Center Host New Exhibition and Author Reading Next Week

The African American Heritage Center will hold a preview and walking tour of its new exhibition “This is the neighborhood you live in” next Thursday, September 12, from 6:30 to 8:30 pm.

On Friday, September 13, at 6 pm the Center will host An Evening with Deborah Willis, co-author of Envisioning Emancipation. The event will take place in the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center Auditorium and feature a talk by Willis, followed by a book-signing and reception.

Willis, a renowned photographic historian, partnered with historian Barbara Krauthamer to collect photographs from the 1850s through the 1930s to explore the profound influence of the Emancipation Proclamation, which turns 150 years old this year. Their collaboration provides necessary context to the photographs, in order to understand them as historical documents, and the struggles and aspirations the nation faced during this era.

JABA to Host Freedom Day Event Next Thursday

JABA will be one of countless organizations across the country hosting Freedom Day USA events on Thursday, September 12 at the Jefferson School City Center. Kelly Carpenter, the Mary Williams Community Center Manager, said they’re planning to have a “Wall of Thanks” on which the public can express their gratitude to men and women serving in the military. “We will be also be inviting any current military, immediate family members, or veterans to join us for the day,” said Carpenter, “and we will have free refreshments in the afternoon.”

One Week Left Until New Tutor Training at Literacy Volunteers

There’s only a week left to register for Literacy Volunteers New Tutor Training, scheduled for Saturday, September 14, 2013 from 9:30 am to 4:00 pm–and spots are filling up fast! Literacy tutors work one-on-one with adult students seeking to improve their basic literacy skills or hoping to learn English as a second language. While tutoring offers clear benefits to students–from better job opportunities to being able to communicate with their children’s teachers–it also enriches the lives of tutors themselves.

“Many tutors feel they learn as much from their students as their students learn from them,” said Amie Whittemore, Tutor Recruitment and Communications Coordinator. Most tutors are drawn to volunteer by their desire to help others, and many continue because of the strong friendships they form with their students.

Those interested in volunteering can call Literacy Volunteers  at 434-977-3838 to register for the September training. If registration fills, potential volunteers can also sign up for the November 9, 2013 training.

JSCC logoJefferson School City Center is a voice of the nine nonprofits located at Charlottesville’s intergenerational community center, the restored Jefferson School. We are a legacy preserved . . . a soul reborn . . . in the heart of Cville!

Categories
News

Will Virginia’s off-year electoral curse finally fall?

The Odd Dominion is a regular Virginia political opinion column from C-VILLE contributor Dan Catalano.
If there’s one thing that every political junkie in the Commonwealth knows, it is this: Whichever party currently holds the White House will never see the inside of Virginia’s Executive Mansion. This has been the case, without fail, since 1977, when Republican John Dalton was elected governor in the wake of Jimmy Carter’s post-Watergate presidential victory.
But as with all predictive trends of this sort, the streak is only as good as the last election (in this case, when Bob McDonnell trounced his Democratic opponent Creigh Deeds exactly one year after Barack Obama won the presidency). Now, with the 2013 statewide elections only two months away, many experts are speculating that Virginia’s fabled “White House curse” might finally lift, allowing Democrat Terry McAuliffe to best Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli in the gubernatorial gladiator ring. The reasons?
Demographics. Like the country as a whole, Virginia’s percentage of white residents (and voters) is gradually shrinking, and a larger percentage of the electorate is now made up of suburban, college-educated moderates. As recently detailed in The New York Times, the national percentage of whites voting in midterm elections has fallen from 91 percent in 1990 to 78 percent in 2010. This trend is mirrored in Virginia, where Democrats are optimistically predicting that white voters will make up only 75 percent of the 2013 vote. Even more worrisome for Republicans, McAuliffe’s campaign claims that 35 percent of that vote will come from the left-leaning suburbs surrounding Washington, D.C.
Republican fratricide. The one thing a candidate wants to avoid at all costs is friendly fire. Unfortunately for Ken Cuccinelli, the number of fellow Republicans willing to lambast him on the record (and even endorse McAuliffe, as GOP strategist Boyd Marcus recently did) is growing by the day. Chief among these voices has been Lieutenant Governor Bill Bolling, who saw his own dreams of becoming governor evaporate after Cuccinelli unexpectedly entered the race. Last week Bolling told the website Real Clear Politics “I have concerns about Cuccinelli’s ability to effectively and responsibly govern our state, and because of those concerns, I have not been comfortable endorsing his candidacy.” Ouch.
Nonstop scandals. We’ve written extensively about the ongoing troubles of both Cuccinelli and Governor McDonnell in relation to big-money businessman Jonnie Williams, but the last few weeks have added even more fuel to that fire, with the revelation that McDonnell’s wife, Maureen, secretly bought thousands of shares of stock in Williams’ company, Star Scientific, while simultaneously promoting the company’s products. Add to that recent revelations that Cuccinelli’s office attempted to squash the release of inappropriate e-mails from an assistant AG to lawyers representing two energy companies embroiled in a lawsuit over natural gas royalties in Southwest Virginia, and you start to imagine the words “scandal-plagued” hovering in front of Cuccinelli’s name every time you see it in print.
But will this be enough to break the curse? Well, a recent Quinnipiac University poll showing McAuliffe with a six point lead over the Cooch definitely has the Macker’s backers feeling giddy. But curses are powerful things, so who knows? In the end, only the mercurial voters of Virginia can decide whether or not this decades-long streak will come to an end.
Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Sarah Jarosz

Angel’s share

Grammy-nominated greatness visits the Virginia countryside in the form of 22-year-old folk sensation Sarah Jarosz as she tours the East Coast to promote her upcoming album, Build Me Up From Bones. Despite being new to the music industry, Jarosz has captured a sound that many musicians spend a lifetime trying to master. She can expertly strum it all, from guitar to mandolin, while integrating an angel’s voice with some Texas twang.

Saturday 9/7 $15, 5:30pm. Monticello’s West Lawn, 931 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy. 984-9800.

Categories
Arts

The Fabulous Andy Faith is the Cat’s Pajamas – A Studio Visit

This week we share our studio visit with local artist Andy Faith.

Andy Faith’s artwork would fit perfectly in the setting of the Visionary Art Museum. It was a treat to meet someone whose personal sense of style so embodies the aesthetic of her art work. When we met, she wore a purple velvet cape with spiked hair, pink glasses, and a carved resin necklace in the shape of a snake’s head. Here is what she had to say about her artwork and her artistic vision.

Tell me a little about yourself as an artist.

I have always been the type of person who believes that if you follow what your passion is, then you can make things work. Do what you love, be happy, don’t worry, just chill and it will be okay.

I am a retired elementary school teacher and I didn’t start making art until I got a divorce. Then, all of a sudden, all this stuff came pouring out of me. My house looks like my studio, filled with stuff. I have always been attracted to things like rust and beeswax, and as I get older, I find that I am using more natural materials like branches and deer antlers, etc. When I first started, I was doing all this kitschy Jesus art, similar to the kind that I love from Mexico. But over the years, my artwork has evolved to be more autobiographical. All of my figures are me, and they depict my life story through various stages of aging, being single, and being a mother.

Around the time that I separated from my husband, I remember walking down the street in South Philadelphia, and there was this store there where everything comes from Mexico. I loved to shop there, and I loved to look at the sculptural work. I said to myself, “I’d really love to get that, but I can’t afford it. ” And then I started just making stuff like that. I was very whimsical and funny and people liked it. I even had a one woman show on the Downtown Mall.

I had so much stuff for art materials at the time that I had boxes and boxes stacked up in my bedroom. I had to make a pathway to get around them. And I would get up in the middle of the night and start working on two or three pieces at a time. I just had this energy and it really floated me. Doing artwork really helped me get through a very difficult time.

I also found that I had reinvented myself. I wasn’t Andy the wife anymore; I was Andy the artist. I even changed my name after the divorce to my sister’s middle name, Faith. My motto is “I have faith that everything always works out in the end,”and I feel that I represent “A” faith. I’m not any religion, but merely having faith will get you through in the end.

What are you working on now?

I usually have several different projects going on at any given time. A piece that I am currently working on is called “The Unbearable Lightness of Being.” It’s about where we come from in nature and utilizes the imagery of the vagus nerve. The vagus nerve is the main nerve in your body that hits every internal organ. This symbolizes the mind-body-soul connection and a lot of the spiritual things I have been studying lately. I’m not sure I would have been working on a piece like this five years ago, but I’ve been doing a lot of soulful work with various teachers and it has come into play in my artwork. All of the heart stuff and all of the soul stuff is an important part of my collection.

Do you have any formal training?

No. But I’ve always had a soul that is attracted to unusual, provocative art pieces that really make you think. Like works by Joseph CornellMarcel Duchamp, or Edward Kienholz.

I remember going to the Philadelphia Art Museum when I was a kid. I went into this room, the Marcel Duchamp room. There was the broken glass piece, the urinal, and the upside-down wheel. And then he had this piece where you had to look into it, and he made you a voyeur. There was this woman inside, a sculptural thing. But that was my favorite room in the entire museum. I will never forget that, and I went back again and again to see it.

I also feel very inspired by the kids that I teach. I base a lot of my kids’ projects on artists I love like Louise Nevelson or Hannah Hoch, African art, Sailors’ Valentines, even shoe design books.

What would you call your style?

I do call it mixed media, but it is also intuitive. Because for me, it is an experimental process of deciding what works and what does not. I try to integrate different objects into a piece and make them meaningful. And different people, they see my work and they offer so many different reactions. Some people are put off by the religious imagery I use. Some people can look at my skulls and respond with fear. They say, “Oh that’s so scary!”  I find it interesting that people interpret my work in their own way dependent upon who they are and where they come from in life. None of my pieces are scary to me because they come from me and I’m not scary. So my style is very intuitive.

What is your medium?

Sometimes I think that I do this art just because I love to collect things.

I have a whole crawl space at home plus two storage buildings, and my entire backyard is filled with my stuff. I’m just attracted to skulls and barbed wire and little pieces of hardware. That’s the cat’s pajamas for me.

I also use horseshoes, antlers, baby dolls, mannequins, and rust. My daughter travels all over the world, and she brought me a piece of rust from Tajikistan. I love it, and it goes really well on a piece that I am currently working on.

I have these spoke thingies that make great breasts and these portions of a lampshade that make great shoulders. I have baby doll eyeballs that I love. If you remove the face from an old baby doll, you will find that the eyes are amazing. I use old eyelash curlers, bullets casings, eyes glass lenses, animal bones, clock parts, and iridescent beetle wings. I even utilize used tea bags and I have a whole collection of teeth and partial dentures.

I am just so in love with my materials.

What is your method of working?

It’s funny because in my ad for my kids classes, I always advertise that art making is a problem solving process. And the process is so very important. I want the kids to know that there is no “wrong” in art. I will model ideas as the instructor, but I always want them to maintain their own vision and figure out a way to make things work and take ownership of the fact that they are artists, too.

In terms of artistic process, what I will usually do is choose a form, and then gather my materials. I’ll just start looking through my stuff to get inspired. My materials are my inspiration, and once I get started, the piece will take on a life of its own and become what it wants to be. I don’t usually start with a set idea in mind, so I let the materials inform the direction the piece needs to take to be completed. I’m constantly experimenting, and I like to follow my gut. I will try different materials until I know I have found the right ones. I’ll know that it’s finished when it’s finished.

Do you use photographic sources?

Not usually. I start with one thing and then keep building until I feel that it is finished. My favorite art is African art, and I have made figures that are inspired by African masks. But I try to let my materials inform the work.

How regular is your studio practice?

I try to come to the studio often. You can find me here most days. I always have multiple projects going on, so once I am in the studio, there is always something to do.

What is your favorite Bodo’s bagel?

Cinnamon raisin with coffee or an everything bagel with tomato, cucumber, and the baked salmon and whitefish salad.

 

~ Rose Guterbock and Aaron Miller

Categories
News

Charlottesville environmental organizations make the case for renewable energy

Local environmental groups have teamed up to challenge the long-term plans of the state’s largest power provider, Virginia Dominion Power, citing a report released last Tuesday by third-party energy think tanks. The report, commissioned by Wise Energy for Virginia Coalition, which includes local organizations Appalachian Voices and the Southern Environmental Law Center (SELC), claims that Dominion’s long-term plans rely too heavily on coal and natural gas and don’t incorporate enough clean, renewable energy.

Dominion went before the State Corporation Commission (SCC) last week to present its biannual Integrated Resource Plan, an outline of how the company will supply power to its customers over the next 15 years—what facilities it will build, what new programs it will develop, and what the energy market will look like over that period. SELC is requesting a hearing before the SCC, hoping to persuade the Commission not to give Dominion the green light until the company adds a little more green to its plan.

“The IRP is really the only process where we as the public, and the Commission as regulators, can evaluate all of Dominion’s resources at once,” said SELC attorney Angela Navarro.

The report commissioned by Wise Energy is based on past Dominion resource plans created as recently as September 2012. According to the report, coal and natural gas will constitute around 60 percent of the company’s energy production as late as 2027. A clean energy plan, the document says, would save thousands of megawatts of energy and cost millions of dollars less than construction of new power plants.

“Dominion has put forth in its documents a future trajectory that’s really heavily based on building two big gas plants and a nuclear plant, and very little on renewable energy and demand-side resources,” said Jeff Loiter, a consultant for the research firm Optimal Energy and co-author of the report. “We put together what we see as a potential alternate future that uses more of those resources to meet customers’ needs.

Dominion countered that many changes proposed by environmentalist groups simply aren’t practical.

“I endorse them for being concerned about having clean air, but it’s not as simple as that for us,” said company spokesman Dan Genest. “We have to come up with an energy plan that not only protects the environment and keeps us in full compliance with all state and federal laws and regulations, but also that is reliable, safe, and affordable.”

Genest said even if Dominion tried to put forth a plan like the alternatives proposed in “Changing Course,” it would never pass the SCC because of high cost and impracticality. He pointed out that Dominion already has clean energy initiatives in place, like its solar partnership with major commercial customers, including Old Dominion University.

But the company also has financial reasons to resist transitioning to clean energy, said Nathan Jenkins of Appalachian Voices.

“Energy efficiency measures cost much less to implement, but they don’t get the same financial reward,” Jenkins said. “Clearly, a for-profit company is going to do what makes them the most money.”

If no changes are made to Dominion’s long-term plans, Appalachian Voices and its partners will continue their “New Power for the Old Dominion” campaign to build public support for new energy regulation and reform. The group will host dozens of events across the state, starting in Charlottesville on September 12.

Several local environmental groups have come together to call on Dominion Power to incorporate more renewable sources in its long-term energy plan for Virginia.—Ryan McCrimmon

Categories
Arts

Schools in session: WSP bassist gets prepped for Lockn’

Widespread Panic bassist Dave Schools is a Virginia native. When reached for a recent phone interview he sounded genuinely enthusiastic about his old home state hosting the Lockn’ Festival, a high-profile jam band bash taking place at Oak Ridge Estate in Arrington this Thursday through Sunday and featuring Grateful Dead offshoot Furthur, Trey Anastasio Band, the Black Crowes and the String Cheese Incident, among many others.

On Saturday, Panic is slotted to play one of the festival’s most highly anticipated sets, a collaboration with John Fogerty that will predominantly feature tunes from the rock legend’s Creedence Clearwater Revival catalog. The festival also begins a hearty fall tour for Panic, the Southern jam titans known for purveying an original brand of experimental Southern groove rock. The band emerged from Athens, Georgia’s storied music scene in the late 1980s, and as stalwart road warriors it’s maintained a loyal following.

After a mostly dormant 2012, the group returned this year with a big slate of shows across the country, including four nights at Colorado’s venerable Red Rocks Amphitheater where the band holds a record of 42 consecutive sold out shows.

Ahead of Lockn’, Schools chatted with C-VILLE Weekly by phone about the festival and rebooting after a year off.

C-VILLE Weekly: Panic returned this year after taking nearly a full year off. How did the band’s playing evolve following the extended break? 

Dave Schools: We had to blow some dust off, but we eventually caught our groove and started to dive deeper into the catalog. By the summer tour I felt we were bettering the high points we had achieved before we took the time off. Some of us brought some new ideas back that weren’t necessarily musical—philosophical approach ideas. We’re starting to break in some new material. It’s always a reinvention that we allow to happen.

Since Panic plays many festivals, what’s your take on Lockn’? 

I’m really happy that it’s in Virginia. Panic did plenty of time playing all of the colleges along I-81 and I-64, so we know this is a beautiful area.

It feels like the way Bonnaroo started over 10 years ago. They carved out a target demographic. I think it’s smart to keep all of the bands in the same wheelhouse with the emphasis on a lot of music from a few bands and some interesting collaborations. I’m also glad I’ll be able to see some music, since I won’t be missing most sets due to staggered start times. I’ll get to walk off stage and go see Phil (Lesh) and Bobby (Weir) play. That’s pretty cool.

Speaking of the Grateful Dead…when Panic was off the road you toured with drummer Mickey Hart and you frequently visit Bob Weir’s TRI Studios. Is it safe to say you’ll be sitting in with Furthur? 

When bands like this get together, you never know what will definitely happen. I love playing the Grateful Dead catalog. For me as a bass player, I get taken to school by Phil, transported to a place beyond technique. There’s nothing that gives me greater pleasure than to watch his mind work.

How did the Fogerty set get organized? 

Management presented the idea and all I could say was, “let me pinch myself.” It seemed too good to be true. From a personal standpoint, my parents bought me Creedence 45s when I was 5 years old. Getting to back up Fogerty will give me the chance to play some of the first songs I ever heard. I won’t believe this wasn’t a dream until we walk out on stage together and play some music.

How much preparation goes into a collaboration like this? 

We’ve gone back and forth. John has made some suggestions and we’ve made some suggestions. There will be a rehearsal, but in the world of Widespread Panic anything can change between rehearsal and when you’re on stage playing in front of people. The idea is to be prepared for anything.

Panic released its last album, Dirty Side Down, on ATO records. Are there plans for a follow up? 

Not yet. With the way the music business is now, I don’t see any reason to spend a bunch of money writing in the studio. I’m enamored with the idea of breaking out ideas on stage. People don’t buy music like they used to. They do buy tickets and love shows. They want to feel like they have a stake in the creation of new music, so I like to let it grow in front of them.

After nearly 30 years together, can you pinpoint a pinnacle moment for Widespread Panic?

There are several. As a band, it has to be playing in the streets of Athens and bringing nearly 100,000 people into town for an album release party rather than a Georgia football game. For me, personally, it was probably realizing I could actually pay the rent playing music. Also, performing in venues where I saw shows as a kid, like Hampton Coliseum. I remember seeing Led Zeppelin’s The Song Remains the Same when I was 12, and then standing on stage at Madison Square Garden years later realizing I was probably standing on the same spot Jimmy Page did in that movie. That’s rock ‘n’ roll dream stuff.

What’s been the key to keeping the band vital for so long?

It’s about adapting to change. Even though we decided we would only do this as long as it’s fun, we’ve grown to embrace the responsibility that this is a business with employees involved who need a paycheck and insurance. That’s a big part of it. There’s also something we learned from R.E.M.—don’t get caught up in who wrote what. We credit everything—lyrics and music—to Widespread Panic. It’s all for one, and one for all.

Check the Lockn’ Festival schedule for Widespread Panic’s set times

Categories
Arts

ARTS Picks: Suuns

Ride the wave

Montreal-based electro-prog rockers Suuns take dance beats to new punk heights following the launch of their sophomore album, Images Du Futur. Tightly edited melodies layer and clash, building huge waves of sound with a crashing intensity matched only by the musical soothsayers’ boundless energy.

Saturday 9/7 $12, 9pm. The Southern Café & Music Hall, 103 S. First St., Downtown Mall. 977-5590.

Categories
Living

Garden to glass: Local produce takes center stage for three bar managers

If you’re into food, chances are you’ve heard the phrase “farm to table.” If you haven’t, it’s essentially a movement of chefs and farmers to limit the distance food travels to market, to restore produce diversity to local markets, and to limit consumption of foods to those that are seasonally available. Voluntary imposition of self-limitation sounds like no fun to most Americans, but the farm to table movement is uniquely responsible for transforming neon, cardboard-flavored supermarket produce back to the true hues and organic flavors that produce has had for generations. True, this does require a certain zen embrace of the limitations of where you live, what time of year it is, and what’s around. But the flavors of aptly picked, locally sourced, in-season produce regularly transform the most simple combinations of ingredients.

It’s taken some time for farm to table to spill over into the domain of beverages, but fortunately, there are some folks in town paying attention to what’s good, and they’re trying to bring “garden to glass” cocktails to Charlottesville. And even more fortuitous is the astronomical number of farms surrounding Charlottesville and flooding our markets with fragrant, diverse, and delicious produce. We asked two local bartenders to share what cocktails they’ve come up with lately using local produce. (My own recommendation follows.)

Brett Harder

Bar manager at The Whiskey Jar

Favorite seasonal produce and where to get it: I like making the trip up to Carter Mountain Orchard for peaches and apples whenever I’m not having them provided by the Local Food Hub. Honestly, the view is beautiful up there and I definitely have a craving every now and again for those addictive, cider granitas.

The Fuzzy Exorcist

Pour 1 1/2 oz. Bowman Brothers bourbon, 1/2 oz. Demerara rosemary-caramom syrup, 1/2 oz. lemon juice, 1 1/2 oz. Carter Mountain peach purée over ice in a Tom Collins glass. Top fill volume with Foggy Ridge First Fruit sparkling apple cider. Garnish with a slice of peach and a twist of lemon. “Peach and rosemary both tend to have some professed ability in history at keeping away evil spirits,” said Harder. “In ancient China, where the peach originated, they used to make peachwood wands to protect against spectral evils that might infect magistrates, kings, and emperors. Similarly, rosemary in the Western world was believed to dispel nightmares if kept under one’s pillow and also repel witches if kept outside. That’s where the name of this drink came from.”

Nick Crutchfield

Bar manager at Commonwealth Restaurant and Skybar

Favorite seasonal ingredient and where to get it: My wife, since I get home around 3:45am on Saturday mornings, heads to the City Market and picks up my produce for me. She frequents different vendors and tries to buy the best of what’s around. I use apples from Carter Mountain and local celery to make my Pink Lady shrub (a cocktail made mixing drinking vinegar syrup with liquor).

C-Ray Smash

Combine 1 1/2 oz. Beefeater gin, 1/2 oz. cucumber simple syrup, 1/2 oz. fresh lemon juice, four 1″ pieces of celery, and three drops of Carter Mountain Pink Lady shrub in a mixing tin and muddle. Add ice and shake hard. Double strain over fresh-cracked ice in an old-fashioned glass that has been rinsed with 1/8 oz. Kübler absinthe. Express lemon swath and discard. Rub sage leaf on lip of glass and place across top of drink. “Bright acidity from the lemon and shrub, balanced by the herbal notes of the gin and absinthe, rounded with the cucumber simple and crushed celery. Nicely balanced in texture and aroma,” Crutchfield said. “The story of shrubs is that they were used in old times as vessels to deliver medicine. As our social drinking evolved past medicinal needs into social settings, so did the ways in which we took the elixirs. Shrubs are one of the few families that haven’t evolved a lot. They are typically bright with the vinegar used and full of flavor and texture, depending on ingredients used in the making of the shrubs.”

As for me, there’re still a few more weeks of melons left in the growing season. The dudes at the City Market (especially the stand next to the Taqueria) frequently have some fun heirloom varieties like yellow watermelons, crenshaw melons, etc. I like to get local honey from Integral Yoga, and I have an herb garden that I pull most of my herbs from.

The Constant Gardener

Rinse a martini glass with Green Chartreuse. Combine 1 1/2 oz. Beefeater gin, 1/2 oz. herbed honey, the juice of half a lime, and 1 oz. watermelon juice in a shaker with ice, shake vigorously, and strain into rinsed martini glass. Garnish with a sprig of rosemary.

Watermelon and herbs play together nicely, so it’s not a stretch that the two would be complemented by gin’s botanicals and the 130 herbs in Chartreuse. The herbed honey really ties it together.

Micah LeMon, formerly the bar manager at Blue Light Grill, is the current bar manager at Pasture.