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Living

Pie high: What’s the deal with all the new pizza joints piling up?

A pizza is on its way to your table. It’s bubbling with melted cheese, crackling with a blistered crust, mounded by rendered meats and fresh veggies. Underneath the toppings, a bright, tangy tomato sauce holds it all together.

Now that I have your attention, let’s talk pizza in Charlottesville. With multiple pizzeria openings announced and executed in the past several months, where does the ‘za scene stand? What do we have to stuff in our collective pie hole? What can we expect to hit our table in the near future? What can we pan local restaurateurs for failing to bring us?

New York-style slices (loosely interpreted as largish, floppy, thin-crust numbers) are as well-covered as ever. Fabio’s, Slice, Vita Nova, Christian’s—the old standbys. Now Benny Deluca’s, the C’ville outpost of regional chain Benny’s, supersizes the lineup. Serving a giant piece of pie straight out of the oven via a small menu, the lunch counter has gone in a different direction than the standard-bearers. Where Christian’s, for example, has excelled by sourcing fresh, unique ingredients and combining them in inventive ways, the toppings at Benny Deluca’s are more of an afterthought, a seasoning for the floppy triumvirate of dough, cheese, and sauce. Particularly now, while the West Main Street neighborhood is full of diverse, hardhat-wearing construction workers, Benny Deluca’s doesn’t just deliver the biggest slice in town, it’s also offering the most authentic New York-style experience.

When Christian Tamm, the founder of Christian’s who’s sold off the individual locations over the years, and Andrew Vaughan, a C’ville-based restaurateur who owned the Christian’s location on the Corner from 2009-2010, decided to open a new Christian’s restaurant earlier this year, they deemed the local market too saturated and found space in Richmond. Vaughan said moving outside the local market has given him some perspective on his hometown’s pizza scene.

“The one thing we’re missing here is the Neapolitan style,” he said. “The place that is opening up is the most exciting thing that’s happening, to me.”

That “place” is Lampo, the Neapolitan-style eatery slated for a fall opening in the former Farm space in the shadow of the Belmont Bridge. The restaurant is spear-headed by tavola head chef Loren Mendosa, who likewise thinks he’s pinpointed the soft spot in the C’ville pizza lineup.

“There’s nothing like what we want to do in town,” he said. “I would go to DC and have awesome Neapolitan pizza, and that whole pizza culture just doesn’t exist here.”

If Mendosa and his partners get it right, what they’ll be bringing to the local market is quick-fired, thin crust pizzas topped with the freshest ingredients available and made to standards developed by the Associazione Vera Pizza Napoletana.

The idea at the new spot is to turn pizza back into the “food of the people,” according to Mendosa. He said pizza was historically a peasant food, made and sold by farmers in the cooler months as a way to highlight fresh, straight-from-the-source ingredients. The model fits in perfectly with the current trend of farm-to-table eating, and Mendosa said he has relationships in place with farmers and producers of artisan food (think buffalo-milk cheeses and spreadable salami) that will have delicious results.

“[Neapolitan pizza] is about getting in touch with the roots of cooking and food,” Mendosa said. “That is what is really attractive about the whole process.”

The closest local thing to what Lampo is trying to do, at least in philosophy, is the well-regarded Dr. Ho’s Humble Pie in North Garden. With thoughtfully-sourced and combined ingredients cooked in a searing hot oven to sizzling delectability, Dr. Ho’s success may be an indicator of what a place like Lampo can do.

Mendosa’s decision to open the restaurant was driven by his travels to places like New York and Pittsburgh, where small, high quality pizzas for around $10 have been growing in popularity for a decade. The question, as always, is whether C’ville can support a concept that has taken off in more cosmopolitan markets.

Dr. Ho’s owner and chef Michael McCarthy said with all the comings and goings of pizzerias in the city over the years, he’s long been reluctant to consider opening a satellite to his North Garden location here.

“We are an anomaly out here,” McCarthy said. “Going into that market and having to compete with everyone else would be difficult. There are a lot of people serving pizza in C’ville. Some of them close as fast as they open.”

Still, McCarthy’s “pipe dream” of opening a small takeout spot with no dining room in C’ville would likely be hailed by its many fans, including Mendosa.

“I love Dr. Ho’s. Those guys are awesome,” he said. “Being from Nelson County, when they first opened up, it was mind-blowing to me that a place of that quality could be so close.”

Self-congratulations aside, the C’ville pizza scene does still have at least one glaring omission—Chicago-style pizza, be it stuffed deep dish or simply good quality pan pizza. Some might question whether the hearty style, so well-suited to the brutal winters and broad-shouldered clientele of Midwestern pizzerias, would be as successful here. I tend to think a quality deep dish, a la the renowned Lou Malnati’s pies, would be likely to find success in any climate. But the competition around here has certainly gotten thick. 

Categories
News

What’s coming up in Charlottesville-Albemarle the week of August 25?

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 in the comments section.

  • The Charlottesville Redevelopment and Housing Authority meets at 7pm Monday, August 25 in Council Chambers in City Hall.
  • The County’s Long Range Solid Waste Solutions Advisory Committee meets at 1pm Tuesday in the Community Development wing of the County Office Building on McIntire.
  • The Charlottesville Planning Commission meets in a planning session from 5-8pm Tuesday, August 26 in the Neighborhood Development Services Conference Room in City Hall to discuss the city’s Capital Improvement Plan and the board’s strategic plan.
  • The Albemarle County Board of Supervisors and the the county School Board hold a joint dinner meeting from 5-8pm Tuesday in Room 241 at the Albemarle County Office Building on McIntire Road to discuss the coming budget cycle—and how to come at the contentious topic of school funding while “working from a foundation of trust.”
  • The Charlottesville City Council holds an all-day retreat starting at 8:30am Friday at Morven Farm.
Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: fleaVILLE

Looking to add some art and local flavor to your shopping experience? Then head to fleaVILLE, the destination where originality is the leading retail trait. Comprised of local artisans and chefs, the bundle of tented vendors offers a glimpse into the talent of the area, and lets you take a bit of it home in the form of hand-crafted goods or a delicious treat. So, whether you’re in the mood for a handcrafted birdhouse or a vegan cookie, it’s a worthy excursion.

Saturday 8/23. Free, 10am. The IX Project, 2nd Street SE. www.flea-ville.com

Categories
News

What’s Happening at the Jefferson School?

Literacy Volunteers to Benefit from Charlottesville Lady Arm Wrestlers Event Saturday

On Saturday, August 23, Charlottesville Lady Arm Wrestlers will be hosting its final match of the season and proceeds from the event will go to support Literacy Volunteers. General admission tickets are $5 and doors open at 7pm with wrestling starting at 8pm. A few V.I.P. tickets are still available here.

While there are now over twenty CLAW leagues throughout the United States, as well as in South America and Europe, lady arm-wrestling began here in Charlottesville. “Claw’s been around since 2008, so the first year it was at a manic pace of about ten matches that year and now we do three each summer,”  Dolly Joseph, one of the founding members of CLAW. CLAW’s popularity even led to a locally-produced documentary about the growth of the movement by Billy Hunt and Brian Wimer. CLAW: The Movie is available for purchase at the Blue Moon Diner or online, and is currently being screened at film festivals around the country, after premiering at the Virginia Film Festival last year.

“It really started as some smack talk while several of our founders were at the gym together trying to threaten to see who could take who down in arm-wrestling,” added Laura Galgano, another founding member and owner of the Blue Moon Diner. “They decided they wanted to try and have an event and they came to me at Blue Moon Diner and I’m silly enough to say, yes of course, we should completely do something like that.”

The event features eight wrestlers, who dress up as characters and have entourages that try to collect bribes from the audience to sway the event’s judges. All proceeds from these bribes go to benefit a woman-founded or woman-run charity in the area. “We’re really excited to be working with Literacy Volunteers and excited to be doing ridiculous things to raise money for some local causes,” said Galgano.

Literacy Volunteers will be rooting for one of its staff members, Amie Whittemore, who will be wrestling as Betty Bookworm. “While Betty may seem very bookish, she’s tough and she takes reading very, very seriously,” Whittemore explained about her persona. In the last six years, CLAW has raised over $60,000 for local causes.

Galgano added, “There are very few opportunities for adults outside of Halloween to really be silly and let go and hide underneath another persona. So it’s a very freeing and fun experience for everyone.”

Raffle, Game Night Happening at Mary Williams Community Center

JABA’s Mary Williams Community Center will be raffling two pairs of tickets to an upcoming concert at Carver Recreation Center featuring “Touch the Band.” Proceeds from the raffle will support JABA’s Home Delivered Meals program in Charlottesville & Albemarle county. Raffle tickets are available at the center and at JABA’s Hillsdale location for just $1.00 a chance. Concert tickets are valued at $18.00 each and include refreshments catered by Mel’s Cafe. The winners will be drawn on Monday September 8. “Touch the Band” will be performing on September 12, 8:30pm-11:30pm at Carver Rec.

Mary Williams Community Center Manager Kelly Carpenter also reports that the Center will be partnering with Charlottesville Parks & Recreation to host a weekly Games Group. Beginning Sept. 17, each Wednesday through December 17 from 2:15pm to 3:15pm, the Center will be open to individuals who would like to play dominoes, checkers or scrabble. While the group is geared to seniors everyone is welcome.  There is no fee to participate. Call the Mary Williams Community Center for questions and to reserve your spot at 434-987-8433.

The Women’s Initiative Offers “Challenge into Change” Writing Contest, Workshops

The Women’s Initiative is offering two workshops to support writers entering its “Challenge into Change” writing contest. On August 29, noon to 1pm,the Women’s Initiative will host a brainstorming session at its main office, located at 1101 East High Street. The second workshop will focus on polishing one’s essay and take place September 19, noon to 1pm, also at the High Street location. Contact Eboni Bugg for more information or if you’d like to attend:  ebugg@thewomensinitiative.org.

“Challenge into Change” is open to all writers, regardless of gender. Submitted writings should be no more than 500 words and be about or by a woman who has turned a challenge into an opportunity for positive growth.

Submissions are due by Thursday, September 25 and winners and contestants will be celebrated on October 26 at the Jefferson School City Center. All submissions must be accompanied by an agreement form. Judges will be looking for essays that inspire and show transformation; perfect spelling and grammar are not required. The following cash prizes will be offered: 1st place ($200), 2nd place ($150), 3rd place ($100), Runners Up ($50) and Honorable Mentions ($25). All contestants will receive three free copies of the 2014 contest book. Books will also be available for purchase through Lulu Press, Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble.

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!

 

Trial by desire: The McDonnells’ fairytale romance takes a nasty turn

For a political columnist, the federal corruption trial of Bob and Maureen McDonnell is like a giant bowl of M&M’s dusted with cocaine sitting by your keyboard at all times: it’s such a constant temptation that it’s hard to resist gorging yourself every time you sit down to write. But with prosecutors finally resting their case, and the McDonnells’ defense team now attempting to refute a whole host of embarrassing allegations, we hope you’ll indulge us as we return, once again, to the ongoing soap opera of Virginia’s formerly high-flying, now fallen and dysfunctional first couple.

While in office, the former governor and his ex-NFL cheerleader wife projected a carefully constructed image of marital bliss. But the trial’s first two weeks not only ripped the veneer off of that image, but then proceeded to smash the underlying wood into splinters and set them aflame. (To be honest, it was fairly easy to see this coming, as one of the very first actions taken by the McDonnells’ lawyers was to introduce a motion to have Bob and Maureen tried separately. It was denied).

The prosecution’s allegations that Bob and Maureen traded official favors for cash and gifts seemed strong going in, and even stronger at the conclusion of their presentation. To bolster their case that the McDonnells abused the powers of the governor’s office for personal gain, prosecutors turned to Jonnie Williams, the millionaire tobacco-pill huckster who sought to promote his highly questionable “dietary supplement” Anatabloc by befriending the McDonnells (mostly Maureen) and showering them with no-contract loans, high-priced dresses and jewelry, and assorted other favors.

Williams turned out to be a surprisingly solid witness, and stuck to his story throughout countless hours of cross-examination. He repeatedly described instances of the McDonnells helping to promote Anatabloc, including personal introductions to high-level government officials and a lunch at the governor’s mansion which featured a bottle of Anatabloc placed prominently next to every plate. Other witnesses, such as former McDonnell policy aide Jason Eige, testified about requests from both Maureen and Bob McDonnell regarding government-funded studies of the product.

The prosecution capped its case with a final, devastating presentation of all the luxury goods and clothing that Williams had purchased for the first couple, each one held aloft as it was described meticulously for the jury.

In response, the McDonnells’ defense team decided on a very simple strategy: throw Maureen under a bus. At various points during the trial they alleged (or elicited testimony alleging) that the McDonnells’ marriage was so bad that they were barely on speaking terms, that Maureen had a “crush” on Williams, and that the governor was “in denial about Mrs. McDonnell’s mental capacity.” It got so bad that one of Maureen’s own attorneys got her former chief of staff to admit, under oath, that she’d called the former first lady a “nutbag” in her FBI testimony.

This sets the stage for the even more exciting defense presentation, which will try to convince jurors that Williams is an opportunistic liar, that Bob McDonnell did nothing illegal (technically true, given Virginia’s incredibly lax ethics laws at the time), and that the entire imbroglio was apparently a product of Maureen McDonnell’s misguided romantic fantasies.

For our part, we will try to resist chronicling every sordid twist and turn in this ongoing train wreck of a trial—but man oh man, do those drug-dusted M&M’s look good!

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Karen Jonas

Though Oklahoma Lottery is Karen Jonas’ debut recording, the album has been touted by critics as refined, polished, and sophisticated—a rare combination for an artist’s freshman effort. Jones is a native of Fredericksburg, Virginia, but her tone and approach are straight out of Nashville, Tennessee with stylistic nods to country greats like Willie Nelson and Johnny Cash atop folky undertones that are reminiscent of female forerunners like Joan Baez and Joni Mitchell. It’s safe to say that Jonas is musically wise beyond her years, and to catch a live show on her current tour of small bars and clubs could easily be an “I saw her when…” moment.

Friday 8/22. Free, 10pm. Fellini’s #9, 200 W. Market St. 979-4279.

Categories
Arts

Film review: The latest chapter in The Expendables comes up short

Four years and three installments into the Expendables series and we’ve reached what is typically the nail in the coffin for action franchises: the PG-13 sequel. While the rating is essentially meaningless in this age of bloodless gun battles and cramming in as many “shits” as you can but using only one intentionally placed “fuck,” the shift from R to PG-13 typically reflects the series’ low point, signaling when the people making creative decisions are more interested in reaching a wider audience than in continuing the spirit of its predecessors. Just look at the RoboCop remake, Alien vs. Predator, Terminator: Salvation, and Live Free or Die Hard-—OK, that one was kinda fun.

But pandering to audience expectations is really what The Expendables is all about, so who can say whether the lower MPAA rating is a tongue-in-cheek parody of an inherently goofy series or just the result of its own self-referential nature? Some things are markedly worse than the previous entries, from the iPhone app quality of the special effects to the messy fight choreography and spatially baffling set pieces. But it’s certainly not short on what it came here to do: kick ass, chew bubblegum, and beg the question whether it’s in on its own jokes.

There is absolutely zero point in talking about the plot of a movie where Arnold Schwarzenegger makes two separate “chopper” references. The whole point of the series is to find new additions to the crew. Antonio Banderas steals the show and may be worth the price of admission. Wesley Snipes’ apparent happiness to be free and working is infectious, providing a nice counterbalance to a hilariously bored-looking Harrison Ford. Mel Gibson is a fitting villain (as in real life), starring as a former Expendable turned weapons dealer who never misses an opportunity to flip out (as in real life). But the crop of youngsters takes over the screen for way too long, essentially erasing the movie’s sole reason for existing: muscles, guns, and grizzled stars of yesteryear kicking ass.

By its own standards, it’s not awful, but it is more of the same with diminishing returns. If and when the fourth entry to the Expendables makes its way to theaters, the best thing it can do for itself is get out from under Stallone’s wing and move into one of the other fantastically silly subgenres of ’80s action flicks. Bruce Willis was the master of smirky sarcasm, and we rooted for him because he was the only one who could see how much of an idiot everyone else was being. Most of Schwarzenegger’s best films are razor sharp parodies that work because his very presence is intended as a grotesque, exaggerated parody of an everyman. He’s so clearly not a New York construction worker or small-town sheriff that the movie is inherently self-parodying while not skimping on the excitement.

Stallone movies, meanwhile, are a much tougher nut to crack. Where the rest of the decade was dedicated to knowingly preposterous, funhouse mirror versions of action entertainment, Stallone always seemed to take on even the most idiotic movies with complete sincerity. Watch an interview with him and you’ll know he’s an intelligent guy —hell, he wrote Rocky—but even when there is a jokey tone to the movie he’s in, the joke he’s making and the one the audience is laughing at are always two different things. The robot in Rocky IV isn’t funny, but the expectation that anyone in the world would find it cute is hilarious. And he sure seems convinced of his integrity in Rambo III, the most accidentally anti-war film of all time.

In the end, you probably already know if you’re going to see The Expendables 3 without reading a single review, and there’s really nothing wrong with enjoying the movie. But for the next installment to work, it needs to answer two huge questions: why cast legendary martial artists only to give them guns, and why bother making a movie PG-13 when all of the references are 30 years old?

Playing this week

A Most Wanted Man
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Boyhood
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Chef
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Dawn of the Planet of
the Apes

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Elvis: That’s the Way It Is
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

The Expendables 3
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Get On Up
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Giver
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Guardians of the Galaxy
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Hercules
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Hundred-Foot Journey
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Into the Storm
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Let’s Be Cops
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Lucy
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Magic in the Moonlight
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Planes: Fire & Rescue
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Step Up All In
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

What If
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Movie houses

Regal Downtown Mall
Cinema 6
979-7669

Regal Stonefield 14
and IMAX
244-3213

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Communitas

Communitas is a Latin term that signifies the coming together of various mediums in the spirit of equality, which makes it the perfect name for an event that joins music and dance. From around the country, violinists and dancers come gather for a celebration of the human spirit through sound and motion. The concorDance contemporary company brings together a group of dance and music professionals to work in sync, creating a singular experience that uplifts both art forms and demonstrates the wonders that can happen when good things come together.

Friday 8/22. $10, 8pm. The Haven, 112 W. Market St. 973-1234. 

Categories
News

Despite traffic worries, supes approve permit allowing growth at Albemarle private school

In a 4-2 vote last week, the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors approved a special use permit that will allow a small private school to expand enrollment. The school in question is the Regents School of Charlottesville, where last year 83 plaid- and khaki-clad kids from kindergarten to eighth grade attended classes infused with Christian lessons. It’s located in an area designated as rural, and existing zoning codes don’t offer much guidance for the expansion of small private schools, making way for a debate about balancing a need for growth with safety along a busy route.

“We’re really not trying to be a huge school,” Head of School Courtney Palumbo said. “We’re allowed to have up to 130 in the coming years, and we don’t anticipate that will happen.” But the little school community wants the headroom, she said.

The original proposal, which requested a special use permit to allow 98 students this year and 130 by 2015, was shot down by the Planning Commision earlier this year. The 4-year-old school’s entrance is located directly on Route 250, and commissioners worried that an increased number of vehicles exiting the school and turning left onto the road would up the risk of collisions.

School officials revised the plan and presented two options to the board last week. The first option proposed a “modified pork chop,” a triangular concrete barrier, be built at the existing entrance to prevent vehicles from turning left on Route 250. Option one also included an agreement with nearby businesses that would allow parents to turn around in their parking lots to avoid turning left, plus the implementation of a vanpool to keep vehicle volume to a minimum. Option two included the originally proposed entrance built onto Broomley Road, which runs perpendicular to Route 250, plus a traffic control island prohibiting left-hand turns from the existing entrance. Supervisors and school officials agreed that a new entrance would create more problems than it would solve, and speakers during the public hearing urged the board to consider the first option.

After nearly three hours of hearing public comments and discussing the projected traffic impacts, the board voted to approve the special use permit. Supervisors Diantha McKeel and Liz Palmer cast the two votes against it.

“I have no doubt that it’s a wonderful school,” McKeel said. “It’s not about that. It’s about safety. It’s always got to be about safety.”

Palumbo said she understands the safety concerns, but at least for the foreseeable future, she doesn’t expect the school’s enrollment expansion to have a drastic impact on traffic.

“This basically allows us to accept the students on our waiting list,” Palumbo said, bringing enrollment up to 98 for this year. She added that many of the children on the list are siblings of current students, so the number of cars coming in and out of the parking lot shouldn’t change much.

Palumbo also noted that any changes wouldn’t have to be permanent, as the school will likely find a new home within the next few years. The Regents School started out in the basement of the Jefferson Park Baptist Church before relocating to the campus of the Christian Aid Mission near the intersection of Ivy and Broomley roads, and will likely move to at least one more temporary location before settling downpermanently.

“We’re grateful to be here for as long as we can, and we want to do everything we can to avoid these problems,” Palumbo said.

 

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Tina and Her Pony

The wonderful tunes of Tina and Her Pony prove that not everything needs to be modernized in the 21st century. The Ohio duo sticks to the basics, producing amazing folk music from simple guitars, banjos, and cellos. Each song tells the story of a true experience and explores the themes and emotions found in the everyday moments of life. Though the music may be stark, its depth is profound, providing an intimate experience and connection with the audience.

Thursday 8/21. Free, 8pm. Blue Moon Diner, 512 W. Main St. 980-6666.