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The new bacon? Anchovies take their place among umami foods

They aren’t just the pizza topping you love to hate anymore. Anchovies are showing up on menus all over town, and diners are responding.

“I think more chefs are turning to anchovies as an ingredient not just as a topping but as a way to add depth and umami to other dishes,” Lampo co-owner and chef Loren Mendosa says, referring to the so-called fifth taste that might be described as “savory kicked up a notch.” “Umami is kind of a buzzword, but it really is important. Chefs are constantly looking for foods that have high concentrations of umami, and anchovies are one of them.”

Fact is, anchovies have been in dishes for quite some time. But it’s only been in the last decade or so that diners’ tastes have become accepting enough for them to be mentioned on menus, according to Parallel 38 owner Justin Ross. As Ross puts it, “consumers have more and better resources, so they are better educated about what’s in their food and, perhaps more importantly, what’s in their favorite chef’s food.”

These days anchovies are taking center stage in an array of preparations: white anchovies dressed with oil and citrus as boquerones, fresh-roasted anchovies and cured anchovies mixed into spreads, tossed with pasta, giving salads that extravagant edge and—of course—on pizza. “Anchovies give you the brininess, a lot of mouth feel from the oil and fat and a hint of the ocean,” says former Public Fish & Oyster chef Donnie Glass, who’s in the process of opening Banyan Day Provisions, a seafood counter in Timbercreek Market.

Glass points out the majority of preparations feature cured anchovies—the tinned, floating-in-oil variety usually associated with the fish. And Mendosa says it’s that age-old version that fits so well with modern cookery. “When you’re trying to build a dish that has some bigger flavors, you can’t add things that are too light because they will be overpowered,” he says. “Anchovies can take it.”

Anchovies are most often cured for good reason, Glass says—they just don’t stay fresh long. But they’re also delicious fresh, according to Mendosa. “They’re an oily fish, similar to mackerel, so they can stand up to the high temperatures” and crisp up without drying out, he says.

Ross says white anchovies are “more approachable” and have also helped the fish’s popularity. Less pungent than the cured variety, white anchovies are more likely to be seen as a standalone protein.

So what’s the future for anchovies? Are they here to stay? Will they come and go? Heck, could they be the new bacon? Glass says no.

“False. Absolutely false,” he says. “There will never be a new bacon, and if there is we will see it come and go and see bacon retake its place at the top of the food chain.”

Ross is more diplomatic. “Anchovies are perhaps the new olive…always hidden in recipes to pack a punch when it comes to flavor, insanely versatile and absolutely delicious on their own,” he says.

There’s something a little fishy about this tapenade at Parallel 38 (hint: It’s anchovies). Photo: John Robinson
There’s something a little fishy about this tapenade at Parallel 38 (hint: It’s anchovies). Photo: John Robinson

ANCHOVIES AHOY

One of the longest-standing anchovy preparations in town, Mas’ white Cantabrian anchovy fillets dressed in olive oil, garlic and lemon juice are a favorite of local chefs and foodies. According to Lampo co-owner and chef Loren Mendosa, the fillets that Mas mastermind Tomas Rahal sources are the “best of the white anchovies.”

Parallel 38 occasionally serves boquerones marinated in olive oil, citrus, vinegar, garlic and herbs as a special, and owner Justin Ross says the fish are used to punch up many of the restaurant’s traditional sauces. For your everyday anchovy fix, try the tapenade with kalamata olives, anchovies and lemon.

Ross says “anchovies are the flavor backbone of puttanesca,” and Fellini’s take on the classic dish doesn’t disappoint. The campanelle pasta with sausage is tossed in a sauce of fresh tomatoes, artichokes, capers, olives and an anchovy wine reduction for that mouth- coating umami kick.

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Knife & Fork Magazines

‘One cheese led to another’: Behind the counter with Feast!’s Sara Adduci

Sometimes, when it comes to food, it’s best to leave it to the experts—from your brunch omelet to your post-dinner cheese plate. We asked Feast! cheesemonger Sara Adduci to tell us how to do it right. She’s been cheesemongering for 12 years, ever since taking a part-time job at a shop in Richmond following a “terrible addiction to a two-year aged Gouda. One cheese led to another and soon enough I was hooked,” she says.

Not hooked enough to try her hand at making cheese on her own, though.

“I made cheese with Gail Hobbs-Page at Caromont Farm, back in the day,” Adduci says. “But I’m around so many of my favorites at Feast! I’ve never seen the need!”

Here’s what she says about creating the perfect plate (including a universal crowd-pleaser).

How much cheese do you actually end up eating every day?

About a pound. I’m kidding. Honestly, not all that much! I have some quality control nibbles here and there throughout the day, but generally it isn’t a huge amount.

What’s the most common question people ask you
when they approach the counter?

That would probably be “What is your favorite cheese?”, the answer to which depends on the day, my mood, which direction the wind is blowing and whatever swoon-worthy cheese is my current crush.

What’s a good rule of thumb when buying cheese for a party (i.e. how much cheese per person)?

I suggest three to five cheeses, making sure to include different textures and different milks, and I calculate about 2-3 ounces of cheese per person.

I have $50 to spend to make a cheese board. What do I buy?

Something soft and creamy, something firm and a wild card, like a blue or something with a bit of attitude. This should be about $30- 35. Use the rest to get a baguette, a box of crackers, some mixed nuts and fresh or dried fruit. The best suggestion I have, though, is to find a cheesemonger to help. We are really good at finding just what you need to please your people, whether they are conservative cheese folks or wide-open turophiles (cheese connoisseurs). We can let you taste first, we can work within any themes or special requests, and we can send you home with all you need to impress!

Feast!’s Sara Adduci says that, as a cheesemonger, she doesn’t eat as much cheese on the job as one would think. We say she’s squandering an opportunity.

CURDS THIS WAY What’s a no-fail cheese choice? Adduci says, “Two words: triple crème. These rich, decadent, soft cheeses are like cheese butter, and it is very rare that someone doesn’t like them.”

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Knife & Fork Magazines

Spring chicken: Bill Scatena’s favorite seasonal recipe

To a chef, a new season means a chance to spruce up the menu. We asked Pippin Hill Farm & Vineyards’ executive chef, Bill Scatena, to share one thing he’s excited to start cooking this spring.

“My inspiration for this dish [comes from] cooking chicken on a little Weber grill in between high school and college. It was one of the first proteins I gained confidence cooking with. My dad also showed me how to roast poultry the proper way—whole birds, to be exact (i.e. proper trussing, roasting technique, brines, etc.).

I source the onions from Manakintowne—they also have other wonderful alliums, all of which we are eager to use again this year.

For the Aleppo chile, I stumbled upon it at a farmers market one weekend when I lived in Colorado for a few years. The flavor is a bit more piquant than that of an ancho—which is smoky and earthy—but the same spice level, roughly. It’s a very forgiving spice with a moderate heat level.”

Roasted whole chicken with spring onion and Aleppo chile

1 pasture-raised whole chicken (giblets removed, rinsed and patted dry)

2 tbs. extra virgin olive oil

2 bunches of green onions (bulbs reserved and stalks thinly sliced)

8 cloves garlic (thinly sliced)

1 1/2 tbs. coarsely ground Aleppo chile (similar to ancho chile)

2 tsp. minced thyme

1 lemon, cut in half

4 tbs. butter, room temperature

Kosher salt and cracked black pepper

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees. In a food processor, add the butter, garlic, onion stalks, Aleppo chile and thyme. Mix until the butter has incorporated evenly. Season lightly with salt and pepper, then gently rub the butter underneath the skin in all nooks and crannies. Stuff the chicken with half a lemon and the reserved onion bulbs, then truss the legs tightly before cooking. Pour the olive oil over the chicken and season with salt and pepper to preference and place in the oven in a roasting pan. Cook for 20 minutes, then reduce heat to 350 degrees and cook for another 45 minutes, basting with pan juices every 15 minutes. Insert a thermometer into the thigh section and at 165 degrees, pull the chicken out, squeeze lemon juice over the top with the remaining lemon half and let it rest for 15 minutes. Carve and plate with the soft spring onions and pan juices. Serves 4

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Eat, drink and be merry: Epicurean Ways fulfills any foodie’s whim

When Jane Gregg studied in Madrid and Salamanca, Spain, during college, she had no idea it was the start of something wonderful. Epicurean Ways, her Charlottesville-based company that customizes luxury food and drink tours throughout Spain and Portugal, to be precise.

“After college I lived in Madrid for three years and then went to graduate school for Spanish literature,” Gregg says. She ran a Spanish-English translation agency for several years, and in 2005 she moved her family to Spain so her children would “get to know the culture from the inside.” It was during that time that Gregg formed relationships with chefs, winemakers, artisan food producers and guides from all over the country. In 2008, Epicurean Ways was born.

All of Gregg’s trips are custom-created, whether there are two or 22 people in a group, and they might include an in-depth wine excursion to a single region, learning to cook alongside a Michelin star chef or spending time in a small village, visiting food producers and soaking up the local ambiance.

“Our job is to guide people to the best experiences, restaurants and hotels in harmony with their tastes and interests and the way they like to travel,” Gregg explains, adding that one of her favorite trips includes spending the better part of a day with Françesc Capafons, “the charming” 71-year-old owner of Capafons Ossó winery in the Priorat wine region outside of Barcelona. He loads visitors into his 4×4 vehicle for a trip to hilltop vineyards, where they “look out over the Priorat and inhale the scent of the rosemary and thyme and mountain herbs that he lets grow among the vines,” Gregg says. Afterward, Capafons’ guests spend time at his Montsant estate for a tasting of eight to 10 wines—white and red, Priorat and Montsant—including some older vintages.

Gregg’s clients also enjoy cooking with a private chef at a txoko (cooking society) in the Basque Country. The chef takes everyone to the market in a fishing village outside San Sebastian, where they buy the fish and go back to the txoko and “cook up a storm,” she says. “They are usually in the txoko until 4 or 5 in the afternoon, after a long lunch with a few bottles of Txakoli.”

Tours that include excursions like the ones mentioned above are typically between four and 10 days and cost about $400 per person per day for groups of two or larger (not including airfare). For more information, visit epicureanways.com.

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Knife & Fork Magazines

My favorite bite: Banyan Day’s Donnie Glass gets bare bones

“Chicken necks and backbones right off the rotisserie at The Park-side in Providence, Rhode Island. I worked at The Parkside as the meat cook early in my cooking career, while I was at Johnson & Wales University. We brined whole birds with lemon and garlic, then roasted them slowly on a gorgeous, fire engine red Rotisol rotisserie. As soon as they came off the flames, I would use shears and cut the backbones out (half chickens were on the menu), ending up with a big pile of them every single day. The best part is a little half dollar-sized piece of meat on the lower back of a chicken called the ‘oyster,’ but the whole thing would just get eaten by the chefs like an ear of corn on the cob, spitting out vertebrae like watermelon seeds. The skin was brown and crispy and still gelatinous, the meat was falling off the bone, perfectly salty and garlicky. I’ve never tasted anything so good in my life.”

Banyan Day Provisions is a seafood counter in Timbercreek Market.

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The last bite: The Alley Light’s raspberry tart

Some things are almost too pretty to eat, like this raspberry tart from The Alley Light: bright red raspberries shoring up pistachio pastry cream atop sweet shortbread. It hums spring. Too pretty to eat? Somehow we’ll get over it.

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Arts

Jason Flom on making hit records and freeing the innocent

Jason Flom was born into wealth and privilege. His father, Joseph Flom, made a name in legal circles as a mergers and acquisitions savant, a man who built one of the largest law firms in the country and is sometimes known as “Mr. Takeover.”

As a youth growing up in New York City, the younger Flom seems to have enjoyed everything that came with his father’s success, making connections in the music community that would eventually serve him professionally.

So it’s refreshing when Flom, asked about the secret to his success in anticipation of his talks at the 2016 Tom Tom Founders Festival, continually admits it really comes down to one thing: “luck.”

Flom parlayed his privileged childhood into becoming one of the most successful record executives of all time. He’s headed four different record companies—Atlantic, Virgin, Capitol and his own company, Lava, which he launched twice. The first time, in 1995, he turned it into a success before selling it off and heading back to lead one of the majors. The second time, in 2009, he revived his brand and a client list that includes Katy Perry and Lorde.

“I won the name back in a golf game,” he says. Okay, so maybe his success is from luck and solid putting.

Flom says once he had his company name and brand back, running his own label has been like riding a bike, despite the “tremendous upheaval” of the record business since his first go-around.

“We’ve had to adjust to those changes, but as much as it’s different, it’s the same,” he says. “It’s a hit-driven business. If you have hits it works. That’s what it comes down to. Record companies have adjusted, whether they are small or big, to the new reality that the business is smaller than it used to be.”

Again it was luck, Flom says, that brought the powerhouse Perry to Lava. He had hired a woman whom he’d worked with at Virgin who told him Columbia had dropped Perry. It was the second label to have released the now-megastar. Flom met her at The Polo Lounge. Despite the rejections of his peers, he immediately embraced her.

“As soon as she walked in, I was like, ‘Oh my god she’s a star,’” he says.

He listened to Perry’s backstory and was convinced before he’d even heard her music.

So how was Flom able to tease Perry’s star power out where others had failed? Luck again.

“Serendipity,” he says flatly. He invited Perry to a Grammy after-party and introduced her to a friend of his, Dr. Luke. The two musicians clicked, and the result was two of Perry’s breakout hits: “I Kissed a Girl” and “Hot N Cold.”

“With Katy, the magic came from that chance meeting,” he says. “I walked in with Dr. Luke, we brokered a deal, and that was where the magic came from. Sometimes artists need to meet their creative muse. The record company just helps make it happen.”

(Flom declined to comment on Dr. Luke’s recent legal troubles involving the musician Kesha, who has tried to vacate her contract with Sony Music Entertainment because she says Dr. Luke sexually assaulted her.)

Flom says serendipity and luck are likely to be the subject of one of the two talks he’ll give at this year’s Tom Tom Fest. The April 15 Founders Summit at The Paramount Theater will feature a variety of entrepreneurs; Flom’s Passion & Advocacy talk is scheduled for 2pm.

“I think I’ll talk about how I was able to take [Lava] from zero to hero, or whatever you want to call it—what that was like both in the ’90s and today,” he says. “I like to talk about the role of luck and serendipity.”

The festival will give Flom a chance to talk about his other passion: freeing the innocent. A founding board member of The Innocence Project, made famous by its prominent role in the podcast “Serial,” Flom has made it his mission to free the improperly incarcerated. “Hit records are great; getting someone out of prison is better,” he says.

Flom, who’s on the board of five organizations involved in reducing mass incarceration, will tackle the issue in a noon luncheon at the Founders Summit, “Exoneration as Innovation.” The talk will give him a chance to explain just how overwhelming this problem is, he says, and continue to push it into the spotlight, as real-life crime dramas such as “Serial” and “Making a Murderer” have.

In the meantime, the music magnate took a minute to reflect on the innocence of the two most famous criminals whose guilt has been questioned. He says he’s not versed enough on the Adnan Syed case to say innocent or guilty. As for Steven Avery, Flom says “there is a huge probability that Steven Avery is innocent, and probably even greater that his nephew is.”

What we do know, Flom says, is Avery didn’t get a fair trial. And that’s his focus—the inherent problems in the legal system that made his father’s career.

“People have woken up to the idea that the criminal justice system is flawed,” he says. “There is a lot of momentum for change.”

Jason Flom says luck is at the center of his success in running four record labels, including his own, Lava, which signed Katy Perry after she was dropped by multiple labels. Photo: Courtesy subject

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Natural fit: Clifton Inn’s chef mixes health and food

You’ll find Yannick Fayolle, Clifton Inn’s executive chef since October 2015, on Instagram @superman_chef. It’s a moniker that speaks to his kitchen chops, of course, but also hints at his other passion: natural body-building. He’s currently preparing for his second competition.

“It keeps me close to a healthy lifestyle where I can think clearly,” he says. “I like to be clear-minded.” That’s how he leads the team in his kitchen, too—clean eats, but with a little international flare. Fayolle hails from Mauritius, where he started his culinary career before working in kitchens in Switzerland and India. We asked the chef to tell us about a few of his favorite foodie things.—Caite White

Always on the bar: I don’t have one.

Special-occasion drink: I would say a good glass of Premier Grand Cru Classé à Pauillac.

Energy source: My daily workouts.

Breakfast: Smoothie with 1 cup of spinach, 1 cup of strawberries, 2 tbs. of peanut butter, 2 scoops of whey protein and whole milk.

Lunch spot: Chipotle (and I ask for extra protein).

Japanese restaurant order: I go for unagi nigiri.

Sandwich: Corned beef Reuben

Unusual ingredient: Bison tail

Healthy snack: A Quest Bar

Unhealthy snack: A beer

Condiment: Pickled carrot peel

Chocolate: Chocolate and goat cheese crumble that one of my cooks came up with.

Grocery store cookie: Of course not.

Dessert: Scoop of ice cream with a shot of Frangelico.

Beer: My Mauritian beer—the Phoenix.

Ice cream flavor: Earl Grey

Kitchen aroma: Searing thyme and garlic and curry. Reminds me of home.

Always in the home fridge: Lots of meat

Always in the pantry: White basmati rice

Bodo’s order: Everything bagel with four scrambled eggs, bacon and cream cheese

Salad bar toppings: Chicken

Cut of meat: Hare tenderloin

Fish: Red snapper. The perfect red snapper has an interesting shellfish taste to it.

Vegetable: At this moment, it would be a tomato.

Midnight snack: None

Knife: My deboner and fish knives.

Cookbooks: Bon! by Thierry Marx. It shows the purity of the ingredients.

Mentors: My dad and mom. They taught me discipline.

Dream trip: An experimental food trip in Asia.

Food city: Tokyo

Cooking clothes: Chef’s jacket

Kitchen shoes: Skechers

Cooking music: Dubstep and deep house

Food-related tattoos: The one on my forearms. It’s a Thai philosophy: Food is art.

First food memory: Quail eggs and tropical fruits

Best meal ever: I was on a boat barbecuing a fresh snapper and lobsters.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Mavis Staples

Genre-defying, freedom-fighting diva Mavis Staples has woven her music into a fabric of gospel, soul, folk, pop, R&B, blues, rock and hip-hop for the past 60 years. A pioneer of the Delta gospel sound created in the 1950s, Staples flourished as a solo performer and in her family group, The Staple Singers. She has collaborated with Ray Charles, Ry Cooder, Prince, Jeff Tweedy and Bob Dylan—and outshined them all.

Saturday 4/9. $24.50-39.50, 8pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 979-1333.

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News

Court orders ‘Jackie’ deposed in Rolling Stone lawsuit

In UVA former associate dean Nicole Eramo’s ongoing lawsuit with Rolling Stone, Judge Glen Conrad ruled Monday that Jackie’s request to prevent her deposition would be denied and she is scheduled for at least seven hours of depositions today.

Former UVA student “Jackie,” who claimed she was gang raped at a fraternity party in Rolling Stone’s now discredited article “A Rape on Campus,” has been fighting subpoenas in the legal battle Eramo, whose title at UVA is now listed as executive director of assessment and planning, filed last May. Eramo’s defamation suit seeks $7.5 million from Rolling Stone and the article’s author, Sabrina Erdely.

In a court document, Jackie opposed the deposition of her doctor as well as herself on the grounds that “the severe harm” she would suffer  “greatly outweighs the limited utility of such discovery in light of the real issues in this case.”

Additionally, Jackie’s lawyers argued that Eramo’s actions in the case were “harmful” and described her as using “aggressive attacks” against Jackie in both the media and the court.

“Plaintiff’s conduct in this case has done more to damage her reputation and discredit any claim she may have had to being a compassionate counselor and advocate of sexual assault victims than any magazine article,” the motion reads.

While the court granted that Jackie’s psychologist would “not be deposed or otherwise subjected to discovery” at this time, Jackie herself will be deposed on April 7 at a “mutually convenient location” that is not being publicly disclosed.

Eramo and Rolling Stone’s attorneys will each get to question Jackie for 3.5 hours. Eramo had requested additional time, and may depose Jackie a total of five hours over two days, and request more time from the court. Any recordings or transcripts of the deposition will be confidential.

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” says attorney Dave Heilberg. “It’s a civil case and discovery is getting a lot more attention” than other cases.

And because Jackie never reported her alleged assault to police—Charlottesville Police investigated and found no evidence of the assault she described to Rolling Stone—she does not have the same protections of a victim in a crime that was prosecuted, says Heilberg.