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Best of C-VILLE Food & Drink

Best of C-VILLE 2016: Food & Drink

If you are what you eat (and drink), then you’re tacos, dumplings, wings and wine. You’re pizza, you’re burgers. You’re beer and croissants. And, amazingly, you’re still hungry for more. Here are your picks for the best edibles.

 

RESTAURANT

C&O Restaurant

Runner-up: Lampo

Honorable mention: Tavola

As a founder of Charlottesville’s fine dining scene, the C&O Restaurant is a legend that’s been nurtured over decades. In the talented hands of current chef/owner Dean Maupin, the vegetable soup and steak Chinoise remain on a menu that’s been elevated beyond country French to include satisfying fresh pasta dishes and creative Southern comforts. And after grooming their kitchen skills at Mas and Tavola, the four owners at runner-up Lampo united to capitalize on the piping hot (read: 900-degree) Neapolitan pizza trend, creating a menu that so frequently sells out, it seems we can’t put enough dough in our collective pie hole.

NEW RESTAURANT

Brazos Tacos

Runner-up: Kardinal Hall

Honorable mention: Timbercreek Market

The popularity of Peter Griesar’s pop-up taco shop in the former Ristorante Al Dente space last summer made it clear: Charlottesville wants, nay, needs tacos. Specifically, Texas-style tacos with a sense of humor—from the Meatwad to the Pork Star. Open since June 2015, readers say Brazos is their handheld meal of choice for breakfast, lunch and supper. And over on Preston Avenue, bocce, beers, brats and a stack of games combine to make Kardinal Hall the perfect place to quaff, chow and play through the dinner hour.

COFFEEHOUSE

Mudhouse

Runner-up: Shenandoah Joe

Honorable mention: MarieBette Café & Bakery

Having it your way has always been important to coffee drinkers, and the Mudhouse fulfills and refills caffeine dreams, while pledging to source and roast its beans carefully. Second place-getter Shenandoah Joe’s Brain Freeze on Nitro, iced coffee growlers or stout beer collabs keep you abuzz at its vibrant-yet-chill coffee spots.

MarieBette is named after Jason (left) and Patrick's daughters, Marian and Betty. Photo: Keith Alan Sprouse
MarieBette is named after Jason (left) and Patrick’s daughters, Marian and Betty. Photo: Keith Alan Sprouse

BAKERY MarieBette Café & Bakery

How we knew:

We’re gonna open a bakery!

“When Patrick [Evans] and I met, we both were changing careers into culinary—a field that we were passionate about. One thing we discussed early on was our desire to work for ourselves one day and have a business together. What that would look like was an open question at the beginning. We each did our time working in the New York food world—from bar food to baking to fine dining. It’s hard work with little reward but you learn a helluva lot.

One thing we learned is what we were good at and where our interests lay. Mine was line work and Patrick’s was baking. When we thought about what our business would look like we had three requirements: We could do what we were passionate about, not be in each other’s way and be home for supper with our daughters. Because Patrick is from North Garden and we own some land there, Charlottesville became the spot to plant our roots. We couldn’t be happier. We do what we love and love what we do.”—Jason Becton, co-owner of MarieBette Café & Bakery

Runner-up: Albemarle Baking Co.

Honorable mention: Sweethaus

 

BRUNCH

Beer Run

Runner-up: MarieBette Café & Bakery

Honorable mention: Bluegrass Grill & Bakery

The antidote to a few pints among friends on a Saturday night has always been the Sunday brunch. The much-loved Beer Run cures the hangover it gave you with a funky, tantalizing menu that includes butternut squash and egg casserole with bacon cream, choco loco chocolate banana coconut strata and a classic Southern biscuits-and-gravy platter. Over on Rose Hill Drive, MarieBette’s expert pastries serve as the foundation for its classically constructed brunch with a Euro flair.

DRAFT BEER SELECTION

Beer Run

Runner-up: Kardinal Hall

Honorable mention: Sedona Taphouse

You can’t swing a stein in this city without bumping into a beer tap. The family-owned, family-friendly Beer Run has an average of 17 taps flowing at all times and up to 125 bottles of Virginia beer, cider and mead available for retail or to enjoy on-site. This might seem like enough beer to quench a city, but in 2015, Beer Run founders tricked out the old Coca-Cola building on Preston Avenue, converting it to the boisterous 27-tap runner-up Kardinal Hall—and our pints runneth over.

RESTAURANT WINE LIST

C&O Restaurant

Runner-up: Tavola

Honorable mention: The Alley Light

If you’ve ever searched for the perfect glass of wine in this town, or picked up a copy of Best of C-VILLE, it should be no surprise that C&O takes the cup for the best restaurant wine list again this year. The list is less intimidating to the untrained eye than it once was—the high-quality reds and whites are sophisticated yet approachable, and the kitchen staff works closely with local winemakers to make sure they’re serving you the area’s best. Belmont darling Tavola, another best wine list frequenter and this year’s runner-up, counts a Wine Spectator Award of Excellence among its recent wins, joining only a few thousand restaurants worldwide.

Trying to win your date's heart and mind? Go with a classic Sazerac. Photo: Tom McGovern
Negroni, a bittersweet symphony. Photo: Tom McGovern

COCKTAILS The Alley Light

For richer pours

We drink when we’re happy, we drink when we’re sad and, sure, a martini is a great catch-all when you’re just in a drinking mood and don’t know why. But we asked this year’s best bartender, The Alley Light’s Micah LeMon, to recommend five cocktails that might satisfy those more complex feelings.

…like I want to impress my date without seeming pretentious.

Sazerac

“The Sazerac is a cocktail that’s at least 200 years old—and for good reason: It is perfect and it is delicious. It’s a regional New Orleans riff on the Old Fashioned, another classic and classy cocktail, with Cognac or rye, sugar, bitters, absinthe and a lemon twist. You might be lured into a counterproductive soliloquy about how Cognac is the base for the ‘true’ Sazerac, and how rye only came into popularity in New Orleans after a global brandy shortage due to the phylloxera epidemic in Europe in the late 19th century. But let’s focus on impressing your date with less, rather than more.”

…burdened by the passage of time.

Negroni

“Life is full of sweet moments, and full of bitter ones. This cocktail reminds you that bitter moments are preceded by sweet ones, and around we go. Dulcius ex asperis. The dance of bitter Campari, rich-sweet vermouth and gin signals to us that balance is a part of life, and when you embrace it, it can be savored as much at the perfect bittersweetness of the Negroni.”

…decadent.

Chocolate Choke

“Americans created the cocktail culture of the 1800s that survives today, and egg white cocktails were the original two-in-one drinks of the day: a little sustenance, a little booze and a lot of flavor. The Chocolate Choke follows in that tradition: bourbon, chocolate, Cynar and egg white, twice shaken and topped with Russian Imperial Stout. Having this cocktail as dessert or meal-substitute is a perfectly rational and historically appropriate decision.”

…amorous.

Ramos Gin Fizz

“Gin, citrus, cream, egg white, orange essence and soda. That sounds gross until you see the cocktail built. After laborious assembly*, your barman pours a white ribbon that forms a pillow of perfectly meringued, gin-citrus cream that slowly rises in a collins glass. In a tight column, it lifts above the mouth of the glass and, with perfect, unblemished turgor and tumescence, hints of the youth and fecundity latent in a hot summer night.”

*Don’t order this drink when the bar is three-deep.

…stupid happy.

19 Feet of Sexy

“Some things do not require a magnifying glass, a Ph.D. or any shred of contemplation to be appreciated. Reflex is an exceedingly valid way to accept or reject something. Nineteen Feet of Sexy was conceived in this notion: perfectly ripe local peaches, placed smartly in a gin sour with lemon verbena, lemon, egg white and house-made local sassafras sweet vermouth. Do not think while you are drinking this. Recoil with joy, be giggly and be happy.”

Runner-up: Bang!

Honorable mention: Oakhart Social

 

OUTDOOR DINING

Blue Mountain Brewery

Runner-up: Pippin Hill Farm & Vineyards

Honorable mention: Kardinal Hall

Why should a friendly game of cornhole be reserved strictly for tailgating? At Blue Mountain, you can pitch a few bean bags while waiting for your plate or sit under the twinkling white lights strung above the patio. Outdoor seating is year-round at this Afton spot, so when it cools off come fall, you can still get your fill of the Blue Ridge backdrop while sipping your sampler. At runner-up Pippin Hill, sitting on the patio of the rustic barn with your loved ones is sweeter than a glass of Viognier.

BARTENDER

Micah LeMon (The Alley Light)

Runner-up: Albee Padone (Oakhart Social)

Honorable mention: Alec Spidalieri (The Local)

If you’ve heard of one mixologist in town, it’s Micah LeMon—though he says becoming a bartender was purely an accident. We say it was a happy one: From Blue Light Grill to The Alley Light, LeMon has been widely recognized for his knowledge and expertise in making inventive cocktails (see a few on page 93). Speaking of being inventive, runner-up Albee Padone uses a slushie machine for some of his lavish libations at Oakhart Social.

LOCAL BREWERY

Devils Backbone Brewing Company

Runner-up: Champion Brewing Company

Honorable mention: Three Notch’d Brewing Company

Whether you’re at its basecamp brewery off Nelson 151 or the outpost brewery and taproom in Lexington, Devils Backbone—acquired by Anheuser-Busch last spring—is a Virginia fan favorite, serving beloved brews such as Vienna Lager and Eight Point IPA. Indulge in the brewery’s full menu while listening to live music at its outdoor amphitheater. And readers can’t turn down a Missile IPA at Champion, whether you’re dropping by for a concert, movie night or even a book club meeting.

LOCAL CIDERY

Bold Rock Cidery

Runner-up: Potter’s Craft Cider

Honorable mention: Albemarle CiderWorks

If there’s someone on this planet that a honeydew cider can’t impress, we haven’t found him. When guests are visiting from out of town, readers say it isn’t Monticello or even UVA Grounds that top their list of must-see destinations. It’s the timber frame cidery overlooking the Rockfish River in Nelson County. Some might even tell you that tossing back a few of Bold Rock’s best while slinging a Frisbee out by the creek is the only way to spend a Saturday. At Potter’s Craft, there’s no tasting room (yet?), but owners Tim Edmond and Dan Potter regularly take their Airstream trailer to events and local retailers.

BREAKFAST SANDWICH Ace Biscuit & Barbecue

Barbecue for breakfast

Ace Biscuit & Barbecue rolls to victory on its homemade biscuits

What does it take to deliver Charlottesville’s best breakfast sandwiches every morning at 8am? Two hours before he opens his doors, Ace Biscuit & Barbecue owner Brian Ashworth and his line cooks are in the kitchen, putting butts and briskets on the smoker, “picking up” already smoked meats, preparing side dishes, mixing waffle and pancake batter and, perhaps most importantly, fixin’ biscuits.

“The biscuits are one of the main reasons I would guess we won best breakfast sandwich,” Ashworth says.

By 8am, the customers start rolling in, sometimes without breaks in between. “Some mornings we get absolutely demolished for breakfast, and it can be three of us just keeping up with tickets,” Ashworth says. “Once 8 rolls around, we just basically keep on prepping as needed for the day and week.”

Runner-up: MarieBette Café & Bakery

Honorable mention: Ivy Provisions

 

FARM

Timbercreek Farm

Runner-up: Caromont Farm

Honorable mention: Bellair Farm

Maybe you’ve never toured Timbercreek Farm, but we bet you’ve tried more of the owners’ meat and produce than you know. Sold at local restaurants like Revolutionary Soup, Citizen Burger Bar, The Local and The Whiskey Jar (not to mention the farm’s café and grocery on Preston Avenue), the farm-to-fork offerings are pesticide-, herbicide-, fertilizer-, antibiotic- and hormone-free, which means nothing stands between you and a delicious (and healthy) meal. At cheesery Caromont Farm, be sure to snuggle the baby goats before taking home your block of Esmontonian—a goat cheese named after the town where the farm is located.

SCENE AFTER 10PM

The Whiskey Jar

Runner-up: The Alley Light

Honorable mention: C&O Restaurant

The lights will be low and the bar will be busy, so shell out some cash for your screwdriver (made with freshly squeezed orange juice, of course) and make your way to a barrel-top table outside, where you can keep an eye on all the happenings on the Downtown Mall. A collection of live bands frequent this whiskey-centric spot, so you never know what tune you’ll leave whistling. For an upscale after-hours experience, readers recommend The Alley Light (if you can find its hidden entrance) and indulging in a creative cocktail made by Charlottesville’s best bartender, Micah LeMon.

Slick bathroom, bro! Owner Andy McClure uses one of the extra-reflective mirrors for touch-ups in Citizen's bathroom. Photo: Keith Alan Sprouse
Slick bathroom, bro! Owner Andy McClure uses one of the extra-reflective mirrors for touch-ups in Citizen’s bathroom. Photo: Keith Alan Sprouse

RESTAURANT BATHROOM Citizen Burger Bar

King of the throne

Before Citizen Burger Bar opened in 2012, its Downtown Mall building underwent a hefty renovation at the hand of Stoneking von Storch Architects—including the addition of a unisex third bathroom (the first one guests encounter at the back of the restaurant). Now, as far as top honors go, this one is a bit mucky. Butt, Citizen Burger Bar owner Andy McClure wanted to make sure readers knew he was grateful for the recognition. Here’s what he had to say about ensuring the new bathroom wasn’t a stinker.

“If there is one thing we humans know in this world, it has to be toilets. With the third bathroom, we thought about how we like to do our business, how we feel emotionally when using the restroom. What we came up with is pretty special. It has a toilet complete with paper; we have a sink with 100 percent local water; and we even have a drying station that uses high-powered Charlottesville air. I am humble about pretty much everything I do, but not when it comes to that bathroom. We had a goal and we achieved it. Thank you, Charlottesville!”

Runner-up: Zocalo

Honorable mention: The Bebedero

 

HAPPY HOUR

Citizen Burger Bar

Runner-up: Beer Run

Honorable mention: South Street Brewery

It’s been a long day at the office, so we’ll just get to the good stuff. Take $2 off drafts and wine by the glass, and $1 off wells from 4-6pm at Citizen, where you can people-watch from its Downtown Mall patio or belly up to the bar inside. And if you’ve never heard of a 5pm-midnight Saturday happy hour, drop by Beer Run for half-off Belgian beers. You deserve this.

Photo: Amy Jackson
Photo: Amy Jackson

SPECIALTY FOOD SHOP Feast!

Picnic perfect

Feast! does the work for you

Grab your picnic basket and your red-and-white checkered tablecloth, because Feast! store manager Kelsey Gillan has cultivated the perfect spread for your next excursion. Only local products, which can be found at the place you voted the best specialty food shop in town, make up the perfect picnic lunch, she says.

Grab-n-Go sandwiches

“Using the freshest ingredients, our grab-n-gos are healthy, convenient and delicious. Most popular are prosciutto and mozzarella, chicken cheddar and fig or caprese.

Forage pastured pâté

“Local pâté made from Free Union Grass Farm chicken liver. Spreadable, light and easily paired.”

Twenty Paces Cheese Noah’s Arcade #19

“Slightly twangy, gorgeously textured, mixed milk cheese from right here in Charlottesville.”

Feastables

“Ready-made snack packs. Quick, convenient and stackable. Choice of veggies and Greek Goddess dressing, ants on a log, fresh fruit and Greek yogurt, or salami, cheese and mixed nuts.”

Crostini

“Made in-house with Albemarle Baking Company baguettes. Salty, buttery, crunchy and oh so good.”

Potter’s Craft cider

“The perfect picnic beverage. Cool off with an ice-cold glass of dry and crisp cider that complements all your picnic fare.”

Marcona almonds and cherries

“Nutritionally packed and the ultimate sharing snack to complement cheese and charcuterie.”

Local deviled eggs

“Easily shared and delicious. Try with Prosciutto and Peppadews or Thai for a twist to this famous classic.”

The Bees Knees Kitchen shortbread

“The perfect salty-sweet treat that won’t melt in the summer heat.”

Runner-up: Timbercreek Market

Honorable mention: Foods of All Nations

 

DUMPLINGS

Marco & Luca

Runner-up: Got Dumplings

Honorable mention: Now & Zen

What do a student with the 2am munchies and a penny-saving professional with a short lunch break have in common? Maybe a lot, maybe a little, but definitely their allegiance to Marco & Luca. Readers delight in dropping by one of three locations for a box of fried dumplings, served with a special sauce you’ll undoubtedly want to dab your pork bun in. Got Dumplings, well known for its food truck at the UVA amphitheater, recently opened a location on the Corner, where you can order from a full menu of Chinese cuisine.

CURRY

Monsoon Siam

Runner-up: Thai 99

Honorable mention: Milan Indian Cuisine

While yes, we love our red, green and panang curries, you can’t truly say you’ve had the best curry dish in town until you’ve tried the chef’s special at Monsoon. The massaman curry—a Thai take on a Persian dish—features a generous portion of slow-cooked chicken thighs in a rich, warm, spiced sauce with potatoes, onions, cherry tomatoes and crunchy peanuts over rice. Get the classics at runner-up Thai 99, too, where you can choose from seven different types of the dish.

TACOS

Brazos Tacos

Runner-up: La Michoacana

Honorable mention: Continental Divide

Whether you’re more of a Triple Pickle or a This Is My Yam kind of taco connoisseur, Brazos Tacos delivers Austin-style flavors you can’t munch off any other taqueria’s menu. Grab a watermelon margarita and cheers to the mashed potatoes you never knew you needed in your tortilla. If you’re looking for classic, you can’t go wrong with the Mexican-style cabrito (habañero-spiced pork) taco at runner-up La Michoacana.

Photo: Tom McGovern
Photo: Tom McGovern

STEAK Timbercreek Market

Steak, simplified

Timbercreek Market serves its award winning cuts au naturel

Quality steak doesn’t need much to taste great. Salt, pepper and a really hot grill should do it. With its Steak on a Plate, Timbercreek Market proves that better than anyone in town, according to the specialty grocer’s already ravenous fan base (it opened a scant 14 months ago).

“You come in, you pick out any raw cut at the butcher counter and we grill it to order,” says Sara Miller, co-owner of the market and Timbercreek Farm.

All of Timbercreek’s grass-fed and/or dry-aged beef cuts (New York strip, ribeye, tenderloin, etc.), as well as pork chops, lamb and even sausages, are available “on a plate” and prepared under the watchful eye of chef Allie Redshaw.

Cooking that grass-fed beef does take some know-how, Miller says, but if you remember three things, you should be fine. One, “counter age” your meat by bringing it up to room temperature before cooking. Two, grass-fed beef cooks more quickly than corn-fed beef, so take it off the grill before you think it’s ready. (“You can always put it back on,” Miller says.) And three, let the meat rest before you cut into it.

“Grass-fed beef is so lean,” Miller says. “We cook everything here at the market on the grill, but it really just depends on your method at home. In the winter, I will pan sear it and stick it in the oven to finish.” As for the market’s dry-aged beef, Miller says you’d be best off using the grill.

Runner-up: Downtown Grille

Honorable mention: Aberdeen Barn

 

SUSHI

Now & Zen

Runner-up: Ten

Honorable mention: Mican

Blink and you’ll miss this tiny Japanese joint on Second Street across from McGuffey Art Center. And our sushi-loving readers won’t mind because that means one thing: more Now & Zen for them. Their enthusiasm for chef/owner Toshi Sato’s creations isn’t wasted on us: He “puts out huge and beautiful sushi rolls stuffed with dynamic flavor combinations and sided with hot and sweet and salty sauces,” C-VILLE said not long ago. Taking second place this year is the Downtown Mall’s Ten (come for the sushi, stay for more than 20 different kinds of sake).

TIRAMISU

Tavola

Runner-up: HotCakes

Honorable mention: Bella’s Restaurant

Translated from Italian, tiramisu means “lift me up,” and that’s exactly what Tavola’s terrific take on this espresso-infused dolce will do for you. Chef/owner Michael Keaveny has taught several cooks to prepare the popular Belmont eatery’s soft, creamy confection, but yum’s, er, mum’s the word when we ask him to tell us what’s in it. One thing we—and our readers—have figured out, though: After a single forkful, you’ll ask your waiter for a second piece to go. Barracks Road regulars also know a good tiramisu when they taste one, which is why HotCakes took this year’s red ribbon.

Okay, Chickapig isn't a "sport," per se, but professional sports are sorely lacking in pooping cows. Sue us for taking some creative liberties. Photo: Tom McGovern
Okay, Chickapig isn’t a “sport,” per se, but professional sports are sorely lacking in pooping cows. Sue us for taking some creative liberties. Photo: Tom McGovern

SPORTS BAR Kardinal Hall

Barnyard antics

Kardinal Hall’s own official pastime

Kardinal Hall ain’t your typical sports bar. The bierhaus from the owners of Beer Run is as likely to draw a crowd for a Manchester United tilt as it is for the Super Bowl. And, while the place is almost always packed for major UVA sports contests, Kardinal’s focus is as much on playing games as watching them. Right down to the tabletop genre.

“Tuesday night is Chickapig night,” owner Josh Hunt says. “It’s a lot of fun.”

Chickapig, a strategic board game for up to four players, was developed right here in Charlottesville by renowned guitar maker Brian Calhoun. The object is to “break your flock of chickapigs free while dodging opponents, hay bales and an unruly pooping cow,” according to the official description. Hunt says the game’s more complicated than checkers but maybe not quite as complicated as chess.

“Brian came up with this game years ago and has been developing it over a long period of time,” he says. “I have played probably three times and had fun every time.”

Chickapig is for sale at Kardinal Hall, and Hunt says Calhoun is working on making it more widely available.

If dodging cow dung isn’t your idea of a good time, no worries. Join the crowds in front of the beer garden’s six flat screen TVs for a Cavaliers basketball game or the day’s Barclay’s Premier League matchup.

Hunt says Kardinal Hall occasionally sets up a projector and big screen for major games after dark. “We’re hoping to do more of that with UVA football and other events like the Olympics,” he says. Game on.

Runner-up: Citizen Burger Bar

Honorable mention: Boylan Heights

 

FINE DINING

C&O Restaurant

Runner-up: Tavola

Honorable mention: Ivy Inn

What’s left to say about C&O Restaurant—a place the Washington Post once called “the least prepossessing fine restaurant in America”—that hasn’t already been said? Plenty, if these recent five-star TripAdvisor reviews are any indication: “Incredible food at historic location!” “Fine dining at its best,” “Professional service and excellent food,” “Dining delight in Charlottesville.” You’ll get no argument about any of that—from us or our readers. This year’s silver goes to Tavola—“Exceptional rustic Italian,” says one TripAdvisor review—the Hinton Avenue gem.

RevSoup

VEGETARIAN-FRIENDLY Revolutionary Soup

Vegging out

Why Rev Soup is the best place to eat meat-free

While beloved lunchery Revolutionary Soup is a hotspot for omnivores and herbivores alike, it’s its vegetarian (and, often, vegan) offerings that catch your eye.

Heather Phillips, the organizer of the Charlottesville Vegetarian Festival, calls Rev Soup “an amazing vegetarian option.”

“They serve a wide—and I mean wide—variety of meat-free soups, sandwiches and salads,” made with fresh and local produce, which uses fewer resources and makes the joint environmentally friendly, too.

Her recommendation? “My usual, and one of my favorites, is the black bean and spinach wrap,” Phillips says. “They make a tasty batch of black beans and that wrap, with a small bowl of the spicy Senegalese peanut tofu, is a vegan’s dream lunch.”

Runner-up: Roots Natural Kitchen

Honorable mention: Brazos Tacos

 

FRIED CHICKEN

Wayside Fried Chicken

Runner-up: Ace Biscuit & Barbecue

Honorable mention: The Whiskey Jar

Why did C-VILLE readers cross the road? To chow down on what they consider to be the crispiest, crunchiest, gosh-darn best fried chicken in town: Wayside’s “Ole Virginia.” For more than 50 years, this hole-in-the-wall off Jefferson Park Avenue has been frying up finger-licking good wings, breasts and thighs—at prices that are something to crow, ahem, cluck about: A recent monthly special featured eight pieces for nine bucks. Head over to Henry Avenue to sample runner-up Ace Biscuit & Barbecue’s buttermilk fried chicken breakfast biscuit.

BURGER

Citizen Burger Bar

Runner-up: Boylan Heights

Honorable mention: Riverside Lunch

The folks at Citizen Burger Bar declare that “a delicious burger is your right. …Perhaps even your responsibility,” and our readers, who once again voted it No. 1, couldn’t agree more. The Downtown Mall stalwart’s namesake sandwich is crafted with Timbercreek Farm beef, McClure Swiss, blackened onions, garlic aioli, iceberg and tomato, all piled high on a brioche bun. Over at runner-up Boylan Heights, you’ll wanna wrap your mitts around a Room 121.

BBQ

Barbeque Exchange

Runner-up: Ace Biscuit & Barbecue

Honorable mention: Smoked BBQ Co.

In 2015, Barbeque Exchange’s Craig Hartman told us that “Virginia was once the epicenter [of barbecue], and when people moved away, so did barbecue. …There’s no reason Virginia can’t re-establish itself.” If you ask our readers, it already has—and Hartman’s Gordonsville barbecue joint dishes up the area’s finest. His personal favorite? The pork belly is “one of the best cuts there is,” he says, and it comes off the smoker like über-bacon.

PIZZA

Dr. Ho’s Humble Pie

Runner-up: Lampo

Honorable mention: Christian’s Pizza

Our readers know there’s nothing humble about a slice of Dr. Ho’s Bellissima (a margherita ’zza topped with local shaved country ham, arugula, lemon vinaigrette and aged Parmesan), or the Ragin’ Cajun (Creole-spiced shrimp, local andouille sausage, green peppers, roasted red peppers and mozzarella cheese). And once again this year you say it’s worth the schlep to North Garden to sink your teeth into the hottest pies in—okay, south of—town. Popular Neapolitan pizzeria Lampo comes in second.

FISH AND CHIPS

Beer Run

Runner-up: Shebeen Pub & Braai

Honorable mention: Tin Whistle Irish Pub

One of the draws that keeps you running through the door at Beer Run and cooling your heels while you wait for a table is the baja fish and chips, made from farm-raised catfish fillets and topped with housemade pico de gallo and chipotle ranch. And don’t get us started on the organic, house-roasted frites, but, since you asked, they’re perfect. Shebeen Pub & Braai has its own fine kettle of fish (and chips) to fry.

Illustration: Jason Crosby
Illustration: Jason Crosby

WINGS Wild Wing Café

One shining sauce

Wild Wing Café has 34 sauces on its menu right now, but the changes since 2013 have been madness. Four years ago, the national chain introduced the Battle of the Bones, an NCAA-style bracket competition to select new sauces. Eight customer recipes are selected to compete annually, and patrons vote for their favorites each week until one winner remains. This year’s victor? Felice Bogus with 7 Pepper Sticky. Chad Ragland, owner of Wild Wing, called it “more of an Asian-inspired sauce.”

“Those last two battled it out, and that was the winner,” Ragland says. “Customers can vote online or right here in the restaurant.” The winner typically replaces one of the lowest-selling sauces on the Wild Wing Café menu.

Runner-up: Oakhart Social

Honorable mention: Wings Over Charlottesville

 

FROZEN TREAT

Splendora’s Gelato

Runner-up: Chaps Ice Cream

Honorable mention: SweetFrog

We’ve got more than our fair share of frozen treats in this town, but any place with flavors such as amarena, fior di latte, gianduia and zabaione is in a class by itself. And readers have once again assured us that’s how they too feel about Splendora’s. With anywhere between 24 and 36 different handmade flavors to pick from (good luck with that!), the Downtown Mall sweet treatery has something for everyone. Speaking of mixing things up, it’s hard to beat a scoop of runner-up Chaps’ chocolate ice cream atop a scoop of strawberry served in a homemade cone.

PASTRY

MarieBette Café & Bakery

Runner-up: Albemarle Baking Co.

Honorable mention: Paradox Pastry

Caneles and financiers and petit kouign-amann, oh my! And of course there’s also the chocolate-almond croissants, sticky buns and pain au chocolat. But MarieBette really had us—and you!—at the chocolate chunk cookies. Each one is big enough to serve a family of four, and these bad boys are wide, thin and asymmetrical—it’s as if they were fighting for space on the baking sheet. Second place goes to the home of the Princess Cake, aka Albemarle Baking Co.

FOOD TRUCK

South Fork Food Truck

Runner-up: Carpe Donut

Honorable mention: Côte-Rôtie

Phillip Gerringer told us he started South Fork in 2013 to fulfill a dream of running his own food business. In 2016, our readers let him know that not only has his dream come true, but it’s the best on the scene. With a focus on Southern cuisine, South Fork’s offerings—served on Thursdays at Champion Brewing Company and at Fridays After Five and other area events—include a Cheerwine-braised pork sandwich or a smoked jalapeño meatloaf sandwich topped with garlic mashed potatoes, green tomato salsa and bacon. Gerringer, however, says he’s partial to the grilled pimento cheese sandwich with arugula and a fried green tomato. Sounds good to us! Longtime fave Carpe Donut takes the red ribbon this year.

King Family winemaker Matthieu Finot makes the Crosé from Merlot grapes that are picked slightly underripe, for acidity and freshness. Photo: Ryan Jones
King Family winemaker Matthieu Finot makes the Crosé from Merlot grapes that are picked slightly underripe, for acidity and freshness. Photo: Ryan Jones

VIRGINIA WINE Crosé (King Family Vineyards)

Virginia’s cult rosé

The people have spoken! Rather than voting for a Viognier, Cabernet Franc or Meritage blend—or any other wine that could be considered “typical” for the Monticello region—Charlottesvillians want rosé. More specifically, they want Crosé.

But just how is it that King Family’s rosé came to be such a fiercely loved symbol of the local wine scene? It could be that it’s the perfect counterpoint to the humid Charlottesville summers. More likely, though, it’s winemaker Matthieu Finot’s classic approach.

When Finot first moved to Charlottesville in 2003, he was discouraged from making a dry rosé.

“At the time, rosé was supposed to be blush,” Finot says, “and blush was supposed to be sweet.” But he had a different vision for Virginia rosé. Instead, he created a new style modeled after his favorite French versions, many produced near his hometown of Hermitage, along the Rhône River.

At King Family, he has a special block of Merlot dedicated to his rosé. “The grapes were not harvested with the ripeness to do a red,” he says. He picks them “slightly underripe, to make a rosé wine with good acidity and freshness.”

This past harvest, rosé production increased around the world, Finot notes, and Virginia was no different. The shift in popularity from sweet rosé to high-quality dry rosé over the last decade pleases him.

“Winning [this category] with the Crosé is a sign, for me, of just how far Virginia wine has come,” says Finot. “It’s very satisfying to see the overall quality of world-class wines in the Monticello AVA.”

Runner-up: Octagon (Barboursville Vineyards)

Honorable mention: Viognier (Veritas Vineyard & Winery)

 

SPOT WHEN THE BOSS IS BUYING

C&O Restaurant

Runner-up: The Alley Light

Honorable mention: Hamiltons’ at First & Main

Eating on the company dime means two things: You want to splurge, and you want to feel like a big shot doing it. C&O offers diners both in spades. Not only can you treat yourself to duck confit and the steak Chinoise, you’ll find yourself in a low-light space with enough Old World charm to make you forget you even had a boss in the first place (and isn’t that the dream?). At runner-up Alley Light, order the pork rillette to make a great first impression.

HALL OF FAME

Mas

In the 14 years since it opened, Mas has garnered praise in Best of C-VILLE for a whole host of reasons—its outdoor patio (just look for the cheerful yellow umbrellas!), its appeal as a date spot (mood lighting, yummy cocktails to calm the nervous jitters) and its chef/owner, Tomas Rahal, whose affinity for Spanish cuisine delivers a menu of artisanal small plates six nights a week (though for some of us, that’s still not enough). Readers know—and have known for a while—that this is why it’s also consistently voted best restaurant in town.

Bodo’s Bagels

It’s hard to poke a hole in this choice. On the Charlottesville dining scene since 1998, this standout bagel spot has wowed customers for nearly 30 years thanks to an inclusive atmosphere, its Caesar salad and, let’s be honest, prices so low you could come back for breakfast, lunch and dinner and not even break a 20. It earns a spot in the Best of C-VILLE Hall of Fame this year because we can’t think of another restaurant that has gotten it so very right for so long.

Want more Best of C-VILLE? Click through to…

Categories
Arts

Early male impersonator Kathleen Clifford had Charlottesville origins

One of the earliest ordinances against cross-dressing was passed in Columbus, Ohio, in 1848, making it illegal for someone to appear in public “in a dress not belonging to his or her sex.” While police enforced such laws on public streets and jailed offenders, the impersonation of women by men, and men by women, became a popular routine on the vaudeville stage, a precursor to today’s variety show. And it so happens that in the early 1900s, one of the most renowned male impersonators was a Charlottesville native.

Kathleen Clifford was born in Charlottesville in 1887. Hailey Stoudt, who researched and designed an exhibit about Clifford’s life that is currently on display at the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society, says there are discrepancies between the historical record and the information Clifford presented to the public about her life.

Because British performers were popular at the time, Clifford purported to be from England, despite her Virginia birth. And because being a performer was not exactly a reputable thing to do, especially for a woman, there is no information available about Clifford’s family, possibly because she took a stage name. While an origin story pinpoints her entrance into the performing arts at age 15, when she met American producer Charles Frohman at age 15, (who then cast her to star in a musical comedy called Top o’ the World), Stoudt says this is likely the glamorized Hollywood version. Clifford probably had more humble beginnings and had to work her way up from minor parts to center stage.

As a male impersonator doing vaudeville, Clifford wore a top hat, coattails and a monocle. Her smart fashion sense earned her the nickname “the Smartest Chap in Town.” The exhibit explains there were two generations of male impersonators. In the first generation, which performed from 1860 to 1900, the goal was to present a realistic portrayal. According to historian Marybeth Hamilton, female impersonators at the time were billed as illusionists, which made them appear less of a threat to traditional gender roles. But in the second generation of male impersonators, from the 1900s to 1930s, actresses were purposefully more feminine, no longer trying to pass for male as vaudeville hoped to attract a more middle-class audience, including women and children, and a convincing drag performance would have been considered vulgar.

Clifford continued to perform in vaudeville up to the 1930s, even as she was cast in Broadway productions and silent films. The only film Stoudt found intact was When the Clouds Roll By, a 1919 comedy in which Clifford stars as the romantic leading lady, an artist named Lucette Bancroft, opposite Douglas Fairbanks as Daniel Boone Brown, a young man being driven mad by his psychiatrist.

“It is the only one [of her films] still currently available,” Stoudt says. “A lot of silent films were actually destroyed. It’s kind of sad that we don’t have them to look at now. The performance is over the top and exaggerated to get the point across, but she was definitely talented.”

While she continued to act, Clifford also opened a florist business in Hollywood in the late 1920s. But five years after the first feature film with sound, Clifford appeared in a short talkie called The Bride’s Bereavement (1932), and then she disappeared from film. Her appearances in vaudeville, too, began to wane in the 1930s, as the novelty and popularity of the talkies eclipsed such live-performance shows.

Her passion for the written word, however, did not diminish. In 1945, she published The Enchanted Glen: Never Trod by the Feet of Men, a children’s book that was illustrated by Howard “Kim” Weed, a contributing illustrator to Disney’s Fantasia (1940). Ten years later, Clifford published the novel It’s April… Remember?, inspired by her time in Hollywood, a place she described as “perhaps the most romantic city in the world of romantic dreams.”

“It’s a farce that looks at Hollywood’s personalities and outrageous characters,” Stoudt says. In the foreword to the novel, Clifford reminds her readers that it is a work of fiction, asks them not to superimpose themselves on her characters and even jokes about being sued for libel. Yet she writes a sincere and nostalgic tribute to the “fabulous people” of Hollywood and credits them with their unbiased generosity and selflessness.

“She was such an interesting woman,” Stoudt says. “She was famous for being a male impersonator in vaudeville, making all her costumes, writing her own songs and material. She was definitely a hardworking woman and this translated later in her life when she ran her own business and wrote her stories and novels. I’m excited to see, as more information becomes available, what we can uncover about her.”

The exhibit will be on display through the end of the year, and an article on Stoudt’s latest findings on Clifford is forthcoming in The Magazine of Albemarle County History.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Marian McLaughlin

Singer-songwriter and guitarist Marian McLaughlin weaves together imaginative lyrics and intricate classical guitar work, then delivers it so rhapsodically that you can’t help but be drawn into her wake. A couple of years ago, McLaughlin captured the attention of NPR’s “All Songs Considered” host Bob Boilen, who likens her music to that of Joanna Newsom and Diane Cluck, saying of the three of them that “listening feels as if you’ve entered their meticulously decorated living rooms.”

Friday, 8/26 $7, 9pm. Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar, 414 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 293-9947

Categories
News

In brief: UVA’s class of 2020 breakdown, ‘monstrous maniacs’ and more

First year tragedy

While UVA administrators were worried about Block Party, they couldn’t have foreseen that a family of three in town to drop off a student would be struck by a car turning left from Bond Street onto District Avenue shortly before 1pm August 21 at The Shops at Stonefield. Bonnie Baha, 57, of San Marino, California, died from her injuries at UVA Medical Center.

First reported sexual assault of the school year

On move-in weekend, a female UVA student was grabbed from behind by a knife-wielding white male on Emmet Street near Thomson Road between midnight and 1am August 20. The suspect is described as between 20 and 30 years old, average height, with light-colored hair.

Everyone’s a winner

Photo: Eze Amos

Both the Jane Dittmar and Tom Garrett camps claimed victory for the first 5th District debate August 10 at the Senior Center. Photo by: Eze Amos

The big move

The Kroger on Emmet Street will move to Seminole Square in 2018 and become the biggest grocery store in Virginia west of Richmond at 100,000 square feet. It’ll bring 150 new jobs, and Kroger says the deluxe new store has nothing to do with the coming of Wegmans. Kroger’s fuel station will remain in its original location, and Hobby Lobby, a craft and home store, will move into the vacated space.

City seeks Draego suit dismissal

Joe Draego feels he was prevented from exercising his free speech rights when City Council shut him down after he called Muslims “monstrous maniacs” and he was carried out of the June 20 council meeting. Now he's suing.

City Council has the right to ban speech that defames groups and to kick Joe Draego out when he talked about Muslims as “monstrous maniacs” June 20, according to a motion to throw out Draego’s lawsuit filed August 18. Draego’s attorney, Jeff Fogel, disagrees and promises a response and a preliminary injunction this week.

Bringing home the pork

Senators Mark Warner and Tim Kaine snag nearly $8 million in federal Department of Transportation and FAA grants to rehab a runway at CHO. Blacksburg airport gets $4 million, and earlier this month, small airports in Dinwiddie, Warren and Culpeper got almost $2 million.

Class of 2020

UVA Rotunda. Photo courtesy of Dan Addisen
Photo: Dan Addisen

Classes began August 23 for the latest batch of UVA students to matriculate at Mr. Jefferson’s U, and officials say they come from the largest application pool yet. The incoming class, estimated at 3,685, is more diverse, both
racially and socioeconomically. That said, you’ll still be seeing a lot of white females. Here’s what the class of 2020 looks like.

Gender: Female 54% | Male 46%

In-state 67%

Out-of-state 33%

Biggest out-of-state enrollers: New York 134 | New Jersey 111 | Pennsylvania 91

Biggest out-of-country enrollers: China 102 | India 30

—UVA Office of Institutional Assessment and Studies

Ethnicity: White 57% | Asian-American 14% | Black 7% | Multirace 4% | Hispanic 6% | Nonresident alien 5% | Unclassified or unknown 6% | Native American 0.2% = 6 students | Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander 0.1% = 2 students

Income: Low income 7% | Need-based financial aid 34% | First-generation college 11%

In-state: Fairfax 677 | Loudoun 220 | Richmond/Henrico 173 | Albemarle 120 | Charlottesville 19

Quote of the week:

“I personally believe in the power of second chances and in the dignity and worth of every single human being. These individuals are gainfully employed. They send their children and their grandchildren to our schools. They shop in our grocery stores and they pay taxes. And I am not content to condemn them for eternity as inferior second-class citizens.” Governor Terry McAuliffe at the Civil Rights Memorial in Richmond August 22, in his announcement of the re-restoration of voting rights to nearly 13,000 felons after the Supreme Court of Virginia ruled his blanket restoration of rights of more than 200,000 was unconstitutional.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Annual Youth Film Festival

Put a child in front of a camera and you might end up with a candid moment that’s viral-worthy and gets grandma tapping on her smartphone. Put kids on both sides of the camera and you’ll gain unique perspectives on society, community and family at Light House Studio’s Annual Youth Film Festival. The film center teaches filmmaking and gives youngsters access to showcases such as the LA Film Festival and far reaching outlets like PBS, CNN and IFC. Past Light House movies have received national awards, including a Peabody, a Gold World Medal at the New York Festivals International Television and Film Awards and a CINE Golden Eagle.

Friday, 8/26. $15-80, 8pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 979-1333.

Categories
Living

Korean fried chicken and sushi bowls come to UVA

Han Lee and his wife, Mi Eum, moved to Charlottesville from Maryland about a month ago to open casual sit-down Korean restaurant Zip Chicken on 14th Street, across from Boylan Heights and smack dab in the middle of the Corner restaurant scene. “I know Korean isn’t as big here as it is in big cities,” he says, “but I think young people will be willing to try it out.”

Zip Chicken’s signature item is Korean fried chicken, which is lighter than its American cousin because the meat is battered with a light flour and cornstarch mixture, then fried for 10 minutes, shaken—this puts some air back into the chicken and makes it tender and juicy, says Han—and fried a second time.

It pairs nicely with beer and is well-suited to college students, Lee says.

Zip Chicken will also offer meat and tofu bibimbap bowls, salads, potstickers, kimchi and, Lee’s favorite, bulgogi—a dish made with marinated ribeye, soy and garlic sauce, hot pepper paste, lettuce, onion, mushrooms, carrots and sesame seeds. Korean food tends to be fairly healthy (and spicy), and Lee says he wants to give Charlottesville “a [new] taste, a different choice,” when it comes to casual eating options. The restaurant is scheduled to open this week.

Got Dumplings owners Phung Huynh and Bo Zhu saw a need for fresh, healthy options near UVA, and started serving mix-and-match sushi bowls last week at Poke Sushi Bowl. Photo by Eze Amos
Got Dumplings owners Phung Huynh and Bo Zhu saw a need for fresh, healthy options near UVA, and started serving mix-and-match sushi bowls last week at Poke Sushi Bowl. Photo by Eze Amos

Last week, on the ground floor of the same building, Poke Sushi Bowl began serving up Hawaiian poke—a fresh, raw fish salad that borrows ingredients and flavors from Japanese sushi—with a modern, takeaway twist. Think Chipotle or Roots Kitchen, but with sushi ingredients.

“I feel like there’s a need…for fresh and healthy items” on the Corner, says owner Phung Huynh who, along with her husband, Bo Zhu, also owns and runs Got Dumplings.

Customers can order a signature bowl or build their own with a choice of white or brown rice; proteins such as salmon, yellow tail or organic tofu; mix-ins such as cucumber, kale or edamame; housemade sauces like ponzu citrus and miso glaze; and toppings including seaweed salad, ginger and onion crisps.

Huynh is particularly fond of The Corner bowl, with salmon, mango, cucumber and avocado mixed with sweet and hot sauce and topped with eel and sesame seeds (add seaweed salad and ginger for an extra kick). The dish is an homage to Huynh’s 8-year-old daughter who loves the smoky, barbecue flavor of eel and begged Huynh to include it on the menu.

Changes in Crozet

Concluding with its dinner service Saturday, August 20, Three Notch’d Grill closed after dishing out casual American fare in Crozet for nearly 11 years. In a press release issued by the restaurant, chefs and managers Cathy and Hayden Berry say they “have decided to hang up their aprons and kick back for a bit before seeing what adventures lie ahead.”

But 5790 Three Notch’d Rd. won’t be empty for long. Current Southern Way Cafe chef Jason Fitzgerald and general manager Kellie Carter plan to open SWAY Taphouse & Grill in October. Carter says that Southern Way has outgrown its space at 5382 Three Notch’d Rd., and the entire operation—chef, kitchen staff and servers—will move down the road as SWAY. Fitzgerald will continue to hickory-smoke whole pigs (his specialty), serve up barbecue, grits, specialty burgers and more.

Redshaw leaves Timbercreek; Yoder takes the helm

Later this month, Allie Redshaw will leave her post as executive chef at Timbercreek Market, and for a very good reason: to open a restaurant of her own. Redshaw, known for her new-school American cooking and modern, locally sourced gourmet cuisine, told C-VILLE Weekly that she leaves Timbercreek “on good terms,” and that she “didn’t want to take away from the  market” while she planned her own venture. “I figured if I was going to be working as hard as I was, I might as well have some skin in the game and do it for myself,” she says, adding that she and her business partner will reveal their concept and location soon.

Redshaw opened the café at Sara and Zach Miller’s Timbercreek Market last June and before that served as sous chef at Pippin Hill; former Clifton Inn executive chef Tucker Yoder will succeed her at Timbercreek.

Sara Miller says she’ll miss Redshaw’s creativity behind the café counter, but she’s glad to have Yoder (her top pick to fill the post) on board. “Who wouldn’t want Tucker Yoder cooking for you?” she asks. Miller says that Yoder is a particularly good fit for Timbercreek because his approach to food, like the market’s, “is all about the raw product.”

Yoder, recognized for his exquisite treatments of local ingredients, served as executive chef of Clifton Inn for four years before stepping down in December 2014. Since then, he’s worked on various food projects, including a pop-up restaurant and catering.

“I have always been fond of working with local farms and farmers, and [this] seemed like a good opportunity to work directly with a great local producer,” Yoder says of his new gig, adding that Virginia farmers grow “some of the best produce on the East Coast. It’s an easy option to search out great raw ingredients and let them shine.”

Categories
Living

Cold-brew coffee isn’t a watered down version of the original

It’s been really hot. We’re all sweaty and sluggish, and most of us could use a good jolt to get through the dog days of summer.

Enter iced coffee, which, on a steamy day, can taste like the ambrosia of the gods…as long as it’s done right.

Brew a regular cup of coffee, let it cool and drop in a few ice cubes and you’ll be left with a bland, weak, watered-down brew. It might cool you down, but it won’t taste very good. There’s an art to brewing a flavorful glass of iced coffee, and coffee shops and markets all over town are mastering it with different techniques.

None of them are necessarily better than others, it’s just “a matter of preference,” says Milli Coffee Roasters owner Nick Leichtentritt.

Here are some of the methods local coffee shops are using right now.

Cold brew

A few years ago, almost nobody was cold-brewing coffee, says Shark Mountain owner and head coffee roaster Jonny Nuckols. Now, it’s all the rage, probably because the cold-brew method yields a smooth, flavorful, non-acidic beverage ideal for adding some cream and sipping slowly, he says.

Cold-brew coffee is a distinct way of brewing. As its name implies, it never touches heat. To create a batch of Shark Mountain cold brew, Nuckols finely grinds a light-roast coffee and adds the grounds to a filter bag within a nylon bag inside a five-gallon bucket. He pours about three gallons of cool water onto the grounds and lets the mixture soak for 20 to 24 hours. Then, he pours the filtered, concentrated brew into a five-gallon keg and adds water to bring the brew to a normal, but still fairly strong, strength. It’s dispensed from the keg and poured over ice as customers order.

This method extracts good flavors from the bean while leaving out the bitterness found in hot coffees, says Nuckols. Depending on the bean used, you’ll taste more chocolate, nut and berry flavors than you might with a hot cup of coffee, but you won’t get as robust a flavor profile, because high temperature is what ultimately draws out all of those notes. But still, “cold brew is definitely a good thing for the coffee industry,” he says. You can try Shark Mountain cold brew at Studio IX or at the iLab at Darden.

Shenandoah Joe’s Brain Freeze is also a cold-brew iced coffee. Owner Dave Fafara says his shops use a blend of coffees created specifically for iced coffee. Their 16-hour, triple-strained cold brew is popular: Fafara estimates that, during the summer, Shenandoah Joe moves between 100 and 125 gallons in Charlottesville each week. And JM Stock Provisions also sells cold brew—you can take home a growler of it—which they brew in-house.

Japanese style

Over at Milli Coffee Roasters on the corner of Preston Avenue and McIntire Road, Leichtentritt uses the Japanese-style iced coffee method. The resulting brew is “a little more well-balanced,” he says. “One of the big selling points of cold-brew coffee is that people say it’s very low-acid.” But, to him, “that little bit of acid is what helps make a good, balanced cup of coffee.”

Like cold brew, the Japanese-style method begins with finely ground coffee and a filter, but this method uses hot water. “It’s essentially like brewing really strong coffee” that is immediately poured—and thus cooled and diluted—over ice, Leichtentritt says. The cooled coffee is then stored in a carafe and poured over ice once again upon serving.

Cooling the coffee right away is the key. High temperatures bring out a coffee’s flavor, but the longer a brew is exposed to air as it cools, the more those flavor-packed compounds break down. Cooling the coffee quickly, with ice, helps trap and preserve those compounds.

Other shops around town, including Atlas Coffee and Mudhouse, make their iced coffee using a similar process. It’s the easiest way to make a lot of iced coffee quickly, says one Mudhouse barista.

Nitro

Nitro coffee, one of the latest coffee trends, is more like a craft beer than a brewed coffee, says Snowing in Space Coffee Co. co-owner Paul Dierkes. Nitro isn’t served on ice, but it is cold brewed and served cold from a keg. It tastes great black, but if cream and sugar is your thing, pour ’em in.

To brew nitro, Snowing in Space cold brews coffee on a large scale, kegs it, then pumps nitrogen gas into the keg at a high pressure for a long time to essentially agitate the brew. It’s served directly from the keg’s tap. Dierkes likens the resulting brew to a Guinness (a nitrogenated beer); it’s smooth, thick and creamy, with a foamy head.

Snowing in Space sources its beans from Shenandoah Joe and offers three single-origin brews, including the straightforward, nutty Brazilian Gimme-Dat and the unusual blueberry Lil Blue, and plans on introducing more varieties, including a cocoa mole flavor, soon. “The goal is experimentation,” Dierkes says while admitting he’s not a coffee connoisseur. “Let’s get experimental with styles and flavors and get interesting coffees to people.”

You can try Snowing in Space’s nitro coffee at Paradox Pastry, Keevil & Keevil Grocery and Champion Brewery. But it isn’t the only nitro in town—Shenandoah Joe and Mudhouse offer it as well.

Categories
Uncategorized

ARTS Pick: Moon Taxi

From Coachella to Firefly, Nashville-based pop rockers Moon Taxi have spent the summer honing their upbeat, charismatic live set at music festivals across the country. Their songs, inspired by life on the road and the power of the human bond, blend personal lyrics, synths, guitar, bass and drums into a subtle, pleasing sound that’s well-suited to a low-key, late-summer festival crowd.

Saturday, 8/27. $79-299, time varies. Oak Ridge Farm, Arrington. locknfestival.com.

Categories
Best of C-VILLE Entertainment

Best of C-VILLE 2016: Entertainment

What do a century-old building, a greenstone outcrop and an urban ruin have in common? This year, readers say they’re all great places to be entertained. We’ll trust ya.

 

MUSICIAN

Love Canon

Runner-up: Chamomile and Whiskey

Honorable mention: Erin & the Wildfire

A wise man once said, “If you’re good at something, you’ll tell everyone. If you’re great at something, they’ll tell you.” The readers have spoken: Love Canon nabs the top spot. The five-piece string band takes ’80s hits and turns them on their head, replacing electric guitar solos with violin, drums with dobro. It’s an unplugged take on megawatt tracks that we wouldn’t entrust to just anyone. But Love Canon has been at it since 2010 and, hell, they’re great. Chamomile and Whiskey, the Nelson County-based rock-folk-Americana-gypsy-Celtic-roots group, takes second place with originals like “Blue Ridge Girl” and “Wandering Boots.”

Photo: UVA Athletics
Photo: UVA Athletics

TRIVIA NIGHT Mellow Mushroom

Call and response

Can you answer these C’ville-centric stumpers?

If you’re a fan of Mellow Mushroom’s Wednesday trivia nights, you know to check the restaurant’s Twitter account (@mellowcville) at 8pm. That’s where hosts Greg Kane, Jordon Trader and Jim Fuson, who come up with the questions, post the night’s theme (“canceled Fox shows,” “fairy tale or fable,” “something you might put in a microwave”). We asked the trivia titans to give us some tough questions on the topic of Charlottesville.

1) On March 6, 1865, the town of Charlottesville and the university surrendered to what Union general under the command of Major General Philip Sheridan?

2) On June 10, 1940, Franklin Delano Roosevelt gave his famous “stab in the back” speech about Italy declaring war on France in what famous University of Virginia building?

3) In the past 50 years, what UVA football coach leads the all-time win categories of both total wins as well as winning percent?

4) Which former UVA School of Law student was offered the role of first president of the university, which he declined, almost a decade before he became president of the United States?

5) Charlottesville is named after the wife of which Mad King (hint: not a Targaryen)?

6) Which 20th-century Nobel Prize-winning American novelist was the University of Virginia’s first writer in residence?

Answers: 1) General George Custer; 2) Memorial Gym; 3) George Welsh (pictured); 4) Woodrow Wilson;
5) George III; 6) William Faulkner.

Runner-up: Tin Whistle Irish Pub

Honorable mention: McGrady’s Irish Pub

 

MUSIC VENUE

The Jefferson Theater

Runner-up: Sprint Pavilion

Honorable mention: The Paramount Theater

In 1912, the British ocean liner RMS Titanic sunk, the Boston Red Sox won the World Series and architect C.K. Howell designed a vaudeville house and cinema in downtown Charlottesville. That venue? The Jefferson Theater, which today is a little less vaudeville, a little more eclectic mix. In the last year alone, the Jeff hosted roots-rocker Sturgill Simpson, ’80s tribute band The Legwarmers and country-punk group Lucero. It’s a bit of a mixed bag that, come to think of it, isn’t too unlike a vaudeville show. There’s something for everyone.

Elite Eight today, championship tomorrow? We'll see you on the court, Coach. Photo: Matt Riley
Elite Eight today, championship tomorrow? We’ll see you on the court, Coach. Photo: Matt Riley

LOCAL MINOR CELEBRITY Tony Bennett

Tony, Tony, Tony!

Because he shares his name with a famous performer, it’s hard not to get confused when someone says the name Tony Bennett. Unless you’re in Charlottesville, in which case, “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” who? Around these parts, readers say, Tony Bennett is all the celebrity we need. Arguably one of the busiest men in UVA athletics, the C’ville Bennett led the men’s basketball team to the NCAA Elite Eight in the 2015-2016 season (which even earned him a mention in Vogue magazine as “the George Clooney of March Madness”). He’s one of your favorite things about Charlottesville, but we caught up with him while he was on the road recruiting to ask: What are some of his favorite things about Charlottesville?

Favorite place for a jog/bike ride/hike: On Grounds at UVA.

Most memorable local music show you’ve seen: Dave Matthews Band and Tim Reynolds at Sprint Pavilion. All proceeds went to charity.

Bodo’s order: Sausage, egg and cheese on an everything bagel.

Favorite date-night spot: Dinner at Tavola and a movie with my wife, Laurel.

Favorite local beer (or wine): No Veto English Brown Ale at Three Notch’d Brewing Company.

Runner-up: Michael Jones (“The Clapping Man”)

Honorable mention: Larry Sabato

 

PLACE TO GET CREATIVE

IX Art Park

Runner-up: Live Arts

Honorable mention: Wine & Design

Yes, the IX Art Park is home to the Love Butt (a 1,600-pound sculpture used in the pilot of a Comedy Central series), but if you think that’s all it is, the joke’s on you. It’s hard not to find inspiration at a place where nearly every square inch is a tribute to artistic liberties—from a set of abandoned steps turned into piano keys and a geodesic dome made of twigs and branches, to a painted maze underfoot and a giant mural compelling you to “Dream big.” It’s the kind of space that celebrates—rather than squelches—crazy ideas, and stands as a living monument to the creative spirit.

Jody Kielbasa.
Jody Kielbasa

ARTS FESTIVAL Virginia Film Festival

The star catcher

Jody Kielbasa on bringing big names to a little city

They call them movers and shakers in Hollywood, but here in Central Virginia we point to Virginia Film Festival Director Jody Kielbasa as our conduit to Tinseltown. Upon his arrival in 2009, Kielbasa took the University of Virginia festival from an enjoyable annual gathering to a nationally recognized industry event that breaks attendance records each year.

“Every year I hear from people how much they love the festival,” says Kielbasa. “They appreciate the opportunity to see many of the most highly anticipated films of the fall season—that will be up for Golden Globe or Oscar consideration—well in advance of their release dates. I also hear how much they appreciate discovering films that are unlikely to make it to the theaters and the incredible discussions with our guest artists.”

In 2013, Kielbasa was appointed as UVA’s vice provost for the arts, a role that (in addition to his work with VFF) allows him to collaborate with the Arts Advisory Committee and other university arts organizations to advocate for more excellence in the arts.

Runner-up: Tom Tom Founders Festival

Honorable mention: LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph

 

LOCAL RADIO STATION

91.9 WNRN

Runner-up: 91.1 WTJU

Honorable mention: Hot 101.9

With 20 years under its belt, WNRN continues to churn out a reliable lineup of triple A (adult album alternative) tunes, with an offering of programs—from “Grateful Dead & Phriends” on Saturday mornings to “World Café” on weeknights—for easy listening. Turning the proverbial dial to 91.9 gets you ear-to-ear with a listener-supported station that doesn’t have to worry about the mandates of corporate programming. It’s radio by the people, for the people.

Warren Craghead. Photo: Keith Alan Sprouse
Warren Craghead. Photo: Keith Alan Sprouse

GALLERY Second Street Gallery

Man with a mission

“Our official mission is to enliven Virginia through access to the best in contemporary art and artists; to inspire new ways of thinking, seeing and doing. We show contemporary art from around the world—literally around the world. This past season we’ve shown artists from South Africa, Egypt, Los Angeles, New York and right here in Charlottesville. We work to bring the world of contemporary art, with all its creativity, ideas and problem-solving, here to Charlottesville. We also have a robust outreach program, reaching into city and county schools, the juvenile detention system and partner institutions like the Boys & Girls Club to bring art and creative thinking out into our community. I see SSG as an essential part of a great ‘culture of creativity’ here in Charlottesville —a culture that makes our city really special.”—Warren Craghead, executive director of Second Street Gallery

Runner-up: IX Art Park

Honorable mention: Fralin Museum of Art

 

DAY TRIP

Shenandoah National Park

Runner-up: Blue Mountain Brewery

Honorable mention: Carter Mountain Orchard

What exactly is the Shenandoah National Park? It’s 199,173 acres from Warren to Waynesboro. Nearly 80,000 of those have been designated as wilderness and are protected by the National Wilderness Preservation System, but tourists are particularly awestruck by the views from Skyline Drive. The 109-mile road stretches the length of the park and affords travelers a peek of surrounding counties from 75 overlooks. It becomes particularly picturesque in mid- to late October, when the leaves are changing colors.

FREE FAMILY FUN

Fridays After Five

Runner-up: Carter Mountain Orchard

Honorable mention: Chiles Peach Orchard

The return of  Fridays After Five is a city-wide signal: Summer has arrived. Now in its 29th year, the April-to-September concert series lineup boasts up-and-comers and seasoned musicians at the end of every week, and draws a crowd of nearly 6,000 that comprises young professionals and, yes, families. (Kids like to boogie down in front, near the band.) In the runner-up spot, Carter Mountain Orchard offers events during each growing season, from its own summer concert series to pick-your-own orchard tours.

"There's something about this town," says 106.1 The Corner Program Director Jeff Sweatman. "People have an appreciation for good musicianship, and not only the players, but bands support each other." Photo: Amy Jackson
“There’s something about this town,” says 106.1 The Corner Program Director Jeff Sweatman. “People have an appreciation for good musicianship, and not only the players, but bands support each other.” Photo: Amy Jackson

LOCAL RADIO PERSONALITY Jeff Sweatman (106.1 The Corner)

The voice

Jeff Sweatman on modern music

106.1 The Corner’s Jeff Sweatman had sports in mind when he first switched on the mic in Springfield, Illinois, but the challenge of learning to call local games was upstaged by an opportunity to take a paid radio gig at age 16.

Sweatman landed in Charlottesville in 2006 as part of the 106.1 launch team, and it’s been a dream come true for the program director/brand manager, as well as for local radio fans who tune in to his warm voice and informative liners during weekday afternoons.

C-VILLE: How did your passion for music evolve?

Jeff Sweatman: This guy Keefer had a show called “Vinyl du Jour” (the inspiration for “Brighten the Corners”) where he was playing stuff like Pixies and The Replacements. That and MTV’s “120 Minutes” was my exposure to bands that never came to my town. I was living vicariously through this guy I would hear on the radio. And, as luck would have it, Keefer [eventually] gave me my first full-time job in radio.

Is it a 24/7 job to keep up with modern music?

Yes, and I’m thankful to have Kendall [Stewart] and Pat [Gallagher], because in the program director role it is tough to have the time during the day to listen to music. …You are not just plucking these songs out of thin air. What makes this format so fun is you can explore. I love the soul revival right now with Leon Bridges, Nathaniel Rateliff, Mayer Hawthorne—Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings started it. They aren’t just imitating something from the past, they are really in it. People still need to know, what is the next big thing? What is gonna be cool?

How does the discovery of new bands work with so many options? How do bands like The Lumineers get so big?

That’s been pretty interesting, especially with that type of sound. The Lumineers are on Dualtone and one of the most successful indie bands of all time. Mumford & Sons are with Glassnote, basically an indie label. Part of it is those bands are super hardworking and they have a different mindset.

I feel like in the early ’90s a lot of bands just took all the money that was floating around out there and took the big advance, didn’t really read the fine print.

Have you ever had a special on-air name? Well, it was inspired by Say Anything. The little kid in that movie. It was when I was on Top 40 on the weekends—“The J-Man.” At the time it was kind of a current movie, so that was my name very briefly.

Who are some local musicians to watch right now? My three favorites at the moment: Sally Rose Band’s album from last year, Michael Coleman has a new one and Annabeth McNamara, she came out of the blue.

Runner-up: Anne Williams (91.9 WNRN)

Honorable mention: Coy Barefoot (WCHV 107.5)

 

FIRST-DATE SPOT

Downtown Mall

Runner-up: Lampo

Honorable mention: Bang!

Restaurants, a movie theater, gelato—the Downtown Mall has all the makings of a rom-com montage. But here’s our advice: Start at The Alley Light for a drink (see page 93 for bartender Micah Le-Mon’s recs on what to sip on). If you’re still feeling into it, switch gears and grab a burger at Jack Brown’s. Then hop over to Splendora’s, where you can get a cone to go, and take a lap (or two) up and down the mall, chatting over your salted caramel. We’ll stop there, but here’s one last tip: Whatever you do, don’t forget to follow up the next day. That’s just good manners.

Terri Allard interviews filmmaker Geoff Luck for an upcoming installment of "Charlottesville Inside-Out," which airs Thursdays at 8:30pm and Sundays at 12:30pm. Photo: Ryan Jones
Terri Allard interviews filmmaker Geoff Luck for an upcoming installment of “Charlottesville Inside-Out,” which airs Thursdays at 8:30pm and Sundays at 12:30pm. Photo: Ryan Jones

LOCAL TV PERSONALITY Terri Allard (PBS)

Talk of the town

Terri Allard’s story days

One of the first things you realize when you meet singer-songwriter Terri Allard is that she’s the same in person as she is onstage: funny, smart, warm and generous. In other words, someone you want to hang out with after work on a steamy July evening. She apologizes for being a few minutes late for this interview at the Barracks Road Greenberry’s, and explains she was delayed in meetings for WHTJ’s “Charlottesville Inside-Out,” the weekly half-hour public television show she hosts, co-produces and writes.

Now in production for its 10th season, “CVIO” was created to spotlight “the people and places that define Charlottesville and the surrounding area and make it such a great place to live,” Allard says with a smile, clearly still enamored of where she grew up, the second-youngest of four children, and has spent most of her life.

Being a musician and a TV show host have more in common than you would think, she says. “I realized about halfway through my singing career that what I like most about performing is the connection with people; having that conversation, that whole exchange. I have spent the majority of my life sharing stories—some are mine, but most often they are the stories of those around me.” 

So it makes sense that when Allard met D.J. Crotteau, WHTJ’s then-general manager, it wasn’t long before the two began collaborating on a show that would highlight Charlottesville and “all of the interesting people and cool places here,” she says. Over the course of about 10 months in 2006, the pair planned their new venture while Crotteau raised funds for the show.

Among Allard’s favorite interviews—she guesses there have been close to 500 guests on the program during the past decade—is one she did with Annie Eplee, a Special Olympics Global Messenger who “is doing such wonderful things and is an inspiration to anyone lucky enough to know her.” Other highlights include pieces on the Charlottesville Lady Arm Wrestlers (she once wrestled as Terrible Tarot Allard, a card reader gone bad), the Charlottesville Derby Dames (“They taught me how to slide on my knees!”), MacArthur genius grant-winner Corey Harris, former UVA president John Casteen III and World Peace Game creator John Hunter. Among the people and organizations featured in the upcoming season, which begins airing in January, are filmmaker Geoff Luck, City Schoolyard Garden, Hope’s Legacy Equine Rescue, The Front Porch Roots Music School, the Darden Prisoner Re-entry Education Program and Free Union Grass Farm.

Allard, who is also WHTJ’s community engagement manager, says she couldn’t ask for a better gig—or a finer place to do it. “I leave every interview feeling mentally and emotionally charged,” she says, calling her schedule “floating and flexible,” which allows her and Dwayne Evans, her husband of 24 years, to take their son, a 15-year-old trumpet prodigy, “to hear so many of the great performers in our fine city.”

Shawn Freude, “Charlottesville Inside-Out”’s senior producer and director, calls working with Allard “a joy.”

“When she researches a story, she becomes immersed and intrigued and that interest shows through in her interview style.” Freude also gets a kick out of Allard’s fans, who regularly want to chat with her when she’s on location. “Terri may be a folk musician and TV personality, but she truly is a rock star in town,” Freude says.

Runner-up: Henry Graff (NBC29)

Honorable mention: Norm Sprouse (NBC29)

 

THEATER (MOVIES)

Violet Crown Cinema

Runner-up: Regal Stonefield Stadium 14 & IMAX

Honorable mention: The Paramount Theater

This time last year, Charlottesville was down to one movie theater: this year’s runner-up, the much-ballyhooed Regal Stonefield. It came onto the scene in 2013 and had dominated until the appearance of Violet Crown, where you can reserve your seat and bring a beer in with you. We’re still on board at Stonefield for the IMAX experience (and, let’s face it, the nachos and cheese), but this year, Violet Crown takes the, well, crown.

Dreamgirls capped off Live Arts' 25th anniversary season in May. Photo: Martyn Kyle
Dreamgirls capped off Live Arts’ 25th anniversary season in May. Photo: Martyn Kyle

THEATER (ACTING) Live Arts

And scene

Dreamgirls’ assistant director explains how the production hit the mission on the mark

In February 2015, Live Arts’ Artistic Director Julie Hamberg approached me about what show I would like to see at Live Arts. My answer was immediate: Dreamgirls.

Julie probably thought I made the suggestion because I wanted to play Jimmy Early (I did)—but my objective went beyond that. It had been 10 years since Live Arts had seen an all-black cast (Ain’t Misbehavin’ in 2006) and, as an active member of Charlottesville’s arts scene (I’m the membership coordinator and dance instructor at the Music Resource Center and have practically grown up on the Live Arts stage, starting with my first play, Hush: An Interview with America, in 2001), I’ve seen firsthand the community of talent, beauty and potential suited for performance. To show her just how serious I was about the possibility of staging this show, I bowed out. I told her I was willing to stay off the stage and do whatever she needed me to do to make it happen.

Ike Anderson. Photo: Martyn Kyle
Ike Anderson. Photo: Martyn Kyle

A few weeks before the 2016 season announcement party, Julie called to tell me that Dreamgirls was a go—we would direct it together and I would choreograph. Immediately, I felt an enormous obligation to get the word out—that Live Arts was bringing one of the most legendary musicals of all time to its Gibson Theater, and that it was going to need a lot of black faces.

I took to social media and searched for local friends who sang, danced or were just looking for a new experience. I hit the jackpot when I started to follow the karaoke scene. Judging a competition at Wild Wing Café helped me discover Jessica Lowry (Stepp Sister, Les Style, ensemble) and Winston Smith (James “Thunder” Early). Another night, even before I finished my first drink, I was in tears—Kim Riley’s performance of Whitney Houston’s “I Will Always Love You” knocked me to my knees. I knew right away: That was my Effie.

Finally, audition dates came around, and the response from the community was tremendous. Never had I seen that many black faces in the Live Arts building, all with nervous smiles and jitters. As directors, we were dumbfounded by the sheer volume of previously undiscovered talent in the room. By the end of the week, we had a cast…and I had a lot of anxiety.

Many of the actors we chose had never done a musical; some had never even been on stage. But that didn’t matter. Even as unexpected challenges arose, I watched as my cast cleared each hurdle with grace and professionalism, growing stronger and more unified with each challenge. We established trust, we chose joy and we chose each other. Black Americans are true pros when it comes to overcoming adversity. This creative challenge was no different.

During the four-week run of 17 shows, I had the great fortune to watch people come into the building for the first time, their faces beaming with pride and excitement. I found joy at intermission, overhearing little black girls say they want to be Effie, hearing women swoon over Jimmy Early. Most of all, I had the pleasure of seeing a colorful audience share emotions with each other during what was a genuinely moving show, performed by a truly colorful cast.

Our production of Dreamgirls was a hit: It sold out every night, often with lines out the door waiting for tickets, and it got great reviews. This show proved that Live Arts can not only forge community and theater (its mission) but can also simply forge community. That’s what it’s all about: bringing people together under one roof for one badass show.—Ike Anderson, Dreamgirls’ assistant director

Runner-up: American Shakespeare Center (Staunton)

Honorable mention: The Paramount Theater

 

HALL OF FAME

McGuffey Art Center

This is what one might call the OG “place to get creative.” In 1975, 58 years after the McGuffey Elementary School closed, a group of local artists with a vision proposed the space be repurposed into a cooperative art center. Classrooms were turned into studios, which made way for both the visual and performing arts. On a given day, visitors to McGuffey might find Joel Jones conducting an improv workshop, Rebekah Wostrel throwing pots or Russell Richards vacu-forming a plastic mask. That’s the thing about McGuffey Art Center: It continues to be a celebration of craft in all its many forms.

106.1 The Corner

Turn it up, please! Sure, the motto of 106.1 The Corner may be “Different is good,” but it’s reliability—of lineup, of community involvement, of just all-around entertaining programming—that encourages listeners to pump up the volume. Take, for example, The Corner Lounge, in which visiting music acts stop by the studio to play an exclusive track on the air. Or the One Second Music Quiz, a daily morning contest to identify one second of a random song for a prize. Or Jeff Sweatman, who takes home this year’s best radio personality (see p.37)—he’s the voice you hear on your afternoon commute home. Of course, after all is said and done, as they say, “It’s about the music” and, we bet, it always will be.

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Categories
News

Street heat: Downtown storefront owner battles vendors

In a progressive town like Charlottesville, the owner of a 31-year-old business on the Downtown Mall says it’s time that equivalent rules and regulations are imposed on downtown storefronts and street vendors alike. His request comes in the form of a petition.

“We’re a fast city, man,” says Tony LaBua, the owner of Chaps Ice Cream. “Let’s make it fair.”

While it varies widely, depending on the building and its use, downtown brick-and-mortar business owners can expect to pay between $18 and $22 per square foot a year in rent, along with fees for electricity, water, sewer and other accommodations, according to Chris Engel, the city’s director of economic development.

That adds up to quite a bit more than the $250 per quarter that most street vendors are required to pay, says LaBua. An extra, say, $200 per month from the vendors, might level out the playing field, he suggests.

Even though he says he “love[s] having vendors on the mall,” the “one-man band,” LaBua, plans to start knocking on Downtown Mall doors in the coming weeks to gather signatures for his petition, which says vendor fees should be increased. He has already gathered a few from people walking by his restaurant.

LaBua will then present the petition to City Council, under the guidance of Downtown Business Association of Charlottesville Co-Chair George Benford, who says his organization is not taking a stance on the matter.

Hearing of the petition for the first time, several downtown vendors refused to comment, but mentioned that business has declined over the years and tighter restrictions on their operations have already been imposed.

“I couldn’t afford to do this if I had to pay more,” says Nym Pedersen, who sells original artwork in a shared assigned space in front of the fountain on the Downtown Mall.

While there are currently 17 assigned locations for vendors paying $250 per quarter, only 11 are actively rented, according to Engel. And 19 unassigned locations are filled by 10 nonprofit organizations, which pay $25 per year, and nine other vendors who pay $50 less per quarter than those who set up shop in an assigned location.

The city’s Commissioner of Revenue’s Office collects a $125 peddler’s license from vendors and says they should be collecting and remitting sales and use tax to the state, just like storefronts. The two food vendors, who declined to comment, must also pay the same monthly meals tax—5 percent of gross receipts—to the commissioner.

“For a lot of the vendors, this is their livelihood,” says Pedersen.

While Pedersen has largely sold his art on the weekends for the past three years, those walking down the mall on any given day will notice a scad of vendors offering colorful scarves, knit hats, sunglasses, jewelry and incense from morning until night.

Vendors don’t pay for amenities like water or electric because they don’t have the luxury of using their own restrooms—or even setting up in a dry space when the weather is bad, Pedersen says. Because the mall already caters to “big businesses that can stomach a lot of fees,” like chains such as CVS and Kilwins, Pedersen adds that Charlottesville is gradually losing its small-town feel.

“My own personal mission is to promote my work and to sell art that is affordable,” he says. “We provide a lot of flavor to the mall.”