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Living

New Zealand-inspired gastropub opens in Stonefield and more local restaurant news

In regards to today’s food culture obsession with eating local, Burger Bach reps say there’s a good reason they source their grass-fed beef and lamb from halfway around the world. The late founder of Burger Bach and Richmond restaurateur Michael Ripp had been traveling back and forth from New Zealand to visit his children, and he noted the high quality of bar food abroad. He couldn’t find what he wanted locally, so he launched the first Burger Bach (pronounced “batch,” New Zealand for “vacation house”) in Carytown in February 2012.

All Burger Bach locations—The Shops at Stonefield spot in the former PastureQ space makes the fourth—source their beef and lamb from the same farm in New Zealand so they can control the quality of the meat they serve, says Burger Bach Virginia director Brett Diehl. Diehl says the USDA allows grain-finished beef to be labeled grass-fed, but because grass grows year-round Down Under, they know their product will be the same each time. Every location grinds meat for patties each morning, and the beef and lamb burgers are 90 percent lean. He says the beef and lamb from New Zealand are “the best in the world,” and likens the flavor to tasting a pinot noir from France versus California—the climate and conditions in which the animals are raised make a difference in taste.

The Charlottesville location offers 12 different burger options (including Diehl’s favorite, the Hangover Cure, with green chile sauce, bacon, Bach-made hot sauce, a fried egg, American cheese, tomato, caramelized onions and mayo made with free-range eggs), as well as free-range chicken and veggie burgers. Each burger is served with a side salad that is a testament to Burger Bach’s commitment to making as much as they can in-house, Diehl says: The thyme for the herb vinaigrette is hand-picked when they make the dressing every other day.

Other menu highlights include fresh-cut fries, which come with 14 kinds of Bach-made dipping sauces, as well as seafood options, such as mussels, oysters and their most popular seafood dish, spicy shrimp made with chipotle and jalapeno peppers. In addition, each location offers a unique craft cocktail menu and local beers—20 of the 30 taps at The Shops at Stonefield location are from Virginia breweries.

The Charlottesville location officially opened August 1, and managing director Justin Owens says the first week saw both new and repeat customers—one gentleman dined there three out of four nights, and a couple who often eats at the Short Pump location drove to Charlottesville on back-to-back nights.

Diehl says Burger Bach’s No. 1 priority is the guest experience.

“I tell a lot of people the best burger you’ve ever had in your life is on our menu,” he says. “You may not know it yet and you may not order it the first time, but if you don’t leave here thinking that was the best burger you’ve ever had, order something else the next time.”

Burger Bach has a limited menu during its first two weeks (menu items in red are not currently available), but will offer a full menu once they start serving lunch, likely by August 15. In addition to lunch, the restaurant will offer happy-hour specials on food and drink, including tap takeovers.

Victory for all

The Alley Light’s master mixologist Micah LeMon has created a cocktail inspired by Victory Hall Opera’s season-opener, Der Rosenkavalier (read about the opera’s Charlottesville connection on p. 29), which will be featured at the restaurant’s bar through the end of the month. The Silver Rose, $11, is a “floral riff on a classic gin fizz with cream,” and $2 from every drink will go directly toward the opera production.

Savoring the success

When Simon Davidson, creator of Char-lottesville 29 and a C-VILLE Weekly columnist, first had the idea of holding dining experience auctions to raise money for the Blue Ridge Area Food Bank, his goal was $29,000. He contacted each owner of what he considers to be the 29 best restaurants in C’ville, and asked them if they would participate. They all stepped up—led by the example of Angelo Vangelopoulos, co-owner of the Ivy Inn and one of the first to respond, who offered a pop-up Greek taverna experience for 20. Coincidentally, that auction raised the most money of all the auctions—$8,100. In total, the auctions, underwritten by McGuireWoods LLP, raised $79,730 for the food bank, which equals more than 315,000 meals for the hungry.

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News

History markers keep Charlottesville’s past alive

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Living

Valley Road Vineyards opens on Nelson’s 151

One of the most surprising things Stan Joynes learned after entering the local wine business is how much camaraderie there is among vineyard owners and winemakers. It’s not a “zero-sum game,” he says—when one business is successful, they all benefit.

About two years ago, Joynes started thinking it was time to do something different. He had helped found Richmond law firm LeClairRyan, and although he was passionate about his work, he knew he needed a change. He and his wife, Barbara, had a second home in Wintergreen and visited many of the local wineries while here.

They started looking for land in both Albemarle and Nelson counties, and heard that the former amFOG Farms property on Route 151 in Nelson County was for sale. They bought it the same day they saw it last fall, and started their winery, Valley Road Vineyards, with four other couples from Charlottesville and Richmond.

Joynes says he received lots of guidance from locals in the industry, including Ellen King, co-owner of King Family Vineyards. Because it takes two to three years for grapes to mature (Valley Road planted one acre each of sauvignon blanc, cabernet franc, chardonnay and petit verdot grapes in April), King suggested they consult with her winemaker, Matthieu Finot, on sourcing surplus grapes for their first bottling.

With Finot at the helm, Valley Road has bottled 2,000 cases of six wines: viognier, chardonnay, Destana (viognier, chardonnay and petit manseng blend), rosé, merlot and a 2014 meritage, which will be available during the vineyard’s grand opening weekend August 19-21. Other wines from the vineyard include a pinot gris, a second viognier, a petit verdot, a viognier-based sparkling wine and a red “spaghetti wine” in the fall.

The property’s previous life as a farm is still evident—the “industrial chic” tasting room has concrete floors and distressed wood walls, and the patina tin covering the front of the bar was part of an equipment shed on the property. In addition, the vineyard is hosting a weekly farmers market from 3-7pm on Thursdays as a way to showcase local vendors and bring the community together.

“(Agriculture) is the ultimate sustainable activity because the community helps each other,” Joynes says. “I think that is very true in the wine business for most people—there’s an abundance mentality. …It’s just instinctively part of the culture here. It’s great to be a part of.”

Something’s brewing

Deschutes Brewery and Blue Ridge Beverage Company held a launch party celebrating the brewery’s Roanoke brewery (projected to open in 2021) July 28 at Second Street Gallery. Deschutes beers started hitting taps and stores in western Virginia August 1. On tap at the event were some of the beers you can find in our area, including the Mirror Pond Pale Ale, Black Butte Porter, Fresh Squeezed IPA and Pinedrops IPA, as well as samples of more rare beers, including Mirror Mirror barley wine ale, Smoked Gose, The Dissident (Belgian-style brown ale) and Green Monster (a sour beer with dried fruit notes).

Related links

Remember when Deschutes wanted to come here?

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Dr. Edward Wolanski has become part of the families

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Enter to win C-VILLE Weekly’s fiction contest

Calling all authors!

Dust off those manuscripts—submissions are now being accepted for the C-VILLE Weekly/WriterHouse fiction contest. Short works of previously unpublished creative fiction that are a maximum of 3,000 words are eligible for entry; the winning story will be published in the August 10 issue of C-VILLE Weekly. The first-prize winner will receive $500 and a one-year WriterHouse membership; the runner-up will receive $250 and a one-year WriterHouse membership. Deadline for entry has been extended to June 14.

This year’s contest judge will be Ann Beattie, who was the Edgar Allan Poe professor of literature and creative writing at the University of Virginia. Her work has been included in four O. Henry Award Collections, in John Updike’s American Short Stories of the Century and in Jennifer Egan’s The Best American Short Stories 2014. In 2000, she received the PEN/Malamud Award for achievement in the short story form. In 2005, she received the Rea Award for the Short Story.

Contest details:

  • Entrants must be 18 years of age or older.
  • Entrants must be residents in the C-VILLE distribution area.
  • Submissions must be postmarked by June 7. Mail to WriterHouse, P.O. Box 222, Charlottesville, VA 22902.
  • Submissions must be in 12 point Times New Roman font, double-spaced and paginated, with the title in the header. The author’s name cannot appear anywhere in the document.
  • Previously unpublished work only (includes print or online). No erotica.
  • 1 entry person. $10 entry fee, paid by check, money order or cash.

The contest is not open to staff or family of staff of C-VILLE Weekly or the WriterHouse board, immediate board family members, WriterHouse staff or 2016 instructors.

Please note: Failure to adhere to the guidelines automatically disqualifies entry, with no refund. Read guidelines carefully! If your questions are not answered above, email programs@writerhouse.org.

 

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Arts Living News

Enter to win C-VILLE Weekly’s photo contest

C-VILLE Weekly is seeking submissions for our photo contest, presented by LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph—specifically creative, high-quality images of local scenes (and people in local scenes!). Prizes will be awarded, and winners will be published in the June 8 issue of C-VILLE, alongside coverage of the LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph, held June 13-19 in Charlottesville.

The contest judge will be Mary Virginia Swanson, executive director of the LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph. Swanson earned her master’s in photography from Arizona State University and has coordinated educational, exhibition and publication programs for a number of institutions and organizations. She has directed educational programs for The Friends of Photography including the Ansel Adams Workshop, headed special projects at Magnum Photos and in 1991 founded SWANSTOCK, an innovative photo agency that managed licensing rights for fine art photographers.

Deadline to submit photos is May 20. Hand-delivered or mailed entries (308 E. Main St., Charlottesville VA 22902) must have photographer’s name and phone number securely attached. You can enter on Instagram (#cvillephotocontest) or by e-mailing artdirector@c-ville.com (“C-VILLE photo contest” in the subject line). Prints will not be returned.

 

 

 

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News

C-VILLE Weekly wins 12 awards at VPA conference

C-VILLE Weekly took home 12 awards at the annual Virginia Press Association Advertising & News Conference held April 8-9, at the Hilton Richmond Hotel and Spa/Short Pump. C-VILLE took home six first-place awards, as well as a Best in Show award for Jason Crosby’s illustration for “Hell on Wheels,” an article about the irritations of driving in Charlottesville.

In addition to being named best website in the specialty publication category, other first-place awards went to Crosby for his illustration; photographers Amy Jackson and Jackson Smith for their photo of James “Monk” Bingler, a World War II veteran, in the personality or portrait photo category; Jackson for her photo of Maggie Lynn, a 9-year-old girl who plays Little League with the boys, in the sports feature photo category; C-VILLE Weekly staff for their annual Power Issue for special sections or special editions; and former news editor Graelyn Brashear and current news editor Lisa Provence for their in-depth coverage of Martese Johnson’s altercation with ABC agents in the general news writing category.

Second-place awards went to photographer Eric Kelley in the feature photo category for his photo of former UVA swimmer T.J. Southmayd; and photographer Ryan Jones in the sports news photo category for his photo of UVA wide receiver Andre Levrone.

Freelance writer Lawrence A. Garretson won two third-place awards in the arts writing category (“Paint the Town”) and feature writing portfolio category (“Paint the Town,” “Hipster 1.0” and “Forgotten Founder”). And columnist Erin O’Hare won third place in the column or commentary writing category (“Dream life,” “Instead of different” and “Cracking up”).

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News

VIDEO: What it means to be a millennial

In this C-VILLE Live video, we sat down with millennials—both “old” and “young” millennials—to discuss the perception of their generation, what they want to be known for and what the bring to the table in terms of the future of society. Both C-VILLE staff and people we interviewed for this week’s cover feature sat in on the discussion.

VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS

2:00: What our panelists think about the words people used to describe millennials

4:10: Millennials are concerned about what jobs will be available when they graduate

5:25: What do you think of when you hear the word millennial?

8:07: Discussion of TIME covers from other generations

11:17: We read what readers said the legacy of the millennial generation will be

15:24: Effect of technology on millennials’ jobs

18:49: What do you think this generation will be known for and what do you want it to be known for?

22:20: What millennials are using social medio for

25:11: The important of cell phones to the next generation and the millennial generation

28:46: Millennials are a nostalgic generation

32:05: Why do millennials document everything with photos?

35:27: How do millennials get their news?

41:03: Print versus digital: Do you still read hard copies?

43:58: The use of laptops in the classroom

 

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News

Join the C-VILLE Live discussion about millennials

We’ve all heard the buzzwords, both positive and negative, used to describe the millennial generation: digital natives, entitled, tech-savvy, purpose-driven, lazy. But how does that generation feel about its perception? And what do others who interact with millennials have to say about them?

We posed those questions to members of the millennial generation as well as people who work closely with them in this week’s feature story.

And at 11:30am Thursday, March 24, we are sitting down with a group of millennials to talk about their generation in a C-VILLE Live roundtable discussion. What are their goals? What do they think their generation’s legacy will be? Do they embrace the term millennials?

Watch the live stream video of the conversation on Periscope on our Twitter page: @cvillenews_desk.

 

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Arts

VIDEO: Author of Beale Street Dynasty speaks with C-VILLE

The Virginia Festival of the Book, in its 22nd year, is holding events throughout Charlottesville and Albemarle County through Sunday, March 20. Read more about some of this year’s featured authors.

Click on the link below to watch our C-VILLE Live chat with Preston Lauterbach, author of Beale Street Dynasty: Sex, Song and the Struggle for the Soul of Memphis, and Jon Lohman, director of the Virginia Program for the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities.

Video overview:

5:11 — Learn about Lauterbach’s main character, Robert Church, who was born a slave and became the South’s first black millionaire.

12:14 — Learn how the book’s plot evolved out of Lauterbach’s research.

13:07 — Hear how Ida B. Wells, a journalist who helped found the NAACP, “found herself” on Beale Street.

14:25 — W.C. Handy takes Beale Street to another level.

17:50 — Hear more about the Reading Under the Influence: Blues and Brews event, which takes place from 9-11pm Friday, at Champion Brewing Company.

24:35 — Learn how music first drew Lauterbach to Beale Street, a place where everything from swing to lowdown blues could be heard.

28:20 — Learn what W.C. Handy, the father of blues, and hip-hop artists today have in common.