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Tavola’s Michael Keaveny guides young talent in honing their skills

“Cooking is a young person’s game.” I’ve heard it more than once. As chefs grow older, the daily grind leaves many looking to continue their careers outside a restaurant kitchen. Never easy, the transition can be especially tough for chef-owners, who must entrust someone else at the helm.

Consider Michael Keaveny of the Belmont Italian restaurant, Tavola. When Keaveny opened Tavola in 2009 with his wife, Tami (C-VILLE’s arts editor), the lifelong chef ran the kitchen. His food was outstanding. In 2011 though, the father of two was ready to step back. “Pushing 50, it would’ve been tough to continue in that role for much longer,” says Keaveny. But Tavola after 2011 has been every bit as good as Tavola before 2011. So, how has Keaveny pulled it off?

“I try to make it advantageous for young chefs to come in, learn and better themselves,” says Tavola owner Michael Keaveny. Photo by Eze Amos

Initially, preparation eased the transition. Keaveny had been grooming his sous chef, Loren Mendosa, for the role. With Mendosa’s talent and training, regulars barely noticed a difference.

But, when Mendosa left in 2014 to help launch Lampo, Keaveny found himself with a new challenge: hiring and retaining a talented head chef from outside Tavola who would be willing to cook someone else’s food. Tavola’s dishes are largely Keaveny’s recipes, and their consistent execution has been key to the restaurant’s success. “An established chef who wants to come in and do his own menu is never going to work out at Tavola,” admits Keaveny.

The ones Keaveny has hired sure have worked out. Most recently, Caleb Warr was named the area’s Best Chef by C-VILLE Weekly readers. When Warr left town this summer, Keaveny hired C&O chef de cuisine Dylan Allwood, who took over in July. And, as Mendosa and I learned during a recent dinner at Tavola, the kitchen hasn’t missed a beat under Allwood, continuing the restaurant’s success from one chef to the next.

Vital to this, says Mendosa, is excellent training. “Tavola has done a great job of bringing staff along at their own pace and training properly,” he says. “Not every kitchen has that in mind or the luxury of the time to train.” Allwood has noticed this already. In just three months, “Michael’s experience and knowledge have helped me improve as a chef,” he says. Keaveny does much of the training himself, still spending more than 15 hours a week in the kitchen. “I try to make it advantageous for young chefs to come in, learn and better themselves,” Keaveny says.

That shows in Tavola’s classics, which Allwood’s kitchen already has down. Case in point is the cozzi ai ferri e pane that began our meal. Mussels are skillet-roasted in butter and garlic, and then served in the skillet with slices of Albemarle Baking Company baguette to soak up the briny sauce. Like many of Tavola’s dishes, Mendosa says, the mussels dish resonates because it’s simply prepared but boasts a bold flavor profile.

Allwood’s go-to among the Tavola classics is linguine alla carbonara. “Comfort food,” he says of the pasta tossed with housemade sausage, Olli pancetta, egg, Pecorino Romano, onion and black pepper. For purists who quibble that sausage does not belong in true carbonara, I have advice: Taste it. This is the way Keaveny learned it at the legendary Connecticut restaurant Carbone’s, and there’s a reason chefs and regulars swoon over it. “I love the way the salty pork and sausage work with the egg sauce and a healthy dose of black pepper,” Allwood says.

Dylan Allwood joined Tavola as executive chef in July. Photo by Natalie Jacobsen

Mendosa meanwhile is partial to the bucatini all’amatriciana, which we polished off quickly. Like spaghetti but thicker and hollowed out, bucatini is tossed with marinara, Calabrian chili, onion, Olli pancetta and Grana Padano cheese. “Again, simple, so it has to hit on all the little details,” Mendosa says.

Another key to retaining good chefs is providing an outlet beyond rote replication of recipes: the blackboard menu of specials. “That’s the chef’s playground,” Keaveny says, dating back to Mendosa’s days. “The freedom to create within the realm of the specials gives plenty of creative outlet for most chefs,” Mendosa says. And, it also rewards Tavola’s guests. Among all of the dishes Mendosa and I shared, Allwood’s special entrata was our favorite: chitarra-cut spaghetti with jumbo lump crab, Calabrian chilies, basil and lobster brodo. The squared shape and texture of chitarra pasta enabled the luscious sauce to adhere to it, all the better to savor it. “Fantastic,” Mendosa said. “Rich and buttery, but still light enough to leave you feeling satisfied but not overwhelmed.”

Tavola is one of Charlottesville’s most beloved restaurants. The main reasons for that, Mendosa says, are the quality of ingredients and consistency in preparing them. For the latter, since stepping down as head chef six years ago, Keaveny has relied upon a series of excellent young chefs to fill that role. He’s found another one in Allwood.

“Dylan is doing an incredible job,” Keaveny says. “His food has fit in perfectly with what Tavola does/is.”

Categories
Living

Caleb Warr leaves head chef post at Tavola; Dylan Allwood takes his place

After showcasing his mastery of Italian cooking at Tavola, Caleb Warr is leaving his post as head chef. Dylan Allwood, current chef de cuisine at C&O Restaurant, will take the spot.

Warr, a Louisiana native, arrived in Charlottesville seven years ago with a desire to cook. He didn’t attend culinary school, but with dedication and hard work, he won spots in some of Charlottesville’s best kitchens—Zinc, The Rock Barn and Mas among them—and is in the running for the coveted title of best chef in our 2017 Best Of C-VILLE poll.

Warr’s last day at Tavola (the restaurant is co-owned by C-VILLE’s arts editor Tami Keaveny) will be June 10, after which he’ll relocate to Cape Cod with his family and run the kitchen at an athletic center while getting to know New England food and culture before deciding what’s next. He says he’s proud of what he’s accomplished at Tavola, most of all passing knowledge along to other hard-working, aspiring cooks.

“I’ll miss my staff the most,” says Warr. “General manager Priscilla Martin and owner Michael Keaveny and I have developed something very special recently. Walking away from this was not easy, but I leave it in very great hands between them and my kitchen staff in conjunction with Dylan. I will also miss other chefs and cooks in this town—there are to many to name, but a few are very special to me.”

Allwood feels similarly about his departure from C&O. The restaurant “has an extremely talented team…some of the best in the business,” Allwood says, both in the front of the house and the kitchen and bar. “It’s very much like a family, and it will be difficult to leave—even for such a great opportunity.”

Allwood got his first kitchen job when he was 15, washing dishes at a local restaurant in his hometown of Locust Grove. He eventually worked his way up to line cook, then attended the Culinary Institute of America and worked at the Clifton Inn and at Lemaire in the Jefferson Hotel in Richmond before cooking at the now-shuttered Brookville Restaurant. After serving as sous chef to Brookville’s Harrison Keevil, Allwood was sous chef and later executive chef at Rocksalt Charlottesville before landing at C&O.

“I’ve always had a passion for Italian food but have never had the opportunity to explore that in any of the kitchens I’ve cooked in previously,” says Allwood. “This is my chance to explore that passion with some of the best in the business.” Plus, “Tavola has some of the best food in Charlottesville. I’m looking forward to being part of that tradition,” he says.

Categories
Living

A trip to Italy influences chef’s approach to food

Tavola chef Caleb Warr never intended to cook Italian food. Warr, who grew up eating home-cooked Southern food in Louisiana, says that although he’d always dreamed of owning a restaurant, he wasn’t exactly into the idea of culinary school (neither were his parents). And if he did cook, he didn’t want to be limited to one pantry—like his childhood best friend’s big Italian family was.

So Warr was pretty surprised to find himself in Poggio a Caiano, Italy, this July, cooking alongside seventh-generation Italian chef Roberta Vivetta Cintelli in the kitchen of Ristorante il Falcone, Cintelli’s family’s restaurant that has been serving Tuscan fare since 1862. 

Warr and Cintelli had met just one month prior, when Cintelli visited Tavola for a week in June as part of a culinary exchange through the Charlottesville Sister Cities program (Charlottesville and Poggio have been sister cities for 40 years). Cintelli cooked for Tavola’s specials board, and in moments when she wasn’t cooking, peeled carrots, ran dishes and folded linens.

Warr, who cut his teeth cooking in some of Charlottesville’s best kitchens—Zinc, Mas and The Rock Barn, to name a few—returned the favor at il Falcone. Thing is, he doesn’t speak a lick of Italian, and Cintelli doesn’t speak any English.

But during those two weeks—one in Poggio and one in Charlottesville—in which they cooked together in their kitchens and visited markets, wineries and vineyards, they exchanged plenty between them. Their common language was food.

While in Poggio, Warr took careful notes—he wanted to figure out exactly how Ristorante il Falcone has managed to operate for nearly 160 years. He wanted to know why customers were walking back into the kitchen to pepper Cintelli and her staff with kisses, hugs and endless professions of “grazie.”

Warr was already familiar with many of the techniques he saw in Tuscany, so his education wasn’t so much about the mechanics of cooking, but about preparation and presentation. Many of the dishes he ate (and helped make) had just three or four ingredients but were created carefully.

“It wasn’t that I saw something I’d never seen before,” says Warr. “To a point, there were probably only two or three ingredients that I had never heard of, like the jujube,” a red date that grows on backyard trees in Tuscany, “and I’d never known people to eat pigeon.”

One thing he noticed in Italy is that dishes are served and enjoyed as they’re ready; vegetables and antipasti, which take less time to prepare, will come out first, and on their own plates. Then the meats and pastas arrive, again on their own. “You don’t get steak, potatoes and a vegetable all on the same plate” like you would in America, Warr says. It affords eaters time to savor each individual dish.

“I had so much there that I want people to enjoy,” Warr says, and because many of the ingredients that flourish in Tuscany grow well in central Virginia, he feels he can “easily translate Tuscany into Charlottesville” at Tavola.

Although Tavola’s printed menu won’t change—it’s the work of Tavola owner Michael Keaveny, and the restaurant’s backbone, Warr says—Warr brings his Italian trip influence to Tavola’s specials board and the cichetti bar menu, with soups, pastas, antipasto and various meat dishes.

He’s also cooking a multi-course Tuscan dinner on September 29. The dinner is an effort “to translate, with my craft, on a dish, my journey in Italy,” Warr says. “That seems very deep and artistic, but hopefully it’s very approachable.” The menu focuses on well-developed flavors, quality ingredients and top-notch (read: proper) preparation. He’s adapted some of the dishes to better suit the American dining experience, such as the bite-sized beef tongue, cannellini bean and pesto canapé that was inspired by a full plate of beef and beans that Warr ate in Tuscany.

And he’s combining Piedmont proteins with Italian methods as well. Warr watched Cintelli prepare a braised beef sugo (an Italian sauce or gravy) and serve it over potato-stuffed tortelli. Warr’s version features that same potato-stuffed tortelli topped with a ground local rabbit and guanciale sugo (cured pork cheek sauce).

But it’s about more than just food for Warr.

“Five years ago, it was all about the food to me,” Warr says. “I thought that people come to a restaurant to eat, and that the food has to be perfect, and everything else is [secondary] to the food. That’s not the case anymore.”

Partly from working at Tavola and partly from his trip to Italy, he learned that a restaurant is about food, sure, but also about the wine, the drinks, the music, the ambience and the service. It’s about the soil and the sun that grow the tomato and the farmer who harvests it. It’s about the chicken that lays the egg and the chef who mixes the egg with semolina flour to make pasta, and it’s about the family that sits down together to eat it. Food isn’t just cooking and eating; it’s living, and Warr says that realization has transformed his approach to food.

“[I want] people to feel like they’ve been taken good care of,” Warr says.


Bird’s the word 

While in college at Louisiana State University, Warr studied evolutionary genetics, with a particular focus on birds. “I love birds. I love birds. I birdwatch with my nephew, with my son,” he says. “I have many pictures and paintings of birds in my office. I also love to eat birds.”

While in Italy, Warr had a guanciale-wrapped, fire-roasted pigeon dish that he’s dying to recreate at Tavola. “I ate three of them,” Warr says. He loved the clean flavors, the gaminess and the preparation of the dish.

But he’s running into a couple of problems.

In the U.S., we think of pigeons as a nuisance; they’re chubby street birds that peck through leftovers on trash day. But in Italy, they’re domesticated, like chickens, and eaten often.  Would American diners order a pigeon dish?

And then there’s the matter of sourcing the pigeons. They’re not raised here, and he can’t just pluck them from the sidewalk. War says that since returning from Italy, he’s talked with his rabbit farmer about possibly raising pigeons and guinea fowl, all in the hopes of bringing more options to Tavola diners.

Contact Erin O’Hare at eatdrink@c-ville.com