Categories
Living

Food & Drink: Editors’ picks

Where and what we’re eating and drinking now.

Hickory Hill Store

BBQ, gas station, cheap eats

This no-frills roadside stop offers solid, reasonably priced pork and chicken barbecue slow-cooked on hickory and oak in smokers on the asphalt lot out front. What you have here is a convenience store with a kitchen, a counter with a few barstools, and a country music soundtrack. Sides and salads (including one made with smoked chicken) are housemade and unfussy, like you’d eat at a backyard cookout.

Service: Cheerful, quick

Space: Country store, linoleum floors

Apps/entrées: $1-2/$5-10

Drinks: Beer and soft drinks

Reservations: Not accepted

6:30am-6pm, Monday-Friday, 10am-5pm Saturday, 777 Monocan Tr., 293-0703

 

At Early Mountain Vineyards, Icelandic arctic char is seared and presented with mustard cream and sautéed chanterelles, and topped with potato “pebbles.” Photo: Tom McGovern

Early Mountain Vineyards

Farm-to-table, fine dining, great wine list

Chef Tim Moore spent more than seven years at the famed Inn at Little Washington before his recent arrival at this pastoral Madison winery. His small but dynamic menu changes frequently and delivers sophisticated fare to match Early Mountain’s next-level wine offerings. On a recent visit, local roasted beets with fromage blanc and Asian pear were served in an earthy sauce made from foraged black walnuts, and shrimp were brightly flavored with coriander, dill, parsley, and a lime vinaigrette. Surprise touches, like the peanuts in a dish of local pork belly with poached Virginia apples and braised cabbage, sealed the deal.

Service: Chatty, good pacing

Space: Large, farmhouse industrial, fireplace

Apps/entrées: $6-10/$12-26

Drinks: Wine

Reservations: Accepted; exploretock.com

11am-6pm, Wednesday-Monday, 6109 Wolftown-Hood Rd., Madison, (540) 948-9005, earlymountain.com

 

Comal

Mexican, upscale casual, Belmont

Former Mas Tapas manager Benos Bustamante and staff pay homage to the food of his childhood in Oaxaca, Mexico. The showpiece dish is the mole negro con pollo, which like many other menu items is homey yet refined, with great depth of flavor and chili-pepper heat that comes on slowly and never overwhelms. Standouts when we visited included pork tenderloin tamales with a garlic sauce and green salsa, pan-seared salmon tacos with pico de gallo and guacamole mousse, seared shrimp with a purée of roasted black beans and avocado leaves (think, basil), and braised pork ribs with guajillo mole and Caromont Farms queso fresco.

Service: Friendly, attentive

Space: Cozy, colorful

Apps/entrées: $8-12/$15-18

Drinks: Wine, beer

Reservations: Not accepted

5-10pm, Tuesday-Saturday, 816 Hinton Ave., 328-2519,
comalcville.com

Categories
Living

The price is right: C-VILLE’s guide to the best deals in town

Charlottesville’s a pricey town, but there are still lots of ways to enjoy yourself on the cheap. So whether you want to eat out or rock out, here are a few of our favorites.

It takes two

Two bucks don’t get you very far these days, but some local breweries and bars don’t believe in such nonsense. South Street will hook you up with any 12-ounce pour under 8 percent alcohol from 11am-9pm on Tuesdays. On Thursdays from 7-9pm, Random Row’s got select pints available. And over on the Corner, the Biltmore has been hosting $2-rail “survivor hours” from 8-9pm on Thursdays ever since “Survivor” was the most popular show on TV.

Join the club

You’ll have to drink 100 beers (take as long as you want) to join the Notch Club at Jack Brown’s, but once you do, you can get 20 percent off food and drinks every Tuesday.

Sweeeeeeet

Here’s one we love a hole bunch: Every day, Sugar Shack, the donut chain founded in Richmond by self-proclaimed “donut nostalgia nerd” Ian Kelley, offers a free house donut from its location on West Main Street. But there’s a catch: You have to complete an often-quirky daily challenge to get this particularly sweet deal. Walk in wearing two different shoes. Draw a unicorn. Bring in a Goosebumps book, an arcade token, a disposable camera, or your drumsticks (whether they’re talking percussion mallets or meaty poultry, we’re not sure). Follow @cvilledonuts on Twitter or Sugar Shack Donuts Charlottesville on Facebook for the sweet deets.

Go big

The Paramount occasionally opens its doors for free live sporting events on the big screen, including UVA men’s basketball games. Keep a close eye on the theater’s online events calendar throughout the season.

Fill ‘er up

Top off your growler at Random Row for half price on Mondays.

One shell of a deal

Get a lobster dinner for around $20 at The Pub by Wegmans on Thursdays.

Sound of free music

Charlottesville is bursting with music these days, and it doesn’t always have to bust your wallet. Fridays After Five has been around long enough—this is its 31st season—to be an institution, and even if the summer is winding down, there’s still a chance to catch Skip Castro September 5, which will be a Thursday After Five. Fall is a good time to Freefall with WTJU and IX Art Park’s Saturday music and art series through October 5. And at Carter Mountain’s Thursday Evening Sunset Series, the free concerts come with a view.

Tank you, thank you

Getting your fill at Brown’s convenience store and gas station on Avon Street means a tank of gas plus your choice of a crispy, fried chicken snack. Grab a wing, drumstick, thigh, or breast for free when you put 10-plus gallons of fuel in your ride.

Play nice

We here at C-VILLE believe in supporting the arts in many ways, including financially…but we know that’s not always possible when you have other necessities (like rent, groceries, or an electric bill) to cover. Enter Live Arts’ pay-what-you-can Wednesdays. During any production run, show up to the Live Arts box office in advance of a hump day performance, and ask if any PWYC tickets are available.

*Don’t be a cheapskate. If you can spend twenty bucks on a play, then do it.

Fewer fees

Save on fees by buying your tix in person at the Jefferson, Southern, and Pavilion box offices (where you’ll still pay a flat 50-cent fee), and the Paramount box office, where there’s no fee at all.

Free nature

We’re lucky enough to have the wonders of Shenandoah National Park in our backyard, and on selected holidays during the year, you can even get in for free (the next one is National Public Lands Day, on September 28). See nps.gov for the complete list.

$5 movies

Alamo Drafthouse frequently offers $5 screenings, and while you won’t catch the latest, most popular releases for a paper Lincoln, you could see something old and nostalgic (like Godzilla-adjacent Mothra), or, if you’re reel open, something from the Video Vortex series, featuring “ultra-obscure, ultra-bizarre movies from the fringes of the universe. And beyond.”

A la c-art

The first Friday of every month, local galleries open their doors for evening receptions, often offering free drinks and snacks alongside quality, thought-provoking art from local, national, and international artists, Need we say more? Keep your eyes peeled for C-VILLE’s handy First Fridays guide, out the first Wednesday of every month, to help you choose which shows to see.

Wine-ing out

We’re not sure which is the better deal at Tilman’s on the Downtown Mall: Half off bottles of wine on the bar menu from 3-9pm on Tuesdays, or no corkage fee (a $10 savings) on retail-priced bottles from 3-10pm Thursdays. The former will get you an old-world wine—a viognier from France or a barbera from Italy, for instance—from $15 to $23, and the latter means you’ll pay shelf price and get to sit and sip in the calm little space at the back of the shop.

Half-price wine specials are also on the chalkboard every Wednesday at Fry’s Spring Station on JPA, and Zinburger at Barracks Road, for early birds only (3-6pm).

Free skate

At Carver Rec on Friday evenings and Sunday afternoons, the roller skating and skate rentals are free (and so are the irresistible dance hits).

Cuppa for nada…

At its three Charlottesville locations (and also in Crozet and Richmond, if you’re traveling), Grit Coffee will pour you a hot or iced regular coffee—meaning, no fancy latte stuff—when you buy a pound of beans. Let us help you with the math: The bag will cost $13 to $17, and the drink you’ll receive gratis would go for $2 to $4. Cha-ching! Meanwhile, another prominent local coffee roaster said it offers the same deal—but requested that we not publish anything about it. Freebies on the DL only, we guess!

…or for a buck!

Also at Grit, enjoy a “coffee happy hour” from 3-4pm every weekday, with $1 off all coffee drinks. That means you can get a small drip coffee for just a dollar! That’ll perk you up.

Flexible spending

Now, this is how you stretch a dollar. Pay-what-you-can yoga at IX Art Park has a suggested price of $5 to $15 for an hour of expert instruction, now through October 31. Just show up at the patio adjacent to the Dream Big mural at 6pm. Your instructor’s name is Shankari. She is a true yogi, with her own signature style of Hatha yoga and Vinyasa Flow, which she calls “Soul Flow.” An hour on the mat under her direction, starting at five bucks? Worth it. Visit the IX Art Park events page on Facebook for more info.

Cheap seats

Students can catch many shows at the Paramount for half-off with their university ID, anytime within 45 minutes of showtime.

Crozet okay!

Live in Crozet? You can ride into town for free, now through October 1, on the new Crozet Connect commuter bus, operated by Jaunt. (In October, the very reasonable fare of $2 each way goes into effect, though UVA ID holders will always ride free.) Meant to be a commuter service for workers and students, the bus has three stops in Charlottesville (the Downtown Mall, UVA Grounds, and UVA Medical Center), with multiple pickup points in east and west Crozet. See findyourconnection.org for schedules and info.

As the story goes…

The Saturday children’s storytimes at New Dominion Bookshop and 2nd Act Books, on the Downtown Mall, are free. But the chance to browse the shelves while someone else entertains your kiddos?  Priceless.

Room service

Got kids at UVA? The Hotel Tonight app—the cooler version of booking on, say, Hotels.com—has expanded its offerings in town, from solid Fairfield and Holiday Inns to luxe choices such as the Boar’s Head Resort and the Omni at the west end of the Downtown Mall. A quick check at press time showed nightly room rates in September of $99 at the Graduate, $82 at the UVA Inn at Darden, and $176 at the Boar’s Head—savings of $20 to $50 a night. Rates in Charlottesville fluctuate wildly, depending on what’s happening on Grounds, but the app will always put a dent in the cost of your stay.

By the pitcher

The Lazy Parrot, by the Pantops Food Lion, might not be your first thought for craft beer. But they’ve got 40 beers on tap, and for the $10 pitchers on Saturdays you can choose from any one of them, including some top-notch indie brews.

Park it

Parking is the most often-cited reason for people not coming downtown. But here’s the deal: The first hour is free at both the Water and Market street parking garages. And if your lunch date goes 15 minutes over, it’ll cost you a buck. Beats circling around looking for a street space if you’re running late. If you want to go see a movie, Violet Crown validates for four hours at either garage.

More than books

There’s no better deal than our public libraries, and it’s not just the free books and DVDs.

Charlottesville’s downtown branch carries “health kits” and “maker kits” that come with both equipment and instructions that you can take home for three weeks at a time. “Getting started with yoga,” for example, includes a yoga mat, block, strap, DVD, and instructional materials. Maker kits include knitting, embroidery, calligraphy, and more. Parents can check out toys, free passes to the Virginia Discovery Museum, or a parking pass good for any Virginia state park, along with a backpack filled with pocket naturalist guides.

Staff at every branch can proctor exams or notarize documents for free, and can provide one-on-one tech training, says reference librarian Abbie Cox. At the downtown branch you can also digitize your photos, negatives, slides, and audio or VHS tapes, all for free by appointment.

From the library’s website, you can download e-books and audiobooks onto your phone, and access databases for language learning, investment news, auto repair, and much more.

Finally, don’t forget all the free classes and events at every branch—including books clubs for all ages, crafting groups, movie nights, story times, and special events, from a discussion on remembering past lives at the Crozet branch to a poetry open mic at Gordon Avenue. Pick up a program guide at any branch or go to jmrl.org.

Cheap meats

The butcher’s counter at Reid Super-Save Market, on Preston Avenue, is a stealth favorite for hard-to-find cuts of meat that won’t break the bank. Although most prices vary from week to week, Reid has offered a deal for 80/20 hamburger meat for just $2.99 a pound for the last two years—which management says has been the biggest draw for their meat counter.

As a locally owned grocery store in a city full of national chains, Reid offers a mom-and-pop atmosphere where employees know many of their customers, and often offer advice on how to prepare their products. The butchers will custom cut any order and prepare specialty items, like pig’s feet and turkey gizzards, that can’t be found at many other stores.

Weekly deals last from Wednesdays to Tuesdays and can be found on its website at reidsupersavemarket.com.

Kids eat free!

Lots of spots around town offer free meals for the little ones, including Moe’s BBQ (Sunday or Monday evenings, depending on location) and Boylan Heights (Wednesdays from 4-8pm).

Looky here 

Most art museums cost a pretty penny to get into, but here in Charlottesville, they’re free to peruse. And we have some real gems, full of thoughtfully-curated shows.

The Fralin Museum of Art at UVA, over on Rugby Road, is the university’s teaching museum, but it’s not just for students. The museum changes up its exhibitions every few months, and in the past year alone it’s had shows focused on Native American women artists, images of the interior, Asian art from private collections, and so much more (one current show, “Otherwise,” visualizes LGBTQ+ themes in honor of the 1969 Stonewall uprising). Check out the free family programs, tours, and gallery talks, too.

And then there’s the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection, located on Pantops, the only exclusively Aboriginal art museum outside of Australia. Think about what that means: On the six other continents on Earth, there is only one such museum, and it’s here. (Are your eyes popping yet?)

The Kluge-Ruhe rotates exhibitions every few months, constantly showing the breadth and the depth, as well as the global importance, of the work Aboriginal artists produce. What’s more, these artists often travel halfway around the world for residencies at the museum, giving us all a rare opportunity to interact with people who live, well, literally half a world away.

We’d be loath to leave out the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center gallery here—curated by Andrea Douglas, who holds a doctorate in art history and is a former Fralin curator, it’s a museum-quality exhibition space focused on the African American experience.

Categories
Living

Truffle shuffle: Know what you’re going to get in this box of chocolates

My Chocolate Shoppe on the Downtown Mall has closed, but owner and chocolatier Mary Beth Schellhammer isn’t giving up candy for good—she’s started Clean Conscience Chocolates, a line of paleo, vegan, organic, non-GMO, gluten- and dairy-free sweet treats.

“I cannot continue to contribute to our obese society, and I cannot continue to sell gummy bears with Red Dye 40 in them,” Schellhammer says. My Chocolate Shoppe’s last day was July 15.

“I’m just trying to provide a better option,” Schellhammer says, and Clean Conscience is “about my conscience being clean of producing these things.”

Schellhammer’s new line of truffles include four healthified flavors: toasted coconut, almond espresso, maca cinnamon turmeric and raw cacao. All are made without refined sugars, and Schellhammer emphasizes that “chocolate is food, not candy.” She will also offer a new version of her peanut butter cups that aligns with her clean-eating values, along with her paleo almond joyfuls, nut and seed bark and butter toffee bark, which is one of two products with refined sugar.

Some of My Chocolate Shoppe’s more popular candies will still be available at Baggby’s Gourmet Sandwich Shop, and Schellhammer’s Clean Conscience treats will be sold there and at Rebecca’s Natural Foods beginning July 19.

She’s also working on a line of chocolates made with spices aimed to heal each chakra, and hopes to sell them in yoga studios. Beginning in September, Schellhammer will teach clean eating and chocolate-making classes at The Happy Cook.

Noodling around

The owners of Monsoon Siam are moving a Thai fusion restaurant called Urban Bowl into Cardamom’s old spot in York Place…and they’re bringing noodles.

Urban Bowl, open seven days a week from 11am-3pm and 5-9pm, will serve Thai- and Vietnamese-inspired fare, including noodle bowls and noodle soup with a choice of beef, pork and shrimp. It will also serve crispy and fresh spring rolls, with plenty more options to come.

Urban Bowl owner and manager Saydee Aut and owner and chef Kitty Asi say that they’ve been eyeing the space for a while. Cardamom owner Lu-Mei Chang (who also ran Monsoon once upon a time) approached Aut and Asi when she decided to close and asked them to bring the space (and their vision) to life.

“It’s been my passion to open my own restaurant,” says Aut, whose family comes from Vietnam and Thailand. “I love cooking.”

Aut says she’s excited to start serving customers the food that she grew up cooking.

“I would love for everyone to come in and check it out and leave comments,” Aut says. “I am here to serve, because that’s what I do.”

Beefing up

Timbercreek Market will offer more responsibly farmed options with its recent remodel. Half of the current space in the old Coca-Cola building on Preston Avenue will house a USDA-certified meat processing area, which allows for in-house butchering and increased distribution to wholesale customers, and the other half will hold a new full-service restaurant called Back 40, with executive chef Tucker Yoder at the helm.

Once Timbercreek hired Norman Engelhardt, formerly of The Rock Barn, the expansion happened quickly.

“With Norman on board of an already killer team made up of Adam Lawrence and Rodrigo Mejia, the decision was easy to start butchering [on our own] for our wholesale needs,” says Sara Miller, who co-owns Timbercreek with her husband, Zach.

Back 40 is the brainchild of Yoder, who says it’s inspired by seasonal, local ingredients, which the current market already uses in its café.

“It will be his menu, his creations and his inspiration that he brings to our followers,” Miller says.

While the Timbercreek Market storefront is closed until Aug. 1, its products will still be sold at Farmers in the Park at Meade Park on Wednesdays, and at the Market Street Market and Crozet Great Valu. Timbercreek will also offer butcher boxes to fill the void until opening day.

Tune in

The Charlottesville edition of “Cheap Eats,” in which Cooking Channel show host Ali Khan has 12 hours and $35 to find the best deals in a city, airs at 10pm July 19. Restaurants featured include Bodo’s Bagels, Red Hub Food Co., Firefly and Oakhart Social.

Minute Man triumphs

Three Notch’d Brewery’s Minute Man IPA was named No. 10 on Draft Magazine’s list of the best 50 IPAs in America. Out of the more than 387 total beers submitted, Three Notch’d was the only Virginia-based brewery to place, and the magazine said that imbibing Minute Man, a New England-style brew, is like drinking a glass of boozy OJ.