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Living

Water Street replaces Tempo

There’s a new restaurant in the old Tempo space on the corner of Water Street and Fifth Street SE. It’s fittingly called Water Street, and, according to Ashley Sieg Williams, a trained chef who runs the front of the house, it’s not a rebranding of Tempo—it’s an entirely new restaurant.

Williams says she and chef Brice Cunningham—who will lead the Water Street kitchen—decided to leave Tempo behind because “it was time to change into something else.”

Water Street, which opens this weekend, will offer small and large plates, plus beer, wine and cocktails, all served in an upscale casual setting.

Gone are the cow-print couches and the water buffalo head watching over the bar; in their place are soft blue-gray benches, white orchids, Moroccan pendant lamps and mirrors galore.

The food menu will change often, says Williams, likely every two weeks. It’s “elegant, inventive but approachable food,” she says. It has elements of both French and American cuisine and aims to “show some new, fun flavors that [people] haven’t seen in Charlottesville,” Williams says, such as the charred Spanish octopus with fava bean salad. Other small plates ($5-12) include Israeli couscous with Italian tuna salad, roasted baby carrots with thyme and chardonnay, and pork rillettes with an Albemarle Baking Company baguette and cornichons.

Large plates, such as lamb shank with sautéed spinach, salmon filet or flank steak with mint and chili, are also on the menu for about $20 each.

And Williams is particularly excited about the wine program, which offers featured wines for $8 per glass and $30 per bottle. The idea is to encourage people to choose a wine based on their own tastes and interests, not by price point. The restaurant does have an extensive wine list separate from the menu, though it comes with a heftier price tag.

The Cheers of Charlottesville

After 10 years of pouring pints, Tuesday trivia nights, flip cup leagues and St. Paddy’s Day parties, McGrady’s Irish Pub will close after its grand finale party on Saturday, September 25.

“It will be McGrady’s no more,” says manager Tracy Tuttle, who started working at the bar as a bouncer on St. Patrick’s Day 2006.

Tuttle says the pub’s original owners have returned and plan on completely remodeling the space. Although the restaurant’s concept has been chosen, he can’t reveal it yet.

One thing Tuttle will miss: the always unpredictable St. Patrick’s Day parties. “You never knew what was going to happen. That was fun,” he says.

Wait staff and bartenders from the last 10 years will return to serve that final night, and from 1-5pm the bar will hold a silent auction for its wall hangings; half of the proceeds will be donated to Red Shoe Cville.

Beer fest date changes

Originally scheduled for Saturday, September 24, the Top of the Hops Beer Festival will now take place on Saturday, November 5, still at the Sprint Pavilion on the Downtown Mall. All tickets purchased for the September 24 event will be honored for the November date.

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

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Living

LIVING Picks: Week of September 21-27

Food & Drink
Edible native fruits and nuts
Saturday, September 24

While exploring the Saunders-Monticello Trail, learn which berries, nuts and fruits are edible, as well as the history of these native foods and ways to prepare them. $18, 9:30-11:30am. Kemper Park, Thomas Jefferson Parkway. monticello.org

Nonprofit
In the Pink tennis tournament
Saturday, September 24

The Women’s Committee for the Martha Jefferson Hospital Foundation hosts a doubles tennis tournament for men, women and teens to raise money for Marianne’s Room and the Cancer Resource Center. $25-50 individual entry fee; $50-100 doubles team entry fee, 9am-noon. Various locations. 654-8258.

Health & Wellness
Plank-off for Women’s Four Miler
Wednesday, September 21

Local fitness studios are joining together to host a planking competition and raffles to benefit the Women’s Four Miler and UVA Cancer Center. Donations accepted, 6:30pm. Kardinal Hall, 722 Preston Ave. 295-4255.

Family
Fall Into Fun Festival
September 24-25

This fifth annual fall festival at Chiles Peach Orchard celebrates all things autumn with apple- and pumpkin-picking, donut-decorating, hayrides, scavenger hunts and more. Admission is free; some activities are fee-based, 9am-6pm Saturday and 10am-5pm Sunday. Chiles Peach Orchard, 1351 Greenwood Rd., Crozet. chilesfamilyorchards.com

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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

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Food at Scott Stadium ups its game with some national help

You’re at a tailgate party outside Scott Stadium taking down dogs and burgers two at a time. You’re thinking, “I don’t want to pay a bunch of money inside for food. I’ll fill up now.”

This year, you might want to think again.

According to Matt Smythe, director of operations for Aramark’s UVA dining program, the food services giant is always perfecting its Scott Stadium menu under the local leadership of concessions program general manager Paul Schertz and district executive chef David Mason. This year is no different.

“We look at what is popular around town, what fans can enjoy in their seats and what they can only get at a UVA athletics event,” he says. “We want it to be a special day for all of our guests.”

In addition to yearly favorites like the Virginia Burger (formerly the Hoo Burger) and the Hoos on a Roll hot dog stand, Scott Stadium is rolling out a new item this year that’ll fill the stands with flavorful aromas—the smoked pulled pork sandwich.

Smythe says the pork will be smoked on-site, giving it that tailgate party appeal inside the stadium. “The sandwich is slow-cooked in the western Virginia fashion,” he says, and served with Sweet Baby Ray’s barbecue sauce.

The Virginia Burger, an 8-ounce hamburger patty on a pretzel bun with Virginia ham and thick-sliced cheddar cheese, has served that same role for years.

“The Virginia Burger is…grilled to perfection right in front of our guests,” Smythe says. “Its flavor is enhanced by succulent Virginia ham, making it a protein-lover’s favorite. The pretzel bun adds to its uniqueness, something you don’t expect when you are in a football stadium. It would be more at home at an upscale, gourmet burger joint.”

Similarly, Hoos on a Roll is looking to elevate the stadium hot dog, Smythe says, serving “Hebrew National hot dogs with all kinds of crazy combinations.”

And while the stadium’s three signature items are designed to provide that special in-game dining experience, lots of fans still opt for the old favorites. Smythe guesses Scott Stadium vendors will sell 38,000 hot dogs, 35,000 popcorn tubs, 24,000 pretzels and 17,000 pizzas this year. Other options include salads and sandwiches from Einstein Bros. Bagels, Chick-fil-A, Ben & Jerry’s ice cream, Italian sausages, chicken, turkey legs, corn dogs and mac‘n’cheese.

“We [have] a wide variety of options throughout the stadium so that fans can get what they want, when they want it,” Smythe says. “We continuously research what works best so that we can continuously improve the entire fan experience.”

Having the backing of a company like Aramark, which works with sports venues all over the country, gives the local outpost a lot of experience to draw on, according to Smythe.

“We are big fans of the University of Virginia,” he says. “We are the team behind the teams.”

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Talking turkey with Foods of All Nations’ Bill Yenovkian

Bill Yenovkian laughs as he attempts to describe the perfect Thanksgiving turkey “without sounding pornographic.” You want a “full, nice-shaped bird,” the longtime Foods of All Nations butcher begins. And then he stops, embarrassed, and tries again: “You want a rounded, plump breast…”

Why don’t we start with the number of people you’re serving and how big a bird you should buy, Yenovkian suggests. Ask yourself a few questions: How many adults will be at your table? How many children? What’s the makeup of men, women and college-aged boys? Are any of your guests vegetarians? Do you want leftovers? Are you big eaters? “It’s not as simple as buying a boneless piece of meat and guessing between six and eight ounces per person,” he says.

“One and a half to two pounds per person is a good rule of thumb,” Yenovkian says. “If you’re serving five people, you’ll want a 10- to 12-pound turkey—a 12-pound turkey is not a very big bird when you look at it. And you should err on the larger side because nobody wants to run short. It’s not that expensive to buy a couple extra pounds.”

The next step is choosing between fresh and frozen. A turkey is labeled fresh if it hasn’t been cooled below 26 degrees Fahrenheit, while a frozen bird has been chilled below zero degrees Fahrenheit (and needs plenty of time to defrost). There are also hard-chilled turkeys, which have been cooled below 26 degrees, but not below zero.

But fresh and frozen aren’t the only turkey differentiators you’ll encounter. You’ll also need to decide if you want your bird to be organic (raised on 100 percent organic feed, given access to the outdoors and no antibiotics); kosher (a grain-fed, antibiotic-free turkey that’s been processed under rabbinical supervision and soaked in a salt brine); free-range (a turkey that has access to the outdoors); or natural (a bird that’s been minimally processed and has no added artificial ingredients or colors). Then there are heritage breeds: Most store-bought turkeys are Broad Breasted Whites, but farmers such as Judd and Cari Culver raise historic breeds like the KellyBronze that can be found running wild at Heritage Glen, the couple’s Crozet farm. The pair’s slow-growing birds sell for more than $12 a pound and receive no antibiotics, feed additives or growth hormones, and they are hand-plucked, dry-hung and aged before being sold.

Among the three different birds Foods of All Nations carries are Polyface Farm turkeys, which are GMO-free and live in a paddock that is moved every other day to a new pasture that’s been “mowed” by cows, so the grass is shorter and the birds eat tender, fresh sprouts. And over on Garth Road at Timbercreek Farm, the birds are given GMO-free feed to supplement what they consume while grazing and foraging in mobile houses that are also rotated frequently.

Turkey, however, isn’t the only game in town. Yenovkian gets requests for goose, duck and the occasional turducken, a combination of turkey, duck and chicken. (“We have a hard time sourcing them,” he says. “And honestly, they’re a ridiculous amount of work.”) Some people do a Thanksgiving beef roast, a standing rib roast or a tied tenderloin, he says, but the vast majority of his customers go with turkey: Yenovkian estimates he sells about 400 birds, “which is a lot for a small store; it’s a week of chaos, but we try to keep it as organized and running as smoothly as we can.”   

When asked about the centerpiece of his own Thanksgiving meal, Yenovkian says, “I like turkey. There’s a big difference between moving hundreds of pounds of turkey and sitting down and enjoying one with friends and family.”


The day after

Thanksgiving was fun, but the party’s over. Now what about all those leftovers? We turned to Mike Perry, the chef de cuisine at Harvest Moon Catering, for advice. He suggested these simple-to-make, all-inclusive turkey sliders. “They can be a bit messy,” he says. “But they’re worth it!”

8 soft rolls, cut in half and buttered

1 pound sliced or pulled, roasted turkey

1 cup turkey gravy

1 cup mashed potatoes

1 cup stuffing

½ cup cranberry sauce (optional)

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Arrange the bottoms of the rolls in a buttered casserole dish. Equally divide and spoon the mashed potatoes, stuffing and gravy onto the bottom half of the rolls. Layer the turkey on top of the gravy and spoon the cranberry sauce (if using) over the turkey. Put the tops of the rolls in place and cover the assembled sliders with foil. Bake for about 10 minutes. Remove the foil cover and let the sliders rest for a few minutes. Dig in!

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Why we love cauliflower

Cauliflower, the hearty veggie cousin of broccoli, kale and cabbage, is mimicking everything from pizza crust to rice to mashed potatoes. But it’s a star in its own right—no reinvention needed. From appetizers to main dishes, restaurants are featuring florets in a variety of ways.

Lampo Neapolitan Pizzeria

Cavolfiore al forno, $6

Lampo in Belmont is known as much for its blistered-crust pizzas as it is for its ample small plates, meant to be shared. Our pick? The roasted cauliflower dish, made with garum (a type of fish sauce), Calabrian chile and mint that’s served at room temperature. Co-owner Mitchell Bereens says the idea for the dish came from a series of books he was reading about modern cuisine and food history. They talked about how different Italian food was before Christopher Columbus brought things like tomatoes from the New World, which most people associate with “traditional” Italian cooking. Bereens found garum was used in ancient Rome, and he countered the salty fish sauce with sugar and acid, like in Thai cooking, but added lemon, white wine, parsley and Calabrian chiles, which are often used in Southern Italy.

Milan Indian Cuisine

Lasooni gobhi, $6

The lasooni gobhi dish at Milan is true to its name (lasooni means “garlicky” and gobhi means “cauliflower”). The dish arrives at your table a fiery red color, but the tangy sauce is only on the medium side of hot, with just a slight kick at the end. And the batter on the cauliflower is light—not greasy or heavy, perfect for a starter. The cauliflower florets are coated in a lentil and corn batter along with fresh garlic, salt and pepper and deep fried. The crispy pieces are then cooked in the restaurant’s “special sauce”—a zesty tomato base with in-house ground spices, with more garlic and sherry vinegar added.

The Fitzroy

Cauliflower “steak,” $12 ($6 as a side, above)

In the vegetarian world, main dishes are often treated as an afterthought (think mounds of pasta), but The Fitzroy puts cauliflower center stage, serving a slab of it roasted with a Bold Rock cider beurre blanc. First the “steak” is seared at a high temperature for color and texture and then finished in the oven. The cider sauce is an homage to Normandy, France, a place renowned for its cider, where it is often used in cooking.

Parallel 38

Crispy cauliflower, $10

As with all good things, the idea for this crispy cauliflower dish came to Parallel 38 owner Justin Ross in a dream. He had been watching The Hundred-Foot Journey the night before, and he dreamt he was cooking and making cocktails in a garden where all of the spices were growing on bushes and trees and were prepped and ready to go. The spice base in this dish is a chaat masala/pink peppercorn mixture that is sprinkled on the cauliflower after it’s flash-fried. The blend of chaat masala (cumin, coriander, ginger, mango powder, hing, chili powder, salt and pepper) and the pink peppercorn (the soft berry from the Brazilian pepper tree) adds an unexpected crunchy coating to the dish. And the tangy champagne vinaigrette is a nice counterbalance to the sweet, fruity peppercorns.

The Alley Light

Cauliflower gratin, $10

This dish arrives at your table with a satisfying thud: a hefty white casserole dish heaping with cauliflower. This traditional French country comfort food is meant to be savored: The cauliflower is slow roasted with garlic, bay leaf and olive oil and dolloped with smooth pillows of Mornay sauce made with Comté and parmesan. Chef/owner Robin McDaniel says The Alley Light will switch to a butternut squash gratin once the weather cools. We can’t wait.

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Travis Croxton, third-generation oyster farmer, has made shellfish a mission

The water where the Rappahannock River meets the Chesapeake Bay had grown murky. Plant life was struggling. The solution? According to restaurateur and oyster farmer Travis Croxton, it was a no-brainer. Revive the oyster beds.

As the beneficial bivalves feed on plankton and other organic matter, they also remove particles and muck, producing clear seas and thriving ecosystems. As Croxton puts it, “They’re feeding constantly, eating algae, cleaning up the water.”

“We’ve seen evidence of it turning around,” he says. “The subaquatic vegetation is coming back. The water is crystal clear.”

Others have taken notice of Croxton’s efforts, as well. Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe appointed him to the Commonwealth Council on Bridging the Nutritional Divide in late 2014, and he’s won several awards from national media outlets like Food & Wine and Zagat.

Not only does all that mean good things for the Chesapeake Bay, it means good things for oyster fans in Charlottesville. Croxton’s Rocksalt in The Shops at Stonefield, one of seven seafood restaurants in his growing empire, serves ice-cold oysters fresh from his farms, be they the sweet and buttery Rappahannocks, mild and subtly salty Stingrays or deeply briny Olde Salts.

Public Fish & Oyster. Photo: Christian Hommel
Public Fish & Oyster. Photo: Christian Hommel

Is Croxton’s mission leading to a shellfish revolution in C’ville? We can only hope so. Here’s a look at other places to slurp down oysters this fall, as cooler water temperatures make the delicacies both tastier and safer to eat raw.

Public Fish & Oyster. Public offers a rotating selection of raw oysters, reaching from Virginia to the West Coast and up into Canada to find the best offerings at any given time. The local seafood favorite also serves its carefully curated oysters fried, roasted, broiled or as ceviche. “We’ve had over 130 varieties through the door since we opened,” owner Daniel Kaufman says. “One of the things that makes us unique is the fact that we source all over.” Kaufman says he’s even brought in oysters from New Zealand; he bases his sourcing decisions not just on seasonality but also “trial and error…what we like and what our customers like.”

Rhett’s River Grill & Raw Bar. C’ville’s original hole-in-the-wall oyster shack, Rhett’s doesn’t skimp on variety. The seaborne nuggets come fried (plain or buffalo-style), Rockefeller’d, raw, steamed, casino’d, “drunken” and sautéed with bacon. The dining room off Route 29 also serves a mean oyster po’ boy, but it’s only available for lunch.

Seafood @ West Main. The great thing about raw oysters is you don’t have to cook a thing to make them delicious. (See sidebar.) At Seafood @ West Main, owner Christopher Arsenault favors Virginia oysters from the ocean side: “Oysters take on the flavor of the areas where they’re harvested, and people typically prefer the saltier ones.” But he also stocks plenty of bivalves from New England and Canada. —Shea Gibbs


Go shuck yourself

The most common method of oyster shucking, according to resources from science and restoration outfit the Chesapeake Bay Program, is to use an oyster knife to pop the bivalve at the hinge. Here’s a step-by-step breakdown.

1. Wearing gloves, place the oyster round side down on a cutting board.

2. Position the tip of a broad-blade oyster knife at the hinge, the slight indentation where the two halves of the oyster shell meet.

3. Holding the oyster firmly in place, apply light pressure at the hinge and wiggle the knife until it enters the shell and pops the two halves apart.

4. Scrape the knife slowly along the top shell, from the hinge to the opposite end, to sever the muscle connecting the oyster to its shell.

5. Discard the top shell.

6. Scrape the knife along the bottom half of the shell to sever the muscle connecting the oyster to the shell on the other side.

7. Serve the oyster in its bottom shell over ice with selected condiments.—S.G.

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Tucker Yoder steps back into the kitchen

“I take good stuff and try not to screw it up.” That’s chef Tucker Yoder in 2013, the year C-VILLE Weekly named him as a rising star chef. It was a humble response for a man overseeing the Clifton Inn’s Relais & Chateaux kitchen, but it was as clear then as it is now: Rather than himself, Yoder prefers the food be in the spotlight. And, in fact, he’s stayed mostly out of it for the last year and a half, focusing on private catering and a pop-up restaurant called Eljogaha. But this fall marks his front-and-center return to the Charlottesville food scene, as he takes over the kitchen at Timbercreek Café, one of the city’s most buzzworthy new eateries.

What’s he looking forward to at the new gig? “I have always been fond of working with local farms and farmers,” he told us. “[This] seemed like a good opportunity to work directly with a great local producer.”

Before he stepped behind Timbercreek’s counter, we asked him to confess a few of his guilty food pleasures and favorite go-to ingredients.

Always on the bar: Water

Special-occasion drink: Vintage champagne

Energy source: Shenandoah Joe espresso

Breakfast: Eggs on sourdough

Lunch spot: Riverside

Chinese restaurant order: Something spicy

Go-to comfort food: My wife’s lasagna

Sandwich: Peanut butter, honey and banana or tomato with Duke’s [mayo] on sourdough

Unusual ingredient: Hardy orange or okra flowers

Healthy snack: Almonds

Unhealthy snack: Beer Run nachos

Condiment: Duke’s mayonnaise

Chocolate: Any

Grocery store cookie: Pepperidge Farm soft chocolate chip

Dessert: Brownie with vanilla ice cream

Beer: Champion Brewing Company Fruit Basket

Ice cream flavor: Cookies and cream or Turkey Hill Double Dunker

Kitchen aroma: Sautéing onions and garlic

Always in the home fridge: Eggs

Always in the pantry: Nutritional yeast

Bodo’s order: Garlic bagel, pastrami, provolone, sprouts, mustard

Salad bar toppings: Bacon

Cut of meat: Pork coppa roast

Fish: Monkfish

Vegetable: Carrots

Midnight snack: Tortilla, cheese, salsa, sour cream

Knife: Wüsthof chef’s knife

Appliance: Vitamix

Cookbooks: Essential Cuisine by Michel Bras and Relæ: A Book of Ideas by Christian F. Puglisi

Mentors: John Haywood (chef at now-defunct OXO)

Dream trip: Cross-country road trip with lots of food stops

Food city: Copenhagen, Chicago, San Francisco

Cooking clothes: Whatever is comfortable.

Kitchen shoes: Dansko

Cooking music: Beastie Boys’ Paul’s Boutique, El-P, MF Doom, The Roots (prep), Miles Davis and jazz (service)

First food memory: My grandfather’s popcorn rice—the lightest, fluffiest rice I have ever had.

Best meal ever: Lupa, Atera, Townhouse, McCrady’s, Manresa, Per Se, Alain Ducasse, Sushi Zo, Eleven Madison Park, Noma, Nimb…too many to mention.

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Apple pie for president!

How do we like them apples? In cobblestoned layers beneath a tender, flaky crust, that’s how. Which is why, this fall, we’re voting for a slice from The Pie Chest, which owner Rachel Pennington packs with Granny Smith apples first marinated in a cinnamon and sugar mixture, then sautéed in a caramel made with Southern Comfort and baked in a buttery crust. And don’t forget a scoop of homemade ice cream. It’s pie’s perfect running mate.


Core issues

If you’re sour on apples, stay tuned for the honey-spiced pear, which Pennington says is featured in the fall.

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Perfect pairings: Charlottesville wine (with a side of local cuisine)

You may have explored the Virginia Wine Trail, but if you want a meal with your wine, you can sample area selections at a few choice restaurants around Charlottesville. Here are some must-visit places for great food and wine pairings.

Wine and brine

Start your food and wine crawl with some raw oysters at Public Fish & Oyster. “My go-to pairing with oysters is Thibaut-Janisson sparkling chardonnay,” says owner Daniel Kaufman. “It has a biscuity-lemony quality and acts in many ways as a mignonette, cutting through the salinity and adding to the briny goodness.” If you’re not in the mood for bubbles, try the Veritas Sauvignon Blanc by the glass. It’s one of his most popular wines and also pairs great with oysters.

You can find Thibaut-Janisson bubbly on Fossett’s wine list at Keswick Hall, too, where sommelier Melissa Boardman will deftly pop the cork to pair the sparkling wine perfectly with the patio view (and maybe the Eastern Virginia crab cakes, too).

Honor the past

Make your way to downtown’s storied C&O, which recently celebrated 40 years. In addition to its rich history, it was one of the first local restaurants to strongly feature Virginia wine, starting in the 1980s under former wine director Elaine Futhey. A team of merry oenophiles, led by Sarah Thackeray, carries the torch today, and continues to honor local wines.

“I’m digging the 2014 Madeleine’s Chardonnay from Breaux Vineyards,” says C&O manager Jenn Lockwood. “Its crisp finish is great with our monkfish entrée.”

The American wine list at The Ivy Inn has featured Virginia wines since 1995. Wine director Farrell Vangelopoulos has carried Barboursville Vineyards and White Hall Vineyards since the beginning, and she has witnessed the scope of local wines grow to include a wide variety of wineries and grape varieties.

“Michael Shaps, Early Mountain Vineyards, Blenheim, Lovingston and King Family Vineyards are other very popular wines on our list,” Vangelopoulos says. “One of my new favorites is Barren Ridge Touriga. It has a great mouth feel and body for a Virginia red and is priced affordably.” And, it would be delicious with The Ivy Inn’s mustard-herb-crusted rack of lamb.

Palate primer

For a crash course in Virginia wine, head to Parallel 38, where you will find one of the widest selections of Virginia wines by the glass. Out of its 150 glass pours, 12 are local. The restaurant is also forging ahead in the keg-wine category (yes, that is a thing) and carries four Virginia wines on tap, including Early Mountain Rosé and Blenheim Chardonnay.

Sommelier and owner Justin Ross has a few personal favorites. “I’m a big fan of Michael Shaps Cabernet Franc with our roasted pork belly,” Ross says. “The acidity cuts through the Autumn Olive Farm pork belly fat, the earthiness in the wine complements the cipollini onion with the dish and the sumac spices make a bright citrus note jump off the palate.”

In chorus with several other wine directors around town, Ross is also a fan of the Pinot Noir from Ankida Ridge: “It’s out of this world.” He suggests trying it with Parallel’s mushroom flatbread pizza with Bear Dog Farms mushrooms, sweet onion, feta, fines herbs and balsamic vinegar. “The combination of the earthy mushrooms and sweet onions pair well with the acid and forest-floor aromas in the Pinot Noir,” he says.

Stinson Vineyards' Sauvignon Blanc pairs beautifully with a plate of local cheeses. Photo: Rammelkamp Foto
Stinson Vineyards’ Sauvignon Blanc pairs beautifully with a plate of local cheeses. Photo: Rammelkamp Foto
Cheese please

Charlottesville has a wealth of places to make a nice wine-and-cheese match. Visit Stinson Vineyards’ tasting room, nestled on a historic property in Crozet, for a bottle of local Sauvignon Blanc and see what local cheeses are in the fridge. If you’re near downtown, stop by Timbercreek Market for cheesemonger Nadjeeb Chouaf’s recommendation with a bottle of Blenheim Chardonnay, or see what Sara Adduci at Feast! has behind her cheese counter. At The Local, pair the cheese platter with a bottle of Pollak Vineyards Petit Verdot or Horton Vineyards Norton.   

The final stop

Top off your local wine tour with dessert at Fleurie, where pastry chef Serge Torres makes a molten mango cake that begs for a glass of Linden Vineyards’ late harvest Petit Manseng. [Full disclosure: This author writes the Fleurie wine list, raids the dessert station at Fleurie several times a week and is on a mission to get more people drinking Petit Manseng.] Petit Manseng has loads of natural acidity and grows extremely well in Virginia’s various climates. Harvested late, its color turns to gold and its aromas go from tart pineapple to candied peach, but the acid remains and highlights the brightness of the mango coulis you’ll find hidden inside of Torres’ molten treat. Talk about a sweet finish.

Erin Scala is the sommelier at Fleurie and Petit Pois. She holds the Diploma of Wines & Spirits, is a Certified Sake Specialist and writes about beverages on her blog, thinking-drinking.com.


The evolving picture

Local wine professionals have noticed a change in drinking habits as Virginia wine trails become more popular. At Foods of All Nations, Virginia wines account for about 10 percent of the selection, and wine director Tom Walters has built up a steady clientele of local wine enthusiasts. “The people who want to buy local,” he says, “always buy local.” His top-selling local wines are Barboursville Vineyards Pinot Grigio and White Hall Vineyards Chardonnay.

On the restaurant side of things, there is a much different reception to Virginia wines than when C&O’s Elaine Futhey first started putting them on wine lists in the 1980s. “Since I’ve opened,” Parallel 38 owner Justin Ross says, “more people ask for local wines. I’d say that about 85 percent of people from out of town are asking for something local to start out with,” and part of this trend can point to Virginia wine’s increasing importance in the United States wine market.

“There are some great wineries around here getting national press, like Early Mountain,” Ross notes. (Early Mountain Vineyards recently won the distinction of No. 1 Tasting Room in the nation by USA Today.)

As vibrant local wine trails increase enthusiasm for Virginia wines in area restaurants, and as wine professionals increasingly look to local wineries to fill key areas of their wine list, endless opportunities unfold to eat and drink local in the Charlottesville dining scene.—E.S.