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Living

On the record: Baggby’s and Miso Sweet enjoy banner days

Temperatures topped 70 degrees on Saturday, February 18, and eager eaters descended on the Downtown Mall to enjoy a meal in the sun. And at least two downtown eateries—Miso Sweet and Baggby’s Gourmet Sandwiches—had record business days.

Miso Sweet owner Frank Paris reports that his restaurant sold more than 450 donuts (all of which were made by hand), 184 bowls of ramen and 79 rice bowls (that’s almost 20 gallons of broth) to 276 guests.

Just a few doors down, Baggby’s sold more sandwiches that day than on any other Saturday in its 22-year history. It sold more cookies, too—every Baggby’s sandwich comes with a chocolate chip cookie, and owner Jon LaPanta says they went through more than 50 pounds of cookie dough that day.

LaPanta chalks it up to the mild winter weather and the Discovery Museum’s Kid-Vention event that took place that day, but he’s being humble—we’re pretty sure the delicious food at both spots had something to do with it, too.

Ah, sugar sugar

The heavenly scent of handmade donuts, fritters and cinnamon rolls will soon waft up and down West Main Street: Charlottesville is getting a Sugar Shack Donuts, across the street from the Uncommon Building, this summer. Sugar Shack owner and self-proclaimed “donut nostalgia nerd” Ian Kelley opened his first shop in a small building in Richmond’s Carver neighborhood in 2013 and has been searching for the right place to open a Charlottesville spot for a while. This will be Sugar Shack’s 11th location.

“Charlottesville is the town we always wished we were part of, and now finally get the opportunity to join. The people, businesses and university have created an incredible environment for community-driven businesses like ours and we are proud to bring our handmade donuts to a new home,” Kelley says in a press release.

Per Sugar Shack tradition, customers can earn a free house donut if they participate in the almost-daily quirky challenge posted on the store’s Facebook page. So, Charlottes-ville: What will you do for a free donut? Break out the air guitar and riff along to the chorus of Warrant’s “Cherry Pie”? Wear your clothes backwards (à la ’90s hip-hop duo Kris Kross)? Do the “Single Ladies” dance? Oh, this is gonna be good.

Stick a fork in it

Goodbye grilled pimento cheese sandwiches. On February 18, a drawing of a tombstone reading “R.I.P. South Fork, September 2013–January 2017” was posted to South Fork Food Truck’s Instagram account. The caption read, “After 3+ years of the grind, South Fork is hanging up its hat and journeying to the realm of spirits and rad memories. Infinite thanx to everyone who supported us and showed us love. We love you.”

Pouring on the accolades

The winners of the 2017 Virginia Wine Virginia Governor’s Cup were announced last week. Of the 490 Virginia wines that 40 world-class judges sampled from 102 Virginia wineries, just 24 wines—the 12 highest-ranking reds and the 12 highest-ranking whites—make up the Governor’s Case. Local wines—from Barboursville Vineyards, Cardinal Point Vineyard & Winery, Horton Vineyards, Jefferson Vineyards, King Family Vineyards, Michael Shaps Wineworks, Pollak Vineyards, Veritas Vineyards and Winery and Valley Road Vineyards—hold 15 of those 24 spots.

Categories
Living

Local artisan launches bitters company out of necessity

Bitters are back, baby, and one local is looking to get in on the action.

Wait, bitters?

“The traditional recipes for a cocktail up to the late 1800s were all the same—bitters were a part of almost all cocktails,” says Kip McCharen, founder and owner of McCharen’s Bitters. “It’s a seasoning. It serves the same function as salt and pepper or lemon juice in a dish.”

McCharen launched his eponymous bitters company out of necessity—he got into making craft cocktails but couldn’t easily buy the ingredients he wanted. He made a batch of bitters in July. It turned out to be a large batch. At first, he thought he’d give bottles away as Christmas gifts. But he couldn’t wait that long to share them.

“I am terrible at keeping secrets, so I let some friends try them, and they really liked them,” he says.

Bitters have been around for more than 1,000 years, but they’ve been slow to catch on with the modern artisanal crowd. While there are thousands of craft breweries, cideries and distilleries, and more popping up all the time, the number of bitters makers in the U.S. is still somewhere around 50, up from only a few about a decade ago.

And just how many of those four dozen craft bitters producers are located in Virginia? Zip, zero—until now.

McCharen, whose education is in political science and economics and who currently works in finance, saw an opportunity, so he called up the Charlottesville City Market in early August and asked if they might, at some time in the future, have space for him to sell his products. They told him to come down that Saturday.

Kip McCharen is waiting for an ABC decision before he can increase production on his artisanal Virginia bitters. Photo by Matt Bonham
Kip McCharen is waiting for an ABC decision before he can increase production on his artisanal Virginia bitters. Photo by Matt Bonham

After several successful markets and finding his way into a handful of restaurants—Miso Sweet, Lost Saint, Citizen Burger Bar and The Bebedero—through personal contacts, McCharen is at the point where he’d like to scale up and buy commercial kitchen space. “I think he’s got a really cool angle on it, and it might be early enough in the game to catch lightning in a bottle,” says Lost Saint co-owner Patrick McClure, referring to the ability of small bitters producers to be successful on a large scale.

There’s one problem, though: The Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Commission doesn’t know what to do with McCharen.

To answer why, you’ve got to understand a bit about how bitters are made. They are, essentially, booze infused with aromatics. You start with a high-strength spirit, steep with a bittering agent like gentian root or wild cherry bark, and flavor it with star anise, orange peel or mint. Sometimes you dilute the infusion with distilled water or sweeten it with syrup.

Where things get interesting is in the taste of the final product and how it’s marketed and sold. There’s no standard for perceived bitterness (international bittering units, or IBUs, are specific to beverages made with hops), so the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau has to make a judgment call on every bitters-like product to decide whether it’ll be “potable” or “non-potable.” Potable bitters, like aperol, fernet-branca or even Jägermeister, are marketed and sold like any spirit. They’re a standalone drink. Non-potable bitters are what McCharen’s shooting for.

“It’s this weird fine line,” he says. “They take whatever it is and dilute it down…and depending on how it tastes, they can say it is non-potable. The point is there is no measurable way to do that.”

The fact that no one has produced bitters in Virginia in more than a century only makes things more complicated, McCharen says.

Even if the ABC doesn’t yet know what to make of McCharen’s Bitters, local tipplers seem to be on board. McCharen said before going into business he looked at Google traffic for several bitters-related keywords, and Charlottesville was among the most active areas in the region. Consumer response has borne that out—he’s been profitable through his farmers market and bar sales, and when he teamed up with Miso Sweet to introduce his products at a cocktail dinner in early October, the response was positive.

McCharen says he’s optimistic ABC will figure things out soon—there are about five other alcoholic beverage boards nationwide with rules in place for bitters—but there’s no timeline on his ramp-up. When he does go to full-scale production, he said his goal is to develop flavors that are quintessentially Virginian.

“You’ve got gin from England, rum from the Caribbean, whiskey from Kentucky, and I find it fascinating that there isn’t a flavor of Virginia in cocktails—it’s not represented,” McCharen says. “I’m just really focused on trying to expose Virginia history through flavors.”

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News

Businesses affected by Downtown Mall fire on the road to recovery

The June 29 Downtown Mall fire that started in Ike’s Underground Vintage Clothing and Strange Cargo also has temporarily closed Miso Sweet Ramen + Donut Shop and Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar.

The Tea Bazaar suffered from “a fine layer of smoke dust over all of the restaurant including the office and hookah lounge,” says owner and manager Gwendolyn Hall. “Since the dust is highly corrosive we had to get all of our fridges and electronics cleaned in order to prevent further damage.”

Pending any unforeseen setbacks, the Tea Bazaar was planning to reopen Tuesday, July 12.

Miso Sweet, which opened last August, also had a considerable amount of smoke damage, most of which has been cleaned, according to owner Frank Paris. “We still have a few spots left to clean up and we hope to paint to help get rid of any remaining smells,” he says. “We are a new restaurant, so being closed during this time has hurt us quite a bit, as we really need to be open to continue building our customer base.”

He expects Miso Sweet will reopen July 18. “The major problem we may be facing is damage to our equipment,” says Paris. “Anything that is electrical and has copper coils, such as refrigerators and ice makers, could become damaged as the soot that has built up inside them can become corrosive and eat away at these units.”

Miso had to throw away nearly $4,000 in inventory. Fortunately, the restaurant has a good insurance plan, says Paris, but he still has to deal with customary delays with insurance adjusters. And the restaurant will no longer be able to participate in Restaurant Week (July 15-23).

Ike’s Underground, which sells antiques and other vintage products, was hit the hardest because many items in the store are impossible to replace.

The owner of Ike’s, Ike Eichling, told CBS19 that it will take several months for the shop to reopen.

To support the stores, local artist Haylee Powell created a GoFundMe campaign out of “love, pure and simple,” she says. “These three businesses were a staple for me when I first started to visit Charlottesville. The Tea Bazaar, especially, was a safe haven for me; as an artist there is little other public spaces to go to in order to create artwork.”

The campaign’s funds will go to employees who are out of work, and Powell’s GoFundMe has raised $1,122 to date. A benefit concert for the three businesses was also held July 8 at IX Art Park. The concert raised around $500, to be split among the three businesses.

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News

Fire started at Ike’s Underground under investigation

It was nearing lunchtime on the Downtown Mall when smoke began pouring out of the building that houses Ike’s Underground Vintage Clothing and Strange Cargo, Miso Sweet and Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar.

Next door at OpenQ, CEO Otavio Freire was in his office, which “filled up very quickly with smoke,” he says. “The smoke was coming in through the brick wall.”

The Charlottesville Fire Department received a call around 11:45am to 414 E. Main St., says Captain Joe Phillips. “A crew arrived to find a basement fire” that was quickly put out, he says.

Even after eight fire trucks and vehicles pulled onto the mall, black smoke was seen coming out of Twisted Branch’s second-floor windows.

Everyone in those buildings and in buildings on the south side of the 400 block of the mall was evacuated, and no one was injured, says Phillips.

The cause is under investigation, but firefighters were overheard saying an electrical fire started in the basement at Ike’s.

The building was the scene of a small fire in 2006 shortly after Eppie’s opened in the space where Miso Sweet is now located. “We were doing our own laundry to save money, and some clean rags—in a laundry bag, but still hot from the dryer—spontaneously combusted,” says Eppie’s owner Dan Epstein.

“We were lucky,” he says, because the bag was dropped at the front door on a Sunday and put out within about 10 minutes. If it had been anywhere else in the building, it would have been a different story, he says.

—with additional reporting by Jessica Luck and Melissa Angell