The Pulse 11.20 » May 15, 2014

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rye baby | UNFORTUNATE BEAUTY | GOING SOLAR

The Pulse CHATTANOOGA'S WEEKLY ALTERNATIVE

a day in the life of a chef GO INSIDE THE BIG WHITE COAT

SPRING & SUMMER 2014

MAY 15, 2014


FAMOUS GOOD FOOD

DOUG KELLER FAMOUS GRILLED WINGS GRILLED FRESH EVERY MONDAY

KARAOKE EVERY TUESDAY LIVE MUSIC EVERY WEDNESDAY 7PM TO CLOSE TRIVIA EVERY THURSDAY HAPPY HOUR UNTIL 7PM MON - FRIDAY HAPPY HOUR ALL DAY SAT & SUN

3658 Ringgold Road East Ridge, TN • 423.867.1351 2 • The Pulse • May 15-21, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com


MAY

Happenings

EDITORIAL

Managing Editor Gary Poole

BEGINNINGS: Feathering the dove of peace... Planning a bigger and better Chattanooga

Contributing Editor Janis Hashe Contributors Rich Bailey • Rob Brezsny • John DeVore Janis Hashe • Matt Jones • Sandra Kurtz Marc T. Michael • Mike McJunkin • Ernie Paik Rick Pimental-Habib • Alex Teach

LIVE MUSIC CALENDAR ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT CALENDAR

Editorial Interns Christopher Armstrong • Jake Bacon Madeline Chambliss Cartoonists & Illustrators Rick Baldwin • Max Cannon Jen Sorenson • Tom Tomorrow

Features

Photographer Josh Lang

LIVES ON THE LINE

Founded 2003 by Zachary Cooper & Michael Kull

ADVERTISING

MUSIC: Folk duo Rye Baby has got roots mojo working

A pro chef’s kitchen is not for the faint of heart

Director of Sales Mike Baskin

NEW MUSIC REVIEWS: Fear of Men jangles, Falascone skronks

By Mike McJunkin

Account Executives Chee Chee Brown • Julie Brown Lisa Dicaire • Rick Leavell • Leif Sawyer Stacey Tyler • Jerry Ware

SCREEN: Opaque “Under the Skin” fails to connect

CONTACT

Offices 1305 Carter St., Chattanooga, TN 37402 Phone 423.265.9494 Fax 423.266.2335 Website chattanoogapulse.com Email info@chattanoogapulse.com Calendar calendar@chattanoogapulse.com THE FINE PRINT: The Pulse is published weekly by Brewer Media and is distributed throughout the city of Chattanooga and surrounding communities. The Pulse covers a broad range of topics concentrating on music, the arts, entertainment, culture and local news. The Pulse is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. No person without written permission from the publisher may take more than one copy per weekly issue. We’re watching. The Pulse may be distributed only by authorized distributors. Contents Copyright © 2014 by Brewer Media. All rights reserved.

W

brewEr media group

Publisher & President Jim Brewer II

K S ls e AC HE Pu BL RC The U in k CH ee

VOLUME 11 • ISSUE 20

Contents

t ex

2014

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15

DIVERSIONS FREE WILL ASTROLOGY JONESIN' CROSSWORD

Voices

UNFORTUNATE BEAUTY

Shane Darwent finds art in stone poetry, road signs, bad ads By Rich Bailey

SMALL EVENTS. BIG ATMOSPHERE.

SANDRA KURTZ: Unitarian Universalist Church is the first in the city to install solar panels ALEX TEACH: Officer Alex bemoans the inability of Chattanoogans to catch on to the circle concept

The NEWLY-RENOVATED, 700-Seat Robert Kirk Walker Community Theatre IS Available for your SPECIAL event. CALL (423) 757-5156. chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 3


news • views • rants • raves

BEGINNINGS

updates » CHATTANOOGApulse.com facebook/chattanoogapulse EMAIL LOVE LETTERS, ADVICE & TRASH TALK TO INFO@CHATTANOOGAPULSE.COM

Feathering the Dove of Peace I first met Doug Shipman, chief executive officer of the soon-to-open National Center for Civil and Human Rights in 2007, while researching an article for the Los Angeles Times. He was filled with passion for this project—and now, as the project’s long and sometimes rocky journey comes close to its milestone, he still is.

As Shipman emphasized, the National Center for Civil and Human Rights will not be a museum, but rather a living, changing place.”

Shipman was invited by James McKissic and Chattanooga’s Office of Multicultural Affairs to speak at a recent luncheon at the Bessie Smith Cultural Center. Some attendees were likely already familiar with the basic facts about this major regional institution: The National Center for Civil and Human Rights is a 42,000-square-foot facility in the heart of downtown Atlanta, located at Pemberton Place, adjacent to Centennial Olympic Park, The New

World of Coca-Cola and the Georgia Aquarium. Its mission is to be a “world-class cultural institution dedicated to exploring stories of civil and human rights.” Land for the Center was donated by Coca Cola, and as Shipman told the crowd, that JANIS HASHE caused community controversy. Many felt it should be located on Auburn Avenue, site of the MLK Center, helping to revitalize the neighborhood and acknowledging the significance of the area’s connection to the civil rights movement. But Center officials continued to meet with city residents, listened to their concerns, and in the end, most were reconciled to the idea that the site selected would allow more visitors from around the world more access. A streetcar will run from the Center to Auburn Avenue, and, eventually, to the Carter Center, linking three major Atlanta institutions involved in civil and human rights work. Shipman noted that within the past couple of years, several 50-year anniversaries of important American civil rights events have occurred. The generation who participated in and remembers this time is aging, and in many cases, already gone. “Only 25 percent

Rave

4 • The Pulse • May 15-21, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

of Americans are old enough to remember the ‘I Have a Dream’ speech,” he said. Part of the Center’s work will be to ensure that these events are not forgotten— but as Shipman emphasized, the Center will not be a museum, but rather a living, changing place. The human rights aspect of the institution’s mission will be just as important as the civil rights aspect, including making sure that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and its 30 articles continue to be put forward as a world standard. The first article in the Declaration reads: “All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.” When have we needed to remember that more urgently, even here in our own country? When the Center opens on June 23, it will be a regional treasure, and we in Chattanooga are very fortunate to live only a short drive away. Family field trip, anyone?


EdiToon

by Rick Baldwin

HOME GAMES Wed, May 21 • 7:15 PM

Planning a Bigger and Better Chattanooga

vs. Mississippi Braves Go Green Night

Growing Forward project launches public input stage Cities and counties are in constant need of improvement. Roads need widening, buildings need remodeling, and schools, housing, and businesses need to be built. Change can be exciting—but sometimes the process seems to take forever to get moving. Yet no project can get started without planning. One

major project in the works for our area combines planning and public opinion: Growing Forward. Described as “our community’s new planning framework for the future of Chattanooga and Hamilton County area,” Growing Forward is a threestep plan that involves reviewing the past, revising the present, and renewing

plans for the future. The first step, Renewing Our Vision, sets the stage for Growing Forward. Designed as a comprehensive overview, Renewing Our Vision will provide an analysis of changes in our demographics, environment, and infrastructure. Renewing Our Vision also allows locals to determine important values and goals and what level of priority

IN THIS ISSUE

Mike McJunkin This week's cover story is by longtime food writer and professional chef Mike McJunkin, a native Chattanoogan who has gained considerable experience with food through his obsessive habit of eating several times each and every day. Along the way

Thu, May 22 • 7:15 PM they are for the community. While still in its early stages, the team at Growing Forward offers several ways to get involved, including a monthly newsletter, a calendar of upcoming events, a contact page to share thoughts, and more. To learn more about and keep track of Growing Forward visit growingforwardchc.com — Madeline Chambliss

vs. Mississippi Braves

Fri, May 23 • 7:15 PM vs. Mississippi Braves Fireworks!

Tue, May 24 • 7:15 PM vs. Mississippi Braves Puzzle Giveaway

Wed, May 25 • 11:15 AM vs. Mississippi Braves Baseball Giveaway & Fireworks!

Rick Baldwin he has trained chefs, owned and operated restaurants, and singlehandedly increased Chattanooga’s meat consumption statistics for three consecutive years. He can tell you what balut tastes like, what it’s like to eat pork blood boat noodles on the streets of Thailand and how to cure bacon in a loft apartment. He is also quite active on Facebook at facebook.com/SushiAndBiscuits

Pulse editorial cartoonist Rick Baldwin is a comedian, actor, artist and writer born and raised in Knoxville, Tennessee. His award-winning cartoon strips and editorial cartoons have appeared in publications worldwide and as illustrations for several books. He

began stand-up comedy in 1986 and after an extended retirement will return to his comedy performing roots with a one man show titled, "Under The Kilt." Rick is host of the popular podcast "Life in a Kilt Show" which he records from his home studio in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Rick returned to our pages in April after a sabbatical, and we are very happy to see his unique take on life in our pages. chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 5


Keepers of the Garden Step Up with Solar Unitarian Universalist Church is the first in the city to install solar panels.

The Unitarian Universalists conducted a stewardship drive to collect the $20,000 needed to purchase and install the solar panels.”

Sandra Kurt is an environmental community activist and is presently working through the Urban Century Institute. Visit her website at enviroedu.net

It was Earth Day, April 22, 2014 when a truck loaded with solar panels drove into the parking lot of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Chattanooga. There was a wave of anticipation and excitement when, three days later, the switch was flipped and 12 panels silently produced a l m o s t three kilowatts of solar power SANDRA for the first time. For church congregants, it was the latest project in their Green Sanctuary Initiative and a statement of justice and stewardship. It was also a first for Chattanooga. One wonders why. Most people who attend church regularly profess the requirement to love one another. Why haven’t more churches taken this loving step to reduce carbon pollution for the sake of our fellow inhabitants on Earth? It’s a natural thing

to do. After all, solar has guaranteed us energy longer than land-based water, coal, oil or nuclear sources. The sun keeps life going. It has warmed us and caused wind to blow, not to mention providing us food through plant photosynthesis. The trouble is that it is so diffuse in its distribution. Every fifth-grade boy knows KURTZ how to focus the sun’s rays through a magnifying glass to burn up an ant or start a fire, but we are now learning how to capture solar rays more efficiently and how to channel its captured energy for beneficial uses. People sometimes list numerous reasons why solar cannot possibly be our only source of energy: 1. The sun doesn’t shine at night. No kidding. Good to know. This is where batteries and

Shades of Green

We Are Saving Mobile Lives

storage come in. Think new battery industry and jobs connected to solar power. Much work in increasing battery efficiency is already being done. 2. It takes up too much land space for the same amount of energy one gets from a nuclear plant. The land used for a nuclear plant is forever off-limits due to radiation contamination, monitoring, and security. Solar energy can be collected from rooftops, highways, and parking lots without co-opting prime agricultural land. Besides, when there’s a solar accident, we call it a sunny day. 3. We don’t live in a good area to get enough solar energy. Guess what? Tennessee has more solar energy to draw on than Germany, the country that on sunny days can now supply solar power for about 30 percent of German consumption. Germany is hoping to have 80 percent of its power produced from renewables by 2035. 4. It’s too expensive. It used to be. Prices have come down dramatically. A Duke University study finds the price for solar energy is now at or below the cost of more conventional fuels. In Tennessee, the fastestgrowing industry last year was solar. Remember too that a so-

lar panel on your roof increases the value of your home, while reducing your monthly energy payment. Further, if you produce solar electrons for the grid, TVA will pay you $.04/ kilowatt hour, thereby reducing your electric bill. People of faith, it’s time to step up. If we are keepers of the Garden and the Garden is suffering, then action is required. Installing solar panels to reduce carbon footprints and help clean air for others is one moral thing to do. The Unitarian Universalists conducted a stewardship drive to collect the $20,000 needed to purchase and install the solar panels. It’s a first step toward a vision of a small carbon-neutral power plant in harmony with the environment and in support of justice. In time, if enough of us do this, we can stop burning coal supplied by mountain-top removal mining that results in forest destruction, poisoned water and unhealthy communities. We can produce electricity without radioactive trash. Let’s create a good faith movement. The solar panels can be seen from I-24 near the Germantown Road Entrance. The church is located at 3224 Navajo Drive.

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5425 Highway 153 423-805-4640 (Next to CiCi’s Pizza) cellphonerepair.com/chattanooga

6 • The Pulse • May 15-21, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Watch Repair • Jewelry Repair 3752 Ringgold Road • 423.624.6300 Visit us on Facebook/Diamond Tower mydiamondtower.com


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Ph: 423-504-9999 or 423-243-7058 Email: info@CafeRomaine.com www.RomaineOntheGo.com View Pictures and “Like” us on FACEBOOK chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 7


Lives On The Line

A pro chef’s kitchen is not for the faint of heart by Mike McJunkin

The art of a chef is born from techniques learned and mastered over a lifetime, utilizing a continually changing lineup of raw products, served to a capricious and demanding clientele.”

T

he morning alarm assaults his ears like the sounds of a slaughterhouse; piercing his coma-like slumber with its screeching message that sleepy-time is over. Last night was brutal. His eyes open and the memory of that night begins to play in his mind through an “Apocalypse Now”-Martin Sheen-flashback sort of haze. It’s Friday night and there were almost 120 covers...three 10-tops, herds of four-tops, VIPs kept rolling in and blindsiding front-of-house...we were totally slammed by 8:30 and had to 86 teres AND the bass. I was running expo through this huge exodus and killing on that soigné risotto—the one with the zucchini blossoms that goes a la minute... We were seriously crushing it until this green-ass virgin on sauté goes down two orders as we go to plate…TWO ORDERS! Weeds start sprouting up all over the kitchen while he fires both orders on the fly, grill is bitching about missing her cigarette break and the rail is jammed. Then it got really quiet for just a minute, like that moment after you fall just before you hit the ground.

8 • The Pulse • May 15-21, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Then the sound of the printer cut right through the silence, churning out dupe after dupe...I really thought we were going to crash and burn. Jason is working a double today and it’s Saturday, the busiest day of the week. That means he’ll get to the restaurant at 8 a.m., work all day and help close. Theoretically, he should get a two-three hour break sometime in the afternoon, but in reality he knows he’ll be lucky if he gets to huddle over a plate of food in a back booth between rushes, or sit on a stack of milk crates on the back dock to smoke a rare, unhurried cigarette. Such is the plight of a chef at a busy, popular, casual-dining restaurant. Jason wants to eventually rise to become an executive chef in a fine-dining restaurant, but for now he pays his dues

and hones his skills as best he can in this turn-and-burn subculture filled with sex, drugs and home refrigerators cluttered with to-go containers of leftover cauliflower purée and Lagunitas. “Jason” is not his real name. He decided to use a pseudonym because he broke most of his restaurant’s rules and several health-code regulations to let me hang around as he went about his normal workday. In order to secure the silence of several prep cooks, I had to resort to a bribe using the alternative currency of any restaurant kitchen: beer and cigarettes. As we walked through the metal service door to the kitchen that morning, Jason took huge, deliberate sips from a tea glass full of coffee as if the liquid contained a cure for the herpes he got from a hostess two years ago. Sadly, it does not. But it does help him absorb the magnitude of the prep lists hanging at each station on the line. The “line” is where the cooking is done, usually set up in a horizontal line and divided into “stations” manned by chefs or line cooks. This is also where Gordon Ramsey would get punched


in the throat if he screamed at any of the scarred, tattooed misfit line cooks and chefs I have ever known, including Jason’s associates that have begun to descend on the prep list like a swarm of grasscutter ants building a nest. Steaming 20-quart stock pots line the stoves and stacks of empty wooden crates begin to pile up as the chefs clean, chop, dice, brunoise and chiffonade literal piles of produce. This is done while discussing important matters such as the previous night’s inadvertent discovery that mixing wine and Heineken together is disgusting, even if you give it a cute name like “Weineken”. I also learned this pro tip while watching the chefs do their mise en place: If you are not prepared to completely abandon any shred of political correctness and every item in your catalog of offenses, then you have no business in a professional kitchen. Line cooks are some of the hardestworking, most humble and honest people you will ever meet. Many of them also happen to be felons, alcoholics and members of just about every fringe subculture you can imagine (and some you have never imagined). They’ll work a grueling 14-hour shift after being up all night with a sick baby, then still manage to joke around and have a couple of beers with you at the end of it. The kitchen is where I learned to never judge a book by its cover, even if that cover is adorned with neck tattoos, votes Republican, or speaks a different language—we were all part of an informal and unnamed tribe. In the best restaurants, the crew becomes like a second family, complete with all the fighting, yelling and irritation that comes with spending most waking hours together, sharing some of

the most mundane and some of the most important moments of your life together. Tthis is, in part, because line cooks virtually never get time off for normal, human things such as Thanksgiving, Christmas or birthdays. Once the restaurant’s doors open, Jason and his fellow chefs de partie complete their transformation into a finely tuned machine. Customers do not have the courtesy to trickle in this morning. Instead, today begins with a stampede of hungry patrons.The kitchen printer immediately begins to spit out orders and continues for the next 12 hours in a merciless, metronome-like rhythm that will surely haunt my dreams. Watching this crew work was like watching a ballet performance in a blacksmith shop, a strangely beautiful interplay of both grace and grit. Through each service, every chef is responsible for flawlessly creating a wide range of dishes over and over and over again. To reproduce a dish 50-60 times a day, from highly perishable ingredients, all while having to take into account the taste, texture, and visual appeal of each component on the plate is a big part of what makes professional cooking both an art and a craft. The art of a chef is born from techniques learned and mastered over a lifetime, utilizing a continually changing lineup of raw products, served to a capricious and demanding clientele. Not only must each dish be executed in a timely manner and with incredible attention to detail, but each individual chef must sync his or her efforts with everyone else in the kitchen to ensure every plate gets to the table simultaneously hot, fresh and picture-perfect. This may seem different from what you

see on the Food Network, but the type of kitchen Jason and his comrades work in doesn’t make good television. It’s not a fine-dining, special-occasion restaurant where a Michelin star chef hovers over a plate of Partially Sedated Sea Monkey, Bamboo Shoot and Papaya Salad with tweezers and squirt bottles for this week’s episode of Travel Channel food porn. It’s also not an assembly-line chain restaurant where Dane Cook-esque characters freely abuse food “product” that has been processed, fabricated and portioned so that a mouth-breathing microwave operator in a backwards snapback can get it onto a plate before the next order of poppers, skins or whatever fresh-frozen hell coaxed out of Guy Fieri’s bloated brain appears on the rail. This is an independently owned, casual-dining restaurant that cares about the quality of food they cook and, most importantly, about the people they hire to cook it. Restaurants like these are scattered all over Chattanooga and are filled with hard-working chefs and kitchen staff that jump through enormous, stress-filled hoops simply to make sure the food being served for your awkward firstdate or rare night out with the family is delicious and memorable. Chefs live for the smile on a diner’s face just like an actor lives for the applause or a comedian for the laughter. It takes a special kind of person to be willing to subject themselves to the particular brand of madness. As we left the kitchen just before midnight that night, Jason turned to me and said, “See, that wasn’t so bad. We’ll be home, throwing back a beer in no time.” Like I said, it takes a special person to be a chef.

This is an independently owned, casual-dining restaurant that cares about the quality of food they cook and, most importantly, about the people they hire to cook it.

chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 9


CITY SCENE

Southern Sippin’ Liquor

I

’VE BEEN WRITING FOR THE PULSE FOR TEN MONTHS now and I have enjoyed every moment of it. Almost. The truth is that every so often I get an assignment that leaves me struggling to find something to say about what I’ve just heard. Some folks make music the way McDonald’s makes hamburgers, and trying to write about the good in that is…taxing.

Reimagined Pyramid Clever, edgy new release from Mythical Motors Mythical Motors is at it again. The boys in the band have been busy producing a new album as well as playing a slew of gigs with the likes of Sir Army Suit and Thee FiNKS (choice pairings to say the least.) Add to that the fact that the band’s own Matthew Addison is set to tie the proverbial knot in the upcoming weeks (congratulations on the pending nuptials) and one wonders where they found the time to write any new tunes at all, much less record them. Yet somehow they found the time, and the result is 12 tracks collected under the title Reimagined Pyramid. This newest entry sports higher production values than earlier releases (to my ears,

honest music

anyway) while still maintaining the edginess that is so key to their sound. Too pretty for punk, too punk for pop, Mythical Motors once again captures the spirit of the best sounds of 1979 with overtones of Elvis Costello (lightly seasoned with a little Robyn Hitchcock, I think). Clever music for smart people, Mythical Motors recaptures a sound that should never have been lost in the first place (damn you, ’80s pop tripe!). Of course, it only sounds vintage to those of us who are, ourselves, vintage; to the kids it’s just going to be kick-ass rock and roll. To pick up your copy and to keep up with their upcoming gigs, hit the guys up through Facebook. — MTM

Music MARC T. MICHAEL

It takes talent to pull off a duo act, more so even than a single singer/ songwriter.”

Fortunately, I’ve had a hot streak the last several months. Every band I’ve written about has had some unique, outstanding quality that makes listening and writing a pleasure. The latest entry, Rye Baby, is no exception. The folk duo from Chattanooga has its mojo workin’. Jennifer Brumlow and Callie Harmon were rockers when they met, each with their own band, doing their own thing. They hit it off instantly through their mutual love of Dick Dale and Dolly Parton, old-school country, folk music and, apparently, the movie “Rhinestone”. A bevy of mutual interests and influences meant it wasn’t long before their Wonder Twin powers activated in the form of the folk duo The Quote Unquotes, which served as a stepping stone to their latest (and greatest) incarnation, Rye Baby. The kids are currently finishing up their first EP at Red Crow studios here in Chat-

local and regional shows

Darkhorse Ten with Ironchief [$5] An Evening with Groovekid [$5]

Thu, May 15 9pm Thu, May 22 9pm

Live Trivia every Sunday afternoon from 4-6pm Free Live Music every Sunday evening starting at 7pm

Full food menu serving lunch and dinner. 11am-2am, 7 days a week. 35 Patten Parkway * 423.468.4192 thehonestpint.com * facebook.com/TheHonestPint

10 • The Pulse • May 15-21, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com


Callie Harmon and Jennifer Brumlow

tanooga, which means that in the meantime I had a scant two tunes to review, but man, oh, man, the tunes are HOT. “Twitchin” evokes imagery of a shack in the woods wherein a beautiful country girl sits, plotting vengeance with the aid of some dark and unseen forces. Well, that’s what I see anyway. Results may vary, but this banjo-driven minor key tune is a great introduction to Jennifer’s voice, which ranges from sultry to hard-edged. Beautiful, but not “I’m a diva” beautiful so much as “I’ve had to fight for everything I have and I’m not about to back down now” beautiful. You know, the good kind. There is power, strength and confidence with just enough of a snarl to it to serve as a warning: Don’t piss this lady off. Callie’s banjo work on the tune is haunting and the scratch and scrape of the autoharp lends itself to the delightful eeriness of this Appalachian witchery. However you look at it, they are making magic with this song. The second tune is “Ramblin’ Papa Blues”, and as the name implies, it is a good old-fashioned Southern “pickin’ on the porch” blues tune in which Callie is able to demonstrate some tasty

guitar chops while Jennifer shares her “banjer” pickin’ skills. I don’t know if a hound dog was present at the recording or not, but one certainly should have been. The duo has described their modus operandi as a “back to the basics” approach. I have to agree with that assessment. The big spaces are filled in with tinkling guitar and banjo strings, the small spaces are taken up by washboard, autoharp, melodica, kazoo, clapping hands and whatever else isn’t nailed down, and the whole thing is topped off with Jennifer’s vocals, which proudly proclaim, “Watch yourselves, boys, mama is here and she ain’t takin’ no lip.” The result is a raw, lean kind of music that makes the most of what it has and doesn’t waste notes. It takes talent to pull off a duo act, more so even than a single singer/songwriter, but Jennifer and Callie have it in abundance (Porter and Dolly would agree) and I for one am eagerly anticipating the release of their EP. In the meantime Rye Baby has a number of upcoming gigs, all conveniently listed on their Facebook page. If you like roots music, you’re going to love Rye Baby.

Chattanooga Brew Choo Letting you exercise your right to drink!

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with this coupon Use the promotion code25off to book in advance at chattbrewchoo.com or call (423) 432-0116.

chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 11


LIVE MUSIC

MAY

CHATT UNPLUGGED THU 9:30p 15 ISCARIOTS, BEHOLD THE BRAVE, PLVNET

16 BABY LAYLA BENEFIT SAT 8p 17 FRI DOWNSTREAM 9p 23 KATY TIZ SHOWCASE SAT 6p 24 MATT STEPHENS SAT 9p 24 THU JERRY GARCIA 9p 29 BACK IN BLACK A TRIBUTE TO AC/DC

FRI 9:30p

FEATURING DAVEY SMITH BAND with RIVER CITY HUSTLERS

ALL AGES, FREE SHOWCASE 80'S AND 90'S DANCE

PROJECT

COVER BAND

with SHABTI. DEADHEADS UNITE!

5.30 SAME AS IT EVER WAS 5.31 THE COMMUNICATORS: THAT 90'S SHOW

COMING IN JUNE

MURDER BY DEATH WED 9:30p BROODING ORCHESTRAL INDIE ROCK

THU AGORI TRIBE PSYCHEDELIC SPACE ISLAND FUNK 10p

4

5

ALL SHOWS 21+ UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED • NON-SMOKING VENUE

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MUSIC CALENDAR

CHATTANOOGA

David Nail

thursday5.15 CSO Lunchtime Concert Series 11:30 a.m. Warehouse Row 1110 Market St. David Nail 7 p.m. Track 29 1400 Market St. track29.com Folk School of Chattanooga Presents: Sacred Heart Singing 7 p.m. St. Elmo Fire Hall 4501 St. Elmo Ave. stelmofirehall.com Darkhorse Ten, Ironchief 9 p.m. The Honest Pint 35 Patten Pkwy. thehonestpint.com Chattanooga Unplugged Presents: Iscariots, Behold the Brave, Plvnet 9:30 p.m. Rhythm & Brews 221 Market St. rhythm-brews.com Open Mic with Hap Henniger 9 p.m. The Office 901 Carter St. (inside Days Inn) (423) 634-9191 Roots of Rebellion, AFRO 10 p.m. JJ’s Bohemia 231 E. MLK Blvd. jjsbohemia.com

friday5.16 The Fine Art of Jazz 10 a.m.

12 • The Pulse • May 15-21, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Bessie Smith Cultural Center 200 E. MLK Blvd. bessiesmithcc.org The Old Time Travelers 11 a.m. Rock City Gardens Cafe 7 Stage 1400 Patten Rd., Lookout Mountain, Ga. seerockcity.com Jason Thomas and the Mean-Eyed Cats 5 p.m. Chattanooga Choo Choo 1400 Market St. (423) 266-5000 Eddie Pontiac 5:30 p.m. El Meson 2204 Hamilton Pl. Blvd. (423) 894-8726 Matt’s Friday Jam 5:30 p.m. Julie Darling Donuts 121 Frazier Ave. (423) 591-3737 Roadkill Ghost Choir, Paul

Pulse pick: courtney daly Pick a genre, any genre, and chances are Courtney can sing in it. Whether it's blues, soul or country, whether it's from the 1950s or today, she's ready to give it a go, and do it with passion. Courtney Daly Band 9 p.m. The Office 901 Carter St. (inside Days Inn) (423) 634-9191

Hadfield and the McCoys 7 p.m. Miller Plaza 850 Market St. nightfallchattanooga.com Penny & Sparrow, Grace & Tony, Matt Sanders and Friends 7:30 p.m. The Camp House 1427 Williams St. thecamphouse.com Attik Toyz 8 p.m. The Brew and Cue 5017 Rossville Blvd. (423) 867-9402 Mountain Opry 8 p.m. Walden’s Ridge Civic Center 2501 Fairmount Pike, Signal Mountain (423) 886-3252 Priscilla, Lil’ Rickee 8:30 p.m. The Foundry 1201 Broad St.

chattanooganhotel.com Courtney Daly Band 9 p.m. The Office 901 Carter St. (inside Days Inn) (423) 634-9191 Back in Black: A Tribute to AC/DC 9:30 p.m. Rhythm & Brews, 221 Market St. rhythm-brews.com Divine Jazz 10 p.m. Kitchen @ Union Square 200 W. MLK Blvd. (423) 634-9172 Autarch 10 p.m. Sluggo’s 501 Cherokee Blvd. (423) 752-5224 Kopecky Family Band, James Wallace and the Naked Light, Kyle Andrews 10 p.m. JJ’s Bohemia 231 E. MLK Blvd. jjsbohemia.com Remembering January 10 p.m. Bud’s Sports Bar 5751 Brainerd Rd. budssportsbar.com

saturday5.17 The Old Time Travelers 11 a.m. Rock City Gardens Cafe 7 Stage 1400 Patten Rd., Lookout Mountain, Ga. seerockcity.com Julie Gribble 12:30 p.m. The Chattanooga River Market


MUSIC CALENDAR

Conor Oberst Tennessee Aquarium Plaza, 1 Broad St. chattanoogarivermarket.com Jason Thomas and the Mean-Eyed Cats 5 p.m. Chattanooga Choo Choo 1400 Market St. (423) 266-5000 Eddie Pontiac 5:30 p.m. El Meson 2204 Hamilton Pl. Blvd. (423)894-8726 Another Story 7 p.m. The Camp House 1427 Williams St. thecamphouse.com Baby Layla Benefit: Robby Hopkins, Davey Smith Band, Roger Alan Wade, The Collins Brothers Band, Zach Dylan 8 p.m. Rhythm & Brews 221 Market St. rhythm-brews.com Jerry Fordham 8 p.m. The Brew and Cue 5017 Rossville Blvd. (423) 867-9402 Southlander 8:30 p.m. The Palms at Hamilton 6925 Shallowford Rd. (423) 499-5055 Priscilla, Lil’ Rickee 8:30 p.m. The Foundry 1201 Broad St. chattanooganhotel.com Conor Oberst, Dawes 9 p.m. Track 29 1400 Market St. track29.com James Bradshaw

9 p.m. The Office 901 Carter St. (inside Days Inn) (423) 634-9191 Remembering January 10 p.m. Bud’s Sports Bar 5751 Brainerd Rd. budssportsbar.com Megan Jean and the KFB, Lauris Vidal, Vena Cava 10 p.m. JJ’s Bohemia, 231 E. MLK Blvd. jjsbohemia.com

sunday5.18 The Old Time Travelers 11 a.m. Rock City Gardens Cafe 7 Stage 1400 Patten Rd., Lookout Mountain, Ga. seerockcity.com Tiffany Taylor 12:30 p.m. The Chattanooga Market First Tennessee Pavilion, 1829 Carter St. chattanoogamarket.com Friends Under the Stars Festival 2 p.m. Camp Jordan 323 Camp Jordan Pkwy. (423) 490-0078 Sunday Jam 7 p.m. Ziggy’s 607 Cherokee Blvd. (423) 265-8711 Open Mic Night with Ryan Oyer 7 p.m. The Honest Pint 35 Patten Pkwy.

thehonestpint.com An Evening with Noam Pikelny & Stuart Duncan 7:30 p.m. Barking Legs Theater, 1307 Dodds Ave. barkinglegs.org Blind Draw 9 p.m. Bud’s Sports Bar 5751 Brainerd Rd. budssportsbar.com Amber Fults, Magpie, Jack Kirton 10 p.m. JJ’s Bohemia 231 E. MLK Blvd. jjsbohemia.com

monday5.19 Gospel Music 6 p.m. Cloud Springs Deli 4097 Cloud Springs Rd., Ringgold, Ga. (706) 956-8128 Big Band Night 9:30 p.m. The Palms at Hamilton 6925 Shallowford Rd. thepalmsathamilton.com

tuesday5.20 Wendell Matthews Acoustic 7 p.m. North Chatt Cat 346 Frazier Ave. (423) 266-9466 Open Mic with Mike McDade 9 p.m. Tremont Tavern 1203 Hixson Pk. tremonttavern.com Comedy Buffet, MD’hats,

Ben Durazzo 10 p.m. JJ’s Bohemia 231 E. MLK Blvd. jjsbohemia.com

901 Carter St (Inside Days Inn) 423-634-9191 Thursday, May 15: 9pm Open Mic with Hap Henninger Friday, May 16: 9pm Courtney Daly Band Saturday, May 17: 10pm James Bradshaw Tuesday, May 20: 7pm

Server/Hotel Appreciation Night $5 Pitchers $2 Wells $1.50 Domestics ●

wednesday5.21 Ryan Oyer 5 p.m. First Tennessee Pavilion 1829 Carter St. chattanoogamarket.com Wednesday Night Jam Session 6 p.m. Enzo’s Market 1501 Long St. (423) 486-9312 Jordan Halquist 7:30 p.m. The Tavern 12130 Dayton Pike, Soddy Daisy (423) 401-7234 Laureen McLeod Fundraiser Show 7 p.m. The Camp House 1427 Williams St. thecamphouse.com Jerry Fordham 9 p.m. Bud’s Sports Bar 5751 Brainerd Rd. budssportsbar.com Southlander 9 p.m. The Palms at Hamilton 6925 Shallowford Rd. (423) 499-5055

All shows are free with dinner or 2 drinks! Stop by & check out our daily specials! Happy Hour: Mon-Fri: 4-7pm $1 10oz drafts, $3 32oz drafts, $2 Wells, $1.50 Domestics, Free Appetizers

Join us on Facebook daily lunCh & drink speCials!

The only place in Town where you can sing karaoke anyTime.

Book your Birthday, anniversary or oFFiCe parties now!

410 market • (423) 757-wing

singitorwingit-chattanooga.com

CheCk out the Cat in the hat

Map these locations on chattanoogapulse.com. Send event listings at least 10 days in advance to: calendar@ chattanoogapulse.com chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 13


Record Reviews

ernie paik

Internal Conflict Not About Coffee, Not About Bach Fear of Men jangles, Falascone skronks

Fear of Men Loom (Kanine)

L

istening to the debut album Loom from the British trio Fear of Men is perhaps like eavesdropping on a confessional in a chilly cathedral—what’s being said is deeply personal, but there’s a cool formality to the situation and a degree of detachment. It has touches of post-punk and indie jangle-pop, painted in greyscale or sculpted out of marble, and lead vocalist/guitarist Jessica Weiss sings matter-of-factly about emotional issues with an alabaster, blank prettiness, bringing to mind the demeanor of singer Alison Statton of Young Marble Giants and Weekend. Following the laudable 2013 singles collection Early Fragments, Loom makes for a fine debut full-length with various themes infused in the songs, both aurally and lyrically. The trio of Weiss, guitarist Daniel Falvey and drummer Michael Miles is augmented by a string section, which ends several songs; as those tracks close, the strings

14 • The Pulse • May 15-21, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Massimo Falascone Variazioni Mumacs (Public Eyesore) are distorted and the sound is degraded, perhaps suggesting that things are ending badly in the album’s narrative. This is taken to its extreme on the motorik-beat-enhanced “Tephra,” which makes the fuzzy strings experience sound disintegration, ending with white noise. Repeatedly, water-related images appear in the lyrics or the song title “Waterfall,” as if calling for some kind of cleansing or washing of the emotional turmoil. Weiss’s lyrical torment is clear on “Luna,” with lines like “unbearable memories when I sleep” and “I’ve tried my best to destroy you,” with a guitar mirroring the vocal melody. Sometimes the vocals on “Inside” sound like they were recorded in a closet, suggesting claustrophobia, while other parts sound more spacious; being the album’s longest track, it has time to stretch its arms, building to a swirling maelstrom and abruptly cutting off at its conclusion. Throughout the album, there

are serene chord progressions, gorgeous harmonizing and drum outbursts that punch more than expected from a pop group, and its denouement on the calm, nearly pastoral “Atla,” with vocals and a nylon-stringed guitar, offers the line “You don’t disgust me anymore,” a peculiar upturn on an excellent album that confides its troubled internal conflict within a charged, kinetic janglepop shell.

T

he new album, Variazioni Mumacs, from the sound sculptor Massimo Falascone based in Milan, Italy, is subtitled “32 short mu-pieces about macs,” which is a reference to the film anthology Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould, which itself is a reference to Bach’s Goldberg Variations (most famously tackled by Gould on piano) which featured, yes, 32 pieces (opening and closing arias plus 30 variations). It is unclear what exactly is a “mu-piece” or a “mac” or a

“mumac,” although MUMAC is apparently a museum in Milan devoted to the espresso machine. From what this writer can tell, this album is not about coffee, nor about Bach. Although it covers a lot of ground, it is never entirely clear what it’s about or trying to accomplish, but if the listener can get past this inscrutability, then it makes for a fascinating, strange experience, particularly when heard through headphones. Falascone straddles the very different realms of improvisation (both jazz-inflected and free improv) and heavily edited and tweaked electro-acoustic music, where studio and recording equipment are used as instruments. The liner notes state that “all instrumental contributions are improvised,” and Falascone employs over a dozen guest artists and vocalists, from jazz musicians, to spoken word artists including Bob Marsh (who contributes the album’s lyrics) and even children. Falascone himself offers uninhibited sax playing and synthetic treatments, with a multitude of field recordings and sound samples. It’s an album of a million different moments that, defying all logic, does not completely fall apart. There are ambient tones, the sound of a typewriter, a recording of a woman practicing vocal scales with a piano, laughter, cello string scampers, squeaks, hisses, vaguely industrial sounds, violin fits and starts, sliced and diced vocal weirdness, skronks, rumbles and countless other sounds. Inexplicably, there’s also a cover of Thelonious Monk’s “Light Blue” on sax with clarinet counterpoint weaving in and out of abstraction. The album is a glorious, ambitious mess, sure, but it doesn’t repel; instead, its mysterious sound universe featuring the real and unreal pulls the listener in closely.


chow

Chattanooga’s ULTIMATE

RESTAURANT GUIDE

courtesy of

The Chattanooga Pulse chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 1


German-American BrewPub

224 Frazier Ave • brewhausbar.com

Featured: Spaetzle entrée with vinegar slaw and brussels sprouts w/bacon marmalade 2 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

UPCOMING BREWHAUS EVENTS Friday, May 16 @ 7pm Black Abbey Brewing Company Tasting Thursday, May 22 @ 7pm Turtle Anarchy Brewing Company Tasting Thursday, May 29 @ 7pm Star Hill Brewery Tasting


EDITORIAL Managing Editor Gary Poole Contributing Editor Janis Hashe Contributors Christopher Armstrong • Jake Bacon Madeline Chambliss • Daniel Jackson Dea Lisica • Josh Lang • Chase Long Mike McJunkin • Leith Tigges • Josh Weber

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the fine print Chattanooga Chow is published seasonally by The Pulse and Brewer Media. Chattanooga Chow is distributed throughout the city of Chattanooga and surrounding communities. Chattanooga Chow is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. No person without written permission from the publishers may take more than one copy per weekly issue. We’re watching.

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Phone 423.265.9494 Online chattanoogapulse.com Email info@chattanoogapulse.com Got a stamp? 1305 Carter St. • Chattanooga, TN 37402

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Since 2003

Chattanooga’s Weekly Alternative

Index to Advertisers Brewhaus Gastropub . ............................................ 4 Beast + Barrel . ........................................................ 5 Hair of the Dog ....................................................... 5 The Honest Pint ...................................................... 5 Bonefish Grill .......................................................... 6 Tupelo Honey Cafe . ................................................ 8 City Cafe Diner ....................................................... 9 Good Dog .............................................................. 10 Lupi's Pizza Pies . .................................................. 12 Bluewater Grille .................................................... 13 Conga Latin Food ................................................. 14 Southside Saloon & Bistro ................................... 15

Chattanooga Restaurant Listings....................... 16 El Macho Taco ...................................................... 24 Main Street Meats ................................................ 25 The Hot Chocolatier ............................................. 26 Southern Star ........................................................ 27 Chattanooga Brewing Company . ....................... 29 Lakeshore Grille . .................................................. 30 Taqueria Jalisco .................................................... 31 212 Market ............................................................ 32 Fox & Hound ......................................................... 33 The Acropolis ........................................................ 34

chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 3


Brewhaus Gastropub If you’re in the mood for German cuisine, you don’t have to fly the 4,605 miles from Chattanooga to Germany to satisfy your hankering. With everything from schnitzel to bratwurst, Brewhaus, Chattanooga’s only gastropub, combines traditional German dishes with a local Southern twist. Located on Frazier Avenue on the Northshore, Brewhaus is an “environment with a strong emphasis on chef-driven food, paired with good ale and wine, in a casual setting.” Seating is available both inside and on the porch overlooking Coolidge Park and the Walnut Street Bridge. Even if there’s a full house, the staff at Brewhaus invites you to grab a drink at the bar, which, weather permitting, can be taken out to the front patio while you wait. If your taste buds aren’t familiar with German cuisine, entrées like the Brewhaha and the rooster schnitzel wiener art are popular choices among customers. A grilled, beer-marinated brat and a smoked sausage atop a bed of kraut that is served with German potato salad, a veggie medley,

and ale mustard, the Brewhaha is one dish you don’t want to pass up. For fans of the recent fried-egg trend, the rooster schnitzel wiener art is the classic schnitzel—but with a fried egg on top. Meat lovers aren’t the only ones who can enjoy the food at Brewhaus. For vegetarians, one option is the veggie spaetzle. In this dish, spaetzle, or German-style egg noodles, are tossed in a creamy mushroom pepper sauce with fresh steamed broccoli, carrots, and squash. The dish also includes the option of adding a veggie brat. And food isn’t the only thing Brewhaus is known for. As the name suggests, Brewhaus has a variety of both draft and bottled beer. With a menu that regularly changes, Brewhaus always offers Chattanoogans the chance to try the latest brews, and will feature new beers to try from Black Abby Brewing Company this May. In addition to their regular beer tastings every Thursday at 7 p.m., Brewhaus is participating in American Craft Beer Week, which runs from May 12-18. No matter if you’re looking to explore a taste of Germany without leaving Chattanooga, or wanting to catch up with friends and drink a nice, cold beer, Brewhaus is the place to go. The environment is a one of a kind experience filled with laughter, glasses clinking in celebration, and of course—delicious food.

The Scoop Join the O'zapft Is! Bier Club and receive 12 free apps, a BrewHaus mug and T-shirt Brewhaus Chattanooga’s German Gastropub 224 Frazier Ave. (423) 531-8490 brewhausbar.com

4 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com


beast + barrel With the newly opened Beast + Barrel on Frazier Avenue, a new restaurant genre has been created: the “Gastro Smokehouse.” That’s how the trio of owners, Ryan Chilcoat, Matt Lewis and Geoff Tarr, refer to the beautifully renovated, 220-seat eatery on the former site of the Northshore Grille. Walking in, you’re struck by the warm, elegant-butlaidback feeling created by the black and neutrals color scheme, accented by the lipstick-red original tin ceiling and a charming mural on one wall advertising “Danbury Hats, Chattanooga’s Pioneer Hat Cleaner.” Matt Lewis explains that Beast + Barrel, which joins the Hair of the Dog Pub, The Honest Pint and The Terminal Brewhouse as the fourth restaurant from the partners, is designed to maintain the tradition of locally sourced, inventive food, but in an atmosphere that’s a bit more sophisticated. “We’ve dressed it up a little— but not too much,” he says. Chef Jericho Michel, once on staff at The Terminal, is back at B+B, creating dishes such as “Crabacon Stuffed Trout,” one of the entrees for two offered on the menu, served with two family-style large sides. Caesar salad lovers should not miss the B+B version, featuring whole grilled romaine and home-prepared crostini and dressing. For a light meal, or to begin an extended one, the Butcher’s Block sampler shows off one of the highlights of the new restaurant—its own in-house charcuterie. Lewis notes charcuterie items, including bone marrow, can be ordered right off the menu. The bar at Beast + Barrel is staffed by professionals, who are all developing their own signature cocktails, including, says Lewis, “Prohibition-style drinks, such as a classic martini or an Old Fashioned,” and the drinks menu also highlights both aperitifs and digestifs. But the bar’s uniqueness is truly enhanced by its wines on tap, which can be ordered both by the glass and by the carafe. The warmer weather has already meant that diners are beginning to enjoy the outdoor patio seating looking out onto Coolidge Park. And late-night nibblers, you’re in luck: Beast + Barrel is open seven days a week from

11 a.m. until 2 a.m., with a late-night menu served until 1:30 a.m. Of course we had to ask Lewis what was new at the other three restaurants. “Hair of the Dog had a major facelift last year,” he says. “It feels even more like a classic English pub now. We kept most of the menu items that people love, but added some new pub grub. And of course we kept the selection of English staple beers and ales, along with the craft beers.” Over at the three-year-old Honest Pint, “We continue to highlight that it’s an Irish pub in a New World setting,” Lewis says. Live music happens several times a week, along with Irish beers and some outstanding food, including the popular “boxty” (Irish potato pancakes). Both pubs plan to offer extended hours and multiple screens during the upcoming World Cup. While at the very happening Terminal, the green roof garden has been renovated (“with sturdier grass,” says Lewis), and seasonal, local menu selections still rule. Lewis notes the return of pale ale popularity, and its Terminal exponent, Terminally Ale American Copper. Chattanoogans and their out-of-town friends have already shown how much they appreciate Hair of the Dog, The Honest Pint and The Terminal. With the birth of Beast + Barrel, there’s a fourth member of the family to love.

Beast +

barrel

The Scoop Locally sourced, inventive food in a more sophisticated environment Beast + Barrel Gastro Smokehouse 16 Frazier Ave. (423) 805-4599, beastandbarrel.com

chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 5


6 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com


bonefish grill The Scoop A unique dining experience that takes the mystery out of seafood Bonefish Grill Hamilton Corner at the Main Entrance to Hamilton Place Mall 2115 Gunbarrel Rd (423) 892-3175 bonefishgrill.com

The ocean just entered its prime season for seafood lovers—and Bonefish Grill is celebrating this delicious occasion with one-of-a-kind entrees and specials. For a limited time only, seafood aficionados can indulge themselves with Bonefish Grill’s “Sea-lebrities.” The Lobster Stuffed Shrimp will make your mouth water and your tastebuds dance with Butterfield shrimp, mixed with a creamy lobster-andshrimp imperial stuffing, topped with a lemoncaper butter sauce. Seared and served with a cabernet mustard sauce, the Pretzel Crusted Tuna will not only satisfy your cravings, but it will also make you wonder why you aren’t eating at Bonefish Grill every day for every meal. The Misoyaki Chilean Sea Bass comes fresh off the grill and is served with a mango sauce and your choice of side dish. These mouth-watering entrees will surely make

you thirsty, and thankfully Bonefish Grill follows a “bar-fresh” philosophy that ensures their cocktails are mixed with just-squeezed juices and topped with edible garnishes that magnify every flavor. Bonefish Grill believes in helping others, and for every Ocean Trust Tropic Heat Martini sold, they donate $1 to the ocean conservation foundation Ocean Trust. Created with homemade infused pineapple vodka, freshly muddled mango, lemon juice and a thin slice of jalapeño, this exceptional drink will delight your desires—and leave you feeling proud about your charitable donation. If your appetite can’t withstand the wait for your entree, treat yourself to Bonefish Grill’s wildly popular Bang Bang Shrimp. This scrumptious appetizer consists of crispy shrimp tossed in a spicy, creamy sauce. Need a lift from your mid-week blues? Bang Bang Shrimp is free on

Wednesdays with the purchase of a bottle of wine. With nearly 200 stores located across the country, Bonefish Grill has established themselves as America’s go-to place for fresh and reliable seafood. They consult with Ocean Trust and Bloomin’ Brands Seafood Advisory Council to help promote environmentally sound fishing and aquaculture. They are dedicated to responsible fishing practices and the healthy stewardship of the world’s marine resources. Even though Chattanooga is hundreds of miles away from the ocean, after biting into one of Bonefish Grill’s freshly prepared entrees, you can close your eyes and almost hear the waves from the Atlantic Ocean crashing onto the sandy shore. Every day can be a day at the beach when you decide to eat at Bonefish Grill.

chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 7


Tupelo Honey Cafe

COME

SAVOR THE SEASON

Their biscuits have been described as heavenly, their pimento cheese divine. Tupelo Honey Cafe made a name for itself with its “New South” cuisine after launching in Asheville in 2000. Since opening in Chattanooga’s historic Warehouse Row in fall 2013, the restaurant has become one of the city’s go-to places for those hungry for some honest-to-goodness Southern food in a place that feels like home. Brian’s Shrimp and Goat Cheese Grits is one of the legendary Tupelo favorites as is the Shoo Grill Cheese, Have Mercy. This inventive and lavish take on the grilled cheese sandwich includes havarti and pimento cheese with caramelized onions, maple-peppered bacon, smoked ham, fried green tomatoes and fresh basil piled onto sourdough wheat bread, with a side of fresh tomato soup. “Scratch-made” is the Tupelo Honey

at Tupelo Honey Cafe Celebrate summer with us on our patio in Warehouse Row while enjoying our seasonal menu and sipping our tasty drink specials.

Chattanooga’s Warehouse Row East 11th & Lindsay St. | (423) 779-0400 tupelohoneycafe.com |

8 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Cafe watchword. The restaurant dedicates an entire floor of their building to cooking and prepping everything they serve. Even the biscuits and blueberry jelly, which are provided with every meal, are made from scratch. The release of restaurant’s second cookbook earlier this year reflects its expansion beyond Asheville and into Knoxville, Greenville, Chattanooga and Charlotte. Tupelo Honey Cafe: New Southern Flavors from the Blue Ridge Mountains includes 125 recipes with mountain roots, some found in their restaurants (such as pimento cheese) and others not. The recipes, says Chef Brian Sonoskus, are easy enough for the home cook, no fancy restaurant equipment required. The cookbook is available for purchase at their Chattanooga location—along with a whole menu of tasty meals.


City Cafe

Diner

City Café, located at the Days Inn Rivergate hotel in the heart of downtown Chattanooga, is a staple in the food community. There are only a handful of places in the area that you can grab a bite to eat at 6 a.m. before an early shift, or at midnight after a late shift. Open 24 hours every single day, City Café is known for keeping their lights on for you no matter when you get hungry. Sprinkled across the walls are signed photographs of famous people, all familiar with City Café. Famous for their immeasurable selection of mile-high cakes and their never-ending menu that includes breakfast and dinner options, you’ll be able to find something that suits your taste. They even provide a delivery service if you can’t quite make it to the restaurant.

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK, 24 HOURS A DAY SERVING BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER DINE IN | TAKE OUT | DELIVERY | CATERING 901 CARTER STREET AT THE DAYS INN RIVERGATE 423.634.9191

Mon-Fri: 4-7pm $1 10oz drafts, $3 32oz drafts, $2 Wells, $1.50 Domestics Free Appetizers!

901 Carter Street (Inside Days Inn) chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 9


good dog sit. stay. eat. The décor is cozy, eclectic, and the colorful duct tape-covered booths are comforting on a rainy afternoon. If it’s not the creative seating, it’s definitely the BBQ veggie dog and fries that have me feeling right at home. Good Dog owner Susan Paden joins me in the laid-back hangout to chat as I indulge with the signature fries and house-made curry ketchup. Customers are happy to know that everything at Good Dog is house-made, from the sausages to the beans. The peppers in the relish are even grown in Paden’s garden. She explains, “We like to make everything as good as it can be,” adding, “We’re not serving hot dogs, we’re serving people through hot dogs.” Good Dog is definitely a memorable restaurant for locals and tourists alike, all of whom come in regularly to feast on the impressive all-day breakfast menu and even a breakfast happy hour starting at 7 a.m. It’s clear that Good Dog is more than just hot dogs; it’s an experience. “It’s Americana,” Paden explains, “Like apple pie and baseball.” The menu is incredibly accommodating, offering options for both vegetarians and vegans, who can dine on the menu’s popular “vegan fave” and the “veggie/vegan breakfast” option. In addition to this, any other menu choice can be customized with a veggie dog to please non-meat-eaters. A popular crowd favorite is the cone of frites, featuring a fun selection of meats, cheeses and top-

pings, but for the typical hot dog lover, it is easy to change the favorite menu option each week, a practice Paden is also familiar with. Currently, she says her favorite menu item is the Reuben with slaw and pickles; however, her number-one choice is the Chicago dog, which features Good Dog’s relish of serrano peppers. Paden notes the pleasure of working in a successful business in the booming city of Chattanooga. She says, “We’re all working towards the same goal, adding to the picture and creating opportunities together.” With a popular, local eatery offering breakfast, lunch and dinner options, Paden says it best with, “Good Dog is a good place to start and end.”

10 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

The Scoop In-house cased sausages, handcut fries, fresh salads and homemade soups Good Dog sit. stay. eat. 34 Frazier Ave. (423) 475-6175 eatatgooddogcom


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#MORETHANAHOTDOG

Delicious hand-crafted breakfast plates, salads, hotdogs & artisan sausages Served daily from 7am-9pm.

Cupcakes

www.eatatgooddog.com

find more delicious creations on facebook and instagram Chow2014More.indd 1

Specialty Salad

(423) 475-6175 North Shore Chattanooga Coolidge Park 34 Frazier Avenue

5/1/14 4:47 PM

chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 11


Lupi’s Pizza Pies Whole Pies & By-the-Slice Mini & Monster Calzones Meaty & Veggie Lasagna Garden Salads 40+ Toppings 40+ Beers • Fine Wines Local Beef & Ground Sausage Local Produce Seasonally Dough Made Fresh Daily Whole Wheat Dough Appetizers & Desserts Eat In | Take Out | Take & Bake | Catering Downtown 4th & Broad St 266-5874

East Brainerd 1414 Jenkins Road 855-4104

Hixson 5504 Hixson Pike 847-3700

Cleveland 2382 N. Ocoee St 476-9464 lupi.com

Ooltewah 9453 Bradmore Ln 602-7499

Facebook/Lupi’sPizza Closed Mondays

Voted Chattanooga’s Best Pizza! 12 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

One of Chattanooga’s oldest and favorite spots for a slice, Lupi’s continues to provide no-fuss, simply delicious pizza. Diners can create their perfect piece of pie with the build-your-own menu, offering a large list of meat, vegetable and cheese options to accompany homemade hand-tossed dough, house-made sauce and mozzarella cheese. Opened in 1996, Lupi’s began serving downtown when little more than the Aquarium and warehouse buildings existed there. Their long-term success may be attributed to a commitment to keeping things simple: simple menu, wholesome ingredients, great flavor yesterday, today and tomorrow. Lupi’s has been committed to using local products from the beginning, including fresh vegetables during the growing season and local flour, ground beef, ground sausage, eggs and honey yearround. And of course, almost everything is made in-house: pizza dough, sauces and even fresh mozzarella. Although Lupi’s menu is simple, it certainly does not lack variety. Customers can choose white, whole wheat or gluten-free crust and add any of the more than 40 toppings available to create their ideal pizza—whole or by the slice—or calzone. And, for those who can’t muster down one of Lupi’s behemoth-sized calzones, they now offer “minizones”, as well

as half orders of bruschetta. With the build-your-own menu style, Lupi’s is naturally vegetarian-friendly, and even vegans can appreciate a freshly made slice with the vegan white crust. And for anyone craving something a little different, Lupi’s also offers lasagna, salad, bruschetta and more— all homemade and very tasty. If the delicious pizza pie isn’t enough to draw you in, Lupi’s friendly staff and unique, quirky atmosphere—dark colors, low lighting, local art, and a disco ball—make it a great place for friends and family to gather. But don’t just take our word for it: Lupi’s has been awarded “Best of the Best” five years in a row and CityScope’s “Best Pizza” for ten years in a row. According to owner Dorris Shober, “The thing about Lupi’s is consistency—the pizza you get today, you’ll get tomorrow and the next day.” It’s always a good time for pizza. With five locations around the Chattanooga area, Lupi’s is easier than ever to visit. And don’t miss Lupi’s mobile unit at local festivals and the Chattanooga Market this summer. We’ll see you there!


bluewater grille

Located across from the Tennessee Aquarium in the heart of downtown Chattanooga is a seafood destination. Inspired by the original restaurants on the northeast coast of Florida, Bluewater Grille prides itself on having the freshest seafood in Chattanooga. But it doesn’t stop there! Bluewater Grille’s diverse menu has something for everyone, and their blend of high-quality ingredients and welcoming setting truly makes it Chattanooga’s place for casually sophisticated dining. Everything on the menu is passionately handmade with fresh ingredients. Start with an order of Tavern Shrimp. This popular appetizer, deep-fried and tossed to perfection with a creamy spicy sauce, is a great way to kick off a memorable, tasty evening. One of the top favorite entrees is the Seared Tuna. Served with julienne vegetables, the tuna is rolled in spices, pan seared and served over wasabi aioli with sweet ginger. Another popular entrée is the Lobster and Shrimp Tacos, which comes

in a crisp blue corn tortilla, wrapped with a soft flour tortilla with pepper jack cheese, lettuce, pico de gallo and a citrus sauce, served with refried beans. Though the seafood is certainly the specialty at Bluewater Grille, the menu offers a wide range of culinary classics from pasta primavera to the Bluewater Burger, all made with the finest ingredients and cooked to perfection! Bluewater Grille also offers an outstanding selection of adult beverages, with great specials as well. Happy hour is Monday-Friday from 4-7p.m., and offers $2 off all house beers and wines along with $5 ultra-premium cocktails. Wednesday is Wine-Down Wednesday, with half-price bottles of wine with a purchase of any two entrees—perfect for your date night. No matter what your culinary preference or who you’re entertaining, Bluewater Grille has something for you and your guest. Come see why Bluewater Grille is Chattanooga’s place for casual fine dining.

H

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Bluewater Story e h T

H

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Inspired by our renowned seafood restaurants on the northeast coast of Florida, Bluewater brings our passion for the freshest fish possible to Chattanooga. Handpicked in Jacksonville, each fish selection is delivered fresh to our restaurant in the converted trolley barns of downtown Chattanooga.

• Choose from a variety of menu items: Seafood Cobb Salad, Cedar Plank Pecan Crusted Salmon, Grouper Oscar to name just a few. • Full Lunch Menu, Served Daily. • Daily Specials. • Patio & private dining available. • Now serving Brunch every Saturday & Sunday! • Live Jass Brunch on Sunday!

224 Broad Street · Chattanooga · 423.266.4200 bluewaterchattanooga.com chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 13


conga

latin food

Let’s start with what you won’t find at Conga. Though it specializes in Latin food, you won’t find refried beans, tortilla chips, or even salsa on its tables. Restaurant owner René Hernandez said all those foods are part of Mexican and Tex-Mex cuisine. Instead, the restaurant focuses on the Latin foods of Central and South America. Hernandez grew up in El Salvador, where the foundation of food is not corn, but plantains. This close cousin to the banana is sliced into chips, fried and served with chimichurri and Conga’s sweet and spicy mango sauce at every table. While the restaurant has been at its 207 E. Main Street location for ten years, its former name was Taco Rico, but to brand it more clearly as a Latin restaurant, Hernandez notes the name was changed to Conga three years ago. Instead of tacos, the restaurant serves up another popular Latin street food: pupusas. Meat, beans and cheese are combined, wrapped in maize dough,

Chattanoogaʼs Newest & Freshest Latin Restaurant! Conga Latin Food specializes in the native cuisines of South & Central America. Try our fried plantains, empanadas, Salvadorian pupusas, & much more!

207 E. Main St 4 2 3 - 2 01 - 4 8 0 6 M o n - S a t : 11 - 8 14 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

flattened and fried. This is the national food of El Salvador, and represents the country food-wise more than anything, Hernandez said. Conga has also created new twists on the national staple, stuffing pupusas with spinach, chicken or cilantro and onions. Meals are in the $10 range and are less spicy and more tropical than the usual Tex-Mex. Conga’s ceviche, raw tilapia cured in lime juice, is a salty and tart dish that will make you re-imagine Hemingway’s “Old Man and The Sea”. It’s a ceviche, Hernandez said, made in a style distinctly El Salvadorian. Conga’s fare brings other Latin food regions to Chattanooga, such as its empanadas, made with beef, olives, onions and raisins—a variation found in Chile, while Columbian cooks would stuff their empanadas with just beef. Hernandez hopes Conga brings something of Latin culture to the city. “Food is the easiest way to people’s hearts,” he said.


southside saloon & bistro Looking to experience Chattanooga’s Southside Chattanooga and all it has to offer? The Southside Saloon and Bistro is a great place to start. Easy to find at 1301 Chestnut St., the Southside Saloon and Bistro has many different offerings to tantalize your tastebuds. They feature a variety of sandwiches, salads, and their specialty: amazingly fresh, never-frozen half-pound burgers. The history of the more-than-100year-old building alone is enough to pique your curiosity. But what really draws Chattanoogans down to the Southside Saloon and Bistro are their lunch specials. Starting at $6.95, the rotating weekday lunch menu offers tasty dishes such as BBQ chicken, smoked pork chops, lemon-pepper fish, mouthwatering baked beans and potato salad. If you are a sports fan, they have you covered very well. Head down and catch your favorite team on several

large-screen TVs while enjoying their Wild Wild West Buffalo Wings and the coldest beer on the Southside. They also offer quick to-go orders and (very important to us all!) absolutely free parking. And if you just can’t get enough of the great food, don’t despair. Southside Saloon and Bistro caters as well. When you can’t make it down there, they will come to you. They also have live music and bike nights for all you two- (and three-) wheel afcianados. In case you haven’t spotted them, they are located on the Southside near the convention center, not far from TVA headquarters at the corner of 13th and Chestnut. Looking for something different, a place you can take the whole family to and have a relaxed lunch out? Do yourself a favor and head down to one of Chattanooga’s best restaurants. They promise you will not be disappointed.

Southside

SALOON & Bistro Conveniently located on Chattanooga’s vibrant Southside. A family-friendly environment with fantastic lunch specials every weekday, a friendly wait staff, and for you sports fans, plenty of big screen TV’s to watch the latest sports with all your friends.

Southside Saloon & Bistro

1301 Chestnut St., Chattanooga, TN (423) 757-4730 Mon - Fri: 11am to 3pm Catering Available • FREE Parking www.southsidesaloonandbistro.com

chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 15


Chattanooga Restaurant Listings AMERICAN

champyschicken.com

1885 Grill 3914 St. Elmo Ave. (423) 485-3050 1885grill.com

2 Squares a Day 3399 Amnicola Hwy. (423) 697-7595

We strive to make our listings accurate, but things change. We recommend you call in advance or visit websites before visiting any restaurant. For updates and special deals, please visit www.chattanoogapulse.com

A Bountiful Harvest 5228 Hixson Pike (423) 876-1922 abountifulharvest.com

Alchemy Spice Company 2502 12th St. (423) 402-0319 alchemyspicecompany.com

All-American Grilled Delivery 3507 Ringgold Rd. (423) 698-2040 all-americangrilleddelivery.com

Aretha Frankensteins 518 Tremont St. (423) 265-7685 arethas.com

Armando’s 8018 East Brainerd Rd. (423) 899-3705 4801 Dayton Blvd. (423) 870-9910 1814 E. Main St. (423) 629-9218 4767 Hwy. 58 (423) 894-1413 7330 Hixson Pike (423) 842-0479 7032 Lee Hwy. (423) 855-0772 1105 Lafayette Rd. (706) 861-2252 5700 Ringgold Rd. (423) 867-5950

Back Inn Cafe 411 E. 2nd St. (423) 265-5033 bluffviewartdistrict.com

Bald Headed Bistro 201 Keith St. SW Cleveland, TN (423) 472-6000 baldheadedbistro.com

Bea’s Restaurant 4500 Dodds Ave.

(423) 867-3618 beasrestaurant.net

Beast + Barrel 16 Frazier Ave. (423) 805-4599 beastandbarrel.com

Beef O’Brady’s 5958 Snow Hill Rd., Suite 101 (423) 910-0261 ooltewahbeefobradys.com

Beyond The Garden Gate 9508 Church St. (423) 238-2929

Big Chill 103 Cherokee Blvd., Suite 1A (423) 267-2445 thebigchillandgrill.com

Big River Grille 2020 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 553-7723 bigrivergrille.com

Big River Grille & Brewing Works 222 Broad St. (423) 267-2739 bigrivergrille.com

Big Table 118 Cross St. (423) 634-0772 bigtable.net

Blue Plate 191 Chestnut St. (423) 648-6767 theblueplate.info

Bluegrass Grill 55 E. Main St. (423) 752-4020 bluegrassgrillchattanooga.com

Bluewater Grille 224 Broad St. (423) 266-4200 bluewaterchattanooga.com

Boathouse Rotisserie & Raw Bar 1459 Riverside Dr. (423) 622-0122 boathousechattanooga.com

Bonefish Grill 2115 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 892-3175 bonefishgrill.com

Bourbon Grill 2100 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 468-2064

Broad St. Grill 1201 Broad St. (423) 424-3700 thechattanoogancs.com

Bud’s Sports Bar 5751 Brainerd Rd. (423) 499-9878 budssportsbar.com

Buffalo Wild Wings 120 Market St. (423) 634-0468 5744 Highway 153 (423) 877-3338 buffalowildwings.com

Cafe 7 (at Rock City) 1400 Patten Rd. Lookout Mountain, GA (706) 820-2531

Cafe Le Mont 801 Dodds Ave. (423) 629-1388 cafelemont.com

Cafe on the Corner 826 Scenic Hwy. (423) 825-5005

Canyon Grill 28 Scenic Hwy. #189 (706) 398-9510 canyongrill.com

Champy’s Famous Fried Chicken 526 E Martin Luther King Blvd. (423) 752-9198

16 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Charlie’s Restaurant & Lounge 8504 Dayton Pike (423) 842-9744 charliesrestaurantlounge.com

Chattanooga Billiard Club 725 Cherry St. (423) 267-7740 cbcburns.com

Chattanooga Billiard Club 110 Jordan Dr. (423) 499-3883

Chatto Brasserie 200 Manufacturers Rd. (423) 305-1352 chatodining.com

Cheeburger Cheeburger 138 Market St. (423) 265-4108 cheeburger.com

Chop House 2011 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 892-1222 thechophouse.com

City Cafe Diner 901 Carter St. (423) 634-9191 7641 Lee Hwy. (423) 485-8222 citycafemenu.com

Chattanooga Brewing Company 1804 Chestnut St. (423) 702-9958 chattabrew.com

Cookie Jar Cafe 1887 Kelly Cross Rd. (423) 949-5852 johnsonfamilyfarm.com

Countryside Cafe 8223 Mahan Gap Rd (423) 344-8646 countrysidecafe.biz

Dairi Kreme 1401 S Lee Hwy. (423) 472-8852

Delta Queen 100 River St. (423) 468-4500 deltaqueenhotel.net

Dockside Cafe 8411 Harrison Bay Rd.

(423) 344-9998 dockside-cafe.com

Dub’s Place 4408 Dayton Blvd. (423) 875-3151

Easy Bistro & Bar 203 Broad St. (423) 266-1121

Einstein Brothers Bagels 7737 E. Brainerd Rd. (423) 355-5380 einsteinbros.com

ELEVEN 407 Chestnut St. (inside Doubletree Hotel) (423) 752-6959

Epicurean Restaurant 4301 Ringgold Rd. (423) 622-4139

FamGablam 407 Sheridan Ave. Dalton, Ga (706) 529-4698 famgablam.com

Famous Dave’s 2122 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 954-3227 famousdaves.com

Fanatics 7601 E. Brainerd Rd. (423) 894-2524 fanaticssb.com

Firehouse Subs 3849 Dayton Blvd., # 101 (423) 877-2345 6025 East Brainerd Rd., #110 (423) 893-3473 1820 Gunbarrel Rd., #700 (423) 475-5491 firehousesubs.com

Fireside Grille 3018 Cummings Hwy., Ste. H (423) 821-9898

Five Guys Burgers and Fries 124 Stuart Rd. (423) 476-4878 401 Broad. St. (423) 531-8267 2020 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 664-3500 5110 Hixson Pike (423) 870-7772

fiveguys.com

Flying Squirrel 55 Johnson St. (423) 602-5980 flyingsquirrelbar.com

Food Works 205 Manufacturers Rd. (423) 752-7487 riversidefoodworks.com

Fox & Hound Pub & Grille 2040 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 490-1200 tentcorp.com

Fresh to Order 1919 Gunbarrel Rd., Suite 103 (423) 826-5000 fresh2order.com

Gardens Restaurant 1400 Market St. (423) 266-4107 choochoo.com

Giggles Grill 3224 Brainerd Rd. (423) 629-2233 thecomedycatch.com

Good Dog 34 Frazier Ave. (423) 475-6175 eatatgooddog.com

Griffin Footlong Hot Dogs 847 East Main St. (423) 265-5280

Hair of the Dog 334 Market St. (423) 265-4615 hairofthedogpub.net

Heavenly Wings 5231 Brainerd Rd. (423) 499-9949 chattanoogawings.com

Hennen’s 193 Chestnut St. (423) 634-5160 hennens.net

Herman’s Soul Food and Catering 3821 Brainerd Rd. (423) 624-5715

Honest Pint 35 Patten Pkwy. (423) 468-4192 thehonestpint.com


Innside Restaurant 800 Chestnut St. (423) 266-7687

J Alexander’s Restaurant 2215 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 855-5559 jalexanders.com

J T’s Lounge & Pizza 830 Dodson Ave. (423) 622-2094

Jefferson’s 618 Georgia Ave. (423) 710-1560 jeffersonsrestaurant.com

Jenkins Country Style Buffet 4134 Ringgold Rd. (423) 629-5449 jenkinsbuffet.com

Kacey Home Cooking 6921 Lee Hwy. (423) 490-0896 kaceyhomecooking.com

Karl’s Family Restaurant 5100 Hixson Pike (423) 875-5506

Ken’s Burgers Plus 5515 Highway 58 (423) 344-9979

Keri’s Restaurant 2400 Executive Park NW (423) 303-3108

Kevin Browns Burger 8228 Mahan Gap Rd. (423) 344-8344

Kitchen of Union Square 200 MLK, Jr. Blvd (423) 634-9172

Lakeshore Grille 5600 Lake Resort Terrace (423) 710-2057 lakeshoregrille.com

Lamar’s Restaurant 1018 E. MLK Blvd. (423) 266-0988 lamarsrestaurant.com

Lillie Mae’s Place 4712 Dayton Blvd. (423) 875-8999 lilliemaesplace.com

Logan’s Roahouse 2119 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 499-4339 3592 Cummings Hwy. (423) 821-2948 504 Northgate Mall Dr. (423) 875-4443 logansRd.house.com

Magoo’s 3658 Ringgold Rd.

(423) 867-1351 facebook.com/magoostn

Marsha’s BackSt. Café 5032 1/2 Brainerd Rd. (423) 485-7911

McAlister’s Deli 2288 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 510-8299

McHale’s Brewhouse and Pub 724 Ashland Terrace (423) 877-2124

Merv’s 713 Mountain Creek Rd. (423) 877-0221

Moss Place II 711 Tunnel Blvd. (423) 629-6234 mossplace2.com

Niedlov’s Deli 215 E. Main St.. (423) 825-5555

Nikki’s Drive Inn 899 Cherokee Blvd. (423) 265-9015

North Chatt Cat 346 Frazier Ave. (423) 266-9466

O’Heineys 825 Houston St. (423) 702-5687

Outback Steakhouse 501 Northgate Mall (423) 475-5482 2120 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 899-2600 outback.com

Panera Bread 417 Market St. (423) 266-2253 620 Northgate Mall (423) 877-0223 1810 Gunbarrel Rd (423) 899-2253 panerabread.com

Piccadilly Cafeteria 2100 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 892-4909 piccadilly.com

Pickle Barrel Restaurant 1012 Market St. (423) 266-1103 goodfoodchattanooga.com

Porter’s Steakhouse 827 Broad St. (423) 643-1240 porterssteakhouse.com

Proni’s Pizza & Sub 5001 Brainerd Rd. (423) 499-0770 pronispizza.com

Public House 1110 Market St. (423) 266-3366 publichousechattanooga.com

Purple Daisy Picnic Cafe 4001 St. Elmo Ave. (423) 822-6477 thepurpledaisycafe.com

River St. Deli 151 River St. (423) 756-3354 riverstreet-deli.com

Riverside Catfish House 18039 Highway 41 (423) 821-9214

Ronnie’s Grill 408 Dodson Ave. (423) 622-9398

Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse 2321 Lifestyle Way (423) 602-5900 ruthschris.net

Silver Diner 1400 Market St. (423) 266-5000 choochoo.com

Sing It or Wing It 410 Market St. (423) 757-WING singitorwingit-chattanooga.com

DAILY

KARAOKE

HAPPY HOUR

STARTS at 9 PM

3 - 9 PM

THURSDAYS

C O M E TRY O U R B RAN D N EW LU N C H M E N U ! 5450 Highway 153 in Hixson • (423) 875-8049

Sky Zoo 5709 Lee Hwy. (423) 521-2966 chattazooga.com

Slick’s Burgers 3950 Tennessee Ave. (423) 385-8392

Sofa King Juicy Burger 1743 Dayton Blvd. (423) 490-7632 sofakingjuicyburger.com

Southern Belle Chattanooga Riverboat Company 201 Riverfront Pkwy., Pier 2 (423) 266-4488 chattanoogariverboat.com

Southern Restaurant 3224 Dayton Blvd. (423) 877-9295

Southern Star 1300 Broad St. (423) 267-8899 southernstarrestaurant.com

Southside Saloon & Bistro 1301 Chestnut St. (423) 757-4730 southsidesaloonandbistro.com

St. John’s Meeting Place 1274 Market St.

chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 17


1400 Market St. (inside Chattanooga Choo Choo) (423) 308--2472 choochoo.com

Sugar’s Ribs 507 Broad St. (423) 508-8956 2450 15th Ave. (423) 826-1199 sugarsribs.com

Taco Mac

T-Bone’s Sports Cafe 1419 Chestnut St. (423) 266-4240 tboneschattanooga.com

The Farmer’s Daughter

The Growler

The Social 1110 Market St., Suite 103 (423) 266-3366 publichousechattanooga.com

Wally’s Restaurant 6521 Ringgold Rd. (423) 899-6151

Yellow Deli 737 McCallie Ave. (423) 468-1777 yellowdeli.com

Zarzour’s Cafe 1627 Rossville Ave (423) 266-0424

ASIAN Asia Buffet 6901 Lee Hwy., #112 (423) 499-8865

5230 Hwy. 153 (423) 877-8816

Chef Lin Buffet 5084 S. Terrace Rd. (423) 510-1998 cheflinbuffet.com

Tupelo Honey Cafe 1110 Market St. (423) 779-0400 tupelohoneycafe.com

Universal Joint 532 Lookout St. (423) 468-3725 ujointchattanooga.com

Urban Stack Burger Bar

Formosa Restaurant

Kanpai Of Tokyo

2288 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 499-9333

5425 Hwy. 153, #9 (423) 875-6953 formosarestaurant.com

2200 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 855-8204 kanpaioftokyo.com

14 E. 7th St. (423) 266-1521

China Garden Restaurant 4839 Hwy. 58 (423) 894-6776

China Gourmet 321 Browns Ferry Rd., Suite B (423) 821-8500 chinagourmetchattanooga.com

China House 7601 E. Brainerd Rd. (423) 499-8670

China Lee 3815 Dayton Blvd. (423) 877-6917 chinaleerestaurant.com

China Moon

3710 Ringgold Rd. (423) 495-1818

New China Restaurant 1900 Broad St. (423) 267-5941

Old Saigon 2601 Dayton Blvd. (423) 876-0322

P F Chang’s China Bistro 2110 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 242-0045 pfchangs.com

Red Ginger Bistro 1801 Dayton Blvd. (423) 875-6480 redgingerbistro.com

Shinyu Hibachi Express

A’S RESTAURA G O N ANO

8174 E. Brainerd Rd. (423) 510-0001

TakoYaki 172 Old Mouse Creek Rd. (423) 728-3010 gotakoyaki.com

The New Dynasty Restaurant 1999 Keith St. NW (423) 728-5488

The Rice Boxx 3600 Hixson Pike (423) 305-0855

SU M

M ER

China Cafe

511 Market St. (423) 265-1522

710 Cherokee Blvd. (423) 265-0069

Imperial Garden Restaurant

Buffet King

6 E. 14th St. (423) 752-8090 terminalbrewhouse.com

Tubby’s Real Burgers

2273 Gunbarrel Rd. Suite 103 (423) 305-1087 forbiddencitytn.com

4340 Ringgold Rd. (423) 698-0067

China Cafeteria

1203 Hixson Pike (423) 266-1996 tremonttavern.com

Forbidden City

Best China

The Terminal Brewhouse

Tremont Tavern

9203 Lee Hwy. (423) 238-1268 gochinese.com

&

1101 Hixson Pike, Suite A1 (423) 785-1005 thegrowlercraftbeer.com

1600 McCallie Ave. (423) 698-4643 wallysrest.com

5621 Brainerd Rd. (423) 892-0404 5425 Highway 153 (423) 875-0473 yourichiban.com

NG SPRI

1211 Hixson Pike (423) 355-5372 thefarmersdaughterchattanooga.com

Wally’s Restaurant

China Rose

UIDE TG

423 Market St. (423) 267-8226 taco-mac.com

1313 Hanover St. (423) 266-8463 vinestreet.market.com

Ichiban Japanese Steak House

M

Station House Restaurant

Vine St. Bakery

New China Restaurant

Suite 106 (423) 899-4878

E.CO

1278 Market St. (423) 266-4400 stjohnsrestaurant.com

5600 Brainerd Rd. (at Eastgate Town Center) (423) 893-8088 chinamoon.com

2014 • CHAT TANOO

Fortune House Restaurant 1210 Taft Hwy. (423) 517-8999

Fuji Steak and Sushi 2207 Overnite Dr. (423) 892-2899 fujisteakchattanooga.com

Genghis Grill 138 Market St. (423) 634-1188 genghisgrill.com

Hibachi Express 3625 Keith St. NW (423) 339-2396

Hibachi Grill and Supreme Buffet 6734 Lee Hwy. (423) 855-8070

Hong Kong Chinese Restaurant 8652 E. Brainerd Rd.,

18 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

UL S

St. John’s Restaurant

12 W. 13th St. (423) 386-5014 urbanstack.com

CHAT T

(423) 266-4571 stjohnsrestaurant.com

GA P

Typhoon Of Tokyo 3953 Dayton Blvd. (423) 875-6142

Yummy 919 Old 25th St. (423) 339-0701 yummytn.com

Kumo Hibachi & Sushi 6025 East Brainerd Rd. (423) 468-3385 kumohibachi.com

Little Tokyo Express 4516 Hixson Pike (423) 874-0500

Mikado Sushi Bar Noodle House 7003 Lee Hwy. (423) 899-3236

Na Go Ya 4921 Brainerd Rd. (423) 899-9252 chattanooganagoya.com

New China Buffet & Grill 3544 Cummings Hwy. (423) 821-6988 531 Signal Mountain Blvd. (423) 756-8788 newchinabuffetchattanooga.com

BAKERY Couture Cakes 5228 Hixson Pike (423) 876-1922

Cupcake Divas 60 25th St. Suite 2 (423) 473-2788 cupcakedivas.net

Cupcake Kitchen 500 Broad St. (423) 668-8060 cupcakekitchenusa.com

Federal Bakeshop 1966 Northpoint Blvd., Suite D (423) 870-2255

Gigi’s Cupcakes 1906 Gunbarrel Rd., #103 (423) 468-4803 gigiscupcakesusa.com

Jackson’s Bakery 5862 Brainerd Rd. (423) 894-2871

Koch’s Bakery 1900 Broad St. (423) 265-3331 kochsbakery.com

BBQ Bone’s Smokehouse 9012 E Brainerd Rd. (423) 894-2663 bonessmokehousechattanooga.com

Choo Choo Bar-B-Que 6410 Hixson Pike. (423) 843-9554 3951 Ringgold Rd. (423) 629-1313 7910 East Brainerd Rd. (423) 553-8888 900 Appling St. (423) 622-1802

Chubby’s Barbeque 3801 Rossville Blvd. (423) 867-4422

Couch’s Barbecue 8307 Old Lee Hwy. (423) 238-4801

Hickory Pit BBQ 5611 Ringgold Rd. (423) 894-1217

Lockhart’s Fire & Smoke Catering 909 Belvoir Hills Cir. (423) 421-8872

Nooga-Q Smokehouse & Grille 301 Signal Mtn. Rd. (423) 752-1935 nooga-q.com

Porker’s BBQ 1251 Market St. (423) 267-2726

Rib and Loin 5946 Brainerd Rd. (423) 499-6465 5435 Hwy. 153. (423) 877-7675 ribandloin.com

Smokey Bones 2225 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 893-7850 smokeybones.com

Sticky Fingers Restaurant 2031 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 899-7427 420 Broad St.


(423) 265-7427 stickyfingers.com

Sugar’s Ribs 507 Broad St. (423) 508-8956 2450 15th Ave. (423) 826-1199 sugarsribs.com

CAJUN/CREOLE Blue Orleans Seafood Restaurant 1463 Market St. (423) 757-0088 blueorleansdowntown.com

COFFEE Cadence Coffee Company 16 Patten Pkwy. (423) 521-7686

Camp House Espresso 1427 Williams St. (423) 702-8081 thecamphouse.com

Chattz Coffee 1010 Market St. (423) 756-8890 chattanoogacoffeecompany.com

Choo Choo Cafe Espresso 1400 Market St. (800) 872-2529 choochoo.com

Greyfriar’s Coffee & Tea Co. 406-B Broad St. (423) 267-0376

Mean Mug Coffeehouse 114 W. Main St. (423) 825-4206

Pasha Coffee & Tea 3914 St. Elmo Ave. (423) 475-5482 pashacoffeehouse.com

Rembrandt’s Coffee House 204 High St. (423) 265-5033 bluffviewartdistrict.com

Stone Cup Coffee House 330 Frazier Ave. (423) 521-3977 stonecupcafe.com

Stroud’s 1201 Broad St. (423) 424-3770

Velo Coffee Roasters 509 East Main St. (423) 718-8161 velocoffee.com

DELI Ankar’s Downtown 510 Broad St. (423) 266-0017 amigoresdowntown.com

Ankar’s Hoagies 5018 Hixson Pike (423) 876-7158 4764 Highway 58 (423) 894-3808 5966 Brainerd Rd. (423) 899-3074 ankarshoagiesonline.com

Bleacher Bums 850 Market St., #102 (423) 634-1083

Daved’s Deli 7639 Middle Valley Rd. (423) 842-9088

Figgy’s Sandwich Shop 805 Chestnut St. (423) 266-8675

Flatiron Deli 706 Walnut St. (423) 266-2620 flatiron-deli.com

Gardner’s Market 262 Broad St. NW Cleveland, TN (423) 478-3906

Glen Gene Deli 5748 Hwy. 153 (423) 877-9997 7025 Shallowford Rd. (423) 899-7733

Golly Whoppers 6337 E. Brainerd Rd. (423) 855-2001 gollywhopperstn.com

Jason’s Deli 2115 Gunbarrel Rd., Suite 14 (423) 296-1096 jasonsdeli.com

Lenny’s Sub Shop 1913 Gunbarrel Rd. #101 (423) 899-5539 lennys.com

Little Lunch Box 5959 Shallowford Rd., #201 (423) 510-9860

Mindy B’s Deli 826 Georgia Ave. (423) 521-7932

Nicks Deli &

Marketplace 5149 Hixson Pike (423) 877-5818

Niedlov’s Breadworks 215 E. Main St. (423) 756-0303 niedlovs.com

Steamboat 5950 Shallowford Rd. (423) 499-6355

fresh and authentic for over thirty years 5425 Highway 153 N. • Chattanooga, TN www.formosa-restaurant.com • 423.875.6953

Steamboat Super Sandwiches 812 Broad St. (423) 756-8388

Willie’s Deli 7701 N. Lee Hwy. (423) 336-8008

DESSERT Baskin-Robbins 2100 Hamilton Place Blvd., Suite 301 (423) 893-0505 4767 Hwy. 58 (423) 894-5931 6990 E. Brainerd Rd (423) 892-5131 6510 Ringgold Rd. (423) 531-3911 baskinrobbins.com

11 straight years voted Best Chinese Restaurant by CityScope

Ben & Jerry’s 201 Broad St. (423) 265-8606 benjerry.com

Bruster’s Real Ice Cream 1406 Jenkins Rd. (423) 510-9993 4241 Hixson Pike (423) 877-9119 brusters.com

Clumpies Ice Cream Company

DINE-IN, DINE-OUT, & CATERING

26 Frazier Ave. #B (423) 267-5425 clumpies.com

Cold Stone Creamery 100 Chestnut St. (423) 267-0888 coldstonecreamery.com

Cool Swirl 7540 E. Brainerd Rd. (423) 521-6300 coolswirl.com

Dunkin Donuts 7647 East Brainerd Rd. (423) 521-7264 5311 Hwy. 153 (423) 710-1873 627 Signal Mtn Rd.

SANDWICHES, SOUPS, BAKES POTATOES, HOMEMADE DESSERTS Store Hours: Mon – Fri: 11am-8pm, Sat: 11am-4pm, Sun: 11am-3pm

It just doesn’t get any better than GollyWhoppers. 6337 E. Brainerd Rd • Chattanooga • (423) 855-2001 chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 19


Don’t forget to try our Summer Sleigh Ride Smoothie! Piles of fruit and a heaping scoop of vanilla yogurt!

(423) 531-3845

Hot Chocolatier 1437 Market St. (423) 266-3066 thehotchocolatier.com

Ice Cream Show 129 Walnut St. (423) 702-5173 theicecreamshow.com

Julie Darling Donuts 121 Frazier Ave. (423) 591-3737 jddonuts.com

King of Pops Various locations (622) 701-7999

Local Slice Monkey Town Donut Company

1913 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 899-6480 marbleslab.com

Milk and Honey 135 North Market St. (423) 521-3123 milkandhoneychattanooga.com

Perkits Yogurt 3306 Keith St. NW (423) 476-1668 perkits.com

Rita’s Italian Ice 100 Market St. (423) 531-2735

Tasty Daylight Donuts 1414 Jenkins Rd. (423) 531-3444 tastydaylightdonuts.com

FARM TO TABLE 212 Market 212 Market St. (423) 265-1212 212market.com

Elemental 313 Manufacturer’s Rd. (423) 648-9160 elementalchattanooga.com

Main Street Meats 217 E Main St. (423) 602-9568 mainstreetmeatschatt.com

TerraMae Appalachian Bistro

Mean Mug

122 East 10th St. C O F F E E H O U S E (423) 710-2925 terramaechattanooga.com

FOOD TRUCKS 20 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Various locations (423) 596-5457 famousnaters.com

8804 Dayton Pike (423) 332-3310

Marble Slab Creamery

C O F F E E H O U S E

Famous Nater’s World Famous

Various locations (423) 509-2644

5400 Brainerd Rd. (423) 893-6263

Mean Mug

Various locations (423) 255-5163

Kay’s Kastles Inc Las Esperanza Bakery

129 Walnut St • 423-702-5173 • Across from the Glass Bridge near the Hunter Museum!

A Taste of Argentina

Various locations (423) 619-3898

Mountain Waffle Wagon Various locations (423) 504-7060

Muenster Truck Various locations (423) 432-5169

Rock-n-Tacos Various locations (423) 280-3392

Rusty’s Nutz of Chattanooga Various locations (423) 544-5692

Southern Burger Company Various locations (423) 825-4919 southernburgerco.com

Ben & Jerry’s 201 Broad St. (423) 265-8606 benjerry.com

Clumpies Ice Cream Co. 26 Frazier Ave. (423) 267-5425 clumpies.com

Cold Stone Creamery 100 Chestnut St. (423) 267-0888 coldstonecreamery.com

Cool Swirl 7540 E. Brainerd Rd. (423) 521- 6300 coolswirl.com

Ice Cream Show 129 Walnut St. (423) 702-5173 theicecreamshow.com

Incline Ice Cream Depot 3917 St. Elmo Ave. (423) 821-5000

Marble Slab Creamery 1913 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 899-6480 marbleslab.com

Menchie’s 2040 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 531- 8020 menchies.com

Mr T’s Pizza and Ice Cream 3924 Tennessee Ave. (423) 821- 5084 mrtspizza.com

The Missing Link

Nana’s Frozen Custard

Various Locations (423) 762-7966

6707 Hixson Pike (423) 842-3003 nanasfrozencustard.com

GERMAN Brewhaus 224 Frazier Ave. (423) 531-8490 brewhausbar.com

GREEK Acropolis 2213 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 899-5341 acropolisgrill.com

Kabob-ster 1408 Gunbarrel Rd., #111 (423) 475-5370 kabob-ster.com

ICE CREAM

Rita’s 100 Market St. (423) 531- 2735 ritasice.com

Sweet CeCe’s 330 Frazier Ave. (423) 710-1633 sweetceces.com

Sweet Frog 2288 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 305-0696 sweetfrogyogurt.com

Top It Off 401 Broad St. (423) 475- 5192

INDIAN India Mahal Restaurant 5970 Brainerd Rd.


WEEKLY EVENTS

(423) 510-9651

Sitar Indian Cuisine 200 Market St. (423) 894-9696

The Curry Pot 6940 Lee Hwy. (423) 648- 5069 currypotcuisine.com

ITALIAN Alfredo’s Italian Restaurant 3450 Cummings Hwy. (423) 702-5133

Alleia 25 E. Main St. (423) 305-6990 alleiarestaurant.com

Biba’s Italian Restaurant 5918 Hixson Pike (423) 843-0001 bibasitalian.com

Boccaccia 3077 Broad St. (423) 266-2930 boccacciarestaurant.com

Carrabba’s Italian Grill 2040 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 894-9970 carrabbas.com

Mom’s Italian Villa 1257 Market St. (423) 266-2204

Nino’s Italian Restaurant 720 Mississippi Ave.. Signal Mountain (423) 886-1900

Portobello’s Italian Rerstaurant and Pizzaria 4976 Hwy. 58 (423) 499-6001 portobelloschattanooga.com

Provino’s Italian Restaurant 5084 South Terrace (423) 899-2559 provinos.com

Rafael’s Italian Restaurant 3877 Hixson Pike (423) 508-8561

Tony’s Pasta Shop & Trattoria 212 High St. (423) 265-5033 bluffviewartdistrict.com

JAPANESE

Fuji Steak and Sushi 5437 Hwy. 153 (423) 531-3183 fujihixson.com

Hibachi Grill 6734 Lee Hwy. (423) 855-8070

Ichiban Japanese Steak House 5425 Hwy. 153 (423) 875-0404 5621 Brainerd Rd. (423) 892-0404 yourichiban.com

Kanpai Of Tokyo 2200 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 855-8204 kanpaioftokyo.com

Little Tokyo Express 4516 Hixson Pike (423) 874-0500

Mikado Sushi Bar Noodle House 7003 Lee Hwy. (423) 899-3236

Rice Plate 4762 Hwy. 58 (423) 296-2899

Sekisui 1120 Houston St. (423) 267-4600 sekisuichattanooga.com

Shogun Japanese Steak & Sushi 1806 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 296-6500

Sushi Nabe Of Kyoto 110 River St. (423) 634-0171 sushinabechattanooga.com

Teriyaki House 5908 Ringgold Rd. (423) 892-8483

Typhoon Of Tokyo 3953 Dayton Blvd. (423) 875-6142

KOREAN Seoul: Korean and Vietnamese Cuisine 6231 Perimeter Dr. (423) 855-9113

MARKETS Brainerd Farmers Market 20 Belvoir Rd. (423) 580-6281

Chattanooga Market

1829 Reggie White Blvd. (423) 531-7640

Enzo’s Market 1501 Long St. (423) 486-9312 enzosmarket.com

GoUda BURGER

Main St. Farmers Market 325 E. Main St. (423) 531-7641

Signal Mountain Farmers Market 815 Anderson Pike (423) 531-7643

St. Alban’s Hixson Farmers Market 7514 Hixson Pike (423) 842-1342

Whole Foods Market 301 Manufacturers Rd. (423) 702-7300 wholefoodsmarket.com

MEDITERRANEAN Acropolis 2213 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 899-5341 acropolisgrill.com

Tremont Tavern is Chattanooga’s favorite neighborhood pub. With a cozy atmosphere, a diverse menu, and a beer list sure to impress the most discerning connoisseurs, you’re bound to become a regular!

1203 Hixson Pike • (423) 266-1996 TREMoNTTaVERN.CoM

MoNdaY Trivia wiTh JORDAN • 8-10pm TUESdaY OpeN mic with mike • 8:30pm-1Am WEdNESdaY BeeR tAstiNg 7-9pm THURSdaY BeeR & BuRgeR Night • 5-11pm FRIdaY FeAtuReD music OF the week • 10pm SaTURdaY $3 FAt tiRe & $2 cOORs Light piNts SUNdaY Fish tAcO Night • 6pm

Taziki’s Mediterranean Cafe 432 Market St. (423) 779-3100 tazikiscafe.com

Kabob-ster 1408 Gunbarrel Rd., #111 (423) 475-5370 kabob-ster.com

MIDDLE EASTERN International Market 5600 Brainerd Rd., Suite D29 (423) 892-1293

Kabob-ster 1408 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 475-5370 kabob-ster.com

LATIN AMERICAN Abuelo’s Mexican Food Embassy 2102 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 855-7400 abuelos.com

Amigo Mexican Restaurant

M-Th 5-9:30pm • Fri-Sat 5-10pm 1278 market st • 423.266.4400 stjohnsrestaurant.com chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 21


5874 Brainerd Rd. (423) 499-5435 5450 Hwy. 153 (423) 875-8049 1906 Dayton Blvd. (423) 870-9928 amigorestaurantonline.com

Ayala Mexican Restaurant 1832 Taft Hwy. (423) 886-0063

Cancun Restaurant 1809 Broad St. (423) 266-1461 7010 Lee Hwy. (423) 894-1942 cancunmexicanrest.com

Conga Latin Food 207 E. Main St. (423) 201-4806

El Macho Taco 811 Market St. (423) 3805-4553

El Matador 8968 Dayton Pike (423) 332-9248

El Matador Mexican Restaurant 9203 Lee Hwy. (423) 238-6655

El Meson Restaurante Mexicano 2204 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 894-8726 248 Northgate Park (423) 710-1201 elmesonrestaurant.com

El Metate 5922 Hixson Pike (423) 842-1400

El Ranchero Mexican Restaurant 6700 Ringgold Rd. (423) 826-2950

Five 8 Burrito 5715 Hwy. 58 (423) 710-1858 five8burrito.com

La Altena 364 Northgate Mall (423) 877-7433 314 W. Main St. (423) 266-7595 615 Commercial Lane (423) 877-1477 altenachattanooga.com

La Cocina Mexican Restaurant 5425 Hwy. 153 (423) 386-5655

Las Brisas de Machu

22 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Picchu 5813 Lee Hwy. (423) 596-9773

Las Margaritas 3100 Cummings Hwy. (423) 825-0304 4604 Skyview Dr, (423) 892-3065 1101 Hixson Pike (423) 756-3332 lasmargaritaschattanooga.com

Los Amigos 3536 Cummings Hwy. (423) 521-7676

Los Potros 5611 Ringgold Rd. (423) 296-2229

Salsarita’s Fresh Cantina 2115 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 894-7144 salsaritas.com

Taco Mamacita 109 N. Market St. (423) 648-MAMA tacomamacita.com

Taqueria Jalisco 1634 Rossville Ave. (423) 509-3430

Taco Roc 6960 Lee Hwy. (423) 653-1001

PERUVIAN Aji Peruvian Restaurant 9413 Apison Pike (423) 396-3919 ajiperuvianrestaurant.com

PIZZA Crust Pizza 3211 Broad St. (423) 756-4040 103 Signal Mountain Rd. (423) 710-3780 crustpizza.com

Hill City Pizza 16 Frazier Ave. (423) 702-5451

Howz about a Pizza 8909 Hwy. 58 (423) 344-5757

Hungry Howie’s Pizza 4345 Ringgold Rd. (423) 629-7007 hungryhowies.com

Jet’s Pizza 3600 Hixson Pike (423) 757-1616 jetspizza.com

Lupi’s Pizza Pies 406 Broad St. (423) 266-5874 1414 Jenkins Rd. (423) 855-4104 5501 Hixson Pike (423) 847-3700 9453 Bradmore Ln, (423) 602-7499 lupi.com

Mellow Mushroom 205 Broad St. (423) 266-5564 2318 Lifestyle Way (423) 468-3737

Mom’s Italian Villa 1257 Market St. (423) 266-2204

Mr T’s Pizza St Elmo 3924 Tennessee Ave. (423) 821-5084

New York Pizza Dept. 5731 Hwy. 153 (423) 531-8830 indoughwecrust.com

Rafael’s Italian Restaurant 3877 Hixson Pike (423) 508-8561

SPORTS BARS Bud’s Sports Bar 5751 Brainerd Rd. (423) 499-9878 budssportsbar.com

Buffalo Wild Wings 120 Market St. (423) 634-0468 5744 Highway 153 (423) 877-3338 buffalowildwings.com

Hooters 5912 Brainerd Rd. (423) 499-8668 hooters.com

SOUTHWESTERN Moe’s Southwest Grill 1820 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 553-6930 615 McCallie Ave. (423) 425-4200 moeschattanooga.com

Mojo Burrito 1800 Dayton Blvd. (423) 870-6656 1414 Jenkins Rd., #110 (423) 296-6656 3815 St. Elmo Ave.


s... Fuji Steak and Sushi 2207 Overnite Dr. (423) 892-2899 fujisteakhousetn.com

Ichiban Japanese Steak House 5621 Brainerd Rd. (423) 892-0404 5425 Hwy. 153 (423) 875-0404 yourichiban.com

Kanpai Of Tokyo 2200 Hamilton Place Blvd. (423) 855-8204 kanpaioftokyo.com

Kumo Hibachi & Sushi 6025 E. Brainerd Rd. (423) 468-3385 kumohibachi.com

Sekisui

Totto Sushi Bar & Grill 330 Frazier Ave. #124 (423) 508-8898 tottonooga.com

TAPAS Cloud 9 1101 Hixson Pike (423) 521-4737

Terra Nostra Tapas and Wine 105 Frazier Ave. (423) 634-0238 terranostratapas.com

THAI Rain Thai Bistro 6933 Lee Hwy. (423) 386-5586 rainthaibistro.com

Rice Plate

1120 Houston St. (423) 267-4600 sekisuichattanooga.com

Shogun Japanese Steak & Sushi 1806 Gunbarrel Rd. (423) 296-6500

Sushi & Pho 5450 Hwy 153 (423) 531-3462

Sushi Nabe 110 River St.

4762 Hwy. 58 (423) 296-2899

Sawasdee Thai Restaurant 4008 St. Elmo Ave. (423) 822-9001

Sweet Basil Thai Cuisine

VEGETARIAN/ VEGAN Cashew 149 River Street (423) 355-5486

Enzo’s Market 1501 Long St. (423) 486-9312 enzosmarket.com

Sluggo’s North Vegetarian Cafe 501 Cherokee Blvd. (423) 752-5224

Whole Foods Market

99¢ Tacos...

WHAT!

301 Manufacturers Rd. (423) 702-7300 wholefoodsmarket.com

VIETNAMESE Old Saigon 2601 Dayton Blvd. (423) 876-0322

Seoul: Korean and Vietnamese Cuisine 6231 Perimeter Dr. (423) 855-9113

Sushi & Pho 5450 Hwy 153 (423) 531-3462

5845 Brainerd Rd. (423) 485-8836

Thai Smile 3 219 Market St. (423) 266-2333

Pick up a copy of The Pulse for food news and restaurant reviews.

35264267

SUSHI

(423) 634-0171 sushinabechattanooga.co

We strive to make our listings accurate, but things change. We recommend you call in advance or visit websites before visiting any restaurant. For updates and special deals, please visit www.chattanoogapulse.com

h. Chow Beeps

-296-MOJO The Pulse

70-MOJO

2-MOJO

Keep up to date with the latest restaurant specials, deals and more

Follow us on Twitter @chowbeeps

Freshy Fresh.

Tuesday – East Brainerd – 423-296-MOJO St. Elmo

Red Bank

35264267 35264267

T! (423) 822-6656 mojoburrito.com

W

East Brainerd

Saturday – Red Bank – 423-870-MOJO 423-822-MOJO 423-870-MOJO 423-296-MOJO 1800 Dayto n Blvd 1414 Jenk ins Rd Sunday - St.Chattano o ga Elmo –37405 423-822-MOJO Chattano o ga 37421

3815 St. Elmo Ave Chattano o ga 37409

Tuesday

chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 23


el macho

taco

Got tacos? 811 Market St. Chattanooga (423) 805-4553 Now open at 7 a.m. with breakfast burritos 24 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Want to head South of the border for lunch, but don’t have a private jet handy to fly you there and back? The solution can be found right in downtown at the brand new El Macho Taco on Market Street. A Cali/Mex style, family-owned restaurant, El Macho Taco is now open in the former location of Fork and Pie. Owner Armando Ruiz is part of the Ruiz family, which has spread from their restaurant roots into Chattanooga as part of their expansion into East Tennessee. The new location joins 16 other popular locations in the Middle Tennessee/ Nashville area. If you work in a downtown office, they are conveniently located right across from Miller Plaza, perfect for lunch. El Macho Taco is the place for you to get quick, fresh quality food and an enjoyable dining experience. Everything from their highly recommended fish tacos, quesadillas and salsa is made fresh every day. El Macho Taco’s fish tacos are made with breaded flounder and have quickly become

their number-one seller. Do yourself a favor and make them the first menu item you try on your next visit. And don’t forget the salsa for those fish tacos. El Macho Taco has a complimentary salsa bar with four different styles: a sweet salsa, a standard red salsa, and two different hot salsas for those looking for an extra kick when you dig in. There is still some experimenting going on when it comes to hours, as they adapt to their new downtown home, but for the moment they are open Monday - Thursday from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. (with breakfast burritos to start the day), on Friday from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., and on Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. They will be trying some later hours during the summer Nightfall concert series, so you can enjoy some great music and get your hands on the El Macho Taco goodness. A part of the ever-growing downtown Chattanooga food fiesta, El Macho Taco should become a household name for years to come. Ole!


MAIN STREET

MEATS

You may have already heard the hype surrounding Main Street Meats on the Southside. Sitting down with one of the partners, Dan Key, it quickly becomes apparent the “hype” is true. From the moment you walk into the store, the aromas tempting your nose take you back to the time of a small-town butcher shop where everyone knows your name. The staff are all very passionate about their work and dedicated to delivering the best “food experience” to their customers. Their belief is that there is much more to being a butcher shop than simply cutting meat and selling meat. Every customer is treated as a friend. The mission is to send them home not only with an amazing cut of meat, but ideas on how get the best out of each cut. Main Street Meats works with eight local farms from Polk County, Tennessee to Flintstone, Georgia to give customers the best meats and cheeses in the area. Every farmer Main Street Meats works with is personally visited to validate healthy natural growing practices and all products are tested for serving quality before Main Street Meats partners with them.

Every partner farm agrees to never feed antibiotics, growth stimulants or animal components to their animals and to provide a natural environment where the animals can grow, socialize and act naturally. The grazing animals, beef and lamb, are grass fed and grass finished and the meat is hung to dry age before being butchered for the meat case. The poultry and pigs’ diets are supplemented with certified non-GMO grains. This emphasis on happy, healthy animals ensures you get the highest quality…naturally…every time. When you are looking for locally grown meat and poultry that is free of anything artificial, or processed…Main Street Meats is the place for you. Lunch is served from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Monday through Saturday. Daily specials are posted online. Our advice: Make sure to try the house burger. It’s a delight for all your senses. With a mission statement posted in front of the store guaranteeing the best quality meats, combined with a hometown feeling and sense of community, Main Street Meats is sure to be one of Chattanooga’s gems for years to come.

A Cut

ABOVE Main Street Meats is Chattanooga's neighborhood butcher. By working with local farms that are deeply committed to animal quality and care, we are able to offer meat and poultry that is free of anything artificial... no artificial colors no steroids, no growth hormones, no antibiotics. Just clean meat. Main Street Meats... changing the way that Chattanoogans know, experience and enjoy meat.

423 • 602 • 9568 | MainStreetMeatsChatt.com | 217 East Main Street, Chattanooga, TN 37408 chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 25


the hot

Chocolatier Whether you’re in the mood for something sweet, salty, crunchy, gooey or fruity, The Hot Chocolatier has something to satisfy that craving. The store is relocating to 1437 Market St., right across from the Chattanooga Choo Choo, but the business that you know and love isn’t changing. Their new location will offer customers a bigger space, with even more room for their famously yummy goodies. Best known for their chocolates, gourmet pastries, hot chocolate and coffee, The Hot Chocolatier offers customers “the highest quality chocolates and confections using the best and freshest ingredients available.” Each of their products is handmade and prepared with local products when possible. Founded by husband-and-wife duo Wendy and Brandon Buckner in 2008, this locally owned business creates artisan truffles, squirrels (“nuts buried under layers of irresistible caramel and chocolate”), nuts, bars, pretzels, marshmallows, fruits and beverages. If you’re craving something baked, The Hot Chocolatier also offers des-

26 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

serts such as macaroons, cookies, biscottis, brownies, cakes, trifles, cupcakes and tarts, all created in-house. In addition to this range of sweets, The Hot Chocolatier designs sculptures or, as they are better described, “showpieces, centerpieces and cake toppers available in thematic or abstract presentations.” If the store is provided with an idea by the customer, these sculptures can be prepared for any special event, as long as they receive a deposit and two weeks’ notice. The Hot Chocolatier gives customers the chance to watch the pastry chefs and chocolatiers create their products, and see the process they work through every day. With a wide variety of sweets, created with dark, milk, and white chocolates, The Hot Chocolatier has become a habit for chocoholics—will you be next? For more information on The Hot Chocolatier, or to see pictures of some of their creations, visit their website: thehotchocolatier.com, or their Facebook page.


southern star

1300 Broad Street Monday - Friday 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. Southern Star has been a fixture in Chattanooga for more than 13 years. After a four-year stint in a small Southern Georgia town, owners Rick and Nancy decided to bring their taste of home to the Scenic City. Chattanoogans have learned if it’s a good “meat and three” you’re looking for, you can find it downtown at the corner of Broad and 13th or up on Signal Mountain on Taft Highway in the Signal Mountain Plaza. What you might not know is Southern Star isn’t just a place to get great down-home cookin’, it’s also the spot for the busiest parents in Chattanooga. After a long day of work, the thought of getting the kids to do homework and take baths is exhausting. Having to prepare dinner on top of all of that can be just too much. Southern Star has you covered with their dinners to go. These are

fully prepared meals waiting for you to walk in, take them home, and pop them in the oven. No muss, no fuss, and most importantly, no cooking clean-up! From downhome favorites like chicken and dressing casserole and meatloaf, to more exotic dishes such as Asian glazed salmon and pesto chicken pasta, it is all prepared fresh daily for you to take and bake. When you walk through the door at Southern Star, just to your left you’ll find a world of entrées, sides, and more waiting to make your life much easier! So don’t fret, parents, Southern Star is open until 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, so even the overtime types can take advantage of the convenience. Southern Star has an answer to your challenging schedule. Swing by after work and grab dinner for the family. You won’t regret it.

1200 Taft Highway Monday - Friday 11 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Take Away Dinners Until 7 p.m.

NEW TAKE HOME DINNERS AVAILABLE TAKE IT HOME, HEAT IT UP & EAT IT UP chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 27


28 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com


chattanooga brewing company Located adjacent to the south end zone of Finley Stadium is the revival of a Chattanooga pastime. Chattanooga Brewing Company still holds true to the original brewers who first opened it in 1890. (They were forced to shut down in 1915 by the fledging prohibition movement.) Former engineers and home brewers Mark Marcum and Jonathan Clark re-opened the brewery in 2010 on Frazier Avenue, but have recently upsized to the new location at 1804 Chestnut Street. The new location offers customers “a pleasant retail experience,” as Mark Marcum puts it, while the Frazier location was just a place to stop by and grab a few pints or fill a growler. Chattanooga Brewing Company pays homage to the original German owners of the company by brewing authentic German-style beer. The brewery even kept the name of the beer that originally put the company on the map, the Imperial Pilsner. This Munich Helles-style pilsner is not your American pilsner. This beer has the full body and full flavor that only the Germans can produce. The Chickbock is a German-style maibock made with Munich malts and a dash of chocolate. The Two Taverns Pale Ale is made from caramel malts and is similar to an English-style pale ale. The Hill City IPA is similar to the Two Taverns Pale Ale, but is unfiltered to give it a full flavored IPA taste. The new menu at the brewery features pubgrub done right with an emphasis on fresh ingredients. Beer cheese is featured throughout the menu. It’s made with four different types of cheese and can be found on anything from the Beer Cheese Nachos to the Beer Cheese Pretzel. All the bread used is baked locally at Bluff

View Bakery and pretzels are made with spent grain, a brewing by-product. The Chickbock Tenders are hand cut and beer battered with Chickbock flouring. The SJL is a pimento cheese sandwich made with white cheddar, banana peppers and bacon. The menu also has three stuffed pockets: The Classic (mozzarella, provolone, pepperoni and cherry tomato sauce), the Hot Chick (mozzarella, bleu cheese crumbles, buffalo chicken, served with ranch), and the Southshore (ground beef, black olives, onions, jalapenos, feta, cheddar and mozzarella). Chattanooga Brewing Company knows they cannot recreate exactly what the original brewers did on 2nd and Broad more than a century ago, but they stay true to the company’s German roots, and with the recent expansion, look to make history of their own.

The Scoop Seasonal rotating American, English, and German style beers Chattanooga Brewing Company Craft Beer and Pub Grub Done Right 1804 Chestnut St. (423) 702-9958 chattabrew.com

chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 29


LAKESHORE GRILLE

Come and dine with us, for lunch, brunch or dinner, at the all-new Lakeshore Grille, located above Lakeshore Marina in Hixson with a gorgeous view overlooking Chickamauga Lake. We feature in-house, made daily, original variations of America’s favorite dishes, which include fresh seafood, burgers, steaks and pastas, all prepared by our Executive Chef. Lakeshore Grille provides a comfortable and inviting atmosphere. Whether you come by car or by boat, the choice is yours to dine inside or outside on our deck, both of which have water views. We are open Wednesday through Sunday.

5600 Lake Resort Terrace Chattanooga, Tennessee

lakeshoregrille.com • (423) 710-2057 30 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Imagine this: It’s summertime and you and the family are out on the Chickamauga Dam. The weather is perfect. The sun is smiling overhead. But what’s this? We forgot to pack a lunch! Have no fear. The Lakeshore Grille is here! A quick hop, skip and boat ride over to the Lakeshore Marina will solve all your boating hunger needs. We caught up with owner Richard to delve into what makes the Lakeshore Grille so great. For starters, this place has only been open for about one month, and is completely renewed. For example, the nonsmoking atmosphere makes it perfect for the whole Dam family! The view is without a doubt breathtaking. Each dish is handcrafted to perfection. Steaks, seafood, burgers, wings—it’s impossible not to find

something appealing. They offer a lunch menu, a dinner menu, and even a Sunday Brunch. Tuna and swordfish are among the most popular seafood dishes. Beautiful hardwood floors and décor create an inviting and welcoming atmosphere for you and your crew. When the weather is beautiful, the Lakeshore Grille is here to please with a masterfully crafted deck overlooking the river. The owner encourages boaters to stop by and have some lunch. “Come off the boat in your bathing suit and enjoy a quick bite to eat,” Richard recommends. Be sure to stop by and check out their delicious food and fantastic atmosphere. Summertime is fun time and the best place to enjoy good eats is at the Lakeshore Grille!


taqeuria j a l i sc o Taqueria Jalisco has been one of Chattanooga’s best-kept secrets since the quaint Mexican eatery first opened in 2011. Tucked away on Rossville Avenue, across from the legendary Zarzours Café, the restaurant has enjoyed almost cult-like status by serving traditional Mexican food that hasn’t been Americanized to the point of compromising its roots, while remaining approachable for the average Chattanoogan. Now they are expanding with a new downtown location and bringing their special combination of flavors, dishes, passion and personality to Miller Plaza. If you’re new to Taqueria Jalisco, don’t expect to find yellow globs of nacho cheese or mounds of sour cream indiscriminately plopped over every dish; thankfully, their food bears no resemblance to anything you’ll get from Taco Bell. There are familiar items such as tacos and burritos which you can get with a choice of meats ranging from the standard shredded chicken or pork to the more adventurous lengua (beef tongue, which tastes like deli roast beef). A favorite dish at the Rossville Avenue loca-

tion is the handmade mole tamales, with tender pulled pork and mole sauce ribboned through the masa itself. The fluffy masa and slow-cooked pork marries with the deep, rich flavors and hint of sweetness from the mole before being wrapped in banana leaves and steamed to tamale perfection. As with any skilled cook’s offerings, each dish at Taqueria Jalisco is a balanced interplay of textures and gustation, meant to simultaneously satisfy and tease your palate. More space is needed to elaborate on the varieties of tortas (the king of sandwiches), their bright and crispy tostadas, or the incredible desserts Jorge bakes from scratch three mornings a week, such as his spectacular rum tres leches cake. The Rossville Avenue location is open 11 a.m. – 7 p.m. Monday and 11 a.m. – 8 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. The Miller Plaza store is open Monday through Friday 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. and 6 –10 p.m. during Nightfall. Get the word out and get to Taqueria Jalisco today. They have been one of the city’s bestkept secrets for entirely too long.

TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU SOUTHSIDE CHATTANOOGA:

1634 ROSSVILLE AVENUE HOURS: MONDAY 11-7PM TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY 11-8PM PHONE: (423) 509-3430

DOWNTOWN AT MILLER PLAZA:

850 MARKET STREET

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY LUNCH: 11AM-4PM FRIDAY NIGHTS DURING NIGHTFALL: 6PM-10PM PHONE: (423) 362-8056

SEE US AT THE MARKET ON SUNDAYS

LIKE US ON FACEBOOK • CATERING AVAILABLE chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 31


212

on the season. Their food is local, sustainable and made from scratch. Take, for example, the Pecan Chicken Club sandwich. At first look, it’s a chicken breast sandwich served with fries. However, the sandwich embodies local flavor as the chicken comes from North Georgia. And green? If the restaurant packs the meal to go, it includes wooden utensils instead of the usual plastic ones. Another place where the restaurant’s commitment to local and sustainability can be seen is in its Green Tomato Cake, one of the dessert options on rotation. When it comes to fried tomatoes, most people want the meaty middle. That leaves the ends of the tomatoes to be chopped up, soaked in Chattanooga whisky, and baked in a cake frosted with cream cheese frosting that tastes both of summer and of Christmas. In the last year, 212 Market has seen its catering service increase for weddings, business lunches, and even business breakfasts. Beer sales are growing as well, and 212 now keeps a Chattanooga brew on tap. For everyone who walks through their doors, 212 Market is committed to serving superb, locally sourced food with a sense of place and commitment to the community.

Market

restaurant

One of the most distinctly Chattanoogan places to eat is without a doubt 212 Market Restaurant. Today, most people equate downtown, with the Aquarium and the walking bridge, as the very essence of the city’s renaissance. 212 Market, located at the same address as its name, has been there since the Aquarium broke ground and the downtown was not the place you wanted to leave your car, said restaurant owner Sally Moses. And the restaurant has grown with the area. It was the first certified green restaurant in Tennessee. It has won Wine Spectator’s Award of Excellence several times over for its wine selection. Today, the list is 350 wines large and 22 years in the making, said restaurant manager Jesse Pyron. (You can enjoy a half-price wine list on Tuesdays.) 212 caters to both the guest who wants to enjoy a five-course meal with wine, and the casual diner who wants to have a cheeseburger and beer. But for the dicriminating diner, 212 changes its menu based

TUESDAY SPECIAL 1/2 Off Wine Deals

affordable • casual • delicious green / local since ‘92 • weekend brunch 423.265.1212 • www.212MARKET.com

32 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

212 Market Street Chattanooga, TN


fox andHOUND SPORTS TAVERN

Craving both a welcoming atmosphere and a place to have fun? Then consider The Fox and Hound for your next lunch or dinner rendezvous. We sat down with the lovely Miss Courtney to discuss what makes Fox and Hound such a popular establishment. Here’s what she told us: For sports fans, this is the place to be. Along with more than 30 televisions capable of broadcasting any sport, the customer is surrounded by quality food, amazing beer, and an unforgettable service staff. During major sporting events, Fox and Hound will cater to their customers by providing a great restaurant for the fans. “Accommodation” is a word frequently mentioned by customers and staff alike. At Fox and Hound, happy hours are seriously happy business, so they offer it every Monday - Friday,

from 3 - 7 p.m. Four hours of pure enjoyment with $2 domestics, $3 Long Islands & house margaritas, plus $4 Fireball, Jack Daniels, Beefeater, Absolut, & Cuervo Gold! They also provide special drinking prices on Tuesday, Saturday and Sunday. Their lunch offers regular menu options at an affordable price. Be sure to ask about becoming an All Star member! With this reward card, you become eligible for halfoff menu options and special prices on drinks. Fox and Hound understands that not every moment is filled with action-packed sports, which is why they have set up a lovely dining section for romantic evenings or a fun girls’ night out. Their extensive menu for food and spirits delivers on a promise to the customer that eating out should be about having fun with your friends.

Welcome to the Best party in town!

21 and over! The perfect place for parties! Get $5 off any entree valued $15 or more with this ad! * not valid with other discounts

tuesday special: $2 happy Hour drafts all day long!

What's happening at Fox & Hound? "Like" us on Facebook and get the whole scoop! 2040 Hamilton Place Blvd, Suite 150 • Chattanooga, TN (423) 490-1200 • Open Daily, 11 am - 3 am chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 33


Acropolis Mediterranean Grill To the Greeks, “eating Greek” means dining on food that is bursting with flavors, feasting with family and friends through good times and bad, and celebrating life with an attitude and an appetite. This is the type of experience customers can expect when dining at The Acropolis. The renovated Acropolis may look different, but it’s still the same familyowned business that we all know and love. Celebrating their 20th year this summer, the Kyriakidis family continues to provide Chattanoogans with menus of delicious Greek and Mediterranean dishes, prepared with the freshest ingredients that allow customers to feel as if they are vacationing on the islands of Greece. With renovations completed last fall, The Acropolis now features a newly expanded patio and bar. Warmer weather is just around the corner (in fact, it’s here!). That means you can enjoy your wonderful food and spend time with friends the way the Greeks do, relaxing outside. What could be a better than a glass of Greek wine or homemade Mediterranean sangria, a plate of stuffed grape leaves or delicious hummus, and the summer sunshine on the patio? Renovations also include the new Acropolis bar. The Acropolis has been known for their fresh and tasty food for over 20 years. Now you can

34 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

The Scoop The tates of Greece and the Mediterranean with a bakery to make you smile. Acropolis Mediterranean Grill 2213 Hamilton Place Blvd (423) 899-5341 acropolisgrill.com

add wonderful happy hour promotions and bites to that reputation as well. Along with the new look, the Kyriakidis family has several events lined up. A personal favorite is a patio wine tasting that’s been in the works! And don’t forget there is now room for desserts, coffee, and internet in the lobby café. So when your tastebuds crave local, seasonal, delicious favorites like Greek Salad, Spanakopita, freshly caught and prepared seafood, lamb the way it should be prepared, or any number of those famous Acropolis pastries, the place your mind and your body should think to go is The Acropolis. Local, Seasonal, FRESH!


Local. Seasonal. Fresh.

Locally Owned and Operated for 19 Years · Newly remodeled bar and patio 2213 Hamilton Place Boulevard • Open 7 Days (423) 899-5341 • www.acropolisgrill.com chattanoogapulse.com • MAY 15, 2014 • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • The Pulse • 35


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36 • The Pulse • SPRING/SUMMER CHOW • MAY 15, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

NORTHSHORE | BEASTANDBARREL.COM MON-SUN 11AM-2AM | 423.805.4599


chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 51


BELOVED PULITZER PRIZE

WINNER

ART SCENE

HARPER LEE’S

It's As Simple As ABC Money (helps) make the arts go round

TO KILL A

MOCKINGBIRD ADAPTED BY CHRISTOPHER SERGEL

MAY 16 THROUGH JUNE 1 CALL 267-8534 OR VISIT THEATRECENTRE.COM

52 • The Pulse • May 15-21, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Art isn’t just a hobby or a profession; it’s something that has always been a part of our culture. Art is something that should continue to be accessible to those wishing to pursue it. One program designed to help is the Arts Build Communities (ABC) Grant program, which provides “assistance for projects that increase access to the arts and achieve positive outcomes for the community at large.” Through July 1, 2014, the Tennessee Arts Commission is accepting applications for ABC grants. The applications are reviewed by ten agencies throughout Tennessee, which are looking to fund projects that “will involve communities underserved by the arts, such as those limited by geography, ethnic-

ity, economics or disability.” With grants ranging from $500 to $2,000, the program doesn’t just provide funds to complete community projects, but also gives recipients the chance to explain their project’s impact. Organizers say that the grants open the door for community development as well as opportunities for artists, arts, organizations, and nonprofits to form alliances and partnerships in their communities. For more information on the application process for the ABC grants and on the Tennessee Arts Commission, visit the Arts Build Communities webpage at tn.gov/arts/community_arts_abc.htm — Madeline Chambliss

THU5.8

frI5.9

SAT5.10

ART & MOVEMENT

FUNNY GUY

GETTING WILD

Art + Issues

Jake Gulledge

Spirits in the Wild

Main Street Bicycle Cooperative past president Heather Sivley discusses the role of transportation in its many forms in the lives of our community, in honor of National Bike Month and Bike to Work Day. 6 p.m. Hunter Museum 10 Bluff View (423) 267-0968 huntermuseum.org

With a unique approach to using humorous stories and an R&B vocal style, Jake is set apart. He has the ability to reach multiple genres because of the humor he adds—it breaks walls down in a clean fashion. 7:30, 9:30 p.m. The Comedy Catch, 3224 Brainerd Rd. (423) 629-2233 thecomedycatch.com

Guests will be able to meet many of the zoo's residents, enjoy the zoo after-hours and groove to live music— all while supporting the zoo! Plus, there will be plenty of spirits and great food to nosh on. 7 p.m. Chattanooga Zoo 301 N. Holtzclaw Ave. (423) 697-1322 chattzoo.org


Embracing Unfortunate Beauty

Celebrate good friends & good food with Red Bank Wine & Spirits

S

HANE DARWENT IS IN TWO SHOWS right now—at the Front Gallery in May with his friend and mentor Andy Saftel and in a three-person show with Roger Halligan (co-owner of Front Gallery) and Aaron Cowan that opens on May 16 at Tanner-Hill Gallery. He gave me a studio tour and talked about his work, which rotations among photography, painting and sculpture. His photographs at the Front Gallery are lush arrangements of near-abstract color in scenes most people would never give a second look: a pile of painted tires, a concrete pad with the outline left behind after someone apRICH parently spray painted an old iron red, New Year’s Eve confetti in the light of day. And then there’s Cavity Mountain, a landmark of his youth. “Cavity Mountain was a beacon that helped us navigate our way around this rural landscape, but it was also this pilgrimage for kids in the town of Hiwassee who would come up and spray paint their stone poetry on the mountain top,” Darwent says. “In the past I might have thought ‘that’s tragic, this is a beautiful rose quartz rock outcropping that’s covered in spray paint,’ but I’ve kind of become obsessed with this unfortunate beauty.” Last year, at Artifact Gallery, he exhibited photos whose beauty is similarly accidental but more iconic and ironic. One shows a huge blue fiberglass pool liner suspended on edge. “It almost looks like some crucifixion scene or some kind of odd taxidermy display,” he says. “It kind of makes you call into question what a pool is, or

it’s a pool that’s sort of like escaped.” Another photo in this series shows singer Susan Boyle on a billboard with a message of hope and perseverance, but she’s next to a dust devil swirling around BAILEY the bare earth of a denuded hillside. Along with the irony, there’s an embrace of sorts that feels pretty far from ironic detachment. Growing up outside Charleston, South Carolina, Darwent saw marshlands destroyed for new homes but realized those homes were feeding his family. His mother was an accountant whose clients were buying them, and his father was a concrete construction worker who was building them. “This is the world that we’re living in,” he recalls thinking. “So I might as well try to find some beauty in it...and start to see it from a different angle.” The paintings he will show at Tanner-Hill Gallery are in a similar vein. He makes paintings inspired by classic American signs and advertising that have been so overused in recent years that their retro aesthetic has become a commercial cliche, which he wants to avoid. “I was still fascinated with the surfaces and by what happened with those things,” he says. “So

Arts

I began making the paintings as a way to scratch that itch but hopefully have it take on its own life. And be able to play around. With the photographs I can’t really play with the narrative.” One painting in this series is a frenetic mash-up of crass promotional images, but the result is rich and playful. The color scheme came from a billboard he saw driving down to Finster Fest in Somerville, Georgia. A swath of canvas is given over to a few dozen iterations of “click click click” from a car ad that presented a series of clicks, spaces and period and ended with the hollow promise, “You just bought yourself a new car. Log on today.” There’s also ad copy about meat and cheese from a Krystal ad and the very large words “HUGE BLOW.” It all takes on a hint of selfportraiture because Darwent’s birth year, 1983, is also in there, along with his very large phone number. Then there are his sculptures, so intricately detailed that they resemble dioramas, which he calls “sedimentary compositions.” One, titled “Coming

Soon,” is like an imaginary archeology of new signs coexisting with the old ones they replaced—a liquor store sign, next to a drug store sign, overshadowed by the superstructure for a highway billboard. “I wanted time to be open in it,” he says. “The biggest, tallest sign, you can’t tell if it’s still under construction or if it’s crumbling as well.” As his work shifts back and forth among photography, painting and sculpture, running underneath is a curious sense that documentary and imaginative work are on an equal footing. Even the collage-y paintings and mash-up sculptures faithfully record the real-world items they play with. “All those beautiful, amazing moments are already out there,” he says. “My job is just to pluck it out of its surroundings and represent it.” Front Gallery: by appointment, call (423) 280-0531 or (423) 2433778. Tanner-Hill Gallery: opening reception May 16, 5:30 p.m.

Check out our great selection of wine, spirits & high gravity beer. Come see why we’re the liquor store with a smile...

3849 Dayton Blvd. • Ste. 113 423.877.1787 At the corner of Morrison Springs Road and Dayton Boulevard in the Bi-Lo Shopping Center

chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 53


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Ballet Tennessee's Spring Festival of Dance

thursday5.15

for more info call 706.820.2531

See RockCity.com ...and make plans May 23rd

F eaturing the Old Time Travelers!

Another great reason to get a Rock City Annual Pass. For less than the cost of two single admissions, you can come back again and again... for FREE!

Sumi-E Brush Painting Class 9 a.m. North River Civic Center 1009 Executive Dr., Hixson (423) 870-8924 Baby Bounce 10 a.m. Downtown Public Library, 1001 Broad St. (423) 757-5310 chattlibrary.org Build It Game Expo 1 p.m. Chattanooga Public Library 1001 Broad St. (423) 757-5310 chattlibrary.org “Charade” 2, 7 p.m. Heritage House, 1428 Jenkins Rd. (423) 855-9474 Ooltewah Farmers Market 4 p.m. Ooltewah Nursery & Landscape 5829 Main St., Ooltewah (423) 238-9775 Art + Issues 6 p.m. Hunter Museum 10 Bluff View (423) 267-0968 huntermuseum.org Photographic Society of Chattanooga Presents: Brett Wells 7 p.m. St. John United Methodist Church 3921 Murray Hills Dr. (423) 894-5210 “Rumors” 7:30 p.m. Ensemble Theatre of Chattanooga Eastgate Town Center 5600 Brainerd Rd. (423) 602-8640 ensembletheatreofchattanooga.com “Tick, Tick…BOOM!” 7:30 p.m. Theater for the New South UTC Fine Arts Center,

54 • The Pulse • May 15-21, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Vine & Palmetto Sts. (423) 503-0589 theaterforthenewsouth.com

friday5.16 National Bike to Work Day Meet-up 7 a.m. Miller Plaza 850 Market St. outdoorchattanooga.com Home School WorkshopMosaics and Symmetry 10 a.m. Hunter Museum of Art 10 Bluff View (423) 267-0968 huntermuseum.org Sidewalk Store Sale 11 a.m. Hunter Museum of Art 10 Bluff View (423) 267-0968 huntermuseum.org SHINE 2014 7 p.m. The Chattanoogan Hotel Ballroom 1201 Broad St. (423) 643-0202

Pulse pick: “Tick, Tick…BOOM!” This autobiographical tale looks at the courage it takes to follow your dreams as you face the looming age of 30. “Tick, Tick…BOOM!” Now Playing Theater for the New South UTC Fine Arts Center, Vine & Palmetto Sts. (423) 503-0589 theaterforthenewsouth.com

shinechattanooga.com “On Golden Pond” 7:30 p.m. The Colonnade Center 264 Catoosa Cir., Ringgold, Ga. (706) 935-9000 “Tick, Tick…BOOM!” 7:30 p.m. Theater for the New South UTC Fine Arts Center, Vine & Palmetto Sts. (423) 503-0589 theaterforthenewsouth.com “Sleeping Beauty” 7:30 p.m. Chattanooga Theatre Centre 400 River St. (423) 267-8534 theatrecentre.com “Rumors” 7:30 p.m. Ensemble Theatre of Chattanooga Eastgate Town Center 5600 Brainerd Rd. (423) 602-8640 ensembletheatreofchattanooga.com Ballet Tennessee Repertory Performance 7:30 UTC Fine Arts Center

Vine & Palmetto Sts. (423) 602-8640 Jake Gulledge 7:30, 9:30 p.m. The Comedy Catch, 3224 Brainerd Rd. (423) 629-2233 thecomedycatch.com “Life, Love and Laughter at the Full Moon Cafe” 8 p.m. Mountain Arts Community Center 809 Kentucky Ave., Signal Mountain (423) 886-1959 “To Kill A Mockingbird” 8 p.m. Chattanooga Theatre Centre 400 River St. (423) 267-8534 theatrecentre.com

saturday5.17 Countdown the Days to Kindergarten 9 a.m. Creative Discovery Museum 321 Chestnut St. (423) 756-2738 U.S. Masters Open Water Swimming Championship 9 a.m. Outdoor Chattanooga Tennessee River Downtown Chattanooga Waterfront outdoorchattanooga.com Chickamauga Battlefield Bicycle Tour 9:30 a.m. Chickamauga Battlefield, Rossville, Ga outdoorchattanooga.com Brainerd Farmer’s Market 10 a.m. Grace Episcopal Church 20 Belvoir Ave. (404) 245-3682 St. Alban’s Farmer Market 10 a.m. St. Alban’s Episcopal Church 7514 Hixson Pike Chattanooga River Market


10 a.m. Tennessee Aquarium 201 Chestnut St. chattanoogamarket.com Stringer’s Ridge Tree Identification Walk with Jay Clark 10 a.m. Bell Ave. entrance to Stringer’s Ridge Eastgate Page Turners Book Club 11 a.m. Eastgate Public Library 5705 Marlin Rd. (423) 757-5310 Artful Yoga 1:30 p.m. Hunter Museum 10 Bluff View (423) 267-0968 huntermuseum.org “Sleeping Beauty” 2:30 p.m. Chattanooga Theatre Centre 400 River St. (423) 267-8534 theatrecentre.com “Lostnest” Exhibition Opening Reception 5 p.m. 1511 Williams St. (404) 538-1153 Spirits in the Wild 7 p.m. Chattanooga Zoo 301 N. Holtzclaw Ave., (423) 697-1322 chattzoo.org Downtown Sertoma’s Wine n’ Shine 7 p.m. Crash Pad 29 Johnson St. (423) 648-8393 sertomawinenshine.com Ballet Tennessee Presents “VanCura Ballet Conservatory in Spring Festival of Dance” 7:30 p.m. UTC Fine Arts Center Vine & Palmetto Sts. (423) 425-4371 Jake Gulledge 7:30, 9:30 p.m. The Comedy Catch 3224 Brainerd Rd.

(423) 629-2233 thecomedycatch.com “On Golden Pond” 7:30 p.m. The Colonnade Center 264 Catoosa Cir., Ringgold, Ga. (706) 935-9000 “Tick, Tick…BOOM!” 7:30 p.m. Theater for the New South UTC Fine Arts Center, Vine & Palmetto Sts. (423) 503-0589 theaterforthenewsouth.com “Rumors” 7:30 p.m. Ensemble Theatre of Chattanooga Eastgate Town Center 5600 Brainerd Rd. (423) 602-8640 ensembletheatreofchattanooga.com “Life, Love and Laughter at the Full Moon Cafe” 8 p.m. Mountain Arts Community Center 809 Kentucky Ave., Signal Mountain (423) 886-1959 “To Kill A Mockingbird” 8 p.m. Chattanooga Theatre Centre 400 River St. (423) 267-8534 theatrecentre.com

sunday5.18 Strawberry Festival 11 a.m. First Tennessee Pavilion 1826 Reggie White Blvd. (423) 266-4041 chattanoogamarket.com Tucker’s Trek 2014 1 p.m. Baylor School 171 Baylor School Rd. (423) 267-8505 Drum Circle 2 p.m. AVA Gallery 30 Frazier Ave. (423) 265-4282

avarts.org “Sleeping Beauty” 2:30 p.m. Chattanooga Theatre Centre 400 River St. (423) 267-8534 theatrecentre.com “Rumors” 2:30 p.m. Ensemble Theatre of Chattanooga Eastgate Town Center 5600 Brainerd Rd. (423) 602-8640 ensembletheatreofchattanooga.com “Preface: An Introduction to Artists Books” Talk & Demo Event 3 p.m. Hunter Museum of Art 10 Bluff View. (423) 267-0968 huntermuseum.org Jake Gulledge 7:30 p.m. The Comedy Catch 3224 Brainerd Rd. (423) 629-2233 thecomedycatch.com

monday5.19 Adaptive Cycling 6 p.m. Hubert Fry Center 4301 Amnicola Hwy. (423) 697-1345 Chattanooga Bicycle Club 6 p.m. Outdoor Chattanooga 200 River St. (423) 643-6888 outdoorchattanooga.com “The Backlot: A Place for Filmmakers” 6:30 p.m. Heritage House 1428 Jenkins Rd. (423) 855-9474

tuesday5.20 3D Printing 100: An Introduction

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

“KiDon”

5:30 p.m. Chattanooga Downtown Public Library 1001 Broad St. chattlibrary.org “Bright Ideas”: Gallery Talk 6 p.m. Bessie Smith Cultural Center 200 E. MLK Blvd. (423) 266-8658 bessiesmithcc.org Regional Art Alliance May Meeting 7 p.m. East Ridge Community Center 1517 Tombras Ave., East Ridge (423) 867-6406

Named “One of the Ten Most Incredible Cave Waterfalls on Earth” World Reviewer

423.821.2544 RubyFalls.com

wednesday5.21 Chattanooga Wednesday Market 4 p.m. Chattanooga Market First Tennessee Pavilion, 1829 Carter St. (423) 648-2496 chattanoogamarket.com Seventh Annual Jewish Film Series: “KiDon” 7 p.m. Jewish Cultural Center 5461 N. Terrace Rd. (423) 493-0270 jewishchattanooga.com Wednesday Night Chess Club 6 p.m. Chattanooga Public Library 1001 Broad St. chattlibrary.org Rapid Learning Intro to Kayak and Roll Practice 6 p.m. Outdoor Chattanooga 200 River St. (423) 643-6888 outdoorchattanooga.com

Map these locations on chattanoogapulse.com. Send event listings at least 10 days in advance to: calendar@ chattanoogapulse.com.

Open Daily Starting May 24th

RubyFallsZip.com

chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 55


FILM SCENE

GULF SHORES / ORANGE BEACH

Galapagos and Corwin, Too Noted wildlife conservationist visits IMAX for special screening *Restrictions may apply

A beach vacation with a level of amenities and service that is surprisingly affordable. We offer the largest selection of beachfront condominiums,

The Galapagos Islands top many nature-lovers’ bucket lists. Straddling the Equator in the midst of the Pacific Ocean, this volcanic island chain is a paradise unlike any other, and home to some 9,000 species. On Tuesday, May 20, Chattanoogans will be able to witness the splendor of this remote and rugged destination with an experienced guide. Wildlife conservationist and Emmy Award-winning TV host Jeff Corwin will host a premiere screening of “Galapagos 3D: Nature’s Wonderland” at the Tennessee Aquarium IMAX 3D Theater. “I was thrilled to provide the narra-

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tion for this amazing project,” said Corwin. “It literally took my breath away. Despite traveling the world for 20 years hosting and creating documentaries, I was thoroughly impressed with this incredible film.” Corwin will introduce “Galapagos 3D: Nature’s Wonderland” in the IMAX theater at 6 p.m. After the premiere screening, he will entertain questions about his experiences in the Galapagos and his efforts to study and protect wildlife around the world. “I hope that this film will inspire a new generation to become good stewards of this delicate planet,” he added.

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56 • The Pulse • May 15-21, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

Godzilla

Million Dollar Arm

The world's most famous monster is pitted against malevolent creatures who, bolstered by humanity's scientific arrogance, threaten our very existence. Director: Gareth Edwards Stars: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Elizabeth Olsen, Bryan Cranston, Ken Watanabe

A sports agent stages an unconventional recruitment strategy to get talented Indian cricket players to play major league baseball. Director: Craig Gillespie Stars: Jon Hamm, Aasif Mandvi, Alan Arkin, Suraj Sharma


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NDER THE SKIN” SEEMS LIKE A film that, as a critic, I’m really supposed to like. It is slow and ponderous, inscrutable and complicated the way some art is meant to be, and features a story that unwinds without spoonfed explanations.

It’s the type of film that appeals to film connoisseurs, who don’t mind being bored if it’s for a greater purpose. I understand all these things and have seen many a film that fits into this category. And yet, for some reason, I failed to connect with “Under the Skin” on JOHN any real level. There are parts meant to unnerve, to prick at the edges of what it means to human, to rumble the stomach and wrack the mind. To a certain degree, I think I know what the director was intending. However, the film failed to elicit any sort of emotion. I didn’t feel much of anything as it progressed. I enjoyed the atmosphere, the way music and sound were used in crafting the scenes. The bleak beauty of the Scottish landscape combined with the otherworldly circumstances of the plot kept me interested to a point, but ultimately the film didn’t provoke its intended reaction in me. It didn’t provoke much of a reaction at all. “Under the Skin” is loosely based on the 2000 sciencefiction novel of the same name by Michel Faber. In the novel, an alien disguised as a beautiful woman seduces unsuspecting men in order to harvest their meat for consumption on her home world. “Under the Skin” also features a beautiful disguised

alien (Scarlett Johansson). but her motivations for seducing the men are left to the imagination of the audience. As I mentioned, there is no real explanation for anything. The film exists through small snippets of conversations and the silent stares of the film’s star. Good movDEVORE ies don’t always require much in the way dialogue, as evidenced by films like “All is Lost”—in fact, great stories can be told very simply. Much of the dialogue in “Under the Skin” is secondary to the action, mumbled and softly spoken. The quiet is meant to make the tone of the film that much more chilling. Adding to this is the inclusion of Scottish residents, most of whom are non-actors, using their own genuine nervousness at being in the presence of someone as stunning as Johansson to heighten the tension, casting a note of realism into the film. As a critic, I see the logic behind this decision: Only a man confronted with the possibility of sex with such an enchanting beauty would ignore the weirdness of the situation and continue into an abandoned house with dimensions that might confuse a Time Lord. Men will ignore a lot of warning signs for perfection. And yet, as much as the filmmaker’s decisions are consistent with the story, I

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still didn’t find myself caring. It was only due to my slight curiosity at the true nature of the predator that I was able to sustain my interest. Much praise has been heaped upon Johansson for her performance in the film. It was certainly adequate for the story, but as far as being exceptional, the role only called for her to remain expressionless and detached. There are brief hints of humanity, betraying the minor programming necessary to coax men into the windowless white van used to troll the highways of Scotland, but it is the physical aspects of the creature that do most of the heavy lifting. Perhaps it is harder to be blank than human. An actor would need to answer that question. But this is the second film I’ve seen with Johansson starring as a nonhuman character that slowly becomes curious about the world they are inhabiting. Her performance in “Her” seemed much more nuanced and powerful, despite the actress not having a physical presence in the film. The films are very different in tone, of course, one allowing for a larger range of expres-

sion. “Under the Skin” is darker as well. But still, I felt that Johansson needed more to do that just stare straight ahead. Tonally, “Under the Skin” reminded me quite a bit of Shane Carruth’s “Upstream Color.” It requires the same amount of thought on the part of the viewer. The audience needs to pay careful attention to the subtleties included by the director, and even then meaning is hard to decipher. As to what the filmmaker intended, I have no idea. I can speculate on his intentions, but without repeated viewings the point remains enigmatic. But I have no interest in repeating the experience. This is only the third fulllength feature by Jonathan Glazer, the first being “Sexy Beast,” and “Under the Skin” was in production for nearly 10 years. Obviously, there is no correct length of time for a work of art, but the longer an artist spends on a work, the more likely they are to fall into it so completely that it makes sense only to them. “Under the Skin” may have needed the distillation of an outside opinion to be truly effective.

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chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 57


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58 • The Pulse • May 15-21, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com

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Diversions

Consider This with Dr. Rick by Dr. Rick Pimental-Habib, Ph.D.

“How in the world can you give enough, if you’re coming from a place of ‘not enough’?” Would you consider yourself a “giver?” If so, here’s the question to ask: Are my coffers full enough that there’s extra to share? Or, is there enough water in the well, or am I running dry? I think you get the idea. In order to be of use to others, you must be filled up “enough” yourself, first and foremost. What is it you need? A break? A good friend? A workout? A walk with the dogs? A bubble bath? In my books I refer to this as “healthy selfishness”, but really it’s just good self-care. And it’s important. Without it, you burn out. Then who are you good for? Denying yourself good care does not allow you to bring the best of you—only what’s left of you.

chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 59


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Free Will Astrology

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): There’s a piece of art on the moon: a ceramic disk inscribed with six drawings by noted American artists. It was carried on the landing module of the Apollo 12 mission, which delivered two astronauts to the lunar surface in November 1969. One of the artists, Leo maverick Andy Warhol, drew the image of a stylized penis, similar to what you might see on the wall of a public restroom. “He was being the terrible bad boy,” the project’s organizer said about Warhol’s contribution. You know me, Leo. I usually love playful acts of rebellion. But in the coming weeks, I advise against taking Warhol’s approach. If you’re called on to add your self-expression to a big undertaking, tilt in the direc-

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tion of sincerity and reverence and dignity. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The planet we live on is in constant transformation. Nothing ever stays the same. To succeed, let alone survive, we need to acclimate ourselves to the relentless forward motion. “He not busy being born is busy dying,” was Bob Dylan’s way of framing our challenge. How are you doing with this aspect of life, Virgo? Do you hate it but deal with it grudgingly? Tolerate it and aspire to be a master of it someday? Whatever your current attitude is, I’m here to tell you that in the coming months you could become much more comfortable with the ceaseless flow—and even learn to enjoy it. Are you ready to begin? LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): “It isn’t that I don’t like sweet disorder,” said English author Vita SackvilleWest, “but it has to be judiciously arranged.” That’s your theme for the week, Libra. Please respect how precise a formulation this is. Plain old ordinary disorder will not provide you with the epiphanies and breakthroughs you deserve and need. The disorder must be sweet. If it doesn’t make you feel at least a little excited and more in love with life, avoid it. The disorder must also be judiciously arranged. What that means is that it can’t be loud or vulgar or profane. Rather, it must have wit and style and a hint of crazy wisdom. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): I have three sets of questions for you, Scorpio. First, are you anyone’s muse? Is there a person who draws inspiration from the way you live? Here’s my second query: Are you strong medicine for anyone? Are you the source of riddles that confound and intrigue them, compelling them to outgrow their narrow perspectives? Here’s my third inquiry: Are you anyone’s teacher? Are you an influence that educates someone about the meaning of life? If you do play any of these roles, Scorpio, they are about to heat up and transform. If you don’t currently serve at least one of these functions, there’s a good chance you will start to soon. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): According to my reading of the astrological omens, you should draw inspiration from this Chinese proverb: “Never do anything standing that you can do sitting, or anything sitting that you can do lying down.” In other words, Sagittarius, you need extra downtime. So please say NO to any influence that says, “Do it now! Be maniacally efficient! Multitask as if your life depended on it! The more active you are the more successful you will be!” Instead, give yourself ample opportunity to play and daydream and ruminate. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In Raymond Chandler’s pulp fic-

tion novel Farewell, My Lovely, his main character is detective Philip Marlowe. At one point Marlowe says, “I needed a drink, I needed a lot of life insurance, I needed a vacation, I needed a home in the country. What I had was a coat, a hat and a gun.” In accordance with your astrological omens, Capricorn, I’m asking you to figure out how you might be like Marlowe. Are there differences between what you think you need and what you actually have? If so, now is an excellent time to launch initiatives to fix the discrepancies. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): There’s a slightly better chance than usual that you will have a whirlwind affair with a Bollywood movie star who’s on vacation. The odds are also higher than normal that you will receive a tempting invitation from a secret admirer, or meet the soul twin you didn’t even know you were searching for, or get an accidental text message from a stranger who turns out to be the reincarnation of your beloved from a previous lifetime. But the likelihood of all those scenarios pales in comparison to the possibility that you will learn big secrets about how to make yourself even more lovable than you already are. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Author Eva Dane defines writer’s block as what happens “when your imaginary friends stop talking to you.” I suspect that something like this has been happening for you lately, Pisces—even if you’re not a writer. What I mean is that some of the most reliable and sympathetic voices in your head have grown quiet: ancestors, dear friends who are no longer in your life, ex-lovers you still have feelings for, former teachers who have remained a strong presence in your imagination, animals you once cared for who have departed, and maybe even some good, old-fashioned spirits and angels. Where did they go? What happened to them? I suspect they are merely taking a break. They may have thought it wise to let you fend for yourself for a while. But don’t worry. They will be back soon. ARIES (March 21-April 19): When the path ahead divides in two, Aries, I am hoping you can work some magic that will allow you to take both ways at once. If you do master this riddle, if you can creatively figure out how to split yourself without doing any harm, I have a strong suspicion that the two paths will once again come together no later than August 1, possibly before. But due to a curious quirk in the laws of life, the two forks will never again converge if you follow just one of them now. Homework: What’s the thing you lost that should stay lost? What’s the thing you lost that you should find? FreeWillAstrology.com


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Circus Museum 2 Go-getter 3 Waiting room query 4 DOS component? 5 Fictional typing tutor ___ Beacon 6 Latin list ender 7 Sound off 8 Lindros formerly of the NHL 9 Mandrill kin 10 Newsgroup system since 1980 11 Game with 32 pieces 14 Encyclopedia Brown’s hometown 15 Italian word for “milk” 20 2000 Subway Series losers 21 Hinduism, for example: abbr. 23 Hang out 26 Bristly brand 27 Like some

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CONTACT US Office: (888) 531-8411 Mobile: (423) 903-8543 www.prescreen1st.com chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 61


Roundabout Here Officer Alex bemoans the inability of Chattanoogans to catch on to the circle concept

The people of Europe figured this out before electric lighting was available, yet here we are...and those people put freakin’ mayonnaise on their fries.” When officer Alexander D. Teach is not patrolling our fair city on the heels of the criminal element, he spends his spare time volunteering for the Boehm Birth Defects Center. Follow him on Facebook at facebook.com/alexteach

To me, it is the essence of simplicity. Unlike a line, it doesn’t point anywhere or lead anywhere or even point at anything; it simply “is”. It’s its own beginning and ending. It makes me happy…and anyone that knows Officer Teach knows that he likes to be happy. W h e n Pope Julius II asked a ALEX famed artist to demonstrate his skill in the year 1508? The artist Giotto (not Michelangelo) used red paint to simply draw a circle freehand so perfect it appeared to have been drawn with a compass. Simple and to the point. So why is it the people of Chattanooga have lost their freakin’ minds over “roundabouts”? What is it about these recent additions over the last 10 years that leave people stupefied to the point of paralysis when they encounter one? The very essence of the

roundabout is perpetual motion, flow. The one thing you can do wrong is...stop. Yet every time I use one, there’s at least one or two cars sitting there alone, that triangular yield sign mocking them as they idle motionlessly below it, no other vehicles in sight. Yes, yes, sometimes the patTEACH tern is full of cars and you have to stop momentarily; I’m talking about the folks that run up to them and just put it in park. And when they finally figure out they’re the only ones not dancing at the party? BOOM, that’s about the time they dart in front of the only car that will come through for the next several minutes. But do roundabouts work? Without question. The Chattanooga intersection of North Access Road and what used to be Lake Resort Drive (be-

On The Beat

cause now, it’s a big damn circle instead of two lines so it only needs one name) used to be the second-most accidentprone intersection in the city, just after the grand champion intersection of Shallowford and Gunbarrel Roads (no roundabout there, mind you). Now? I’m not even sure it’s on the radar, because a T-bone crash is pretty damn tough to pull off when there isn’t a “T”. High volume and lots of stop-and-go traffic. Lots of irritated motorists in a country where 30 minutes was the most you could wait for pizza to be delivered to your doorstep. Four stop signs controlled the traffic there and they all started those cars off at zero miles per hour. A roundabout nearly eliminates stopping at all and only requires yielding, so you ease through in one hundredth of the time during high traffic hours, and save on fuel economy to boot. Yet despite all the advancements of humankind over the last century, as a people we still can’t figure this out. The people of Europe figured this out before electric lighting was available, yet here we are… and those people put freakin’ mayonnaise on their

fries. It’s different, but we must accept this change, people. Even my dear ol’ Luddite dad traded his precious Champion map book in for a Garmin for at least one trip. The Transportation Research Board conducted a survey of U.S. municipalities in 1998 that showed 68 percent of the citizens opposed roundabouts prior to their construction, but after they began actually using them, a follow-up survey showed the same citizens were now 73 percent in favor of them. (The key? “Actually using them.”) I think I’ve made my point. Do I regret not writing my usual fare about strippers and midgets and balloons? Sure. I’ve just had some bad experiences after being loaned out to police the Hixson area (or as I like to call it, “The Most Horrible Place to Work or Live, Ever”) and knew I had to use this vehicle to get the word out because I’m all about responsibility, people. There are rules. Some are complicated, some are even upsetting, but some are about as simple as a circle. (Next week, though, will be all about the aforementioned strippers and balloons. I promise.)

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RICK DAVIS GOLD & DIAMONDS 5301 Brainerd Rd at McBrien Rd • 423.499.9162 62 • The Pulse • May 15-21, 2014 • chattanoogapulse.com


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chattanoogapulse.com • May 15-21, 2014 • The Pulse • 63



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