A LOVE LETTER TO
MORGAN CREEK 64
TOWN & GOWN
GARDENS 54
LIVING IN
MEADOWMONT 76
CHAPELHILL APRIL 2018 CHAPELHILLMAGAZINE.COM
CHAPEL HILL • CARRBORO • HILLSBOROUGH • ORANGE COUNTY
shelter home & garden issue
amazing
spaces creative ideas for the home
page 34
PRETTY IN PINK
With help from her own mom, Molly Dansby made daughter Maeve’s room into an inspiring space
B E AUTI FU L
Exterior showcase-worthy looks and none of the maintenance wood requires. It’s what makes Zuri® Premium Decking by Royal® such a precious possession.
L e a r n m o r e a t I n s p i r e d B yZ u r i . c o m o r c a l l To m W i l h e l m a t 1 . 8 6 6 . 4 2 9 . 0 9 6 4 For product warranty details, please visit www.ZuriWarranty.com
© 2 0 1 8 R O YA L B U I L D I N G P R O D U C T S
T I M E L E S S LY
You Have A Vision for Yourself. Join thousands of patients who have let us make their vision a reality. At Aesthetic Solutions, we bring your vision to life by re-discovering your natural beauty to reveal a refreshed, younger version of yourself. Our customized treatment approach driven by Dr. Sue Ellen Cox, a pioneer in aesthetic
Services We Oer: Body Contouring
medicine, has transformed lives. Let us transform yours.
Laser Treatments
The very best in aesthetic medicine is right here in your
Injectable Treatments
backyard.
Spa Services Skincare Regimens
www.aesthetic-solutions.com | (919) 338-5007 5821 Farrington Road, Chapel Hill, NC 27517
Make an entrance with Garden Gate
CHAPELHILL
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com PUBLISHER
Ellen Shannon CHIEF VISUAL OFFICER & DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY
Briana Brough
EXECUTIVE EDITOR
Jessica Stringer
C R E AT I V E D I R E C T O R
Kevin Brown
ART DIRECTORS
Jennifer Hill, Jean Carlos Rosario-Montalvo EXECUTIVE EDITOR, DURHAM MAGAZINE
Amanda MacLaren
A S S O C I AT E E D I T O R
Holly West INTERNS
Olivia Cohen, Ashley Cruz, Isabel Drake, Kethan Fadale, Amelia Hanks, Sarah Jeffries, Kyndal Lemelin, Mattias Miller, Nicholas Motta, Kristi Piechnik, Anna Pogarcic, Savannah Shaney and Molly Weybright CONTRIBUTORS
Julia Baker, David Klein, Morton Neal, James Stefiuk, Morgan Cartier Weston
Celebrating 11 Years in business along with Chapel Hill Magazine!
ADVERTISING
For advertising inquiries, email advertising@chapelhillmagazine.com
Melissa Crane melissa@chapelhillmagazine.com Chris Elkins chris@chapelhillmagazine.com Kem Johnson kem@chapelhillmagazine.com Leslie Land leslie@durhammag.com
C O R P O R AT E
Dan Shannon President/Editorial Director Ellen Shannon COO Rory Kelly Gillis Managing Partner & Senior VP Amy Bell Vice President/Administration Caroline Kornegay Administrative and Production Assistant Elitegroup Distribution
2015
SCOTT NILSEN | 919-225-6026 gardengatenc.com | scott@gardengatenc.com
Chapel Hill Magazine is published 8 times per year by Shannon Media, Inc. 1777 Fordham Blvd., Suite 105, Chapel Hill, NC 27514 tel 919.933.1551 fax 919.933.1557 Subscriptions $38 for 2 years – subscribe at chapelhillmagazine.com
2014 BEST REGIONAL MAGAZINE (CONSUMER)
2
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
Thinking of selling your home? Worried that your house is out of style? We’ve got the buyers! Choose the #1 to Real Head to HPW.com findEstate the latest Company the to Triangle home tips andin tricks make your who manages 65% the house the best on theof block. relocation to the area.
Check it out at HPW.com/HomeTips andCheck don’t lose another night of sleep. us out at HPW.com
HPW.com
APRIL
C H A P E L H I L L M A G A Z I N E . C O M
V O L U M E
1 3
N U M B E R
3
FEATURES 92 New on the Food Scene
What you should be eating and drinking around town
IN EVERY ISSUE 6
Letter from the Executive Editor
8
Noted
28 5 Events Not to Miss
32 SHELTER 32
30
Books A two-volume anthology revives former Hillsborough slave Elizabeth Keckley’s story
98 Taste Find our area’s best restaurants 109 Engagement Rachel Cook & Matt Ruterbories 110 Weddings Helen Meyer & Lee Frankstone Courtney Holland & Jason Fearrington Carolyn Stotts & Jake Gann
Three Organized Spaces
Follow these tips for a clutter-free, functional home
38 Shop Local
Funky spring finds to spruce up your space
PEOPLE & PLACES 12
42 Get Your Home Ready for Spring
14 PORCH celebrates $2 million in donations
Gardening basics, what to plant, painting tips and more
16 Chapel Hill High School Hit-a-thon
54 Town & Gown Gardens
18 In Our Schools
Get a sneak peek of the Chapel Hill Garden Tour
20 Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chamber of Commerce’s 75th Annual Meeting
60 Preserving the Legacy
21
Renovations begin on a historic home owned by the Fridays A Morgan Creek playhouse gets a second life
76
Neighborhoods
What we love about living in Meadowmont
YouthWorx on Main open house
22 Acme Food & Beverage Co.’s 20th birthday
64 A Home for All
PTA Reflections Art Show
23 Shack, Rattle & Roll for SKJAJA
64
24 Writers for Readers 25 Clarity Legal Group open house 26 FRANK’s gallery opening and the Mixed Concrete Art Show
Dr. David Lee Hill, Jr. Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon 77 Vilcom Center Circle, Suite 120 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 919-238-9961
Are you in need of oral surgery? If your dentist has recommended oral surgery, whether it’s to remove one or more
Meet Dr. David Lee Hill, Jr.
teeth, implants, or something more involved, you probably have a lot of questions
People who meet Dr. Hill are quickly won over by his knowledge and easy-going
and concerns. What are my options? What about cost? What can I expect? Will I be
style. He is a stickler for detail and in his profession, every little detail matters.
in pain? How long will it take? What kind of surgical safeguards are used?
His commitment to patient safety protocols and surgical precision as well as
It’s normal to be apprehensive about a surgical procedure and at Chapel Hill
his uncompromising philosophy toward care is reflected in the state-of-the-art
Implant and Oral Surgery Center, they understand. That is why Dr. Hill has created
surgical facility he has designed from the ground up. He also places emphasis on
a top notch facility and a team of professionals whose one goal is to help you
his patient’s comfort and it shows - from the warm and inviting surroundings to
understand your options and make your procedure as stress free as possible.
the caring staff, focused on the patient’s well being.
You are invited to experience what makes Chapel Hill Implant and Oral Surgery
If your case calls for implant or oral surgery, let Dr. Hill and his capable team
Center different. Call them for a personal consultation and case review. They will
welcome you for a tour and a discussion about your unique needs.
welcome you with a guided tour of their state-of-the-art surgical facility and take the time to answer all of your questions.
W W W.C H A P E L H I L LO R A L S U R G E R Y.C O M
L E T T E R
F R O M
T H E
E X E C U T I V E
E D I T O R
O
PRICELESS GEMS ON MARCH 29, 1982, two men celebrated the UNC win over Georgetown. In New Orleans, the
“Voice of the Tar Heels,” Woody Durham, was ecstatic in his final calls as his team won their first championship under Coach Dean Smith. In Chapel Hill, my grandfather, Luke Stephens, was with my grandmother, Elaine, on campus, where the empty-nesters reveled alongside the college kids. This year, we lost both Woody and my grandfather, and I couldn’t help but notice their similarities. Both North Carolina natives were fond of football great Charlie “Choo Choo” Justice. Both gave their time to good causes. (I always made a point to say “hi” to Woody and wife Jean at Roy Williams’ Fast Break Against Cancer, a benefit for UNC Lineberger.) They watched so many games in the same building – my grandfather from his season ticket seats while Woody, of course, sat closer to the floor of the Smith Center. Two days after my grandfather Luke passed away, Luke Maye had one of the best games of his career – I got goosebumps hearing fans yell “LUUUUKE.” Woody died the morning of UNC’s first game in the ACC Tournament. Both men would have hated missing those games. This is the first spring I can’t call my grandfather and talk Tar Heel basketball. Usually I’d be right around Caffe Driade where East Franklin Street starts to climb and bend when he’d pick up. Enjoying the weather with my window down, I’d say, “Well, Granddaddy, it’s a beautiful day down here in Chapel Hill. The sky’s Carolina blue.” I’d be passing under all those green tree branches arching over Franklin Street by the time he’d say, “Awww, Chapel Hill ...” I knew he was reminiscing. I’d see Chapel of the Cross on my left and his Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house on the right, two places that were home to him in Chapel Hill. If it wasn’t for him, I wouldn’t be here now. I say it a lot, but I’m grateful to call this place home. I’m glad those two men found happiness here in Chapel Hill, and I’ll miss them both. CHM
JESSICA STRINGER @jessstringer jessica@chapelhillmagazine.com
6
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
®ROBERTOCOIN
PRINCESS FLOWER COLLECTION
NOTED.
SEND U N O T S YO U R E M O MW O R T H ENTS Y From ! to ne births t o w biz
a
awar d
nd m note ore –s d@ch maga apelh zine. comill
WHAT WE’VE HEARD AROUND TOWN …
CHEERS Samantha Marrone
is officially an American citizen! Samantha and husband Angelo, owners and operators of Chapel Hill favorite Italian Pizzeria III, are pictured here with their children Mariafrancesca, Antonio and Valentina after the citizenship ceremony.
been promoted
The organization hopes to accelerate the startups to self-sustaining businesses in a 22-week program.
to sergeant after five years with the
Orange County Department on Aging’s
Carrboro Police
Dementia Friendly Orange County recently
Department.
renewed their partnerships with three local organizations – the Law Office of Colin K. Austin, the Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA and Maitland and English Law Firm – in the commitment to be more accommodating to those with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias.
Officer Jordan Armstrong has
Chapel Hill native Rayshun LaMarr has scored a spot on Team Adam for season 14 of “The Voice” with his performance of “Don’t Stop Believin’” by Journey.
Kidzu Children’s Museum celebrated its
Chapel Hill High senior Seth Samuelson
12th birthday in March with special guests including Rameses Jr.
earned the rank of Eagle Scout in February for his work refurbishing a butterfly garden and construction of two playground benches for Seawell Elementary. Seth says the support of scoutmaster Jimmy Workman, his family and everyone in Troop 59 helped him through the process. 8
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
BUSINESS BRIEFS Launch Chapel Hill inducted 12 new
members for 2018 during their fifth anniversary celebration in February. Included among the startups are: MoyoMedical Technologies, Viva Biliteracy, AITS, British Taxi, ChartMyMatch, Daily Fantasy Insider LLC, enrollmentFUEL, Epione.ai, Isaiah Miner, Let’s Room Together, Nemen Solutions and VIYB.
Husband-and-wife duo Doug Pierson and Youn Choi have relocated their architecture and experimental graphics firm, pod architecture + design, from Durham to Carrboro’s historic train depot, The Station. 1870 Farm expanded its programming to a
new location, Old Mill Farm of Durham, just south of The Streets at Southpoint, in March. The new 20-acre property features more programs for toddlers and children, such as summer camps and workshops.
AND THE AWARD GOES TO… Orange Water And Sewer Authority
PHOTO COURTESY OF TRINITY PARTNERS
(OWASA) received the President’s Award for Distribution System Operation from the Partnership for Safe Water. The third utility in the U.S. to receive this award, OWASA was recognized for meeting highly stringent optimization goals while providing drinking water quality that surpasses regulatory requirements.
WHEN ONE DOOR CLOSES... Tarheel Town Pharmacy held a grand
opening in late March. The business, located in East Main Square, is run by Malli Hadimani. Studio Design Gallery in The Courtyard
has closed after four years of providing a curated art space. Francesca’s women’s boutique has
opened a location in Carolina Square. The Strowd, a bar and events space
above Sutton’s Drug Store, closed after four years of operation due to leasing issues, but management plans to open in a yet-to-be-announced new location under a new name.
No. 1 in the Final Ranking of the United States Tennis Association Boys 12 and Under Division.
137 East Franklin, the building that
connects Franklin and Rosemary streets in downtown Chapel Hill, is now The Central. The rebranding goes along with a new management company, Trinity Partners, and major renovations to the building’s facade and lobby, with more updates to come. It remains under the ownership of ATCO and Zapolski Real Estate.
Cody Benton received his letter for reaching
WHAT AN HONOR
Chapel Hill Country
Nearly 40 seniors from local high schools were selected as semifinalists for National Merit Scholarships. Semifinalists from Carrboro High: Hope B. Anderson, Jackson L. Asaro, Katherine F. Brownstein, Andre F. Javan, Elena K. Peot, Arjun Shankar and Sophia D. Therber. From Chapel Hill High: Silas R. Buckner, Andrew M. Campbell, Garrett F. Chappell, Lena A. Cohen, Anne Crabill, Sayali Gove, Douglas Heine, Jerry W. Ji, Benjamin D. Rampel, John Rich, Maggie Weber, Li-Anne W. Wright, Eric Xu and Tyler D. Yandrofski. From East Chapel
Club is on a
Hill High: Thomas A. Brodey, Yixuan Cao,
Chef David Voelz of Galloway Ridge at Fearrington won the Silver Spoon Award at The Big Deal Casino Night Share to Care Gala in February for his venison tenderloin. The Silver Spoon recognizes taste, presentation and creativity.
winning streak! After being voted Best Sports Club in Chapel Hill in 2017, two of its members have recently distinguished themselves in the tennis world. Head Tennis Professional Mic Wallace was named Head Professional of the Year by the United States Professional Tennis Association.
Katherine H. Characklis, Dawn E. Culton, Kevin Day, Joie Y. Dong, Vincent Y. Du, Martin A. Hito, Alexander Hoerler, Finley S. James, Kelly D. Lin, Frances O’Grady, Jack C. Phillips, Jennifer H. Qian, Mian A. Qin, Sarah E. Stevens, Albert Tsui and Victor Q. Zhao. Nadiya Farrington, a senior at Chapel Hill High School, is the only young woman of
five North Carolina Career and Technical Education students to advance to the semifinals level in the National Presidential April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
9
N O T E D
Carrboro bike shop The Clean Machine has been selected as one of the National Bicycle Dealers Association’s Best Bike Shops of 2017.
Artwork by James Carter was selected to be featured in this year’s Smithsonian Craft Show in April. James is a longtime metalworker and has been operating out of his studio in Carr Mill Mall for almost ten years. Dr. Chris Adigun of Dermatology & Laser Center of Chapel Hill was featured twice
on the North Carolina Public Radio podcast The People’s Pharmacy in January to talk about how to keep nails healthy and beautiful. Chapel Hill native Dean Weld was awarded a Ph.D. in November from the University of Albany. He will be hooded at a graduation ceremony in May. The Hillsborough/Orange County Chamber of Commerce honored several local businesses and people at their annual
“ i have a
voice
“
Scholars Program for 2018. Nadiya will join Cornell University’s top-ranked undergraduate architecture program this fall. She balances academics, clubs, varsity volleyball and community service — excelling in all. She has participated in architecture summer programs at NC State and University of Tennessee and received a scholarship to Cornell’s Introduction to Architecture 2017 summer program.
MAY 5, 2018 • CAROLINA CLUB • CHAPEL HILL, NC
10
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
awards ceremony in January. Lindsley Bowen of Carlisle & Linny Vintage Jewelry was awarded Small-Business Person of the Year; Hillsborough’s Shannan Campbell was the recipient of the Making a Difference Award; Hoof Beat Farm’s Rachel Hawkins won the Commitment to Service Award; Dani Black of Bigger Tables won the Helping Hand Award; and Orange Community Players was honored as Non-Profit of the Year. McPherson Cleaners won the 2018 Award
of Excellence for Quality Garment Care and Customer Service from the Dry Cleaning and Laundry Institute International. This is their 13th time receiving the award. For the third year in a row, Bold Construction won the Best of Houzz 2018 Award from Houzz.com in the client satisfaction category. –Kethan Fadale CHM
GiGi’s Playhouse Raleigh provides FREE therapeutic, educational and career development programs for individuals of all ages with Down syndrome.
2018 GALA JOIN US AT OUR
• TICKETS ON SALE AT • gigisplayhouse.org/raleigh
Franklin Street Realty proudly connects with these local organizations and non-profits
FO R F REE
A L
LL
6
1
A
20
V
OV E
se
r
-2 5,
ES
e
F
U
S
G
O
M
25
A
emb pt
24
S M U
DS ALL KIN
IC
ON
TS AC
0
R
8
T
C
RRBOR
1
O
A
I F E ST
SI C, ALL
TO OVER
W
N
,
Celebrating Chapel Hill Hip Hop Culture
Franklin Street Realty is connected to the community What does “connected to the community” mean? It’s living and working in the Chapel Hill, Carrboro and Durham area for decades It’s investing in our towns by sponsoring local events and supporting our home grown businesses like VibeHouse 405, a new art gallery and recording studio at 405 W. Franklin Street Once again sponsoring Hillmatic – April 6-7 – a music festival, which brings together all types of people and all kinds of music at Local 506 and the Cat’s Cradle Franklin Street Realty – connected to the community for 25 years
Hillmatic 2017
919.929.7174 • franklinstreetrealty.com • 1525 E. Franklin Street • Chapel Hill
P E O P L E
&
P L A C E S
2
1
3
4
EXPRESS YOURSELF
5
PHOTOGRAPHY BY SHEPARD BARNES
The annual Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools PTA Reflections Art Show was held at in University Place in February. Art pieces created by local students from 11 schools were on display in FRANK Gallery’s new Outreach Gallery space. Griffin Kalavsky of Carrboro Elementary, Ariya Jensen of Smith Middle and Mena Boggs of Estes Hills Elementary won at the state level while Katarina Rosario-Soto (daughter of Chapel Hill Magazine’s Jean Carlos Rosario-Montalvo) of McDougle Elementary will be representing the district at the national competition. CHM
12
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
1 Georgie Geier
3 JaBria Oliver, 17,
and Elizabeth Geier.
and Malachi Edwards, 9.
2 Chapel Hill Magazine’s 4 Maggie Robe, Jessica Stringer, Sarah Arneson, Chapel Hill Magazine’s Jean Carlos Rosario-Montalvo and son Carlos Andrés Rosario-Soto, 4.
Ada Watson and Morgan Watson.
5 Piper Lenhardt, 7, and Naomi Conitzer, 7.
Building HOMES. Creating COMMUNITIES. C OMMUN I T I E S
Serving Chapel Hill since 1972 Franklin Grove • Chancellors View • Winmore • The Cedars of Bolin Forest… and many more
kovensconstruction.com • 919-942-8005 • facebook.com/kovensconstruction 258 East Winmore Ave., Chapel Hill, NC 27516
P E O P L E
&
P L A C E S
1
2
3
4
5
MILLIONS FOR MEALS PHOTOGRAPHY BY MOLLY WEYBRIGHT
PORCH, the volunteer organization that distributes food to hundreds of at-risk
families in Chapel Hill and Carrboro, crossed the $2-million mark in donations for hunger relief this February. Co-founder Susan Romaine, Chapel Hill Town Council member Karen Stegman, Carrboro Mayor Pro Tem Damon Seils and volunteer Michael Smith spoke at the celebration, which occurred during the organization’s monthly food sorting at St. Thomas More Catholic Church. CHM
14
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
6 1 Ashley Mattison
4 Hurt Covington
and Kevin McNeilly.
and Catherine Singley.
2 Constance Nelson
5 Rosemary Pierce
and Chelsey Phelps.
and Cathy Ruvane.
3 PORCH founders
6 Hannah Cefalo
Susan Romaine and Debbie Horwitz, speaker Michael Smith, PORCH founder Christine Cotton and speakers Karen Stegman and Damon Seils.
and Lisa Josephs.
P E O P L E
&
P L A C E S
1
2
4
3
HIT-A-THON HOME RUN PHOTOGRAPHY BY KRISTI PIECHNIK
Baseball fans of all ages flocked to Chapel Hill High School for the annual fundraiser, Hit-a-thon, in February. Participants donated $5 to the team for 10 swings at bat and an opportunity to win Tiger merchandise and an autographed Tiger team baseball. High school players guided 8-year-old hopefuls to the plate while JV dad Jimmy Grant filled stomachs thanks to his master grill skills. CHM
16
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
5 1 Chapel Hill High baseball players William Eble, Tyler Hansen and Colin Liebe.
2 Parker Currin, 7, Patrick Currin and Reed Currin, 5.
3 Troy Munday, 8 and Neal Mankowski, 9.
6 4 Thomas Roberts, 12 and Mike Roberts. 5 Assistant Coach Logan Howard and Head Coach Lee Land.
6 Tigers players Solomon Donaldson and Tim White.
Children’s Boutique
919 967 2919 puddlebaby.com Galleria • 400 S. Elliott Rd. Next to Purple Puddle
Informational Tours Kids Activities
Fiber Arts Classes
Alpaca Gifts For All
Handmade Fiber Products
No pets allowed • Limited Handicap Accessibility • Please join our Facebook group for more details.
Laina Peck-Bostwick • Operations Executive • (336) 465 - 8211 • 7084 US Highway 64 West, Pittsboro, NC 27312
mmalpacasofnc@gmail.com • www.mmalpacafarmofnc.openherd.com April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
17
P E O P L E
&
P L A C E S
IN OUR SCHOOLS
Fifth-graders at Emerson Waldorf School recently performed the play “Gilgamesh” for parents and peers. “Gilgamesh” is a Sumerian epic about the semi-mythical king Gilgamesh of Uruk. The students learned about the culture and traditions of Sumerian people to prepare for the play and worked with Kim Black, a costume designer and parent, to craft costumes, crowns, thrones and scepters. Frank Porter Graham Bilingüe held its annual Carnaval community-building
and fundraiser event as Mardi Gras was celebrated around the world. Each class selected a king and queen, created a wagon float representing their selected country and hosted a game from that country. Families watched as students, led by the drum club king and queen from last year’s favorite float, paraded around the school. After the parade, families played games representing the various countries, ate dinner and purchased raffle tickets. Second-graders at Carrboro Elementary School held their third annual Sound Museum for parents and families in February. Students explored the properties of sound and how it travels and changes in science class. Each student then created an informational book to teach others about what they learned. The second-graders made use of their school’s makerspace to plan and create an original instrument to produce all sorts of unique sounds. 18
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
Northside Elementary School held its annual Read-
A-Thon Fundraiser in February to bring awareness to the importance of reading. Students found sponsors who made a pledge to donate money for every 10 minutes they read or a flat, one-time donation. Students decorated superhero masks and turned themselves into reading superheroes using the green screen in the learning lab. The weeklong celebration included local celebrity guests like authors Kelly Starling Lyons, Missy Julian Fox and Linda Ashman, former NBA and UNC basketball star Eric Montross, the mayors of Chapel Hill and Carrboro, and CHCCS Superintendent Pam Baldwin. CHM
Drs. Frost, Sacco, Vandersea, Ruvo and Serlo practice a full scope of oral and maxillofacial surgery with expertise ranging from corrective jaw surgery to wisdom tooth removal.
DAVID E. FROST DDS, MS
CHAPEL HILL 919.929.2196
DEBRA M. SACCO DMD, MD
DURHAM 919.479.0707
BRIAN VANDERSEA DDS
SANFORD 919.775.1615
ANDREW T. RUVO DMD, MD ADAM D. SERLO DMD, MD
OMSANC.COM
DENTAL IMPLANTS • BONE GRAFTING • WISDOM TEETH • FACIAL TRAUMA • CORRECTIVE JAW SURGERY • PRE-PROSTHETIC SURGERY • ORAL PATHOLOGY • SLEEP APNEA
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
19
P E O P L E
&
P L A C E S
CHEERS TO THE CHAMBER PHOTOGRAPHY BY NICOLE DANIELLE PHOTOGRAPHY
Chamber staff Nicholas Johnson, director of member programs and engagement; Rebecca Dickenson, vice president for membership; Vanessa Watson, member relations specialist; Aaron Nelson, president and CEO; Amy Grau, member engagement and executive assistant to the president; Katie R. Loovis, vice president for external affairs; and Justin Simmons, vice president and chief of staff.
20
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
Some 400 community leaders gathered in February for the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chamber of Commerce’s 75th Annual Meeting. The chamber announced it would support four new initiatives this year: the Small Business Energy Initiative, the Carrboro Business Alliance, a chamber rebranding effort and its biggest membership drive since 2010. Awards were given to retiring Chapel Hill Town Manager Roger L. Stancil, Town Council Member Donna Bell, Brett Bushnell of Tri Local Realty LLC and Nancy Williams of Carolina Capital Solutions while Duke Energy President and CEO Lynn Good gave the keynote address. CHM
P E O P L E
1
2
&
P L A C E S
3
1 PTA Thrift Shop board member Margot Carmichael Lester and Executive Director Barbara JessieBlack.
2 Tabitha Blackwell, executive director of Youth Forward, and Russ Alvis, director of finance for the PTA Thrift Shop.
3 YouthWorx intern Jacob Hancock and Pat Richardson, director of communications and community relations at PTA Thrift Shop.
PARTNERING FOR YOUTH PHOTOGRAPHY BY HOLLY WEST YouthWorx on Main held an open
house reception and tour in February to educate community members about its efforts to improve collaboration between youth-focused nonprofits. A partnership between the PTA Thrift Shop and Youth Forward, the office space includes individual offices as well as conference areas. Current tenants include SKJAJA, the Art Therapy Institute, Healthy Girls Save the World, Musical Empowerment, the Refugee Community Partnership, the Reintegration Support Network and Triangle Bikeworks. CHM
HARD HATS FASHION SHOW
4TH ANNUAL FASHION SHOW SATURDAY
APRIL 28, 2018 6PM RIZZO CENTER, CHAPEL HILL
TICKETS ON SALE NOW ORANGEHABITAT.ORG/FASHIONSHOW TICKETS ARE SELLING FAST. GET YOURS TODAY! FASHION PROVIDED BY
919-932-7077 | 88 Vilcom Center Drive, Suite L110 | Chapel Hill, NC 27514 development@orangehabitat.org |
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
21
P E O P L E
&
P L A C E S
1
2
3 1 Acme chef/owner Kevin Callaghan and TOPO Organic Spirits’ Esteban McMahan.
2 Ryan Hallett, Grace Noppert and Amy Hallett.
McPherson Cleaners Family-Owned for 3 Generations Serving Orange County and Alamance County since 1953
3 Event volunteers Agnes Ezekwesili, Uzorma Owete, Melanie Langness and Don Fejfar.
THE BIG 2-0 PHOTOGRAPHY BY ANNA ROUTH
Quality Workmanship and Customer Service Dry Cleaning • Wedding Dress • Dress Shirts Cleaning & Preservation • Monthly Billing Leather and Fur • Christening Gowns Wet Cleaning • Smoke & Water Damage Off-Season Storage Drapery Take-down & Re-hang Visit us online at
mcphersondrycleaners.com
Visit w e our n l Hill e p a h C ation loc tgate s at Ea ssing! o r C
We are your local cleaning experts! Winners of the Award of Excellence in Quality Garment Care & Customer Service since 2005
22
1800 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill
100 Millstead Drive Mebane
2469 S. Church Street Burlington
919.929.4281
919.304.2074
336.570.0800
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
Acme Food & Beverage Co. celebrated
its 20th birthday in February with a party held right behind the restaurant in a big top heated tent. Guests made their way down a red carpet into the tent to enjoy music, dancing and TOPO Organic Spirits cocktails created especially for the event. The party raised funds for the Be Loud! Sophie Foundation, which supports adolescent and young adult cancer patients and their families at UNC Hospitals. CHM
P E O P L E
1
&
P L A C E S
2
1 Lisa Inman, Leigh Staelin, Wendy Riggsbee, Charlotte White and Darrah Wilkerson.
2 Aaron Keck and Brad Bednar.
SHACK, RATTLE & ROLL
Your place for weight loss & wellness. It is not just about losing weight. It is about getting the life-altering benefits that come with it.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF SKJAJA Al’s Burger Shack hosted its second
annual Shack, Rattle & Roll at The Great Room at Top of the Hill to benefit the SKJAJA Fund. Guests and the organization’s sponsors gathered for dancing, appetizers and live music from Liquid Pleasure. SKJAJA provides funding for kids from families with limited resources to participate in extracurricular activities, and in exchange, the students give back to the community. CHM
Offering a comprehensive personalized approach to help individuals achieve sustainable weight loss.
• One, Two, Three or Four Week Residential-style Weight Loss Programs • BOD POD Body Composition Testing • OPTIFAST Meal Replacement Program
Visit dukedietandfitness.org to learn more.
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
23
P E O P L E
&
P L A C E S
1
2 1 Allison Polish, Joe Rice and Tamara Rice. 2 Gina Mahalek, Elaine Maisner, Talia Sherer and John Sherer.
EAT, DRINK, READ, WRITE PHOTOS COURTESY OF ORANGE LITERACY
Food writers and chefs convened in February to discuss the production, preparation and consumption of food at Writers for Readers, an annual fundraiser for Orange Literacy. A panel including local chefs Andrea Reusing of Lantern and Bill Smith of Crook’s Corner, in addition to well-
known food memoirists Kim Sunée and Jessica Harris, discussed how food binds families, defines identities and marks the milestones of people’s lives. Funds raised for Orange Literacy go toward providing free, individualized literacy instruction to adults. CHM
24
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
P E O P L E
1
&
P L A C E S
2
3 1 Larry Loeser, Chapel Hill Magazine’s Ellen Shannon and Dan Shannon.
2 Clarity Legal Group’s Mark Costley, Margaret Costley and Jonathan Williams.
3 Steve Gunter and Linda Peterson.
CLARITY’S NEW BEGINNING PHOTOS COURTESY OF CLARITY LEGAL GROUP
Clarity Legal Group recently held an
open house for its new office at The Exchange West at Meadowmont. More than 250 clients and friends of the firm from the Triangle and around the state were in attendance, excited to mark the occasion. Mark Costley, founder of the firm, says the event was a great start for the new office. CHM
Where art, science & technology meet Come experience the gentle side of Dentistry Preventive, Restorative & Cosmetic Dentistry
Mandy Ghaffarpour, DDS, Scott R. Hardin, DDS & Steven M. Hart, DMD Studio G is Now Welcoming New Patients!
DRS. GHAFFARPOUR AND HART ARE PANKEY AFFILIATED DENTISTS
2010-2017
104 N. Elliott Rd, Chapel Hill, NC 27514
919.942.7163 | StudioGDentist.com
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
25
P E O P L E
&
P L A C E S
A FRESH FRANK PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRAND FORTNER
An estimated 500 people stopped by FRANK’s new gallery in University Place during their opening night in February. The nonprofit organization and artist run collective gallery works to promote local art and artists through events, programs and educational outreach to better serve the community through the arts. The new location allows FRANK to use space on the other end of the mall to run and host outreach programs. CHM
Board Member Lisa Brown, Member Chair Jean LeCluyse and Board Member Diane Amato.
The Place to Be! UNC Habitat Co-Presidents Melissa White, Sarah Renfro and Sara Rogers.
CHAPEL HILL FAVORITE FOR 38 YEARS
BEST PHILLY CHEESE STEAK IN THE TRIANGLE!
County’s annual fundraiser, hosted by
WINNER
508 WEST FRANKLIN STREET, CHAPEL HILL
BEST
919 968 4671 • italianpizzeria3.com
26
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
PHOTOGRAPHY BY ELIZABETH MEACHAM Habitat for Humanity of Orange
ITALIAN PIZZERIA III
FOR CATERING OF ANY OCCASION, PLEASE GIVE US A CALL!
A CONCRETE FOUNDATION
OF CHAPEL HILL M AG A ZI NE
the UNC chapter of the organization in late February, successfully auctioned off more than 60 locally made mixed concrete art pieces at The Great Room at Top of the Hill. The $8,000 raised will go toward the organization’s goal of $20,000 to build a home for a university employee. The UNC group is just one of two in the nation to receive a $20,000 matching grant from State Farm. CHM
A PLACE TO LIVE, WORK & PLAY.
WINNER
BEST OF CHAPEL HILL
HIGH STYLE. BOUTIQUES. RESTAURANTS. ALOFT HOTEL. FITNESS STUDIO AND MUCH MORE!
VOTED BEST ASIAN FOOD, SUSHI AND SEAFOOD!
Thank You!
East 54
Wine Spectator Award of Excellence 2015-2017 Open Table Diners’ Choice Award 2012-2017 Trip Advisor Certificate of Excellence 2015-2016
Sushi Nights Every Thursday, Friday and Saturday ••• 2110 Environ Way, Chapel Hill • Minutes from UNC and I-40 elementsofchapelhill.com • 919.537.8780
WINNER
BEST OF CHAPEL HILL
HAIR • WAXING • FACIALS 919.929.2209 • 3110 ENVIRON WAY • CITRINESALONNC.COM
TOP 100 SALONS IN U.S. 2011+2012+2013+2014
1450 ENVIRON WAY CHAPEL HILL | 919.929.0660 | WWW.EAST54.COM
5 EVENTS
NOT TO MISS Near & Far APRIL 8, 2 p.m. nearandfarchapelhill.com
Celebrate the community’s cultural groups as they share their heritage. Participate in crafts, activities and interactive experiences as musical, dance and art performances take place on the stage and on 140 West Plaza. Enjoy international tastings as food trucks make an appearance. Free admission. 28
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
5th Annual Ackland Artini APRIL 7, 7 p.m. ackland.org
Enjoy an elegant night out at the Ackland Art Museum sipping cocktails and tasting delicious appetizers from local spots, while meeting with 18thcentury artist and connoisseur Madame Adèle Pastel during the final night of their exhibition “Becoming a Woman in the Age of Enlightenment.” Tickets: $50+
TASTE the Event APRIL 18, 19, 21, 22 tastetheevent.com Presented by Shannon Media, Inc. and Johnson Lexus, this four-day festival kicks off on Wednesday, April 18, with a gluten-free dinner at Primal Food & Spirits, followed by the Grand TASTE Experience at the Durham Armory on Thursday. Enjoy food and drink samples from the best restaurants and local artisans – make sure to come hungry! Finish up the weekend with the Brews & Barbecue Bus Tour on Saturday and Artisan Cocktail Dinner at The Rickhouse on Sunday. A portion of the proceeds supports Meals on Wheels. Check tastetheevent.com for tickets and availability.
PHOTO BY BRIANA BROUGH
held at The Friday Center. Kids of all ages will have the opportunity to enjoy emergency, construction, landscaping, military, transportation and delivery vehicles in a safe, supervised environment. Tickets are $6 and children under 2 are free. (Rain date April 29)
Compass Center’s Spring Benefit Luncheon APRIL 18, 11:30 a.m. compassctr.org
In lieu of their annual art show, the Compass Center for Women and
10th Annual Touch A Truck APRIL 15, 12 p.m. touchatruckchapelhill.com
Help raise money for the N.C. Children’s Hospital and Boy Scout Troop 39 programs at this family-friendly event
Families hosts a benefit luncheon at the Sheraton Chapel Hill Hotel. This new,
mission-centered event will feature former clients sharing their inspirational stories and WUNC’s Phoebe Judge, co-founder of the podcast “Criminal,” as the guest speaker. Tickets: $80+ –Ashley Cruz CHM
Science for all.
onth a full m l fun! Enjoy festiva e c n ie of sc
APRIL 2018
Photo credit: Heidi Carlone
Photo credit: Mary Lide Parker
Copyright Š 2017 SAS Institute Inc. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission
Join us for a month-long, 500-mile-wide, statewide celebration of science! Find an event near you at: www.ncsciencefestival.org
HOPE. BELONGING. DIGNITY. PURPOSE.
Club Nova is a nonprofit community center for people with serious mental illness providing employment, education, social opportunities, and more. Support the Club with a donation.
To Learn More About Our Capital Campaign, go to:
clubnova.org/building-campaign Or contact Associate Director, Sadie Brooks at admin@clubnova.org or call 919-968-6682
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
29
LOCAL LIT NEW BOOKS FROM AN AREA PUBLISHER
THE ELIZABETH KECKLEY READER A FORMER HILLSBOROUGH SLAVE’S STORY IS REVIVED WITH THE PUBLICATION OF A TWO-VOLUME ACCOMPANYING ANTHOLOGY.
E
lizabeth Hobbs Keckley published her story, “Behind the Scenes, Or, Thirty
Years a Slave, and Four Years in the White House,” in 1868. It details her difficult life as a slave in Hillsborough, her journey to freedom in St. Louis and her eventual success as a seamstress that led to a close relationship with Mary Todd Lincoln. Now, Eno Publishers has published “The Elizabeth Keckley Reader,” a twovolume collection of interpretive and analytical essays edited by Sheila Smith McKoy. As noted in Volume 1, Elizabeth was “perfectly aware of the ease with which she could escape, but since by law she was a slave, she chose freedom only by such means as that same law provided.” Her story is in turns hopeful and heartbreaking, but always beautifully written. Determined to earn her freedom legally, Elizabeth describes one of the many obstacles she faced during her journey: “The cloud had no silver lining now. The rosebuds of hope had withered and died without lifting up their heads to receive the dew kiss of the morning. There was no morning for me – all was night, dark night.” Later, “a ray of sunshine” in the form of one of her friends brought her hope again and the news she had been waiting for: “Free! The earth wore a brighter look, and the very stars seemed to sing with joy.” However, as the volumes illustrate, although Elizabeth’s story was well written and supported by letters, documents and facts, many white readers at the time did not see it as valid or valuable; their view was that a person of Elizabeth’s standing could only have their story truthfully told by their owner or employer. These new books not only validate her story – they provide insight and historical context that solidify its staying power as a tale of tenacity and determination during our nation’s most tempestuous period. –Morgan Cartier Weston CHM 30
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
MEMORIAL HALL, CHAPEL HILL
Mozart & Mendelssohn TUES, MAY 8 | 7:30PM
Grant Llewellyn, conductor
Samuel Almaguer, clarinet
Hear Mozart’s delightful Figaro overture and his last orchestral work, the serene Clarinet Concerto. Mendelssohn’s romantic “Scottish” symphony is inspired by the drama of Scottish history, remembered among the ruins of ancient castles.
Tickets start at just $18! ncsymphony.org | 919.733.2750
TOWN & GOWN
A LOVE LETTER TO
MORGAN CREEK 64
GARDENS 54
LIVING IN
MEADOW MONT 76
CH A P E LH ILL LLSBOROUGH CARRBORO • HI CHAPEL HILL •
APRIL 2018 NE.COM
CHAPELHILLMAGAZI
NTY • ORANGE COU
shelter home & garden issue
spaces
amazing
creative ideas for the home
K PRETTY IN PIN
With help from her own mom, Molly Dansby made daughter Maeve’s room into an inspiring space
page 34
DON’T MISS A SINGLE ISSUE! SUBSCRIBE TODAY! GO TO CHAPELHILLMAGAZINE.COM CHECK OUR DAILY BLOG POSTS. FOLLOW US ON 1777 FORDHAM BLVD, SUITE 105 CHAPEL HILL NC 27514 tel 919.933.1551 • fax 919.933.1557
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
31
•
shelter
spaces three organized
FOLLOW THESE TIPS TO KEEP YOUR HOME CLUTTERFREE AND FUNCTIONAL BY HOLLY WEST | PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRIANA BROUGH
make your own mudroom
W The mudroom’s location right off the kitchen makes it easy for Ashley Clarke’s two daughters to keep everything from homework to winter coats nearby and neatly organized.
32
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
ITH TWO YOUNG DAUGHTERS, Ashley Clarke says her family was in
desperate need of a mudroom in a home that didn’t have one. “Backpacks, rain boots, seasonal gear and all kinds of odds and ends with nowhere to hide had me searching for solutions,” she says. With the help of an online storage solutions company, easyclosets.com, the interior designer turned a utility closet off the kitchen into a place to store coats, shoes, homework and other miscellaneous items out of sight while still keeping them accessible for the girls. Since the wall space was covered with storage, Ashley made the ceiling and top of the walls her design focus. She painted them a soft blush (Benjamin Moore Conch Shell) and accessorized with wall decals and a shell pendant for lighting.
Use wire baskets as catchalls to store things in a hurry. Just don’t forget to put them in their proper place later!
Open shelving provides multifunctional storage that’s easy to change with your family’s needs. Use baskets or bins to keep things looking neat. Personalized bins are a great way to keep kids’ similar items separate.
Drawers work well for clothing or smaller items like gloves, sunglasses and keys.
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
33
Keep kids close to the ground with wooden slats instead of box springs.
34
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
O R G A N I Z E D
S P A C E S
Canvas bags on hooks provide a cute and easy-to-access place to store toys.
a magical mural
T
hree-year-old Maeve Dansby’s bedroom mural looks like it came
straight out of “Madeline,” one of her favorite book series. The cityscape depicted in the mural is inspired by classic children’s books and downtown Chapel Hill. “I wanted the space to be inspiring and capture my daughter’s personality,” says mom Molly Dansby. “She’s spunky, smart, sweet, loud and loves pink.” The mural is the work of Maeve’s grandmother, Lisa Gaither, a well-known local muralist. In addition to providing a beautiful background for her bedroom, the buildings act as a setting for playtime. “Sometimes we pretend we’re paper dolls, or even dragons, sitting on a stoop having a picnic,” Molly says. “The room is fun and happy and it celebrates childhood and imagination, which I love!” Since Maeve loves animals, stuffed creatures are carefully positioned throughout her room, giving it a town and country vibe. All this charm didn’t come at a premium cost. Between the family-sourced paint job, the $20 bed found at a thrift shop and a couple other DIY projects, Molly says the room came together on a dime.
Use minimal furniture to give children ample space to play.
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
35
O R G A N I Z E D
S P A C E S
Group like things together so you can find ingredients easily. Elizabeth has separate bins for baking ingredients, sugars and pastas.
everything in its place
A
CCORDING TO Elizabeth Hirsh, the best
way to organize any space is to follow one simple rule: Have a place for everything. So when she and her husband
bought a fixer-upper in the Morgan Creek neighborhood two years ago, she applied that principle to the renovations – including a massive pantry that can accommodate cooking staples, paper products, casserole dishes and more. The house already had a fairly large pantry, and the removal of a wall between the space and a garage workroom gave her even more room to work with. Elizabeth, who owns the moving management company The Downsizers, designed built-ins that make it easy to store like items together. She also chose shallow shelves so nothing gets hidden from view. “I really like being able to see everything,” she says. “I find that you use things more when you can see them and they’re readily available.” The pantry’s location, between the garage and the kitchen, makes it functional for big Costco trips in addition to everyday grocery shopping. “We bring all the dry goods into that pantry and we set them all there and then we bring anything refrigerated into the kitchen,” Elizabeth says. “We literally unpack directly from the pantry onto the shelves.” CHM 36
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
Use vertical storage for items you might be tempted to stack. “It becomes a group of things they never touch because it’s so cumbersome to get things out of that stack,” Elizabeth says.
Get rid of duplicates. “Sometimes we’ll find people who have four different kinds of blenders,” Elizabeth says. “We’ll say, ‘What is the blender you use the most? What is in the best condition?’” That goes for food, too. Keep your pantry stocked with essentials, but don’t overdo it.
Bring new color to your life
WITH FRESH COAT OF CHAPEL HILL
HILL.COM REPAIRS • FRESHCOATCHAPEL G • HOME IMPROVEMENTS AND
TIN INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR PAIN
THE FRESH COAT DIFFERENCE: • Professional painters with over 10 years of experience • Competitive pricing • FREE firm & detailed quote • 2 Year Warranty
Your generosity makes our house a home.
Volunteers share their compassion at SECU Family House. Together, we provide the nurturing and affordable housing guests and their families need when traveling great distances for life-saving treatment at UNC Hospitals. You can make a gift in honor of our volunteers at www.secufamilyhouse.org/donate Learn more about volunteering at www.secufamilyhouse.org/get-involved
123 OLD MASON FARM ROAD CHAPEL HILL
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
37
•
shelter
SHOP LOCAL FUN(KY) SPRING FINDS TO SPRUCE UP YOUR HOME BY SAVANNAH SHANEY
Bow Front Double Door Cabinet $1,800, Whitehall Antiques
Terracotta Pig Planter $13, Southern Season
Black Iron Table Clock $109, Night Gallery/ Branching Out Olive Terracotta Standard Planter $30, Southern Season Tin Vase $28, La Boutique Lane
38
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
Hawes Sconce Tapered Gold Candle $450, SOUTH
Link Pendant by LZF $850, Palette & Parlor
Beetle Chair by GamFratesi for GUBI $419, Palette & Parlor
Metal Owl $45, This & That
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
39
S H O P
L O C A L
Succulent Garden Dinner Plate $16, SallyMack
Elijah Leed Horizon Coasters Small $120; Large $110, LIGHT Art+Design
Spun Lilac Lamp $298, Blue Hand Home
FAMILY OWNED INTERIOR DESIGN FIRM SINCE 1982 Mary Lynn Cox, Jennifer Cox, Margo McKinney-Kane and Ami Wells
Design Team
Creating comfortable homes to enjoy is what we do.
M. L. DESIGNS, INC. WINNER
BEST
Furniture | Window Treatments Decorative Lighting | Art and Accessories
EL HILL OF CHAP
919.644.0400 www.mldesignsinc.com
40
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
S H O P
L O C A L
French marble top chest of drawers $4,500, Whitehall Antiques
Pirate Black and White Asparagus Pillow $96, La Boutique Lane
Wild Dove Glacier Grey Throw $64, Blue Hand Home
GROUNDED IN THE TRIANGLE for over 40 years. P Development
P Investment Properties
P General Brokerage & Leasing
P Buyer & Tenant Representation P Property Management
Individual Members
John Morris
Scott Morris
194 Finley Golf Course Road n Suite 102 n Chapel Hill, NC 27517 n 919-942-1141 n morriscommercial.com April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
41
•
PHOTOGRAPHY BY KATHY SWENDIMAN
shelter
get your home ready for
spring BY HOLLY WEST AND ANNA POGARCIC
WE ASKED HOME AND GARDEN
Start here
I
f you’re new to gardening, start small with container plants on your patio or balcony. • Select plants with nice foliage or a long bloom season. For edible plants, consider rainbow chard for color and leafy greens that put out over a long period of time. 42
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
EXPERTS ABOUT PLANTING, PAINTING AND MUCH MORE
MATTHEW ARNSBERGER owner/operator of Piedmont Environmental Landscaping and Design North Carolina Botanical Garden staff
ASHLEY MATTISON vice president of Fifth Season Gardening
DAVID PARKS co-founder of Camellia Forest Nursery
• Know the conditions of the area where you plan to keep the container. Is it sunny or shady? Are deer or other wild animals prevalent? • Use a container potting mix with lots of moisture-retaining additives so you don’t have to water every day.
A N A W A R D W I N N I N G R E A L E S TAT E T E A M
On Top of The Hill for Over 40 Years
VIKI PACE-SMITH • THE KOONCE & ESTACIO TEAM • CHAD LLOYD • THE JENNIFER STENNER TEAM JENNIFER PATTERSON • CAROLINA REAL ESTATE COALITION
H O M E
&
G A R D E N
T I P S
Take it to the next level
T
o move from containers to a small garden, start with the right tools. Our experts suggest these basics:
• Pruners that fit comfortably in your hand to cut away dead or diseased plant material and to harvest flowers and vegetables • Rake or hoe to prepare rows or mounds for a vegetable garden • Shovel or spade for digging holes and turning over beds • Digging fork • Trowel for planting, transplanting and potting • Weeding tool
• Complete Family Eye Care • Diabetic Eye Exams • Glaucoma Exams • Macular Degeneration Exams
ER WINN
BEST ILL APEL H OF CH
Dr. James A. Bryan III
•
Dr. Mark W. Scroggs
•
See what you’ve been missing! We’re Accepting New Patients!
Dr. Dale D. Stewart
55 Vilcom Center Drive, Suite 140 • Chapel Hill, NC • 919.967.4836 44
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
• LASIK Surgery • Cataract Surgery • Corneal Transplants • Full Optical Shop
•
Introducing Dr. Nicole A. Penke
carolina2020.com
A Home Where You Belong
WELCOME TO VILLAGE HEARTH!
The first 55+ LGBT, straight friends and allies cohousing community in the country.
OVER HALF SOLD! CONTACT US TODAY TO LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR COMMUNITY -
Choose from three floor plans
We are creative, dynamic, energetic people who are interested in thinking “outside of the box” to build and live in a community where our values are key.
email Pat McAulay at
VillageHearthCohousing@gmail.com or call Margaret Roesch at
561-714-8009
villagehearthcohousing.com facebook.com/villagehearthcohousing
H O M E
&
G A R D E N
T I P S
Let the sunshine in (or not)
B
efore choosing plants, gauge the amount of sun your garden gets.
SUN
Serving Orange & Chatham Counties since 1982
THE ONLY CONSTANT IS CHANGE We are cooperative, social-minded, curious, inclusive, searching. A niche firm with an environmental ethic. Reach out to Weaver Street Realty when it’s time for a change.
Black-eyed Susans Dianthus Succulents Salvias Echinacea Roses Fire-pink Rosinweed
False indigo Hollies Evergreens Flowering apricots Flowering cherries Magnolias Spirea Abelia
Ken Tunnell, Blair Nell, Don Basnight, Clayton Nell, Terri Turner, Louise Barnum, Jay Parker, Crystal Fisher, Jen Johnston, Bill Mullen & Gary Phillips
(919) 929-5658 • 116 E Main St. • Downtown Carrboro
WeaverStreetRealty.com 46
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
ALL COURTESY OF NORTH CAROLINA BOTANICAL GARDEN
H O M E
&
G A R D E N
T I P S
FULL SHADE Ferns Hostas Heucheras Polemonium Dicentra Columbines Astilbe
Camellias Edgeworthia Cryptomeria Gardenia Hydrangea Japanese maples
PARTIAL SHADE Green-and-gold Foxglove
Beardtongue Spicebush „
b u i l d i n g t o m o r r o w t o d ay
COMING SOON!
NEW NEIGHBORHOODS! NEW HOMES!
STONECREST AT NORWOOD BROOKSIDE AT FIELDSTONE Only 6 remaining lots
CHATHAM FOREST HARRISON POND
919.291.5024 info@HorizonCustomBuilders.com
HorizonCustomBuilders.com April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
47
H O M E
&
G A R D E N
T I P S
Give your home a facelift
A
fresh coat of paint can go a long way in making your home look updated, clean and ready for spring. Dry weather and warm temperatures make early summer or early fall ideal for exterior painting. Avoid scheduling the job when rain or severe temperatures are forecasted within 48 hours. “These can cause your project to leave a less-than-smooth surface with cracking and peeling,” says Nolan Williams, owner of Fresh
Coat Painters of Chapel Hill. “Not the look you are going for.”
When choosing a painter, ask about the experience level of prospective companies’ employees and find out whether they carry insurance in case something goes awry on your project. For homes built prior to 1978, make sure the painter is certified to work on homes that may contain lead-based paint. Once you get to the fun part – picking your color palette – there are a few things to consider. First, check with your homeowners association for any restrictions. John Kent, owner of Tar Heel Painters, suggests driving around
Join us for The Hill Center’s
4TH ANNUAL ONE MILE RACE AND KIDS’ DASH Proceeds benefit Student Financial Aid at The Hill Center
your neighborhood or town for ideas. Once you narrow the options down to a few colors, buy samples to test out on small areas and look at them at various times over the course of a few days.
EVENT HIGHLIGHTS: • One Mile Race & Walk • Elite Fast Mile on the track • Kids’ Dash, Kids’ Zone featuring The Scrap Exchange • Food Trucks: Chirba Chirba, Dusty Donuts, Flirting with Fire, Locopops
APRIL 22, 2018 • 1-4pm Durham Academy Upper School, 3601 Ridge Road, Durham, NC US 27705
Register to race today: runsignup.com/hillmile2018
Thank You to our Sponsors: magazine
48
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
3200 Pickett Road Durham, NC 27705 919.489.7464 hillcenter.org
Can’t decide what color to paint your home? Drive around town to find inspiration.
H O M E
“Keep in mind that the lighting will change in any room during the day, so it’s good to see if a color is as pleasing to you at 9 a.m. as it is at 5 p.m.,” John says. “Know that these samples will not always be the same ‘finish’ as what you end up using, even if it is the exact color. Even so, this paint selection method will give you a good idea of what you are looking for.” Nolan warns that while home improvement store paints may appear similar to those used by professional painters, the products are different. “They may carry the same name, but often are not of the same quality,” he says. “Invest in your home; it will pay off for years.” For exterior jobs, trim shrubbery back to at least 18 inches away from your home. Inside, remove fragile
&
G A R D E N
T I P S
items from the rooms being painted and put down drop cloths. Keep pets away from work areas to prevent paw-printed floors. High-quality paint jobs should last several years – up to 10 with regular maintenance, Nolan says. Keep an eye out for water- or weather-related problems and address them as soon as possible to prevent major damage.
MELVILLE BUILDERS, INC
CONSTRUCTION
•
R E N O V AT I O N
•
ADDITIONS
NEW BUILDING OPPORTUNITIES Large lots available in the Chapel Hill school district and convenient access to I-40. Let us design and build your new dream home. melvillebuilders.com 919.967.0992 jim@melvillebuilders.com PHOTOGRAPHY BY KATHY SWENDIMAN
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
49
DEEP ROOTS DON’T GROW OVERNIGHT. When it comes to commercial real estate, having an advocate nearby is an absolute necessity. At Trinity Partners, we pride ourselves on delivering comprehensive and creative solutions to our clients, no matter how sophisticated their real estate needs. We have every point in the Triangle covered — and all the ground in-between. trinity-partners.com | 919.674.3690 LOCALLY GROWN. EXCEEDINGLY CAPABLE.
B U Y E R A N D T E N A N T R E P R E S E N TAT I O N | P R O P E R T Y M A N AG E M E N T | C O N S T R U C T I O N S E R V I C E S | P R O J E C T M A N AG E M E N T | L A N D L O R D L E A S I N G | I N V E S T M E N T P R O P E R T Y S A L E S
Half Pg_H_April_CH_GENERAL.indd 1
50
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
3/19/2018 5:26:33 PM
H O M E
Sprout Your Mind!
G A R D E N
T I P S
Spring Plant Sale and Festival NORTH CAROLINA BOTANICAL GARDEN
T
his spring, grow your knowledge and get to know the plants and animals that you see every day. The North Carolina Botanical Garden and other venues lead a host of events that will give you a better understanding of nature, as well as help with your own garden and lawn. Why spend the spring inside when there’s so much to do outside?
&
May 12, 3-7 p.m. In celebration of North Carolina’s native flora, the North Carolina Botanical Garden, is holding a springtime plant festival. Browse a selection of plants all while listening to live music, dining from food trucks and participating in multiple educational activities. This festival is free and open to the public. ncbg.unc.edu –Kethan Fadale CHM
Discovering Magic in the Garden Family Festival
April 7, 1-4 p.m. An all-ages event for the whole family. Explore the joys of the natural world by engaging in a wide variety of hands-on activities, including nature play and many cool crafting opportunities. $5 per person (2 and under free). ncbg.unc.edu Annual Spring Wildflower Hike
April 14, 10 a.m-12 p.m. Continuing the annual wildflower hike, Milo Pyne, an N.C. State-trained botanist and expert on Piedmont wildflowers will lead an expedition from Multiflora Greenhouses to explore the ridges and bottomlands near Seven Mile Creek, one of Orange County’s premier undisturbed natural areas, in search of beautiful spring wildflowers and plants. moorefields.org
Offering in-depth market knowledge, strong negotiation skills and a powerful marketing plan enhanced by the regional, national and The Martha Bick Group has provided unparalleled concierge-level service for almost two decades. global reach of the Sotheby’s International Realty network, The Martha Bick Group has provided unparalleled concierge-level service for almost two decades.
Evelyn McNeill Sims Native Plant Lecture
April 15, 2:30-4 p.m. John Harris, director of the Monadnock Institute of Nature, Place and Culture at Franklin Pierce University, is welcomed for his talk “In the Footsteps of Spring” as part of the annual Evelyn McNeill Sims Native Plant Lecture. John will retrace the paths of local naturalists Edwin Way Teale and John K. Terres as they explored and charted the flora and fauna that we live in today. ncbg.unc.edu
Voted BEST OF CHAPEL HILL in 2017
© MMXVII Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC.
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
51
Think Hendrick. Think Southpoint. THINK HENDRICK,
THINK SOUTHPOINT
SALES & FINANCING
SERVICE & PARTS
COLLISION CENTER*
Monday - Saturday 9am - 8pm Closed Sunday
Monday - Friday 7am - 6pm Saturday 8am - 4pm
Monday - Friday 7:30am - 6pm Saturday & Sunday Closed
127 Kentington Drive, Durham, NC 27713 919-407-8140 | www.HendrickGMSouthpoint.com SOUTHPOINT AUTO MALL
*Collision Center On The Corner of Hwy 70 & Page Rd.
www.HendrickSouthpoint.com
HendrickSouthpoint SouthpointAuto AutoMall Mall Hendrick
Mercedes-Benz of Durham 919-354-7770 www.mercedesbenzofdurham.com Mercedes-Benzof ofDurham Durham Mercedes-Benz Kentington 110110 Kentington Dr.Dr. Durham, 27713 Durham, NCNC 27713 919-354-7770
110 Kentington Dr. Durham, NC 27713
919-354-7770
2017 Mercedes-Benz 2017 Mercedes-Benz C 300 Coupe C 300 Coupe
PorscheSouthpoint Southpoint Porsche www.Southpoint.PorscheDealer.com www.Southpoint.PorscheDealer.com
122 Kentington 122 Kentington Dr,Dr, Durham, 27713 Durham, NCNC 27713 877-469-3129 877-469-3129
EasyAccess Accessoff offI-40 I-40 Easy
54
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
•
shelter
town & gown
gardens GET A SNEAK PEEK OF THREE OF THE GREEN SPACES THAT WILL BE ON DISPLAY APRIL 28 AND 29 PHOTOGRAPHY BY KATHY SWENDIMAN
E
VERY TWO YEARS SINCE 1996 ,
Finally get a look at the rose garden just off Franklin Street during the Chapel Hill Garden Tour this month.
the Chapel Hill Garden Tour has been a wonderful opportunity for residents and out-oftown visitors alike to experience the spectacular gardens found in Chapel Hill. Put on by the Chapel Hill Garden Club, the tour features gardens that are selected nearly two years before the tour, allowing adequate time for the hosts and the garden club to prepare. This year’s theme is Town & Gown Gardens – Synergy in Bloom and the nine selected gardens include the North Carolina Botanical Garden, the Coker Arboretum and hidden gems of University staff in classic neighborhoods like Greenwood and Lake Hogan Farms. For two days only – April 28 and 29 – visitors are invited to see as many of the different spaces as they want, rain or shine. Marc
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
55
G A R D E N
T O U R
The brick walkways, low stone walls, bright blooms and wooden benches in Margaret Spellings’ garden mimic the UNC campus.
a presidential sanctuary
E
veryone knows the historic yellow-columned home on the corner of Franklin and Raleigh. What’s not as visible from the street is the beautiful garden of UNC System President Margaret Spellings. Much like she made the home her own by incorporating her pieces with relics from her predecessors, Margaret has done the same outdoors. “One of the important parts of the redesign was to reuse and recycle as much of the hardscape as possible, like the flagstone pavers, and to relocate or build upon the existing plantings. In the recent redesign and renovation of the garden, the historic plan served as an anchor for the new plan. The result is a moonlight garden, a very traditional match to the house that includes some inspiration from my travels,” she says. “My personal addition to the 56
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
design was the fire pit which gets great use during many cool nights.” In her role as president, Margaret uses both the home and garden regularly for entertaining guests of the UNC System including events varying from her inauguration celebration – with tents for dining and a dance floor on the patio – to an evening with the student government representatives from all 17 institutions featuring a food truck parked at the garden gate. “During the holidays, the garden extended the entertaining space with lights and a s’mores station at the fire pit. Also, the sunroom stairs are a great place for a large group photo on these occasions.” And on quieter occasions come springtime, she’s not the only
G A R D E N
T O U R
one enjoying the tulip trees, ornamental cherries and freesia. “On a nice day, I love to read the newspapers or a book on the porch that overlooks the garden,” she says. “My Australian Labradoodle, Davie, loves sitting there doing his birdwatching.” Garden Tour Can’t-Miss:
A majestic willow oak and unusual magnolia grove provide shade and privacy. Boxwoods anchor beds of hosta, hydrangea, peony, fern, hellebore, lungwort and salvia. Tree form hydrangeas frame the stairs while beds of annuals pop with color.
a place to ‘think and dream’
N
estled in Lake Hogan Farms, the suburban garden of Jim Dean (UNC professor, former provost and former dean of Kenan-Flagler Business School) and his gardening wife, Jan, is an ever-evolving reimagination of its subdivision beginnings. Jan, a member of the Chapel Hill Garden Club, offers up three of her favorite plants not to miss – and ones to consider planting yourself: • Hinoki cypress (Chamaecyparis obtusa ‘Torulosa’) – She says it’s an easy maintenance plant that’s been growing in the window boxes for three years. It pairs nicely with spring and summer annuals. • Full moon maple (Acer japonicum ‘Rising Sun’) – This vigorous tree has stunning red, yellow and orange autumn leaves. At the front of the house, this two-year-old tree is located in front of the serpentine wall. • Clematis paniculata ‘Sweet Summer Love’ – This vigorous grower has fragrant blooms. The three-year-old vine is growing on a shagbark hickory tree.
The front aspect of the Dean home is anchored with a mix of evergreen shrubs and hydrangea and is brought to life with masses of colorful annuals.
Once you’ve checked out the plant life at the Deans’ house, enjoy the garden the way Jan does. “My heirloom garden benches [passed down by a dear Pennsylvania neighbor] in my woodland garden and my mother’s garden chimes,” she says of her favorite items in her treasured outdoor space. “It’s a place where I can go to think and dream ... to reminisce and sometimes pray.” April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
57
G A R D E N
T O U R
ABOVE: Pots in the Dean garden add color and interest among the plantings.
Garden Tour Can’t-Miss:
A tall chartreuse pot adds interest as it highlights and vividly complements both the burgundy leaves of the Japanese maple and the vibrant sweet flag surrounding it. The color wheel is brought to life by the gardeners’ artistry.
58
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
GET YOUR TICKETS ONLINE (chapelhillgardenclub.net) or at the N.C. Botanical Garden, Piedmont Feed and Garden Center, Southern Season or Southern States. You can visit the gardens in any order and look for plein air artists, musicians, educators and vendors. Remember to bring your camera (or cell phone) as nine prizes will be awarded in three categories: Macro, Scenic and Smartphone.
G A R D E N
T O U R
everything’s coming up roses
A
nother familiar dwelling on the tour is the garden of UNC Dean of Arts and Sciences Kevin Guskiewicz and wife Amy. As you weave up East Franklin Street, you’ve likely seen the Carolina blue UNC flag waving out front and the iron-gated rose garden. If you stop for a moment – yes, you can literally smell those roses on the tour – you’ll also see some of Amy’s favorite features. “[There’s a] small banana fig tree by the back door to the garage that smells like a banana when it blooms,” she says. “The mondo grass, ferns and hostas are all so lovely.” The former home of George and Sophie Livas, longtime owners of Carolina Coffee Shop, the brick abode was built in 1938. And there’s a massive, pending magnolia near the driveway gate that’s even older than the house – it shelters a teak bench, one of many inviting spots for the Guskiewiczs and others. “The many outdoor spaces are great for spending time with family and friends. We enjoy sitting by the old pin oak – many have said [it] is one of Chapel Hill’s most photographed trees – and the magnolia trees and walking along the shade garden path on the side of the home,” Amy says. “The garden offers many spots to enjoy a morning coffee or a special dinner.” Garden Tour Can’t-Miss: The high-
contrasting colors and textures of creeping Jenny and painted ferns add vibrancy to a shady side garden that manages stormwater beautifully. ‘Stained Glass’ hosta, black mondo grass, autumn fern and sweet flag grass flourish here. Bluestone patios overlook both the charming flower beds in the back garden and the front rose garden, offering delightful venues for entertaining and relaxing. CHM
LEFT Stone walls bring structure to the Guskiewicz garden while a unique weathervane adds a whimsical touch.
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
59
•
shelter
legacy preserving the
RENOVATIONS BEGIN ON A HISTORIC HOME OWNED BY THE FRIDAYS BY JESSICA STRINGER | PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRIANA BROUGH
T
HIRTY YEARS AGO, Southern Living published
an article about Bill and Ida Friday’s home nestled in the Franklin-Rosemary Historic District. After two very different homes – a contemporary and then a columned antique house – the Fridays were ready for a primarily one-level home they could retire in after decades of service to UNC. Taking into consideration the neighborhood, architecture firm McClure and McClure Architects and Planners, PA designed the Hooper Lane home with two wings, soaring 18-foot living room ceilings and French doors that connected the interior with the outdoors. For years, the Fridays
Homeowner Dr. Jo Anne Earp and architect Sophie Piesse have been friends for over a decade and have been working together on home renovations for just as long.
60
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
61
H O M E
&
G A R D E N
enjoyed the garden and entertaining all the UNC friends and faculty they had come to know. One of those visitors was Dr. Jo Anne Earp, who as the then-chair of the Department of Health Behavior in the Gillings School of Global Public Health,
stopped by for scholarship lunches with several of her master’s students. The Fridays endowed a scholarship in the name of Dr. Lucy S. Morgan, the professor Ida studied under while getting her own master’s of public health in the Department of Health Behavior, and the first woman chair of Jo Anne’s department. (Jo Anne was the second woman chair 25 years after Lucy retired.) Jo Anne and her husband, Shelley, director of UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, bought the Fridays’ former home in July, and with all their ties to the university, it’s fitting that the home is staying in the UNC family. Thankfully Carrboro architect Sophie Piesse was up to the task of helping the couple make the iconic home their own. They’ll start with minimal changes to the exterior, including adding a carport and screened-in porch. As for the interior: “Our house is going to be very contemporary,” Jo Anne says. “Theirs was classic.” The upgrades to the 3,800-square-foot home – including opening up the center staircase and bumping out the sunroom wall – will take six months, and the Earps won’t move in until the fall. “We’re mainly moving there because it’s two blocks from the university. Shelley plans to work forever,” Jo Anne laughs. “I plan to bike to campus to visit friends and attend lectures and performances.” CHM 62
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
ar e Y e h t isee of
h
nc 2017 Fra
s w o d n i W g n i f o o R
! e r o m d n a g n i t n s Pai
r e t t u G siding
on restorati e c n a r d e insu me in th has specialize s, a n d te is a trus , Storm Guard iding, window d r a u G m Stor . For over a decadreation for roofing, s industry insurance resto ing services. r rp in exterio d emergency ta n a gutters,
7560 2 C N , rrisville
o om c . 101, M c e n t i u m S a , e ion Driv d-durh
r
gua m r o t s 0 -577
min
400 Do
919-379
imate t s E r o sultation n o C e Fre h us t wit Connec
64
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
•
shelter
Rashyia Williams, 10, and Taleah Fields, 11. OPPOSITE Ava Nieuwsma, 6.
a home for all A MORGAN CREEK PLAYHOUSE GETS A SECOND LIFE BY JEANNE L ANGLEY | PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRIANA BROUGH
I
BOUGHT MY 1950 CHAPEL
Hill home in 2002 in Morgan Creek when my son was 10 years old. It was a beautiful neighborhood and the house and yard are perfect for children; there was even a little playhouse in the backyard. It was also a lonely neighborhood for a child as it was filled with older people who had lived here 30, April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
65
S H E L T E R
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT Liam Hayden, 6 Alethia Nieuwsma, 8 Susanna Vernon, 10 Emeline Craig, 11 Elsa Wright, 6 Eaden Wright, 8
66
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
S H E L T E R
ER WINN
BEST ILL APEL H OF CH
ABOVE Jeanne and the children
M AG AZ
HAIR • SKIN • BODY • NAILS
IN E
TOP RIGHT Cooper Davis, 10
40 and 50 years and there were no other children in the neighborhood besides my son. Sometimes, the quiet was painful. On Halloween, the houses were all dark and neighbors didn’t even bother to get candy or turn on lights for trick-or-treaters. No houses were decorated for Christmas. No flags flew for the Fourth of July. My son and I put up a basketball goal in the front driveway and brought friends from my son’s school and sports teams over to play. As for the playhouse, by the time my son had made friends, he was too old and too big for the playhouse, so we used it to store our outdoor games and toys. One day, an older woman knocked at the door and said that she had lived in my house for more than 20 years and raised her children there. She wanted to know if she could have a cutting from some of the plants she had planted long ago to transplant to her home at Carolina Meadows. I invited her in and she
legendary JANE IREDALE | SURFACE | L’OREAL | BUMBLE & BUMBLE | SKINCEUTICALS Microblading | Make-up | Facials | Manicures & Pedicures | Bride & Groom Hair | and More!
The Galleria | 400 S. Elliott Rd. | Suite K | Chapel Hill
919.968.8548 | minasstudio.com | April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
67
68
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
S H E L T E R
introduced herself as Jane Rogers and told me many stories of the house. The neighborhood had been full of children in the ‘50s and ‘60s, she said. Jane would iron in the kitchen and, from time to time, count the children in the yard. She remembered once the number being as many as 17 at one time. The playhouse had been hers at her childhood home on Franklin Street. When she bought this house as a young woman in 1955, she had her playhouse moved from her parents’ home to her house so that her children could enjoy it. I saw Jane Rogers several more times over the years when she stopped by to see what changes
enjoy a retirement that is
CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT Kate Vernon, 8 Nathaniel “Bubba” Wright, 5 Josie Craig, 8
At The Village at Brookwood, you can entertain family and friends in your newly renovated Garden Home or Apartment, select your own meal plan options, and participate in a variety of wellness activities. Live well in a Life Plan Community that’s part of a respected health care system. Call to schedule a visit.
Proud to be a part of
800-282-2053
| 1860 Brookwood Ave., Burlington, NC
VillageAtBrookwood.org April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
69
S H E L T E R
I had made in the house, and one day, she brought her grown children. They toured the house, told me more stories and were horrified to see that I had painted the daughter’s room – now my son’s – Duke colors. I would often see Jane at Carolina Meadows whenever I visited a woman from our church and she was always a lively, interesting woman. By the time my son was finishing high school and after he left home for college, young people began buying homes in the neighborhood. I was delighted to hear the laughter of small children and see them in neighbors’ yards. Playsets and rope swings began appearing in yards and it felt like the neighborhood was returning to life. I began a friendship with one 4-year-old girl over
ABOVE Caroline Davis, 8 BELOW Graham Davis, 8
t hom as br ent cus t om hom es . com
70
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
S H E L T E R
books and, from time to time, Susanna would pop over with her dad children played in the yard as they waited their turn. We painted until so she and I could read together. I would see the two little girls across dark on Friday night and the children appeared at the street. Allie and Ava would chat as I was working in the yard and 8 a.m. the next morning. We painted all that day until dark, while they were playing. A family moved next door with a little boy, Liam, neighbors stopped by and took pictures of the children playing in the and we would visit. When his parents built him a playset, he would yard or brought snacks and food for the painters. On Sunday morning, call out to me from high in the playset and we would talk over the we again started early and finished by 3 p.m. so we invited the parents fence. The children grew and our friendships bloomed. When Allie for an unveiling party to see the interior. (I had also invited two of my and Ava’s mother achieved her Ph.D. from UNC, I gave her the gift of friends from the Boys & Girls Clubs of Durham and Orange Counties babysitting so that she and her husband could celebrate. That night, we watched old movies in my 1950s basement den and invited their friends, Susanna and her sister, Kate, to join us for dinner and a movie. “Movie night” was born and I began inviting more of the neighborhood children to join us about once every quarter to see my son’s old VCR movies. Soon there were 10 children, then 13, Her Experience. Your Advantage. watching old movies in the basement den, Chris G. Adigun, MD is a board certified dermatologist, all of us having a grand time. known for her expertise in laser and aesthetic dermatology. She is a recognized leader in dermatology Last September, I realized that the old and a national media expert. She has been featured playhouse had not been painted in the on Good Morning America, CBS News, and North 15 years I had lived here. The paint had Carolina’s own The People’s Pharmacy. started to peel and I wanted to maintain Healthy, Beautiful Skin it because it was, after all, a historic Starts at DLC! playhouse, being close to 70 years old. DLC is at the forefront of dermatology, Jane Rogers had died, and it seemed offering the latest technology and treatment. important to me to keep it maintained for Dr Adigun has assembled a team of top notch, dermatology trained professionals. Voted her memory. The interior was a very dirtyThe Best of Chapel Hill 2017. Come see what looking white with sponged purple trim we are doing to help our patients achieve painted by the previous owners perhaps their goals!! 20 years ago. I decided that the children should paint the interior and divided the inside into about 16 sections, one for each child and myself, with a few to spare One of the most caring, where tall games would be stored. knowledgeable, efficient, Each child drew a section out of a jar sophisticated-without-being-stuffy to paint. He or she could do anything practices I’ve ever visited! he or she wanted with that section with —Happy Patient whatever colors he or she wanted. Parents donated colors and on a Friday afternoon, the painting began. We had to paint in Located in the Veranda 58 Chapelton Court, Suite 120 www.dlcofchapelhill.com at Briar Chapel Chapel Hill, NC 919.942.2922 shifts because only two people could be in the playhouse at a time so the other M AG A ZI N E
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
71
S H E L T E R
where I tutor, but we couldn’t work out the arrangements. I saved the door for them, and they painted the next weekend, when they met and played with many of the neighborhood children.) At the unveiling party that Sunday afternoon, we dedicated the playhouse to Jane Rogers. The children’s paintings are spectacular. Each section is uniquely his or her own and each has his or her story to tell. Together, the art forms a picture of our friendship and of our transformed neighborhood, now vibrant, fun and caring.
In our neighborhood now, one family organizes a Halloween party at the end of our street every year. We all gather around a fire in costume after trick-or-treating and another family brilliantly performs a musical number in theme costume (and I need three large bags of candy to give out). We have a 5K “eggnog jog” on Christmas Eve morning, starting at the corner where a young couple lives with three children and has installed zip lines. We run, bike and scooter a 5K in holiday wear and end up with eggnog and treats. On New Year’s Eve, one neighbor hosts a performance party where many gather for performances Body + Facial Waxing Studio For Women And Men by other neighbors, including, this year, a Morgan Creek version of Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire.” Every year, the aging-in-place neighbors throw a party for the children in the neighborhood and when a new baby arrives, the meal train begins for the new parents. The playhouse project cemented the friendship between the children and myself. Watching them paint, helping them with techniques, hearing their stories behind the painting, celebrating the joy of the finished project and dedicating it to Jane Rogers was a shared experience of joy, laughter, patience, effort, taking turns and excitement. We worked and played together for two-and-a-half days and created something to last another 50 years, I hope. Now, the children regularly stop by to check out what I’m doing on an afternoon, to play games, have a snack, tell me a story, bring me a gift (my refrigerator is covered in drawings) and they even threw me a Amal Zonca surprise birthday party! Movie nights WTC Owner continue regularly and we are now up to 15 participants. “Pollyanna” will New Clients Receive 50% OFF Their First Service be our next showing. The playhouse Eastgate Crossing waxingthecity.com is theirs now, filled with my toys and 1800 E. Franklin Street 984-528-3200 theirs, for them to play with as they Chapel Hill, NC Visit us on wish, whenever they wish. CHM
72
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
$48 million in 2017 Sales Volume
COLD FEET?
#1 Broker
among all Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices sales associates in North Carolina
Top ½ of 1%
among all Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices sales associates in the United States
Maybe There’s a Performance Issue… Come tour some of the highestperforming houses in the Triangle!
APRIL 28-29; MAY 5-6 noon–5 pm
Discover how a certified green home delivers comfort, savings, durability, and a healthy living environment. FREE self-guided tour of homes located throughout the Triangle. Sponsors
#PerformanceMatters #SpringGreenHomeTour
Hosted by the High Performance Building Council of the Home Builders Associations of Durham, Orange & Chatham and Raleigh/Wake Counties.
www.SpringGreenHomeTour.com • 919.493.8899
Erika Buchholtz
#1 REALTOR® in Chapel Hill since 2009 919.219.7218 erikaproperties@gmail.com www.erikaandcompany.com ©2018 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity.
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
73
fine gifts custom stationery furnishings & interior design SOUTHCHAPELHILL.COM 1 0 7 M E A D O W M O N T V I L L A G E C I RC L E C H A P E L H I L L , N O RT H C A R O L I N A 919.240.5475
•
shelter
what we love about living in ...
Meadowmont RESIDENTS FIND EVERYTHING THEY NEED WITHOUT LEAVING THIS 20-YEAR-OLD DEVELOPMENT BY DAVID KLEIN | PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRIANA BROUGH
O
N AN IMPECCABLY
landscaped, gently rolling expanse at the eastern end of Meadowmont, one tree stands high above the rest. Known as Momma, this 85-year-old shagbark hickory tree serves as an apt symbol for a community formed in 1999 on 435 acres at Chapel Hill’s eastern edge. It’s also fitting for a place that’s as family-oriented 76
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
Boundaries Burning Tree Drive to the west; Little Creek to the north and east; Raleigh Road/NC 54 to the south Population 1,254 total homes, apartments and The Cedars dwellings Home styles Colonial Revivals and Cape Cods to ranch houses, with a mix of cottages and condos, brownstones and bungalows, apartments, townhomes, row houses and other options. Median Home Sale Price $685,500
as Meadowmont, where one of the defining sights is the lively parade of school-bound kids, caregivers, parents and pets making their way to Rashkis Elementary on weekday mornings. “We love the feel of the neighborhood, just in terms of being family-friendly and having a ton of kids around, knowing your neighbors,” says Stephanie Minter, a Meadowmont resident and former family specialist who is now a full-time
Whether walking or riding a scooter, the Minter family enjoys the sidewalks in Meadowmont.
mom of daughter, Elorie, 7, and son, Jamie, 4. “That I’d rank among the top three benefits of living in the neighborhood: being able to walk to school, surrounded by neighbors. It really is a throwback to a different era.” As with all of Chapel Hill, Meadowmont tends to attract people from all walks of life and all parts of the country. But if one thing unites the folks who live here, it’s an appreciation for the community’s self-contained quality. There’s a lot to be said for not having to get into the car to grab a coffee, shop for groceries,
get a haircut or take a yoga class; for many residents, that freedom amounts to an incalculable lifestyle boost. “We love waking up on weekend mornings and walking or biking to Starbucks or going to Harris Teeter and grabbing doughnuts with the family,” says Stephanie. Along its narrow, carefully landscaped streets, Meadowmont offers a notable variety of dwellings. Homes range in style from Colonial Revivals and Cape Cods to ranch houses, with a mix of cottages and condos, brownstones and bungalows, apartments, April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
77
N E I G H B O R H O O D S
Stephanie Minter with son, Jamie, 4, and daughter, Elorie, 7.
townhomes, row houses and other options. At the center of town is Meadowmont Village, the area’s retail hub featuring more than two dozen businesses, from a nail salon and cleaners to mail services and an ABC store. With popular eateries like Cafe Carolina and Bakery, Brixx Wood Fired Pizza and Chronic Tacos, as well as newer offerings like Fusion Fish, the Village is a lively social destination for Meadowmonters. The showpiece of the area is the DuBose House, a 20,000-square-foot Georgian Revival-style house that’s listed in the National Register of Historic Places – and not just because it was one of the first homes in America with central air conditioning. Donated to UNC in 1988 by David St. Pierre DuBose and his wife, Valinda Hill DuBose – who gave the name
If you haven’t seen
Carrboro’s redesigned website, you may be missing out!
classic · curated · cool
WINNER
Visit www.townofcarrboro.org for all of the latest news, information on projects, town meetings, and volunteer opportunities!
BEST OF CHAPEL HILL
301 W. Main St. Carrboro, NC 27510
elevate your home style fresh and functional interior design combining classic and eclectic aesthetics
78
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
919-942-8541 917.439.2566 www.ashleyclarkedesigns.com
You can also sign up for both emergency and nonemergency notifications, report concerns, or email staff from the page, and add events to the community calendar.
townofcarrboro.org
AN INSPIRED DESIGN DESERVES CUSTOM DETAILS.
As your local Marvin® Windows and Doors dealer, we will provide expert advice and experience that others just can’t match. Fitch Lumber & Hardware Co. 309 N. Greensboro St. Carrboro, NC 27510 919-942-3153 www.fitchlumber.com
Fitch Lumber is proud to be a Triangle Business Journal 2017 Family Business of the Year Award Winner ©2018 Marvin Windows and Doors. All rights reserved. ®Registered trademark of Marvin Windows and Doors.
N E I G H B O R H O O D S
“You see a lot of people when you’re out and about, and everybody’s so friendly. And I wanted a neighborhood that had that feeling and sentiment.”
O’Mara Landscaping & Lawn Care, Inc.
Voted Favorite Landscaper by the Readers of Chapel Hill Magazine
We offer full landscape design and installation. In addition, we provide flexible maintenance services from basic lawn care to full service grounds care allowing you to customize your program to fit your needs.
BEST
919.942.5051 | omaralandscaping.com 80
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
WINNER
OF CHAPEL HILL
Jump rope classes & camps for all ages
Camp Starfish
AT STON E R I DG E / S E DG E FI E LD SWI M & RACQU ET CLU B
• • • • • •
Camp for ages 5-11, focused on Swimming, Tennis and Art Lessons. Weekly sessions with Scrap Exchange, Bricks 4 Kidz and High Touch High Tech. 6:1 Camper to Counselor ratio. CPR certified. All activities on-site at our 8.5 acre Club property. 8:30AM to 3PM, with extended care and lunch available. Conveniently located 1.5 miles from Exit 266 off I-40 and MLK/86
919.967.0915 6 9 0 1 TU R K EY FAR M ROAD, CHAP E L H I LL
|
S S S RC.ORG
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
81
Meadowmont to the vast acreage – it’s a grand setting with its wood-paneled rooms, Persian rugs and air of old-world charm. The grounds also house the UNC Kenan-Flagler Business School Rizzo Center with 183 boutique hotel rooms,
a fitness center and spaces for seminars and conferences. Situated along Raleigh Road/NC 54, a few miles from Interstate 40, Meadowmont’s proximity to major thoroughfares makes for unparalleled access to UNC, the airport and the rest of the Triangle. This was an important factor for Marcie Groller and her husband, Ray, who moved from Boston to Chapel Hill with their toddler-age son, Jackson, so Ray could begin his
Sidewalks – and Cape Cods – abound in walkable Meadowmont.
82
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
N E I G H B O R H O O D S
residency at Duke University School of Medicine. Having grown accustomed to getting around on foot, they valued Meadowmont’s walkability highly, especially with a second child, daughter Hadley, born shortly after the move. “I’ve met a couple of my really good friends just from walking outside,” says Marcie. “You see a lot of people when you’re out and about, and everybody’s so friendly. And I wanted a neighborhood that had that feeling and sentiment.” While Meadowmont’s population continues to expand, the community keeps a modest profile when it comes to special events. The semiannual music series usually draws a single food truck and a few hundred attendees who bring blankets and beverages. “Just kick it back, relax for a couple of hours, go home,” says Bill Ferrell, who has led the Meadowmont Community Association
My family and I have lived and played in both The Oaks and Meadowmont. I would be honored to assist you in selling your home and finding your new one.
Rhonda Szostak Broker / REALTOR®
15 Years of Experience in the Chapel Hill area 919 – 880 –3518 mobile Rhonda.Szostak@BHHSYSU.com
©2018 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity.
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
83
N E I G H B O R H O O D S
for 10 years. “Nobody wants a big, big event in Meadowmont. They want the ability to talk to their neighbors, get to know who lives in and around here. The key vibe is just a comfortable, no-expectations community.” Julie Dickson, a longtime resident who has a blended family of six high school- and college-age kids, agrees that Meadowmont is that kind of place. “My kids grew up [here], and to this day their best friends live on our street,” she says. Plots of land tend to be on the smaller side, but Julie says it’s not a problem. “We don’t need a yard. Everyone just plays out at the park, they go to the street, they go to the pool, they go down to Rashkis, to a playground. No one misses not having a yard in Meadowmont at all,” she says. “I love Meadowmont,” she says. “We’re just really happy here. I sometimes feel like there’s no other neighborhood like this.” CHM
Beautifully appointed and fully furnished office space in Chapel Hill, convenient to I-40, RTP and RDU.
100 Europa Drive | Suite 190 | Chapel Hill, NC | Gary Hill, CCIM | 919.913.1116 | avisonyoung.com
84
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
N E I G H B O R H O O D S
weddings birthdays or just because
Wrap up your holiday décor Wrap up your now and save. holiday décor
now and save. no matter what the Vignette® Modern Roman Shades
Vignette® Modern Roman Shades
100 Inspired Interiors $100 Creating REBATE $
REBATE* *
ON QUALIFYING PURCHASES OF HUNTER DOUGLAS WINDOW FASHIONS
ON QUALIFYING PURCHASES OF HUNTER DOUGLAS WINDOW FASHIONS
Make sure your home is holiday ready by ordering beautiful new Hunter windowisfashions today. Rebate savings arebeautiful new Make sureDouglas your home holiday ready by ordering available on select styles, 9/16/17 Hunter Douglas window fashions today. Rebate savings are through 12/11/17. Ask for details.
available on select styles, 9/16/17 through 12/11/17. Ask for details.
occasion, SallyMack has got your back.
PHOTO COURTESY OF SURYA
Sew Fine II 5850 Fayetteville Rd Ste 104
M-F: 9:00 amII- 5:00 pm Sew Fine Sat: 10:00 am - 2:00 pm 5850 Fayetteville Rd Ste 104 Sun: Closed 919-806-3638
M-F: 9:00 am - 5:00 pm www.sewfine2.com Sat: 10:00 am - 2:00 pm Ask us about special savings on select Sun: Closed Hunter Douglas operating systems. 919-806-3638 www.sewfine2.com
WINNER
BEST OF CHAPEL HILL
Ask us about special savings on select Hunter Douglas operating systems. *Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/16/17—12/11/17 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. Rebate will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card and mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 6 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. ©2017 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas or their respective owners. 17Q4MAGVIGC2
Ask us about special savings on select Hunter Douglas operating systems.
*Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/16/17—12/11/17 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. Rebate will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card and mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 6 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. ©2017 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas or their respective owners. 17Q4MAGVIGC2
762-A Martin Luthur King Jr. Blvd. | Chapel Hill 919.240.5764 | shopsallymack.com
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
85
REAL ESTATE GALLERY IN EVERY ISSUE
HOMES • CONDOS • APARTMENTS
Elizabeth Lindquist, Realtor ALWAYS WORKING FOR YOU
Real Estate Gallery Homes • Condos • Apartments
Showcasing Realtors, Builders & Leasing Agents For advertising information, call 919.933.1551 or email advertising@chapelhillmagazine.com
An Eye for Excellence, Design, Marketing & Negotiating I’m a native Chapel Hill business owner and a Durham resident. Put my experience and expertise to work for you!
ELindquist@cbadvantage.com 919-656-3325 ELindquist.CBAdvantage.com Coldwell Banker Advantage 1130 Weaver Dairy Rd., Chapel Hill
martha.bick@sothebysrealty.com; phil.bick@sothebysrealty.com hodgekittrellsir.com 919.815.5018 Each Office Is Independently Owned and Operated.
HOMES • CONDOS • APARTMENTS
REAL ESTATE GALLERY
NOW PRELEASING JOIN ATLAS TACO, CRAFTBORO BREWING DEPOT, MONTESSORI ACADEMY, BERNDT DDS & NAILZ
South Green
501 S. Greensboro Street Carrboro, NC 27510
Partnership. Performance.
Opportunity
Ch a pel Hill’s Fir st a nd Pr em ier Cl a ss A Office Building. Unsurpassed amenities, including on-site Luncheonette, security and management. Ample covered parking.
Europa Center | 10 0 Europa Dr i v e, Ste 190 | Ch a pel Hill 9 19.9 1 3 .1 1 16 | G a r y Hill , CCI M | av ison young .c om
400 W FRANKLIN STREET prime retail location
96
South Green is a planned and approved 45,000sf retail development coming soon to Carrboro. Located just off Highway 54 on South Greensboro Street, South Green marks the “gateway” to the southern entry of Carrboro, connecting to the north. The development offers retailers a near downtown location with parking and easy access to the bypass and to the Triangle. This is a retail center that has incorporated the character of Carrboro.
85
85 Durham 501
751
15
50
Chapel Hill
40
751
P Located across from the boutique Franklin Hotel in the heart of the 400 block P Short walk from Carolina Square with 220+ apartment units and adjacent to Shortbread Lofts
Individual Members
John Morris, CCIM 919-942-1141 morriscommercial.com
40
Morrisville
440 70
401
64
54
Cary
Raleigh 64
64
40
Apex
540
1
Real Estate Company in Central NC Area experts to help you find your home
HPW.com P Approximately 3600 rentable sq ft
401
70
501
Gary Hill, CCIM Senior Associate, Brokerage 919.913.1116 | gary.hill@avisonyoung.com
900
540 a
RDU International Airport
55
Gary Hill, CCIM Senior Associate, Brokerage 919.913.1116 gary.hill@avisonyoung.com
Over
1
Research Triangle Park
southgreencarrboro.com
#1
98
147
86
Garner 70
40
REAL ESTATE GALLERY
Bring new color to your life WITH FRESH COAT OF CHAPEL HILL
HOMES • CONDOS • APARTMENTS
We are your
LIFETIME REALTOR.
TING
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR PAIN
HOME IMPROVEMENTS AND REPAIRS
Gordon Baker
Len Moss, CRS, GRI, SPS Murray Baldwin
919.603.8425
919.636.0459
gordon@thegatetohome.com len@thegatetohome.com
jebmwb97@aol.com
919.604.0285
Victor Poole
vkpproperties@gmail.com
919.368.8727
From rental homes to first purchases, investment properties, upsizing due to family growth or downsizing to single floor living…
Give us a call!
120 South Churton St., Hillsborough 919.732.5858 (919) 704-3999 | FRESHCOATCHAPELHILL.COM CH Mag small.pdf
1
3/15/2016
www.thegatetohome.com
12:06:20 PM
Franklin Street Realty…Connected to the Community
Build Your Life.
TM
Fran Richmond
is connected to the community
C
Raised two grown children in Chapel Hill
M
Y
MY
Court appointed advocate for abused children in the Guardian ad Litem program
CY
Certified yoga instructor
CM
Local Realtor for 30 years
CMY
K
J. Fuller Homes creates homes and neighborhoods across the Triangle for families just like yours, balancing timeless design with your unique lifestyle.
www.jfullerhomes.com
704.578.3463
919.929.7174 • franklinstreetrealty.com • Chapel Hill
HOMES • CONDOS • APARTMENTS
REGISTER TO WIN GREAT PRIZES!
REAL ESTATE GALLERY MELVILLE BUILDERS, INC
WELCOMING FAMILIES HOME FOR 30 YEARS CONSTRUCTION • RENOVATION • REAL ESTATE CONSULTATION
APRIL 1 – 30, 2018
Stop by any of our beautiful models or Showcase Homes in the Triangle area from April 1–30.
Visit our website to find a community near you in the Triangle area!
See a David Weekley Homes Sales Consultant for details. Prices, plans, dimensions, features, specifications, materials, and availability of homes or communities are subject to change without notice or obligation. Illustrations are artist’s depictions only and may differ from completed improvements. Copyright © 2018 David Weekley Homes - All Rights Reserved. Raleigh, NC (RALA93402)
DOWNTOWN CHAPEL HILL
1109 E FRANKLIN ST, CHAPEL HILL
$
364,900
Rigorous building standards, uncompromising quality, designer vision and engineering precision — using green and energy-efficient materials and techniques.
melvillebuilders.com • 919.967.0992 jim@melvillebuilders.com
Historic Carrboro Estate with extra buildable lot
$974,000 | 116 Old Pittsboro Road | Carrboro, NC 27510 | 3307 SF MORE DETAILS AT: 1109EFRANKLINSTREET.COM
FORGET THE REST... ...LIST WITH THE BEST!
BRYAN GUARNIERI
REALTOR ®, SFR ®, RSPS, GREEN, AHWD ® 919-906-4840
bryang.hpw.com
Each office independently owned and operated
NEW LOWER PRICE $974,000: Renovated early 1900’s craftsman style home on 7.37 acres w/ buildable lot included. Walk to downtown Carrboro. 1st Floor master with 2 WICs, heated bath floor. Gracious DR, LR and library with 12 ft. ceilings, built in shelves and cabinets. Open kitchen with panoramic view of pristine forest. Ice maker, central vac., solar H2O heater. Site of the historic Sparrow Pool. Incredible opportunity to become a part of the history of Carrboro.
CALL TODAY FOR MORE INFORMATION! LOGAN A. CARTER Realtor, Broker Fonville Morisey Realty cell 919-418-4694
www.logancarter.com
REAL ESTATE GALLERY
HOMES • CONDOS • APARTMENTS
30 YEARS EXPERIENCE QUALITY BUILDER
|
SERVICE ORIENTED
S P E C H O M E AVA I LA B LE FA LL 2 0 1 8 AT C O LVARD FARMS
5
919-379-
ive,
-durh
mguard 770 stor
inion Dr
m 400 Do
560 , NC 27 le il v is r r m 1, Mo amnc.co Suite 10 9 1 9 8 6 8 3 3 4 4 | thomasbrentcustomhomes.com
Stop by our local office to find your new home. 921 Morreene Road Durham, NC 27705 919—383—4663 BHHSYSU.com
C OMMUNI TI ES
What’s New at WINMORE LIVE. PLAY. WORK at Philip’s Square, Winmore’s welcoming Town Center featuring:
Backsplashes Unlimited • Winmore Salon Capkov Ventures • Mind Body & Soul Pilates NEW The Winmore Tea Room 919-942-8005 • kovensconstruction.com /kovensconstruction 258 East Winmore Ave., Chapel Hill
A member of the franchise system of BHH Affiliates, LLC.
HOMES • CONDOS • APARTMENTS
REAL ESTATE GALLERY
Chapel Hill’s Real Estate Specialist
Meet Don Basnight What is the best part of living in NC?
Our great food, state fair and complicated cultural history. What do you do to unwind?
Tony Hall
Travel the back-roads, skipping the bypasses of our state. What do you value most about Weaver Street Realty?
I love the opportunity Weaver Street gives me to help people, really help people, in an important time in their lives. RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE 311 W. Rosemary Street • Chapel Hill, NC 27516 919.933.8500 • 800.382.0673 • tonyhall@tonyhallassociates.com
www.tonyhallassociates.com
Weaver Street agents are cut from a different cloth. Find out more about how we do business at weaverstreetrealty.com. 116 E Main St. • Downtown Carrboro • 919.929.5658
The best moments happen at home.
305 W. University Drive CHAPEL HILL, NC Proper ty ID: 8K4QCD hodgekittrellsir.com | 919.800.0799 Each Office Is Independently Owned and Operated.
Chapel Hill/Durham 101 Cosgrove Avenue, Suite 170 919-913-0900
Find your home at allentate.com
Mark Graves of Chapel Hill Toffee with Robert Poitras and Jon Connolly of Carolina Brewery.
NEW Food Scene ON THE
EATING AND DRINKING AROUND TOWN BY KRISTI PIECHNIK AND JESSICA STRINGER
92
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
N E W
O N
T H E
F O O D
S C E N E
Sweet Suds
I
t was a match made in heaven when Carolina Brewery teamed up with Chapel Hill Toffee for a beer. It all started when Robert Poitras, founder and owner of the brewery, reached out to the Chapel Hill Toffee team with the idea of recreating the chocolate-covered toffee flavors in beer, and it launched in February for the brewery’s 23rd birthday.
ABOVE Carolina Brewery’s Toffee Stout; RIGHT Christy Graves of Chapel Hill Toffee (center) with UNC Lineberger’s Meghan Hunt and Elizabeth Rubio.
In case you were wondering, no, they didn’t use actual toffee in the beer. Instead, their tribute to toffee involves roasting malt, using a bit of roasted barley and adding 100% pure cacao. “The beauty of recreating these flavors is that they happen in a stout
SIGN UP FOR OUR E-NEWSLETTER! FIND IT IN YOUR INBOX EVERY THURSDAY! Use it to: Plan your weekend Get the latest in restaurant and retail news Enter ticket giveaways See an updated list of local job openings Go to chapelhillmagazine.com to subscribe.
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
93
N E W
O N
T H E
F O O D
S C E N E
Life’s Too Short For Fake Pizza
anyway because the raw materials are processed in the same manner. For instance, toffee is made of sugar that is cooked under high heat until it caramelizes,” says Carolina Brewery’s Director of Brewing Operations Jon Connolly. “Likewise, we use a dark Belgian caramel malt that is made by heating malted barley until the sugars in the malt caramelize and produce dark glassy kernels. These caramel malts add sweetness and a nutty flavor which is reminiscent of the pecans dusted onto the top of the toffees.” The Toffee Stout makes for a smooth, drinkable pint that’s subtly nutty and sweet. Not only sweet, but compassionate too – they plan on donating a portion of the proceeds to fight cancer. “Having recently lost my own mother, Dina Bray, to ovarian cancer, and after learning that Robert lost his father seven years ago to pancreatic cancer, we thought it only fitting to pair up with another Chapel Hill institution and donate the proceeds of this collaboration to the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center,” says CHT’s Christy Graves. Find it on tap through April or around town in cans at Weaver Street Market, Southern Season, Carrboro Beverage Company and Whole Foods. –JS
THIS IS THE REAL DEAL
Artisan Hand-Crafted | Wood-Fired Local, Farm-Fresh Ingredients DECIDE FOR YOURSELF Located at Veranda at Briar Chapel 79 Falling Springs Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27516
919.240.4104
Thank you for voting us Favorite Pizza! CAPPSPIZZERIA.COM
94
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
Boro Branches Out
T
his spring, Boro Beverage’s Mother Brewer Carly Erickson mobilizes her kombucha operation with a newly renovated camper, The Mothership. The successful completion of her Kickstarter campaign provided Carly with the funds to take her probiotic beverages on the road and straight to your doorstep. “I really love the idea of pop-up markets and mobility,” she says. “The idea of bringing The Mothership to the masses is bringing the products to the community so they’re more accessible.” Accessibility, sustainability and community are three of Carly’s strongest values. Her kombucha and shrubs, or drinking vinegars, are more than healthy
N E W
T H E
F O O D
S C E N E
to buy shrubs online. Unlike kombucha, shrubs are not carbonated, and these syrups are shipped to your doorstep with drink instruction cards and recipes for at-home enjoyment. And although Boro beverages will be available at The Mothership, on your porch and on draft at The Looking Glass Cafe and Gray Squirrel Coffee, Carly assures customers that she’ll still maintain her presence at the farmers markets. “I’m very passionate about food and local food systems and farming,” she says, “and I think we need to find ways to honor those who grow our food.”
PHOTOGRAPHY BY STACEY SPRENZ
drinks; they’re a method of transforming and preserving local foods, strengthening community connections and valuing the imperfection of nature’s bountiful resources. Carly can be found at the Carrboro Farmers’ Market on Wednesday afternoons and the Chapel Hill Farmers’ Market on Saturday mornings with the farmers whose produce she proudly showcases in her beverages. The implementation of The Mothership allows Boro Beverage the freedom to branch out to food truck rodeos, park in central locations like Weaver Street, Steel String Brewery or Cliff’s Meat Market, and test out new flavors. The growler-style fill available at The Mothership keeps Carly on her toes with new recipes. Her current bottling and labeling methods require more consistency and stability to sell wholesale, but the bulk filling station in The Mothership will offer specialty, peak-season experimental flavors. But don’t worry if you’re looking for Boro Beverage probiotic drinks and you can’t make it to any filling sessions; Carly will mail you everything you need. As another part of her Kickstarter, she raised money to start a subscription-based program
O N
WINN ER
BEST OF CH APEL H ILL
TRY OUR ROTATING
DINNER SPECIALS FOCUSED ON FRESH AND SEASONAL INGREDIENTS. FOOD & COFFEE | BEER & BICYCLES SERVING BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER ENJOY PATIO DINING 58 CHAPELTON COURT, SUITE 100, AT VERANDA AT BRIAR CHAPEL
BREAKAWAYNC.COM | 984 234 3010 Carly Erickson of Boro Beverage. April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
95
N E W
O N
T H E
F O O D
S C E N E
As Boro expands its presence locally with the mobile camper, draft kombucha and online subscriptions, the challenge of owning, brewing, operating and selling becomes more prevalent in Carly’s one-woman show. “I’m really focused in on Carrboro and Chapel Hill because I don’t want to spread myself too thin,” Carly explains. “It’s just me running my company. As excited as I am about getting out there and reaching people, I’m also very protective and careful – and selective I guess – of where I go because I don’t want to not have consistency with my customers and be reliable.” “I’m just looking forward to growing,” she says. –KP
G.O.A.T.
F
earrington Village favorite, The Belted Goat, revealed its new
look and location in February, and while the space has changed, the staff members and service remain the same. Operating out of the The Granary’s former location, The Belted Goat offers an expanded menu – look for offerings like whipped feta with honey on the Grazing section – and additional seating. The only asset that didn’t make it through the move was the Goat’s coffee roaster, fondly dubbed Melina, which was put into retirement and replaced with a newer model down the street for a quieter cafe. Stop by to enjoy the same freshly roasted Fearrington blend coffee you’ve come to love – minus the noise – and pair it with something from the new menu. –KP
The new Belted Goat wine section.
96
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
N E W
O N
T H E
F O O D
S C E N E
Global Flavors
• Up N.C. 86 at Mt. Sinai Road is New Hope Market which has f there’s one thing Yung Nay wants you to know about his new been quietly offering breakfast, lunch and dinner for the last Meadowmont restaurant, Fusion Fish, it’s that it’s not just sushi few months. Try the seasonal grain bowl, biscuits & gravy or and seafood. In fact, the owner and operation director wouldn’t label the Down South grits bowl, and don’t miss the plentiful to-go the cuisine at all. Instead, he says, it’s more about the “Fusion” part of section featuring produce, cheese and beer and wine. the name since all the chefs, hailing from around the country, bring something different to the menu. Menu in hand, Yung points out • At press time, Chapel Hill was waiting on Durham import dishes created by his team and explains the collaboration that made Heavenly Buffaloes, Greensboro favorite Hops Burger Bar them possible. “It’s not just my menu,” he says. The creativity shows: and Frutta Bowls, a chain serving bowls of all varieties (acai, the Truffle Benito Fries are served with a gochujang aioli; the misopitaya, kale and oatmeal), to open. CHM glazed cod arrives with sautéed bok choy and garlic mashed potatoes. For his part, Yung brings his experience catering around the Triangle and consulting Annual for other restaurants; he’s been pleasing Triangle palates for years. Yet he says he’s “more like a foodie than a chef.” Yung has big plans for his restaurant – look for sushi or mixology classes soon and Hennessy tastings. Full disclosure: During the interview, I had a spoonful of the caramelized carrot cake – with its brown sugar ice cream, cream cheese icing and carrot granola – and can’t wait to see how Yung and team continue to refine the menu. –JS
I
5th
DINING FOR DOLLARS Wednesday, May 23, 2018 6-9pm
Hickory Tavern
Other favorites • Chef Brendan Cox’s Oakleaf has a new home in Carrboro, not far from where he does most of his shopping at the Carrboro Farmers’ Market. Along with a larger bar and more room for walk-ins, the eatery has increased the number of smaller, sharable plates and has a private dining room.
• Vecino Brewing Co. will be opening its doors later this month in the former YesterYears space in Carrboro. They’ll be brewing offerings like Pazzo, a Belgian lager, and Cascadia, a Black IPA, on site while also serving a menu of sandwiches and shared plates with an emphasis on local and items that pair well with their brews.
JOIN THE FIGHT AGAINST HUNGER! BUY TICKETS AT CHCMOW.ORG
Boarding Now for Airline Ticket Raffle 100 Tickets @ $100 Each to Benefit Meals on Wheels Chapel Hill Carrboro
BUY TICKETS AT chcmow.org
CHM April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
97
I N
R E S C H A P E L H I A N A D V E R
T A U R A N T S , D E L I L L , C A R R B O R O , D N O R T H E R N C H T I S E R S H I G H L I G
TASTE
S A N D B I S T R O S H I L L S B O R O U G H A T H A M C O U N T Y H T E D I N B O X E S
CHAPEL HILL East Franklin Street
[B]SKI’S Specialty wraps. 147 E. Franklin St.; 919-969-9727; bskis.com Bandido’s Mexican Cafe Burritos, salads, quesadillas, tacos. 159-1/2 E. Franklin St.; 919-967-5048; bandidoscafe.com Benny Cappella’s Pizza, by the slice or whole pie. 122 E. Franklin St.; 919-240-5286; bennysva.com/BennyCappellas BUNS Serves gourmet burgers, fries and shakes made from fresh ingredients. 107 N. Columbia St.; 919-240-4746; bunsofchapelhill.com Carolina Coffee Shop The mainstay serves casual American cuisine for breakfast, lunch and dinner. 138 E. Franklin St.; 919-942-6875; carolinacoffeeshop.com Cosmic Cantina Burritos, salads, quesadillas, tacos. 128 E. Franklin St.; 919-960-3955; cosmiccantina.com
FOUR CORNERS American fare, nachos, wings, pasta. 175 E. Franklin St.; 919-537-8230; fourcornersgrille.com IMBIBE Bottle shop and restaurant featuring pizza, salads and appetizers. 108 Henderson St.; 919-636-6469; imbibenc.com Kurama Sushi & Noodle Express Dumplings, salads, noodle dishes. 105 N. Columbia St.; 919-968-4747; kuramasushinoodle.com
98
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
THE DISH O U R
P I C K
O F
T H E
PARTICIPANT Learn more on page 28
S E A S O N
Crossroads Chapel Hill 2 1 1 P I T T S B O R O S T . , 9 1 9 - 9 1 8 - 2 7 7 7 C A R O L I N A I N N . C O M
C H A P E L
H I L L
I’ve made gnocchi just once – just ask my unused potato ricer – and after a long day, the Yukon Gold Potato Gnocchi at Crossroads Chapel Hill was exactly the dish I was glad someone else was making. That someone being chef Brandon Sharp meant that very delicate, tender gnocchi bathe in a fra diavolo sauce, tomato-based with chilies that give it some heat. The blistered tomatoes that pop in your mouth hint of warmer weather and all it brings: tomato sandwiches, caprese salads and Fridays on the Front Porch. For this dish and others, the chef is quick to credit his culinary team for its excellence and ingenuity. “We cook the things we want to eat,” he says. By the time you’re reading this, Brandon and company will have added and subtracted from the menu, reflecting the availability of ingredients from folks like Bill and Joanna Lelekacs of Dancing Pines Farm. Expect English peas, gai lan (Chinese broccoli) and black-eyed peas to play supporting roles in entrees the chefs – and you – will want to eat this spring. Yukon Gold Potato Gnocchi, $24. –Jessica Stringer CHM
Linda’s Bar & Grill Local beer, sweet potato tots, cheese fries, burgers. 203 E. Franklin St.; 919-933-6663; lindas-bar.com Lotsa Stone Fired Pizza Build-your-own stone-fired pizza. 100 W. Franklin St.; 919-391-4100; lotsa.com Ms. Mong Mongolian BBQ, banh mi, fusion burritos. 163 E. Franklin St.; 919-933-5277; msmong.squarespace.com
West Franklin Street 411 WEST The menu – including fresh pasta, seafood and pizzas – is inspired by the flavors of Italy and the Mediterranean, with a healthy California twist; outdoor dining; all ABC permits. 411 W. Franklin St.; 919-967-2782; 411west.com
R&R Grill Spicy wings, kabobs, flatbread pizza. 137 E. Franklin St.; 919-240-4411; rnrgrill.com
Al’s Burger Shack Gourmet burgers and fries with local ingredients. 516 W. Franklin St.; 919-904-7659; alsburgershack.com
Roots Bakery, Bistro & Bar Farm-to-table American and Central American fusion. 161 E. Franklin St.; 919-240-7160; rootschapelhill.com
Beer Study Bottle shop with in-store drafts and growlers to go. 106 N. Graham St.; 919240-5423; beerstudy.com
Sawasdee Thai Restaurant Thai cuisine such as red curry and pad thai. 110 N. Columbia St.; 919-960-0440; sawasdeechapelhill.com
Bread & Butter Bread, cinnamon rolls, desserts. 503 W. Rosemary St.; 919-960-5998; chapelhillbakery.com
Shanghai Dumpling Dumplings, pork buns, hotpots. 143 E. Franklin St.; 919-914-6737; shanghaidumplingnc.com
SPANKY’S A Chapel Hill institution since 1977, the American bar and grill serves hamburgers, brown sugar baby back ribs, garden fresh salads and more. 101 E. Franklin St.; 919-967-2678; spankysrestaurant.com Sugarland Cupcakes, gelato, pastries. 140 E. Franklin St.; 919-929-2100; sugarlandchapelhill.com Sup Dogs Creative hot dogs and sides like jalapeño popper tots and funnel cake sticks. 107 E. Franklin St.; 919-903-9566; supdogs.com Sutton’s Drug Store Burgers, sandwiches, breakfast, milkshakes. 159 E. Franklin St.; 919-942-5161; suttonsdrugstore.com Tama Café A wide selection of tea beverages plus smoothies, coffee, desserts, salad bowls and sandwiches. 105 E. Franklin St.; 919-391-3706; tamatea.com Time-Out Southern comfort food 24 hours a day. 201 E. Franklin St.; 919-929-2425; timeout247.com Top of the Hill Chapel Hill’s only distillery also offers beers and American food, like burgers and flatbreads. 100 E. Franklin St.; 919-929-8676; thetopofthehill.com TRU Deli & Wine Sandwiches and wine. 114 Henderson St.; 919-240-7755; trudeli.com Ye Olde Waffle Shoppe Waffles, pancakes, eggs. 173 E. Franklin St.; 919-929-9192; yeoldewaffleshoppe.com
BREADMEN’S A variety of burgers, sandwiches, salads and grilled meat, with daily soup and specials. All-day breakfast; vegetarian options. Catering available. 324 W. Rosemary St.; 919-967-7110; breadmens.com Carolina Brewery The fifth-oldest brewery in the state features Carolina cuisine. 460 W. Franklin St.; 919-942-1800; carolinabrewery. com Cholanad Restaurant & Bar Contemporary and traditional South Indian cuisine. Catering available. 308 W. Franklin St.; 800-246-5262; cholanad.com Cuban Revolution Express A sister restaurant to Durham’s Cuban Revolution, this location offers wraps, pressed sandwiches and handmade empanadas. 401 W. Franklin St.; 919-240-5276; cubanrevolutionexpress.com CROOK’S CORNER Southern classics like shrimp and grits, Hoppin’ John and jalapeño-cheddar hushpuppies. 610 W. Franklin St.; 919-929-7643; crookscorner.com
Elaine’s on Franklin Fine regional American cuisine, made with the freshest local ingredients; all ABC permits. 454 W. Franklin St.; 919-960-2770; elainesonfranklin.com Guru India Restaurant Tandoori, thali, curry. 508-A W. Franklin St.; 919-942-8201; guruindianc.com Heavenly Buffaloes Chicken wings (bone-in and boneless) as well as vegan wings in more than 25 rubs and sauces, including peri peri and Jamaican jerk. 404 W. Franklin St.; 919-237-2358; heavenlybuffaloes.com ITALIAN PIZZERIA III Pizza, calzones, subs. The “place to be” in Chapel Hill for 35+ years. 508 W. Franklin St.; 919-968-4671; italianpizzeria3.com Kipos Greek cuisine in a relaxed, upscale setting; outdoor dining. 431 W. Franklin St.; 919-425-0760; kiposchapelhill.com Lantern Pan-Asian cuisine. 423 W. Franklin St.; 919-969-8846; lanternrestaurant.com La Residence French-inspired cuisine made from fresh ingredients. 202 W. Rosemary St.; 919-967-2506; laresidencedining.com Lime & Basil Vietnamese fare. 200 W. Franklin St.; 919-967-5055; limeandbasil.com
MAMA DIP’S Traditional Southern specialties, including a country breakfast and brunch and dinner classics like fried chicken and Brunswick stew. 408 W. Rosemary St.; 919-942-5837; mamadips.com Mediterranean Deli Offers healthy vegan, vegetarian and gluten-free options as well as delicious meats from the grill. 410 W. Franklin St.; 919-967-2666; mediterraneandeli.com Mellow Mushroom Classic Southern pizza. 310 W. Franklin St.; 919-929-1941; mellowmushroom.com/store/chapel-hill Merritt’s Store & Grill Sandwiches, breakfast biscuits, burgers. 1009 S. Columbia St.; 919-942-4897; merrittsblt.com
CROSSROADS CHAPEL HILL AT THE CAROLINA INN New American cuisine and seasonal specialties; all ABC permits. 211 Pittsboro St.; 919-918-2777; crossroadscuisine.com
Might As Well Bar & Grill Bar favorites like cheese fries plus pizza, burgers, wings, salads and more. 206 W. Franklin St.; 984-234-3333; chapelhill.mightaswellbarandgrill.com Mint North Indian subz korma and chicken jalfrezi. 504 W. Franklin St.; 919-929-6188; mintunc.com
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
99
G U I D E
GET JUICIN’ If you’ve fallen behind on your New Year’s health resolution, have no fear! Clean Juice opened a new location in Eastgate Crossing. Head there to find 100% certified organic juices, smoothies, acai bowls and more to satisfy your cravings while keeping it clean and healthy. THE TEA ON TAMA Snack spot Tama Tea expanded its menu to include breakfast and lunch items, including a variety of vegan and vegetarian options. Plus, every item on the menu can be made gluten-free. With the changes comes a new name, Tama Café. TOPO HIS GAME Top of the Hill founder Scott Maitland was honored with the Griff and June Glover award at the North Carolina Restaurant & Lodging Association’s Stars of the Industry Celebration Gala. The award recognizes members who have gone above and beyond in their service to the association. BURRITO BLISS Monterrey Mexican Restaurant is opening a new restaurant in Rams Plaza. The current Chapel Hill location will remain open, but will be converted into a spot with an entirely new menu focused on quick bites like burritos and street tacos.
Spicy 9 Sushi Bar & Asian Restaurant Sushi, Thai curries, bibimbap and other Asian entrees. 140 W. Franklin St.; 919-903-9335; spicy9chapelhill.com Talulla’s Authentic Turkish cuisine; all ABC permits. 456 W. Franklin St.; 919-933-1177; talullas.com Trolly Stop Specialty hot dogs and burgers. 104 W. Franklin St.; 919-240-4206; trollystophotdogs.com
Dunk & Slide at Whole Foods Market All-day breakfast, sushi and more. 81 S. Elliott Rd.; 919-968-1983; wholefoodsmarket.com Guglhupf Bake Shop Bakery serving European-style breads, pastries, desserts and savory baked goods in addition to coffee. Eastgate Crossing; 919-914-6511; guglhupf.com/chapel-hill-bake-shop Hibachi & Company Japanese fast-casual spot serving healthy hibachi- and teriyakistyle dishes. 153 E. Franklin St.; 919-9038428; hibachicompany.com
Vimala’s Curryblossom Cafe Traditional Indian tandoori and thali. 431 W. Franklin St.; 919-929-3833; curryblossom.com
Il Palio Ristorante at The Siena Hotel N.C.’s only AAA Four Diamond Italian restaurant. 1505 E. Franklin St.; 919-918-2545; ilpalio.com
West End Wine Bar Pastries, light tapas, 100 wines. 450 W. Franklin St.; 919-967-7599; westendwinebar.com
La Hacienda Burritos, salads, quesadillas, tacos. 1813 Fordham Blvd.; 919-967-0207; lahacienda2.eat24hour.com
Windows Restaurant at the Franklin Hotel New American breakfast cuisine. 311 W. Franklin St.; 919-442-9000
Living Kitchen Vegan and vegetarian options including sweet potato sushi, pad thai, burritos, juices and smoothies. 201 S. Elliott Rd.; 919-535-9191; livingkitchen.com
YOGURT PUMP Since 1982, YoPo has served up frozen yogurt treats and shakes with unique flavors. 106 W. Franklin St.; 919-942-7867; yogurtpump.com Village Plaza/East Franklin Street/ Eastgate Crossing
BABALU TAPAS AND TACOS Gourmet Mexican. 1800 E. Franklin St., Ste. 16; 984-528-8030; chapelhill.eatbabalu.com
Luncheonette A weekday lunch spot serving up salads, burgers, soups and pasta dishes house-made with fresh, local ingredients. 100 Europa Dr.; 984-234-0644; roseluncheonette.com Market Street Coffeehouse Coffee, pastries and more. 227 S. Elliott Rd.; 919-968-8993; marketstcoffee.com Min Ga Korean cuisine. 1404 E. Franklin St.; 919-933-1773; min-ga.com Monterrey Traditional Mexican cuisine. 237 S. Elliott Rd.; 919-969-8750; monterreychapelhill.com OLIO & ACETO CAFE Brunch and lunch options inspired by Blue Sky Oil and Vinegar products. 400 S. Elliott Rd.; 919-903-8958; olioandacetocafe.com OLIO & ACETO
U ni
qu
Caffe Driade Carrboro Coffee, bowl-size lattes, local baked goods, beer and wine. 1215 E. Franklin St.; 919-942-2333; caffedriade.com
The Loop Pizza Grill Pizzas, soups, salads, sandwiches, burgers. Eastgate Crossing; 919-969-7112; looppizzagrill.com
Moe’s Southwest Grill Made-to-order burritos, nachos, quesadillas and more. 110 W. Franklin St.; 919-914-6217; moes.com Noodles & Company Asian, Mediterranean, American noodles. 214 W. Franklin St.; 919-967-7320; noodles.com
Cerritos Cantina Specialty dips, ceviche, street tacos, nachos, burritos and salads. 1502 E. Franklin St.; 919-929-6566; cerritoscantina.com
The Northside District Specialty cocktails and international small plates. 403 W. Rosemary St.; 919-391-7044; thenorthsidedistrict.com
Chopt Offers unique salads, grain, noodle and quinoa bowls. Eastgate Crossing; 919-240-7660; choptsalad.com
100
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
In
sp
el
el
y
Carolina 1663 Contemporary Southern fare at the Sheraton. 1 Europa Dr.; 919-969-2157; carolina1663.com
s.
SO LONG, SAL After 37 years, Filippo and Sylvia Tornetta of Sal’s Ristorante are retiring. The good news: the restaurant was sold to a longtime employee who plans to keep everything pretty much the same in a new location, 2811 Homestead Road.
The Purple Bowl Acai bowls, toast, smoothies, coffee. 306-B W. Franklin St.; 919-903-8511; purplebowlch.com
Clean Juice Certified organic juices, smoothies, bowls and snacks. 1800 E. Franklin, Ste. 22; 919-590-5133; cleanjuice.com
ou
NEWS BITES
Perennial Coffee and pastries; 403 W. Franklin St.; 919-869-7517; perennial.cafe
ici
D I N I N G
ir e d
.
Si m
ply
D
Red Pepper Chinese restaurant offering traditional Szechuan dishes. 1704 E. Franklin St.; 919-968-3488; redpepperchapelhill.com SQUID’S Fresh seafood options include woodgrilled fillets, Maine lobster, fried seafood and oysters. 1201 Fordham Blvd. (15-501); 919-942-8757; squidsrestaurant.com
Sunrise Biscuit Kitchen Drive-thru biscuits, sandwiches. 1305 E. Franklin St.; 919-933-1324; sunrisebiscuits.com Tandoor Indian Restaurant Traditional Indian cuisine, vegan options. 1301 E. Franklin St.; 919-967-6622; tandoorindian.com Twisted Noodles Thai noodle soups, pan-fried noodles. Eastgate Crossing; 919-933-9933; twistednoodles.com Zoës Kitchen Mediterranean soups, salads, sandwiches and kebabs in a colorful space. Eastgate Crossing; 919-883-9310; zoeskitchen.com University Place Alfredo’s Pizza Villa Pizzas, calzones, salads, subs, pasta, desserts. 919-968-3424; alfredospizzanc.com
KITCHEN Bistro-style dining with a seasonal menu that always includes mussels. 764 MLK Jr. Blvd.; 919-537-8167; kitchenchapelhill.com
Lucha Tigre Latin-Asian cuisine and sake tequila bar. 746 MLK Jr. Blvd.; 919-904-7326; luchatigre.com THE ROOT CELLAR Sandwiches, prepared salads, desserts and more. Beer and wine only; outdoor dining. 750 MLK Jr. Blvd.; 919-967-3663; rootcellarchapelhill.com
Bartaco Tacos of various styles like sesame ribeye and fried oyster, plus fresh-juice cocktails, poke and mole options. 910-807-8226; bartaco.com
Sal’s Ristorante Calzones, pizza, pasta, sandwiches. 2811 Homestead Rd.; 919-932-5125; salsristorantechapelhill.com
City Kitchen Wholesome American fare with a sophisticated twist. 919-928-8200; citykitchenchapelhill.com
Allen & Son Barbecue N.C. barbecue. 6203 Millhouse Rd. (N.C. 86 N.); 919-942-7576
Maple View Mobile Ice cream outpost of the Hillsborough dairy farm. 919-244-1949; mapleviewmobile.com
Farm House Restaurant Steaks, salads, potatoes. 6004 Millhouse Rd. (N.C. 86 N.); 919-929-5727; farmhousesteakhouse.com
Red Bowl Sushi, bento boxes. 919-918-7888; redbowlchapelhill.com
Joe Van Gogh Coffee and pastries. Timberlyne Shopping Center; 919-967-2002; joevangogh.com
TRILOGY American cafe featuring innovative twists on classic dishes. Silverspot Cinema; 919-357-9888; trilogyrestaurant.com
Timberlyne/Chapel Hill North Area
Magone Italian Grill and Pizza. 1129 Weaver Dairy Rd., Ste. F; 919-904-7393 Margaret’s Cantina Creative Mexican appetizers and entrees. Timberlyne Shopping Center; 919-942-4745; margaretscantina.com
Stoney River Steakhouse and Grill Southern favorites like deviled eggs meet steak house mainstays like the legendary 12 oz. filet. 919-914-6688; stoneyriver.com
New Hope Market Store and grill that uses local products and features breakfast and daily specials like burgers, soups and more. 6117 N.C. Hwy. 86 S.; 919-240-7851
Village Burgers Gourmet burgers with sides like sweet potato fries and tater tots. 919-240-4008; villageburgerchapelhill.com
Oishii Specialty rolls, teriyaki, stir-fry, sushi. Timberlyne Shopping Center; 919-932-7002; oishiiroll.com
at Southern Season
WEATHERVANE & PATIO • Lunch • Dinner Breakfast RESTAURANT Shrimp & grits,Weekend sweet Brunch potato fries, chicken & waffles, and other foods with a southern flair. 919-929-9466; southernseason.com/ restaurant/chapel-hill Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard (Airport Road) Contemporary cuisine with a Southern flare highlighting local ingredients
Hunam Chinese Restaurant Cantonese cuisine. 790 MLK Jr. Blvd.; 919-967-6133; 2012 Champions of the “Got to be NC” Competition hunamchapelhill.com Dining Series 201 S. Estes Drive, University Mall, Chapel Hill 919-929-9466 | southernseason.com/weathervane
Pop’s Pizzeria Pizzas, calzones, stromboli, pasta. 1822 MLK Jr. Blvd.; 919-932-1040; pops-pizzeria.com Queen of Pho Vietnamese cuisine like banh mi, stir fried egg noodles and, of course, pho beef noodle soup. Timberlyne Shopping Center; 919-903-8280 Rasa Indi-Chinese Indian and Chinese cuisine. 1826 MLK Jr. Blvd.; 919-929-2199; rasachapelhill.com The Bagel Bar More than 20 homemade bagel varieties. 630 Weaver Dairy Rd., Ste. 109; 919-929-7700; bagelbarbagels.com
The Pig Barbecue, fried tofu, collards. 630 Weaver Dairy Rd., Ste. 101; 919-942-1133; thepigrestaurant.com Sage Vegetarian Cafe Vegetarian fare. Timberlyne Shopping Center; 919-968-9266; sagevegcafe.com Special Treats A chocolate boutique shop offering gourmet chocolates, cookies and biscotti made by people with disabilities. 1129 Weaver Dairy Rd., Unit R; 919-883-2151; specialtreatsnc.com YOPOP Chapel Hill Frozen yogurt shop featuring 14 flavors made daily and 36 toppings including fresh fruit. Bubble tea and smoothies. 1129 Weaver Dairy Rd.; 919-537-8229 N.C. 54 East/Raleigh Road Amante Gourmet Pizza Create-your-own pizzas. 6209-B Falconbridge Rd.; 919-493-0904; amantepizza.com BIN 54 Steaks, seafood and other fine American food. Everything made in-house. Glen Lennox Shopping Center; 919-969-1155; bin54chapelhill.com Brenz Pizza Co. Specialty pizzas, subs, salads. 3120 Environ Way, East 54; 919-636-4636; chapelhill.brenzpizzaco.com Coco Bean Coffee Shop Locally owned coffee shop offering Carrboro Coffee Roasters coffee and a variety of baked goods. 1114 Environ Way; 919-883-9003; cocobeancoffeeshop.com ELEMENTS Cuisine combining classical and modern Asian and European cooking techniques; check out the wine bar with full menu next door. 2110 Environ Way, East 54; 919-537-8780; elementsofchapelhill.com Jujube Eclectic, modern cuisine inspired by the classic flavors of China and Vietnam. Glen Lennox Shopping Center; 919-960-0555; jujuberestaurant.com Nantucket Grill & Bar Clam chowder, lobster rolls and more. 5925 Farrington Rd.; 919-402-0077; nantucketgrill.com Raaga Authentic Indian delicacies like curry and masala. 3140 Environ Way, East 54; 919-240-7490; raagachapelhill.com Thai Palace Soup, curries, pad thai. Glenwood Square Shopping Center; 919-967-5805; thaipalacenc.com The Egg & I French toast, pancakes and specialty omelets. 1101 Environ Way, East 54; 919-537-8488; theeggandirestaurants.com
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
101
D I N I N G
G U I D E
JOYOUS COOKING
M O R E T O N N E A L I S A N A U T H O R A N D I N T E R I O R D E S I G N E R W H O L I V E S I N C H A P E L H I L L . S H E I S A L I F E L O N G F O O D I E , H A V I N G C O - F O U N D E D L A R É S I D E N C E I N 1 9 7 6 .
Chocolate Challenge Like most Southern ladies of her generation, my grandmother was a fabulous cook. She could make anything taste wonderful, but when we kids dropped by after school, it was all about sugar. Sugar cookies, oatmeal cookies, devil’s food cake with seven-minute icing, caramel cake, divinity candy, fudge – she knew sweets were the key to her grandchildren’s hearts. She was an expert pastry maker and I was her eager apprentice. There wasn’t much measuring or even timing in Mimi’s kitchen. Flour was added until the dough was “stiff enough.” Icing was beaten until it “loses its gloss.” Candy was done when a “soft ball forms in cold water.” Cake was baked “until the sides come away from the pan.” Her instincts and hands told her what to do. She had the touch. Chocolate fudge was her specialty. She taught me how to cook it until it boiled up, then down, test for doneness with a drop
in cold water, cool it until barely warm and then beat the heck out of it with a wooden spoon until no longer shiny and stiff – but not too stiff. Fudge icing for yellow cake (the mnemonic Southern classic, 1-2-3-4 cake) was made the same way. Not long ago I tried to replicate her cooked fudge frosting. It was grainy and hard as a brick, a total disaster. Alas, I’ve lost my touch. Last week I needed a dessert for company. I had homemade Dutch butter cookies on hand and envisioned a quick sundae to serve with them. I decided to get back in the saddle and try a simple chocolate sauce I hadn’t made in years. So, from my cookbook, “Remembering Bill Neal,” I looked up Honey Chocolate Sauce and carefully followed my own instructions. When I tried to stir it after boiling, my spoon stuck in a hard clump of chocolate in the bottom! The good news: it hadn’t burnt. The bad news: it had seized, resulting in the same kind of disaster as when an emulsion, such as
Honey Chocolate Sauce 2 oz. unsweetened chocolate 2 oz. semisweet chocolate ½ cup heavy cream or half-and-half Pinch of salt ½ cup honey Grated rind of 1 medium orange ¼ cup bourbon or rum Break up the chocolate into small pieces. Add it to a medium-size saucepan along with the cream, salt and honey. Over low-medium heat, stir the mixture until the chocolate melts and the sauce begins to bubble. Immediately turn the heat down to low and let the sauce simmer 1 to 2 minutes longer without stirring. Take the pan off the heat and stir in the orange peel. PHOTO BY JAMES STEFIUK
102
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
mayonnaise, separates mid-recipe. Seizing happens when the fatty chocolate comes in contact with liquid, or in this case, when it overheats by just a few seconds. Luckily, I remembered a lesson from Mimi: seized chocolate can be fixed by adding more liquid. I was reluctant to waste perfectly good liquor in this counterintuitive experiment, but pressed on. As I whisked in bourbon, a small portion at a time, the sauce began to loosen up, and by the time all the bourbon was incorporated, it had smoothed out perfectly. The flavor combination in this bittersweet sauce makes me think of an Old Fashioned mixed with chocolate. Adults love it, but I wouldn’t serve it to my grandchildren. They are perfectly happy with Magic Shell.
When the sauce reaches room temperature, add the liquor a little at a time, stirring to incorporate it. The finished sauce should be smooth and silky. Serve over ice cream of your choice. Notes: The sauce can be kept for weeks in the refrigerator. It will harden when cold. Reheat in the microwave or over hot water to thin it before serving. This recipe makes about 1¾ cups of sauce, enough for about 10 sundaes. CHM
D I N I N G
Tobacco Road Sports Cafe Burgers, salads and sandwiches. 1118 Environ Way, East 54; 919-537-8404; tobaccoroadsportscafe.com/chapel-hill
Pazzo! Italian cuisine, takeout pizza. 700 Market St.; 919-929-9984; pazzo-restaurant.com
Meadowmont Village
Rasa Malaysia Authentic Malaysian dishes. 410 Market St.; 984-234-0256; rasamalaysiach.com
Brixx Wood Fired Pizza Specialty pizzas and salads. 501 Meadowmont Village Circle; 919-929-1942; brixxpizza.com
Town Hall Grill Sandwiches, steak, seafood. 410 Market St.; 919-960-8696; thetownhallgrill.com
Cafe Carolina & Bakery Salads, sandwiches, breakfast. 601 Meadowmont Village Circle; 919-945-8811; cafecarolina.com
Weaver Street Market Hot bar and salad bar for breakfast, lunch and dinner. 716 Market St.; 919-929-2009; weaverstreetmarket.coop
CHRONIC TACOS Mexican grill utilizing authentic recipes. 504 Meadowmont Village Circle; 984-999-4803; eatchronictacos.com Fusion Fish Eclectic menu including tapas, family-style dinners and sushi – all with a global flare. 100 Meadowmont Village Circle; fusionfishcuisine.com
CARRBORO Downtown
ACME FOOD & BEVERAGE CO. Soups, salads, seafood and entrees with a Southern touch. 110 E. Main St.; 919-929-2263; acmecarrboro.com
Southern Village Al’s Burger Shack Gourmet burgers and fries made with local ingredients. 708 Market St.; 919-914-6694; alsburgershack.com
AKAI HANA Japanese cuisine including sushi, tempura and teriyaki; 206 W. Main St.; 919-942-6848; akaihana.com
G U I D E
Armadillo Grill Tex-Mex burritos, enchiladas, tacos, nachos. 120 E. Main St.; 919-929-4669; armadillogrill.com Cafe Carrboro Lunch and breakfast served all day, house-roasted espresso and coffees. 401 E. Main St.; 919-929-0445 Carrburritos Burritos, tacos, nachos and margaritas. 711 W. Rosemary St.; 919-933-8226; carrburritos.com GLASSHALFULL Mediterraneaninspired food and wine; outdoor dining; all ABC permits. 106 S. Greensboro St.; 919-967-9784; glasshalfull.net Gourmet Kingdom Sichuan cuisine. 301 E. Main St.; 919-932-7222; thegourmetkingdom.com Market Street Coffee & Ice Cream Locally sourced coffee, ice cream and pastries. 100 E. Weaver St.; 919-960-6776; marketstcoffee.com Milltown Pub fare with an extensive beer list. 307 E. Main St.; 919-968-2460; dininganddrinking.com Neal’s Deli Traditional deli fare. 100-C E. Main St.; 919-967-2185; nealsdeli.com
La Vita Dolce Pastries, sorbet, gelato. 610 Market St.; 919-968-1635; lavitadolcecafe.com
The Place to Be!
CHAPEL HILL FAVORITE FOR 38 YEARS BEST PHILLY CHEESE STEAK IN THE TRIANGLE!
ITALIAN PIZZERIA III WINNER
BEST OF CHAPEL HILL
FOR CATERING OF ANY OCCASION, PLEASE GIVE US A CALL! 508 WEST FRANKLIN STREET, CHAPEL HILL
919 968 4671 italianpizzeria3.com
WINNER WINNER
BEST OF CHAPEL HILL OF CHAPEL HILL
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
103
D I N I N G
G U I D E
Oakleaf The daily changing menu includes “immediate” cuisine like handmade pastas, seafood from the Carolinas and ingredients from the chef’s own garden. 301 E. Main St..; 984-234-0054; oakleafnc.com Open Eye Cafe Locally roasted Carrboro Coffee and espresso, tea, beer, wine and baked goods. 101 S. Greensboro St.; 919-968-9410
Esperanza Empanada y Tequila Savory and sweet empanadas, 50 kinds of tequila. 370 E. Main St.; 919-617-1674; esperanzanc.com Gray Squirrel Coffee Co. Roastery and espresso bar. 360 E. Main St., #100; graysquirrelcoffee.com
CROSSTIES BBQ A variety of barbecue, sides and scratch-made desserts. 919-904-7160; crosstiesbbq.com
Hickory Tavern Burgers, sandwiches and build-your-own salads. 370-110 E. Main St.; 919-942-7417; thehickorytavern.com
Elmo’s Diner Homemade Southern and American classics. 919-929-2909; elmosdinercarrboro.com Oasis Organic coffee, tea, beer and wine. 919-904-7343; oasisincarrmill.com
Provence Southern French cuisine. 203 W. Weaver St.; 919-967-5008; provenceofcarrboro.com
One Fish Two Fish Hawaiian poke restaurant offering the traditional raw fish over rice and salad bowls, as well as poke burritos, nachos and tacos. 370 E. Main St., Ste. 140; 919-240-5532; onefishtwofishpoke.com
Spotted Dog Vegetarian-friendly appetizers, soups, salads, entrees, desserts. 111 E. Main St.; 919-933-1117; thespotteddogrestaurant.com
Rise Biscuits and Donuts Carrboro Biscuits, doughnuts and coffee. 310 E. Main St., Ste. 100; 919-929-5115; risebiscuitsdonuts.com
Tyler’s Restaurant and Taproom Specialty import beers on tap and traditional pub fare. 102 E. Main St.; 919-929-6881; tylerstaproom.com
Carr Mill Mall
Pizzeria Mercato Pizza, antipasto, soups and fritti. 408 W. Weaver St.; 919-967-2277; pizzeriamercatonc.com
Wings Over 18 flavors of wings. 313 E. Main St.; 919-537-8271; wingsoverchapelhill.com
B-SIDE LOUNGE Small plates like flatbread, bacon-wrapped dates and fondue. Plus inspired cocktails. 919-904-7160; b-sidelounge.com
East Main Square Amante Gourmet Pizza Create-your-own pizzas. 300 E. Main St.; 919-929-3330; amantepizza.com
Tandem Farm-to-table, modern American cuisine with full service bar. 919-240-7937; tandemcarrboro.com VENABLE ROTISSERIE BISTRO Upscale comfort food with a heavy emphasis on locally sourced and seasonal ingredients; all ABC permits. 919-904-7160; venablebistro.com Weaver Street Market Hot bar and salad bar for breakfast, lunch and dinner. 919-929-0010; weaverstreetmarket.coop
Carrboro Pizza Oven Pizza, calzones. 919-904-7336; carrboropizzaoven.com
wood-fired pizza housemade pastas sammies • salads • desserts
Thanks for Voting Us Best of Chapel Hill!
RADIUS
112 N. Churton Street Downtown Historic Hillsborough 919.245.0601
Dinner Nightly Brunch on Sunday reservations 919.929.2263
acmecarrboro.com 104
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
radiuspizzeria.net
D I N I N G
N.C. 54 West/Carrboro Plaza Aidan’s Pizza Pizza, wings and salads. 602-D Jones Ferry Rd.; 919-903-8622; aidanspizza.com Anna Maria’s Pizzeria Italian cuisine. Carrboro Plaza; 919-929-1877; annamariasnc.wordpress.com Fiesta Grill Burritos, chimichangas, fajitas, tacos. 3307 N.C. 54 W.; 919-928-9002; fiestagrill.us Monterrey Traditional Mexican cuisine. Carrboro Plaza; 919-903-9919; monterreychapelhill.com Wingman Wings and hot dogs. 104 N.C. 54 W.; 919-928-9200
CHATHAM COUNTY Governors Club
Flair Restaurant & Wine Bar Highquality French-influenced American food, coffee, wine, beer and Sunday brunch. 50100 Governors Dr.; 919-967-9990; flairforfoodrestaurant.com Ciao Bella Pizzeria Pizzas, pastas, sandwiches. 1716 Farrington Point Rd.; 919-932-4440
Tarantini Italian cuisine. 50160 Governors Dr. (Governors Village); 919-942-4240; tarantinirestaurant.com
G U I D E
Town Hall Burger and Beer Gourmet burgers plus shared plates, tacos, wings and salads. 58 Chapelton Ct.; Ste. 140; 984-234-3504; townhallburgerandbeer.com
Veranda (Briar Chapel) 501 Pharmacy Scoops of Maple View Farm ice cream, plus malts and shakes. 98 Chapelton Ct., Ste. 300; 984-999-0501; 501rx.com
PITTSBORO Allen & Son Barbecue N.C. barbecue. 5650 U.S 15-501; 919-542-2294; stubbsandsonbbq.com
Alberello Café & Market Florentine sandwiches, housemade pastas, from-scratch desserts and more. 72 Chapelton Ct.; 984-234-3017; alberellonc.com
Angelina’s Kitchen Seasonal dishes of the Greek and southwestern variety including gyros, rice bowls and family dinners for pick up. 23 Rectory St.; 919-545-5505; angelinaskitchenonline.com
BREAKAWAY CAFE A casual “cycling-inspired” cafe serving breakfast, lunch, dinner and small plates, along with Counter Culture coffee, beer, wine and Maple View Farm ice cream. 58 Chapelton Ct., Ste. 100; 984-234-3010; breakawaync.co
Bella Donna Classic Italian dishes like lasagna and spaghetti carbonara. 440 East St.; 919-545-0900; donnaitalianrestaurant.com
CAPP’S PIZZERIA Artisan pizzas that are hand-crafted and wood-fired, utilizing LIFE’S TOO SHORT FOR FAKE PIZZA local ingredients. 79 Falling Springs Dr.; THIS IS THE 919-240-4104; cappspizzeria.com
REAL DEAL
THE BELTED GOAT A coffee and wine shop with paninis, cheeses and pastries. Fearrington Village Center; 919-545-5717; fearrington.com/belted-goat Carolina Brewery The fifth-oldest brewery in the state. 120 Lowes Dr., Ste. 100; 919-545-2330; carolinabrewery.com/pittsboro Chatham Marketplace Sandwiches, baked goods. 480 Hillsboro St.; 919-542-2643; chathammarketplace.coop
DECIDE FOR YOURSELF
CROOK’S CORNER
COMING THIS FALL 2016 TO VERANDA AT BRIAR CHAPEL 79 FALLING SPRINGS DRIVE CHAPEL HILL, NC
Crook’s continues to live up to its national reputation as a temple of Southern Cuisine. —Raleigh News & Observer
WWW.CAPPSPIZZERIA.COM
FOOD & COFFEE | BEER & BICYCLES SERVING BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER ENJOY PATIO DINING
ADDING NEW MENU ITEMS WEEKLY. CHECK OUR WEBSITE FOR OUR DINNER SPECIALS.
WINNER
BEST OF CHAPEL HILL
58 CHAPELTON COURT, SUITE 100 VERANDA AT BRIAR CHAPEL BREAKAWAYNC.CO | 984 234 3010
On the menu: Crook’s Corner’s classics & seasonals Check us out at crookscorner.com Dinner Tues–Sun at 5:30 pm • Sunday Brunch 10:30 am–2 pm 610 West Franklin Street, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27516 www.crookscorner.com • Full bar includes local beers on tap Reservations accepted. Walk-ins welcome • 919 929 7643
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
105
D I N I N G
G U I D E
The City Tap Classic bar food. 89 Hillsboro St.; 919-545-0562; thecitytap.com COMPADRES TEQUILA LOUNGE Mexican restaurant with a variety of classic dishes. 193 Lowes Drive; 919-663-5600; compadresnc.com Elizabeth’s Pizza Pizzas, calzones, sandwiches, salads and pasta. 160 Hillsboro St.; 919-545-9292; elizabethspizzapittsboro.com
THE FEARRINGTON HOUSE RESTAURANT Contemporary fine-dining. Fearrington Village Center; 919-542-2121; fearrington.com/house
MOON ASIAN BISTRO An Asian fusion restaurant offering sushi, Chinese dishes like sweetand-sour chicken, Thai curry dishes, rice and noodles. 111 Knox Way. Ste. 100; 919-869-7894. ASIAN BISTRO
THE MOD Wood-fired pizza, salads, small plates and a full bar. 46 Sanford Rd.; 919-533-6883; themodernlifedeli.com The Phoenix Bakery Small-batch and seasonal baked goods and specialty cakes. 664 West St., Pittsboro; 919-542-4452 PITTSBORO ROADHOUSE Hearty American entrees, burgers and salads; 39 West St.; 919-542-2432; pittsbororoadhouse.com
THE ROOT CELLAR Sandwiches, prepared salads, desserts and more. 35 Suddles Rd.; 919-967-3663; rootcellarpbo.com
S&T Soda Shoppe Soda fountain, American fare. 85 Hillsboro St.; 919-545-0007
Starrlight Mead
Heavenly Honey Wines
It’s Honey... All Grown-up!
Our internationally
STARRLIGHT MEAD Tastings of honey wines and honey. 480 Hillsboro St.; 919-533-6314; starrlightmead.com award-winning wines are expertly crafted on the
premises from fruits, herbs, and locally
sourced honey.
Come relax in our
tasting room, the perfect
place to sit, sip, savor,
Postal Fish Company Fresh seafood from North Carolina’s coast prepared thoughtfully by chefs James Clark and Bill Hartley. 75 W. Salisbury St.; 919-704-8612
and learn about the art of honey wine.
Virlie’s Grill Soups, salads, burgers, sandwiches. 58 Hillsboro St.; 919-542-0376; virliesgrill.com Located in the Heart of Pittsboro at Chatham Mills
Thursday - Saturday 12-6 pm, Sunday 1-5 pm StarrlightMead.com
919-533-6314
480 Hillsboro St. - Around back, under the water tower
SILER CITY ROOST BEER GARDEN AT FEARRINGTON VILLAGE Wood-fired pizza, local brews and live music; 2000 Fearrington Village Center; 919-545-5717; fearrington.com/roost
COMPADRES I Mexican restaurant with a variety of classic dishes. 115 Siler Crossing; 919-663-5600; compadresnc.com
201 S. Estes Drive, Chapel Hill, NC 27514 (919) 929-7133 | southernseason.com
Call for reservations for Mother’s Day and Graduation
Now catering!
984-484-0500 504 Meadowmont Village Circle, Chapel Hill 984-999-4803
eatchronictacos.com 106
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
WINNER
BEST OF CHAPEL HILL
Private Events | Weekend Brunch | Full Bar Seasonal Menus | Outdoor Patio
D I N I N G
HILLSBOROUGH Antonia’s Italian cuisine. 101 N. Churton St.; 919-643-7722; antoniashillsborough.com El Restaurante Ixtapa Authentic from-scratch Mexican dishes. Try the handmade tortillas and the guac. 162 Exchange Park Lane; 919-6446944; ixtapa.homestead.com/homepage.html
Mystery Brewing Public House A rotating seasonal menu and local beers. 230 S. Nash St.; 919-245-1325; mysterybrewing.com Panciuto Southern Italian cuisine. 110 S. Churton St.; 919-732-6261; panciuto.com RADIUS Wood-fired pizzas, housemade pastas, sandwiches, salads and desserts. Outdoor dining; all ABC permits. 112 N. Churton St.; 919-245-0601; radiuspizzeria.net
Hillsborough BBQ Company Barbecue plates and sandwiches, sides and desserts. 236 S. Nash St.; 919-732-4647; hillsboroughbbq.com Hot Tin Roof Games and specialty cocktails; 115 W. Margaret Ln.; 919-296-9113; hottinroofbar.com Jay’s Chicken Shack Chicken, buffalo wings, breakfast biscuits. 646 N. Churton St.; 919-732-3591; jayschickenshack.com LaPlace Cajun cuisine. 111 N. Churton St.; 919-245-0041; laplacehillsborough.com MAPLE VIEW FARM COUNTRY STORE Homemade ice cream and milk. 6900 Rocky Ridge Rd.; 919-960-5535; mapleviewfarm.com Matthew’s Chocolates Gourmet chocolates, frozen treats and baked goods. 107 N. Churton St.; 919-732-0900
G U I D E
Discover what “Best Of” is made of!
Saratoga Grill New England-style cuisine; 108 S. Churton St.; 919-732-2214; saratogagrill.com Village Diner Southern diner, buffet. 600 W. King St.; 919-732-7032
2015
Weaver Street Market Hot bar for breakfast, lunch and dinner. 228 S. Churton St.; 919-245-5050; weaverstreetmarket.coop Whit’s Frozen Custard Ice cream and frozen treats. 240 S. Nash St.; 919-245-8123; whitscustard.com Wooden Nickel Pub Pub fare. 105 N. Churton St.; 919-643-2223; thewnp.com
C H R G
C AT E R I N G Dependable
Affordable
Local
Downtown Chapel Hill 106 W. Franklin St. | Chapel Hill 919.942.7867 www.yogurtpump.com
Spring
LOCAL. HANGOUT. F R A N K L I N S T R E E T, C H A P E L H I L L
Scratch kitchen
SERVING BREAKFAST ALL DAY LONG
WITH CLASSIC LUNCH AND DINNER FARE WE CATER! Call (919) 906-0765 to discuss your upcoming event!
20 Hi-Def TV’s
WINNER
BEST EL OF CHAP
For all your NFL, NCAA, MLB, & NHL games
HILL
324 W. RosemarY St., Chapel Hill 919.967.7110 breadmens.com WINNER
BEST OF CHAPEL HILL M AG A Z I N E
SPANKY’S SQUID’S
411 WEST MEZ
PAGE ROAD GRILL
919-941-1630 events@chapelhillrestaurantgroup.com ChapelHillRestaurantGroup.com
FOURCORNERSGRILLE.COM April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
107
D I N I N G
G U I D E
ALSO CHECK OUT THESE DURHAM RESTAURANTS… Bar Virgile Artfully crafted beverages and small plates. 105 S. Magnum St.; 919-973-3000; barvirgile.com Bleu Olive High-quality comfort food with a Mediterranean flair. 1821 Hillandale Rd.; 919-383-8502; bleuolivebistro.com blu seafood and bar Upscale seafood restaurant featuring innovative regional classics and a complete oyster menu. Try the crab mac and cheese! 2002 Hillsborough Rd.; 919-286-9777; bluseafoodandbar.com Clouds Brewing American favorites with a German flare. 905 W. Main St., Ste. 22; 919-251-8096; cloudsbrewing.com COPA Cuban-inspired tapas and cocktails restaurant. Try the Butifaras a lo cubano, Cuban-style sausages and the Paella del verano, “summer rice,” with a mojito or daiquiri. 107 W. Main St., Durham
Nana’s Restaurant Seasonal dishes of Southern, French and Italian cuisine. 2514 University Dr.; 919-493-8545; nanasdurham.com
The Blue Note Grill Fantastic barbecue, ribs and live music. 709 Washington St.; 919-401-1979; thebluenotegrill.com
NanaTaco Inventive taqueria that features locally produced meats and veggies. 2512 University Dr.; 919-489-8226; nanataco.com
The Boot Italian-American restaurant serving sandwiches, pastas and traditional Italian entrees. 2501 University Dr.; 919-294-8383; thebootdurham.com
Page Road Grill Traditional American dishes. 5416 Page Rd.; 919-908-8900; pageroadgrill.com
The Original Q Shack “BBQ tender as a mother’s love.” 2510 University Dr.; 919-402-4227; theqshackoriginal.com
Saladelia Cafe Espresso and smoothie bar, pastries, sandwiches. 2424 Erwin Rd., 406 Blackwell St. & 4201 University Dr.; 919-489-5776; saladelia.com
The Pie Hole Made-from-scratch sweet and savory pies and specialty coffee drinks. 810 Ninth St., Ste. 130; thepieholela.com/durham
Saltbox Seafood Joint Local seafood that is delivered fresh from the Carolina coast and served griddled or fried in a straightforward manner. 608 N. Mangum St and 2637 Durham Chapel Hill Blvd.; 919-908-8970; saltboxseafoodjoint.com
Primal Food & Spirits Gluten-free options featuring wood-fired local meat dishes with seasonal sides, craft cocktails. 202 W. N.C. 54; 919-248-3000; primalfoodandspirits.com
Denny’s Diner fare. 7021 N.C. 751, Ste. 901; 919-908-1006; dennys.com Fairview Dining Room Washington Duke Inn’s AAA Four Diamond-rated restaurant. 301 Cameron Blvd.; 919-493-6699; washingtondukeinn.com
Taste of the South
Geer Street Garden Simple, down-home fare in a cozy atmosphere. 644 Foster St.; 919-688-2900; geerstreetgarden.com Mad Hatter Cafe & Bakeshop Scratch-made pastries and cakes, salads, sandwiches. 1802 W. Main St.; 919-286-1987; madhatterbakeshop.com
Porch Dining
Life’s Too Short For Fake Pizza
THIS IS THE REAL DEAL
MarketPlace JB Duke Hotel’s main restaurant, open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. 230 Science Dr.; 919-660-6400; jbdukehotel.com
Artisan Hand-Crafted | Wood-Fired Local, Farm-Fresh Ingredients
Mez Contemporary Mexican Creative Mexican dishes with a fresh twist. 5410 Page Rd.; 919-941-1630; mezdurham.com
WINNER
NanaSteak Offers various cuts of beef and steaks, plus other meats and pastas. 345 Blackwell St.; 919-282-1183; nanasteak.com
108
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
DECIDE FOR YOURSELF
BEST OF CHAPEL HILL
Located at Veranda at Briar Chapel 79 Falling Springs Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27516
WINNER
BEST Voted Favorite BBQ and OF CHAPEL HILL
Southern/Comfort Food!
Meats • Chicken • BBQ/Ribs Chicken & Dumplings • Vegetables • Casserole Brunswick Stew • Gumbo Breakfast items include Chicken & Waffles • Sweet Potato Pancakes
Mama Dip’s Kitchen
919.240.4104
408 W. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill 942-5837 mamadips.com
CAPPSPIZZERIA.COM
Open every day 8am-9pm Breakfast served daily M-F till 11am, Sun till 1pm Sat and Sun Brunch
E N G A G E M E N T
COOK & RUTERBORIES BY KETHAN FADALE PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOANNA SUE JOANNASUEPHOTOGRAPHY.COM
B
Born-and-bred North Carolinians – Rachel Cook from King and Matt Ruterbories from Raleigh – both attended UNC after graduating from their respective high schools. They became acquainted through mutual friends and developed their friendship for several months before beginning to date. The proposal was tricky, as Rachel is not one for surprises, so Matt knew he had to be creative. He started by handing Rachel a card requesting her presence for a special date. After getting down on one knee at The Franklin Hotel surrounded by framed photos of their happiest moments,
Matt popped the question. Surrounded by the memories they had made together, Matt asked Rachel to continue making memories, forever. She, of course, said “yes.” Afterward, he recreated their favorite date night ever – drinks at The Crunkleton followed by dinner at Lantern, where they were served by the same waiter that had served them two years earlier. The wedding and reception will take place June 2, 2018 at The Cookery. CHM
Fo r
SO
wa it
LD
lis t in fo go to t
Ap
ril
18
OU
as te th
–2 2
T!
ee ve nt .c
Thank you to our Sponsors
om
TASTE’s Official Flower Partner
PRESENTED BY
magazine
April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
109
W E D D I N G S
MEYER & FRANKSTONE
C
BY ANNA POGARCIC PHOTOGRAPHY BY ANAGRAM PHOTO ANAGRAMPHOTO.COM
Chapel Hill natives Helen Meyer and Lee Frankstone crossed paths all through childhood at school, church and social gatherings. Although not especially close growing up, they had deep family and community ties: their mothers were childhood friends from summer camp, and their fathers’ families had lived in Chapel Hill for generations. Eventually they forged different paths: Helen went to UNC to study art history and moved to Kansas City, Missouri, to work at an art museum, while Lee went to Georgia Tech for engineering before getting his MBA at Kenan-Flagler Business School. Around the same time, they returned home from their separate ventures and caught up on a hike together. Casual get-togethers as old friends slowly evolved into official dates. A little over a year later, in December of 2016, Lee created a scavenger hunt for Helen. The final clue led her to a Christmas tree, where Lee put an engagement ring – a family heirloom – on one of the sentimental ornaments. Helen turned around to find Lee down on one knee, and the rest is history. The weekend kicked off with a rehearsal dinner at Morehead 110
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
Planetarium State Dining Room. The couple said their “I do’s” at The Chapel of the Cross on July 1, 2017. One of the couple’s favorite
memories was when the priest asked them to turn around to see everyone – including parents Paula and George Meyer, Frances Gravely and David and Laura Frankstone – gathered to support their marriage. Afterward, guests made their way to Fearrington Village for cocktails on the Garden Terrace and dinner and dancing in the Barn. The band played away, the dance floor was full all night and the couple exited under a shower of sparkers – a joyful end to a magical day. The newlyweds reside in Raleigh. CHM
W E D D I N G S
HOLLAND & FEARRINGTON
F
BY KYNDAL LEMELIN PHOTOGRAPHY BY WES ELLIS ELLISWES.COM
For Courtney Holland and Jason Fearrington, the family history of growing up in Chapel Hill was an important part of their romance. Courtney’s grandparents, Helen Whitt and Helen and Murry Holland, and Jason’s grandparents, Jeanette and Frank Fearrington,
had been close friends for many years, and the couple’s parents knew each other from Chapel Hill High School. In 2015, after noticing that she was absent from the Christmas Eve service at University Baptist Church that they both attended annually with their families, Jason asked Courtney if she would spend New Year’s Eve with him. A little over a year later, on March 11, 2017, Jason proposed to Courtney after telling the family that the ring was “burning a hole in his pocket!” He contemplated where and when he wanted to propose and finally decided to ask the question one weekend when they were both home and having a bonfire. After bumping up their wedding date, they tied the knot on September 30, 2017 at their home in Fearrington. Despite concerns about timing, the fall wedding went off without a hitch. Mums, hay
bales and the beautiful natural woods set the tone for the occasion as the couple celebrated with friends and family, including Courtney’s parents, Lantz and Janine Holland, and Jason’s parents, Rachel Welch and Steve Fearrington. Courtney and Jason reside in Fearrington with their two pups, Gia and Rosie. CHM April 2018 chapelhillmagazine.com
111
W E D D I N G S
STOTTS & GANN
C
BY MOLLY WEYBRIGHT PHOTOGRAPHY BY MEGAN GIELOW MORNINGWILD.COM
Chapel Hill native Carolyn Stotts met Jake Gann near the beginning of their freshman year at UNC through InterVarsity Christian Fellowship. The couple hit it off right away and seven years later in western North Carolina at Black Balsam Knob with the sun setting behind them, Jake proposed. Carolyn and Jake were married in May 2017 in front of their parents Nancy Jo and David Stotts and Bob and Sue Gann on a beautiful spring day at Old Sherrill’s Inn, just outside of Asheville. Guests showered the couple with confetti on their way out of the ceremony, which was followed by drinks on the venue’s wraparound porch complemented by stunning views of the Blue Ridge Mountains. The reception was held in a nearby orchard lit with hundreds of string lights; the night felt magical. The couple’s first dance was to a cover of Ed Sheeran’s “Perfect” that Jake had recorded himself, to Carolyn’s surprise. The fatherdaughter dance was to a waltz written and recorded by the bride’s father, David, a professor at UNC. The couple celebrated all night 112
chapelhillmagazine.com April 2018
with family, friends and their 21-person wedding party – about which the couple declared, “Go big or go home!” – while their DJ, Michael Betts II, kept everyone on the dance floor. Carolyn and Jake now live in Asheville with their two dogs, PJ and Tupelo. Carolyn is a wedding photographer while Jake handles tech support and web development for Chesapeake Technology. CHM
4401 Glenwood Ave, Raleigh, NC 27612
(919) 571-2881
www.diamondsdirect.com
OfďŹ cial Jeweler
WE’RE at THE HEART OF INNOVATIVE CARE
When it comes to heart and vascular health, UNC Medical Center provides innovative care that truly makes a difference. We’re on the front line of medical innovation and discovery, developing the most advanced heart and vascular treatment options available at our academic medical center in Chapel Hill and throughout the state. It’s expert care centered around you. At UNC Medical Center, we put our whole heart into caring for yours. LEARN MORE ABOUT HEART and VASCULAR CARE at UNC MEDICAL CENTER, INCLUDING OUR COLLABORATION WITH UNC REX at UNCHV.ORG.