Friday Fun Food Facts – September 9, 2016

Triangle Restaurant News

Triangle restaurant news…that not everyone knows. Impress your co-workers at the water cooler.

Featured Restaurant News

  • Well, you heard it here first. David Sadeghi is bringing another new and exciting concept to the Triangle food scene. October 1 will be the last day of his downtown Raleigh restaurant Bolt. Beginning October 2nd, he, along with Rudy Theale, will convert the space into Pizza La Stella. Look for them to re-open in mid-November. Theale will oversee the operations at La Stella. The two will also bring the pizza concept to the space next to Sadeghi’s Durham location of Town Hall Burger and Beer. No website yet, but keep up with Town Hall Burger and Beer here.

Wake County Restaurant News

  • Recently while walking through Raleigh’s City Market, reader Chad Barringer noticed that Troy Mezze had closed and that there were signs in the window saying “City Market Sushi Coming Soon.” No word yet on who is behind the new concept or when they plan on opening. We will keep an eye on it. Thanks Chad!
  • We must be getting close to the opening of the new location of Tobacco Road Sports Cafe which is moving into the former Natty Greene’s space at 505 West Jones Street. We saw an announcement about a “hiring fair” that is taking place today. Keep up with their progress here.
  • Also in Raleigh, friend Ashton Mae Smith brought attention to the fact that The Players’ Retreat has reopened their “new” kitchen and their full menu is back along with chef Beth Littlejohn’s features! Keep up with the latest here on their Facebook page.
  • James Borden’s blog, Raleigh Public Record, noted this week that Crabtree Valley Mall will become the home to the first North Carolina location of of the chain restaurant Seasons 52. Seasons 52 is one of seven brands operated by Darden Restaurants. Five of these brands currently have Raleigh locations: Bahama Breeze, The Capital Grille, LongHorn Steakhouse, Olive Garden and The Yardhouse. Get to know them here.
  • The Raleigh Public Record also noted that Ba-Da Wings! is set to open a second Raleigh location, this one at the Creedmoor Crossing shopping center at 6300 Creedmoor Road. The restaurant currently has a space at the Mission Valley Shopping Center on Avent Ferry Road. The new space should be opening pretty shortly, as it was an ABC Permit, not a construction permit, that was issued for the restaurant last week. Check them out here.
  • And the Raleigh Public Record also noted that on August 17 permits were issued for the newest location of healthy-food chain Clean Eatz at the Celebration at Six Forks shopping center in North Raleigh. Clean Eatz is both a cafe/restaurant and a business that offers pre-prepared meals and meal plans. Check out Clean Eatz here.
  • The FoodCary blog noted this week that things are moving along again for the addition of Annelore’s German Bakery coming to 308 West Chatham Street. The building on that site was demolished, making way for the brand new store. Annelore’s German Bakery currently has one store in Raleigh on Agriculture Street. Keep up with their progress on their Facebook page here.

Durham, Orange & Chatham Restaurant News

  • The Daily Tar Heel reported this week that the Franklin Street building where Fitzgerald’s used to be is getting a new resident – Might as Well Bar and Grill. Might as Well, which opened in Wilmington in 2012, is a college-town neighborhood sports bar. This will be the restaurant’s second and they haven’t set an open date as of yet. Check them out here.
  • Got word from Neal DePersia that after 18 years, partners Linda Bourne and Karin Mills sold their award winning restaurant Spotted Dog Restaurant & Bar in historic downtown Carrboro to Ed Corbell, a Carrboro resident and former assistant general manager at Maggiano’s at Southpoint. Keep up with the latest on their Facebook page here.
  • While they have been open for a number of weeks now, Chapel Hill’s Chronic Tacos, located in Meadowmont Village, will hold their grand opening celebration from noon until 4 p.m. on Sunday, September 18th. They will be giving away free tacos to the first guests, hosting a taco eating contest, live music – and a chance to meet professional skateboarder and television personality Jason “Wee Man” Acuña. Check out Chronic Tacos here.

Closings

  • After reporting last week that Boheme was closed for “extensive renovations,” WRAL reported this week that they have closed and are converting the space to a catering kitchen.
  • It was announced this week that Pogo, the cafe operating at Marbles in downtown Raleigh, has closed and will be replaced by a new cafe in mid-September under new management. Stay tuned.

Food Trucks

Events

  • Beericana, a craft beer & music festival, is this Saturday, September 10th at Sugg Farm Park in Holly Springs. Beericana features 70 breweries from across North Carolina and beyond, 20 food trucks, and 3 live bands. Entry to the festival gets you unlimited tastings from the breweries. Food will be available for purchase from the many food trucks. Get a listing of food trucks, breweries and everything else on their site here. Thanks to Triangle Explorer for the reminder.
  • Also this weekend is the annual Raleigh Greek Festival, held in the Jim Graham Building at the NC State Fairgrounds. The festival runs today from 5-10 p.m., tomorrow from 11 a.m. until 10 p.m., and again on Sunday from 11 a.m. until 6 p.m. Get by. Get all the information on food, tickets, music, etc. here.
  • Black Twig Cider House in Durham will host their inaugural TxotxFest (pronounced “choach”) on Saturday, September 10 from noon to 4 p.m. This event will bring regional and national cider producers and chefs together. It will feature tastings from the top cider houses on the east coast as well as food from chefs at Bona Fide, Durham Catering, Mateo, Oval Park Grille, PICNIC and Rise. They will also serve a whole deboned, sausage – stuffed local pig from Firsthand Foods. Get all the details and tickets here.
  • Dinner in the Meadow, a benefit for small farms, will take place on Sunday, September 11th from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. on a farm in Louisburg. Join them for farm-fresh local food and refreshments, prepared by the Triangle’s most talented chefs, served in the bucolic meadow of one of North Carolina’s oldest continually operating farms. WUNC’s Frank Stasio is your host for this special evening. Get all the details and ticket information here.
  • Not to be outdone by Durham, Raleigh is going to have their very own vegan cookoff between September 12th and October 1st. The Oak City Vegan Challenge will feature 6 restaurants offering special vegan dishes that diners can cast votes for their favorites. The event is modeled after the Bull City Vegan Challenge, which has been extremely successful over in Durham. Get all the details and the list of restaurants here.
  • Next Tuesday, September 13th, The Rickhouse in Durham will host Forage into the Forest beginning at 6:30. There will be three guest chefs who prepare a dish using foraged ingredients followed by a demo of their respective dish on stage. Get ticket information and all the details here.
  • Hibernian Hospitality Group and Ed Mitchell are proud to announce Ed Mitchell’s Brews & ‘Cue event featuring Ed’s foodtruck “Q On Wheels” to be held at the Raleigh Beer Garden in downtown Raleigh on Saturday, September 17th from 5pm until the food runs out. The renown pitmaster’s truck will feature his highly sought after signature barbecue offering a wide array of platters and sides. Get all the details here.
  • The third annual Triangle Oktoberfest will take place at Cary’s Koka Booth Amphitheatre on September 23rd and 24th. Enjoy family-friendly activities such as music from the Little German Band, dancing, traditional Bavarian food and fare, wiener dog races, “Rock-toberfest” concerts by Four Founders and West Street Band, children’s play area, and prizes for German attire. Children 16 and younger are free. Friday tickets: $15 in advance, or $20 at the door. Saturday tickets: $20 in advance, or $25 at the door. Purchase tickets here.
  • Tickets to TerraVita are now on sale. And you better jump fast, as many of these events will sell out soon. Trust me. If you aren’t familiar with TerraVita, it is arguably the premier “foodie event” in the southeast and it will take place September 28th through October 1 right here in Chapel Hill. In a nutshell, it is a multi-day celebration that brings together top chefs, food artisans, sommeliers, baristas, brewers, educators, distillers, cookbook authors and industry luminaries from across the Southeast to celebrate culinary excellence and sustainability in food and drink. Get tickets (NOW!) here. And get additional details on TerraVita here.
  • You don’t want to miss this event (because yours truly will be one of the judges). The event? It is Relish Cafe & Bar’s charity Mac and Cheese Throwdown and Bartender Showdown benefiting the Hope Center at Pullen on Saturday October 1st from 6pm to 11pm. Visit the website to get all the details and ticket information.
  • Felicia Perry-Trujillo reminded me about the upcoming 9th Annual Pepperfest taking place Sunday, October 2nd from 2-7 p.m. at Brier Chapel in Chatham County. The event features super delicious pepper-themed dishes and beverages, live music and children’s activities. A great outdoor event for this time of the year. Get tickets and all the details here.
  • The Root Cellar Cafe & Catering in Chapel Hill is holding its fifth annual Porkapalooza on Friday, October 14th at 6:30 p.m. The event will feature twelve small plate courses celebrating local pork, including roasted suckling pigs; beer cheese fondue with local sausages; fried green tomatoes topped with pimento cheese, beer-braised crispy pork belly and tomato jam; poutine with sweet potato fries, Seven Springs country gravy and Ashe County cheese; and bacon marshmallow s’mores. The dinner also includes Fullsteam beer pairings. Save $10 by ordering tickets by Aug. 31. Get all the information and tickets here.
  • Jennifer Noble Kelly sent me information about PICNIC, North Carolina’s newest whole hog barbecue joint, and its’ farm partner, Green Button Farm, hosting their inaugural NC Barbecue Revival at the farm this fall, October 28th – 30th. The three-day weekend will be chock full of classes, discussions, feasts and pig pickins’. Get a listing of all the events, ticket information and every last detail on the their website here.
  • And on November 6th, the folks over at Acme will bring back the fourth edition of Salt & Smoke Festival to beautiful Rock Quarry Farm on Highway 54 just outside of Carrboro. This is becoming quite the event, as over 500 people attended last year. Get all the details and ticket information here.

Food Bank Corner

  • September is Hunger Action Month and as part of that, the Food Bank of Central & Eastern North Carolina will be holding their annual 24 hour telethon –  #FoodBank 24 to raise money and awareness from noon on September 15th until noon on September 16th. 24 hours to raise $24k! Get all the details here.

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Friday Fun Food Facts – September 2, 2016

Triangle Restaurant News

Triangle restaurant news…that not everyone knows. Impress your co-workers at the water cooler.

Featured Restaurant News

  • The News & Observer reported this week that M Sushi’s chef and owner Michael Lee plans to open a new chicken restaurant in downtown Durham by mid-September. M Kokko (the second word being Korean slang to refer to chickens) will share the same kitchen as Lee’s highly-rated sushi restaurant at 311 Holland Street but have a separate entrance. And Lee isn’t done with his restaurant plans in downtown Durham. By next spring, he hopes to open a Korean barbecue restaurant serving pork and beef. That restaurant will have a similar set up to M Sushi-M Kokko with a small taqueria also operating out of the same kitchen. In the meantime, check out M Sushi here.

Wake County Restaurant News

  • Jon Seelbinder is doing it again. This time with the opening of Little City, a neighborhood bar, bodega, and brewery, at 400 West North Street on the ground floor of the seventeen-story West at North complex. Seelbinder is behind Level Up, Linus & Pepper’s and Virgil’s. The Raleigh Agenda reported that he will open Little City on September 15. Check them out here.
  • Also in downtown Raleigh, Raleigh Agenda reported that Seaboard Station’s Oak & Dagger Public House will open in mid-September just in time for Raleigh Beer Week. Keep up with their progress on their Facebook page here.
  • And we got word this week from Daniel Whittaker that his Person Street Cafe, in the Person Street District in downtown Raleigh, is expanding hours to include Sundays from 7am-4pm starting September 11. Check out Person Street Cafe here.

Durham, Orange & Chatham Restaurant News

  • One of the sleepiest corners of the Triangle when it comes to dining options is getting ready to blow up with dining options! Located at the 15-501 entrance to Briar Chapel, just south of Chapel Hill, the Veranda is welcoming four (count them, four!) amazing dining options. Thanks to Neha Shah at the Pittsboro-Siler City Convention and Visitors Bureau for the tip on all of these.
  • First up is Alberello, a new Italian restaurant by Brendan and Leslie Cox, owners of Oakleaf in Pittsboro. Alberello brings the commitment to quality and service that you know and expect at Oakleaf to a casual, family friendly setting. Check them out here.
  • Next up is Breakaway Cafe, a bicycle-themed restaurant serving breakfast, lunch, and dinner, as well as baked goods and small plates. Additionally, Breakaway will feature coffee and espresso from Durham roaster Counter Culture, and seasonal beers, wine, and liquor. Check them out here.
  • Already with sister properties that are huge hits just down the street in Chapel Hill’s Southern Village (Town Hall Grill), and over in Durham near the Streets at Southpoint (Town Hall Burger & Beer), Veranda will also welcome Town Hall Burger & Beer at Briar Chapel. They are looking to open next month. Check them out here.
  • And finally, we will see the opening of a great pizzeria in Capp’s Pizzeria. They will feature artisan, handcrafted wood-fired pizzas, fresh seasonal salads, sandwiches, Italian desserts, craft beers, wine and all natural sodas. Check them out here.

Closings

  • Heard first from reader Ayeshia Beavers that Bailey’s in Chapel Hill has closed. They were part of the group that owns Champps and Fox & Hound.
  • Also got word from WRAL that Tijuana Flats on Ninth Street in Durham has closed. They still have a location in Cary.
  • We saw on the Raleigh Agenda that Crema will close its location at 121 Fayetteville Street in downtown Raleigh. Its second location at the opposite end of Fayetteville Street will remain open.
  • And over in Durham, reader Jeff Harris notified us that Pale & Porter at Sutton Station has closed.

Food Trucks

  • This Sunday is the annual Labor Day weekend Food Truck Rodeo at Durham Central Park featuring over 50 of your favorite food trucks as well as local craft beer and live music. The fun runs from 12 to 4 at Durham Central Park. Get all the details here.

Events

  • Feed the Force is an event started by Yaniv Sharir, owner of O’Malley’s Pub and Restaurant in Raleigh, to provide free meals and thank the men and women police officers that protect our communities. The event will take place on September 4th & 5th, so if your restaurant would like to join the growing list of participating restaurants, or if you would like to support the effort, please visit the site here.
  • Black Twig Cider House in Durham will host their inaugural TxotxFest (pronounced “choach”) on Saturday, September 10 from noon to 4 p.m. This event will bring regional and national cider producers and chefs together. It will feature tastings from the top cider houses on the east coast as well as food from chefs at Bona Fide, Durham Catering, Mateo, Oval Park Grille, PICNIC and Rise. They will also serve a whole deboned, sausage – stuffed local pig from Firsthand Foods. Get all the details and tickets here.
  • Dinner in the Meadow, a benefit for small farms, will take place on Sunday, September 11th from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. on a farm in Louisburg. Join them for farm-fresh local food and refreshments, prepared by the Triangle’s most talented chefs, served in the bucolic meadow of one of North Carolina’s oldest continually operating farms. WUNC’s Frank Stasio is your host for this special evening. Get all the details and ticket information here.
  • Not to be outdone by Durham, Raleigh is going to have their very own vegan cookoff between September 12th and October 1st. The Oak City Vegan Challenge will feature 6 restaurants offering special vegan dishes that diners can cast votes for their favorites. The event is modeled after the Bull City Vegan Challenge, which has been extremely successful over in Durham. Get all the details and the soon to be released list of restaurants here.
  • Hibernian Hospitality Group and Ed Mitchell are proud to announce Ed Mitchell’s Brews & ‘Cue event featuring Ed’s foodtruck “Q On Wheels” to be held at the Raleigh Beer Garden in downtown Raleigh on Saturday, September 17th from 5pm until the food runs out. The renown pitmaster’s truck will feature his highly sought after signature barbecue offering a wide array of platters and sides. Get all the details here.
  • The third Annual Triangle Oktoberfest will take place at Cary’s Koka Booth Amphitheatre on September 23rd and 24th. Enjoy family-friendly activities such as music from the Little German Band, dancing, traditional Bavarian food and fare, wiener dog races, “Rock-toberfest” concerts by Four Founders and West Street Band, children’s play area, and prizes for German attire. Children 16 and younger are free. Friday tickets: $15 in advance, or $20 at the door. Saturday tickets: $20 in advance, or $25 at the door. Purchase tickets here.
  • Tickets to TerraVita are now on sale. And you better jump fast, as many of these events will sell out soon. Trust me. If you aren’t familiar with TerraVita, it is arguably the premier “foodie event” in the southeast and it will take place September 28th through October 1 right here in Chapel Hill. In a nutshell, it is a multi-day celebration that brings together top chefs, food artisans, sommeliers, baristas, brewers, educators, distillers, cookbook authors and industry luminaries from across the Southeast to celebrate culinary excellence and sustainability in food and drink. Get tickets (NOW!) here. And get additional details on TerraVita here.
  • Felicia Perry-Trujillo reminded me about the upcoming 9th Annual Pepperfest taking place Sunday, October 2nd from 2-7 p.m. at Brier Chapel in Chatham County. The event features super delicious pepper-themed dishes and beverages, live music and children’s activities. A great outdoor event for this time of the year. Get tickets and all the details here.
  • The Root Cellar Cafe & Catering in Chapel Hill is holding its fifth annual Porkapalooza on Friday, October 14th at 6:30 p.m. The event will feature twelve small plate courses celebrating local pork, including roasted suckling pigs; beer cheese fondue with local sausages; fried green tomatoes topped with pimento cheese, beer-braised crispy pork belly and tomato jam; poutine with sweet potato fries, Seven Springs country gravy and Ashe County cheese; and bacon marshmallow s’mores. The dinner also includes Fullsteam beer pairings. Save $10 by ordering tickets by Aug. 31. Get all the information and tickets here.
  • Jennifer Noble Kelly sent me information this week about PICNIC, North Carolina’s newest whole hog barbecue joint, and its’ farm partner, Green Button Farm, hosting their inaugural NC Barbecue Revival at the farm this fall, October 28th – 30th. The three-day weekend will be chock full of classes, discussions, feasts and pig pickins’. Get a listing of all the events, ticket information and every last detail on the their website here. 

Food Bank Corner

  • Hunger Action Month is your opportunity to join a movement that has a real and lasting impact on our effort to feed more North Carolinians than ever before. Whether it’s by advocating and raising awareness, making donations, or volunteering, you can find the way that’s right for you to make a difference during Hunger Action Month. Together, we can solve hunger. Each voice counts. Every action matters. And with nearly 650,000 food insecure individuals in our 34 county service area alone, it matters more than ever before. Find out more here.

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