Skip to content

Category Archives: North Carolina News

Eating Green in Asheville

by Melissa (Missi) Hathaway

Asheville was placed as a top destination for America’s Greenest Dining, through a collaboration between Blue Ridge Sustainability Institute and Asheville Independent Restaurant Association (also known as AIR) and is set to continue its healthy dining initiative into the foreseeable future.

The green restaurant program includes dealing with issues of energy efficiency and waste management and a large number of eateries now support the drive and partner up with suppliers and with each other for further green ideas and developments. In an interview with The Huffington Post, Randy Talley of AIR claimed that ‘it’s good for the community, good for the planet, and good for our bottom line.’

Last year residents protested against a coal fired plant in the area, which was seen as damaging to the environment through its process of stripping coal from mountaintops, proving that Asheville takes its green issues very seriously indeed.

The move by restaurants has put Asheville on the map as America’s first Green Dining Destination and is drawing in tourists who are attracted by the green initiatives offered here and who are curious to see the results for themselves.

In February this year, Asheville managed to reach its goal of having 15 certified restaurants in the city go green, with the 16th being certified shortly afterwards, and this enabled the city to earn the accolade of America’s first green dining destination. The Mayor, Terry Bellamy, announced that ‘Asheville’s 15 Certified Green Restaurants are leading the way toward zero waste’ as well as sustainability and that they were giving diners a superior selection of establishments to choose from (airasheville.org).

Green Restaurants

The certified restaurants range from 2, 3 and 4 star dining destinations and they offer a wide range of food. All restaurants are located within Asheville. The choice includes:

French Broad Chocolates

Located on South Lexington Avenue, this eatery is all about chocolate. Visitors can relax in the chocolate lounge, sipping wine or hot chocolate and nibbling on chocolate brownies and cake. French Broad Chocolates also deliver to customers, who can browse the selection of truffles and caramels online. Locals have the option of ordering first and collecting at the restaurant.

Plant

Plant is situated on Merrimon Avenue and serves dinner from 5 to 9 Sunday to Thursday and 5 to 10 on Friday and Saturday. The restaurant offers plates featuring local flavors and is wholly vegetarian. On the menu are small plates of Seitan Satay Skewers, made with grilled pineapple and peanut sauce, and Smoke Hummus. Entrees include red curry tofu, mixed mushroom grill and smoked Portabello steak made with polenta, chard and grape tomato salad. Plant has received favourable reviews in WNC magazine and Mountain Xpress and was chosen as ‘best of WNC’ in 2012 by Mountain Xpress readers.

The Green Sage

This restaurant is located downtown and in South Asheville, and is a 4 star dining destination. Food is local and organic and the restaurant promotes healthy lifestyles with its gluten free and vegetarian dining, as well as preservative free meats. Guests can choose from grass fed beef, chicken or Tempeh sandwiches in classic, Swiss shroom or Greek Feta styles as well as Chipotle Jack burgers. Salads are a popular option at the restaurant, such as spinach and beet or Sage house salad.

The Green Sage has featured in articles about its sustainability in the Asheville Citizen Times, WNC magazine and UNC TV.

Luella’s Bar-B-Que

The ethos at Luella’s is great food made with honest, loving hands. The name of this Asheville restaurant comes from the owner’s grandmother Luella who was renowned for her astonishing cooking. Plates are cooked with soybean oil and used oils are recycled at Blue Ridge Biofuel. Guests can choose such dishes as dry rubbed sweet potato chips, smoked jumbo wings, chile rubbed beef brisket and smoked andouille sausage and there is also a selection of salads served.

Luella’s involves itself with the community through causes such as MANNA Foodbank and the American Red Cross.

Experience Asheville’s Green Dining for Yourself

Asheville is a popular tourist destination, famed for its scenery, food, art and beer. There are a wide variety of culinary delights on offer in the city, from Mediterranean to vegetarian plates and southern cooking with a twist. Asheville is proud of its cuisine and its new status as green dining destination means that there is an emphasis on healthy eating and local produce such as organic beef or mountain trout as well as seasonal vegetarian dishes and fresh salads. This is bound to attract even more visitors, particularly those for who green issues are important and like to do what they can to protect the environment. There are sidewalk cafes to sit out at and many of the city’s restaurants feature live music for their diners’ enjoyment. Tourists come to Asheville for the mountain attractions, the hospitality and food, as well as the craft fairs held throughout the year. There are online discount coupons available for visitors to Asheville, featuring special packages on local attractions, and with competitive flights available as well as online overseas car insurance deals, getting here is easier than ever. Compare the best prices from online insurance companies to make sure you are getting the best deal for your trip and visit Asheville, where green dining is taking the city by storm.

CELEBRATING VINTAGE N.C.

Salute!

 

Fourth Street, between Marshall and Spring streets, downtown Winston-Salem. 336-354-1500. www.salutencwine.com.

 

The ever-growing number of wineries in North Carolina has sparked a lively subgenre of tourism: Driving up to the Yadkin Valley – or to the coast or to the mountains – to walk the vineyards, sample vintages, sometimes have a bite to eat there and, on occasion, hear live music.

 

But with more than 100 wineries now in business, how can you filter to find the vintners whose product you’re sure to like?

 

An easy solution presents itself the afternoon of June 1 (a Saturday) in downtown Winston-Salem, where the centerpiece of Salute! The North Carolina Wine Celebration is an ultimate sampler. In tents along Fourth Street, approximately two dozen wineries will offer tastes of what they make. You’ll find familiar winemakers – like Asheville’s Biltmore Winery, or the Childress and Raylen vineyards from the Yadkin Valley – as well as ones you may never have heard of, but may wish to try. The list runs from Adams Vineyards, which makes muscadine wines in Willow Springs, to Westbend Vineyards, which makes reds and whites in Lewisville.

 

Here’s how it works: You buy

Article source: http://www.newsfeedmaker.com/article/150480603/9cad0b81 If you need a cheap air ticket, hotel or rental car please visit http://www.airticket.com

Beer month showcases N.C.’s status as ‘Brewing mecca of the South’


English: Visitors posing with bottles of LoneR...

English: Visitors posing with bottles of LoneRider beer after a tour of the LoneRider Brewery in Raleigh, North Carolina. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

N.C. Beer Month, brought to you by the state’s Division of Tourism, is a 30-day celebration of the craft beer industry. The group wants pint lovers to head out – responsibly, of course – to breweries across the state for all-things beer. That includes specialty brews, beer dinners, beer cooking classes, beer making and “beer memories” intended to last longer than those from college.

It’s called beer tourism, and local breweries are ready for you to belly up to the bar.

Wilmington’s Front Street Brewery is participating all month with pint specials, a beer-pairing dinner and a limited-edition beer with an undeniable coastal flavor.

Brewmaster Kevin Kozek took a bushel of Eagle Island Fruit Seafood oysters up to NoDa Brewing Co. in Charlotte where he and the NoDa crew brewed an oyster stout. He said it’s a dark, English-style stout with notes of briny oysters.

“It will

Article source: http://www.newsfeedmaker.com/article/143858541/7b2910f9 If you need a cheap air ticket, hotel or rental car please visit http://www.airticket.com

Move afoot to bring 37-mile rail line back to life

Rail Transport Museum Class 59 No 5910 light e...

The steam-powered locomotives chugged 37 miles between Gainesville and Helen, helping to forge a connection and commerce among rural North Georgia communities in the early part of the 20th century.

But progress crept in, with the advent of the automobile and roads and highways to support them, leading to the abandonment of the railroad in 1934.

Today, nearly 80 years later, the iron rails and wooden ties are gone. Beaten-down pathways serve as the lone reminder of that era.

However, forces are at work to bring new life to the former Gainesville Northwestern Railroad, with the concept forming to perhaps some day turn at least some of those stretches into bike and pedestrian trailways.

“This is an area that’s big on tourism and outdoor recreation, so anything you can create that feeds into that is likely going to succeed,” said Adam Hazell, planning director for the Gainesville-based Georgia Mountains Regional Commission.

“We think the idea of bona fide bikeways, preferably paved, would be very strong tourist draws.”

Hazell and Sarah McQuade, regional planner for the GMRC, have both discussed

Article source: http://www.newsfeedmaker.com/article/143935274/7b2910f9 If you need a cheap air ticket, hotel or rental car please visit http://www.airticket.com

Does the Piedmont Triad have its footing back?



N.C. Commerce Secretary Sharon Decker

Major roads and cities in the Piedmont Triad a...

N.C. Commerce Secretary Sharon Decker speaks at the Piedmont Triad Partnership’s State of the Region breakfast Thursday.

Film industry creates big business for Charlotte region

By: Adam Rhew

 

'); if(infobox=='True' ShowInfoBox_l691772_1==false){ jQuery("#player_infobarl691772_1").trigger('click'); ShowInfoBox_l691772_1==true; } }; if (false) { $.setup_player(Play_Conf); } //info bar setup jQuery('#player_infobarl691772_1').click(function() { var $info =jQuery('#player_info_contentl691772_1'); if($info.text()!=''){ var $content = jQuery('div',$info); //min heigth var min = $content.css('min-height'); var max = $content.css('max-height'); $info.slideToggle(600); ShowInfoBox_l691772_1=!ShowInfoBox_l691772_1; } }); });

CHARLOTTE — When the Showtime hit Homeland returns to the Queen City next month to shoot its third season, the production will employ local crews, actors and caterers.

“Anything that they can get in this region, there has to be a business base for and there are a lot of companies setting up shop here that weren’t here five years ago,” said Keith Sweeney, executive producer at Dalliance Films.

But those companies may be so busy they won’t have time for the next project. Producers say it’s the best kind of problem to have.

“I don’t necessarily think we’ve missed out on a lot but

Article source: http://www.newsfeedmaker.com/article/141571071/7b2910f9 If you need a cheap air ticket, hotel or rental car please visit http://www.airticket.com

Crooked Road dropping pursuit of National Heritage Area designation

Crooked Road dropping pursuit of National Heritage Area designation

ABINGDON — Crooked Road officials announced Thursday afternoon that the non-profit organization is dropping its pursuit of a National Heritage Area designation for Southwest Virginia due to growing opposition.

Crooked Road officials said the decision was made because the designation had become divisive and failed to unify “the entire region”.

“The Crooked Road believes it can best serve the region in the role of a unifying entity,” Hinshelwood said. “Although a significant number of localities have supported it, the proposed Crooked Road National Heritage Area designation has not unified the entire region.”

Opposition to the designation has been growing in recent months after local Tea Party groups began expressing concerns about how property rights would be impacted if the NHA was approved by Congress.

Oppenents say the NHA designation would effectively put the counties involved under the jurisdiction of the National Parks Service and Department of Interior.

Officials with the Crooked Road and backers of the NHA, which include U.S. Rep. Morgan Griffith (R-Salem) and Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), maintain the designation will have no

Article source: http://www.newsfeedmaker.com/article/141557150/7b2910f9 If you need a cheap air ticket, hotel or rental car please visit http://www.airticket.com