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North Carolina

Dine to Support the Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project

August 18, 2016 by Lisa Leave a Comment

On September 8 at 6pm, restaurants and breweries in Historic Biltmore Village will come together on 5 Boston Way for a fundraiser to support the Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project. Guests will have a chance to meet and mingle with award winning chefs, brew masters, local farmers and a vineyard owner. Local band, Simple Folk, will entertain guests with their dulcet sound and pleasing melodies while they dine on create a 5-course gourmet dinner under the stars.

ASAP works diligently to promote local farms and this event will feature fresh produce and meats supplied by the farms they support. The meal will feature amazing dishes from Biltmore Village partners The Cantina, Catawba Brewing, Corner Kitchen, Doubletree Catering, Fig, Hi-Wire Brewing, Red Stag Grill, Rezaz and The Village Wayside.

The event is sponsored by MTN Merch, Saint Paul Mountain Vineyard, Southern Season, West Carolina Water Treatment, Wells Fargo, and The Village Group of Oppenheimer and Co. Inc.

Tickets are limited to the first 100 who sign up and are $100 per person. Purchase a ticket and enjoy tasty food, wine and craft beer and take home a  gift bag at the end of the evening.

To purchase tickets on line please visit: www.historicbiltmorevillage.com/farmtovillage

Have dinner at Biltmore Village on September 8 and support Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project

You can also find more information at www.historicbiltmorevillage.com/events and www.asapconnections.org/farmtovillage.

About Historic Biltmore Village

Located directly across from the world famous Biltmore Estate, The Historic Biltmore Village is truly one of the south’s most unique touring and shopping environments. The Village features a collection of independent, regional and national retailers along with the most sought after restaurants and outstanding lodging. It’s the perfect night out for foodies, brews and friends. It’s a must see site for history buffs and architecture aficionados. In short, it’s a destination like no other.

About Asap: Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project

Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project is a 501C (3) Non-profit organization whose mission is to help local farms thrive, link farmers to markets and supporters, and build healthy communities through connections to local food.

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Filed Under: Food and Home, Travel Tagged With: Asheville, Biltmore Estate, Biltmore Village, North Carolina

Scenes from the weekend: Coffee — November 13, 2014

December 14, 2014 by Lisa 1 Comment

Vintage Roaster at Small Town Coffee Roasters, Rutherfordton, NC

 

When I make it back to my old stomping grounds, I like to stop in and frequent local businesses, giving them the love they deserve in a county with severe economic woes. Yesterday, I stopped in at Small Town Coffee Roasters located in the hamlet of Rutherfordton, NC, in order to pick up a cup of their magical elixir. This was much needed little liquid refreshment for my two hour drive home.

I had heard great things about this shop from raconteur and attorney, Chris Callahan, and knew that if he said it was good, it was a place to add to my list. Small Town Coffee Roasters was definitely worth my stop. I’ll be heading back soon to learn more about this little shop, sample more of their caffeinated wares, and, hopefully, hang out with Monte as he roasts green coffee beans to glistening perfection in a vintage Royal #1.

If you stop in, ask for an El Tim. Drink two. Leave with a delicate caffeine buzz you’ll wish never ends.

wears.Vintage Roaster at Small Town Coffee Roasters, Rutherfordton, NC

Coffee waiting while the barista works his magic at Small Town Coffee Roasters in Rutherfordton, NC Beans waiting for their turn to be turned into aromatic roasted coffee beans at Small Town Coffee Roasters in Rutehrfordton, NCPastries and gratuities at Small Town Coffee Roasters in Rutherfordton, NC Coffee. Small Town Coffee Roasters, Rutherfordton, NC

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Filed Under: Handmade in North Carolina, Lifestyle, Travel Tagged With: coffee, handmade in north carolina, North Carolina, rutherfordton NC, Travel

Facing my fears at 5,230 feet on Grandfather Mountain

December 10, 2014 by Lisa 5 Comments

2015 Toyota Camry, Grandfather Mtn, NC

Have you ever done something completely out of character? Pushed yourself to the limits and faced your fears head on, or at 5,230 feet from sea level? I crossed the mile-high swinging bridge at Grandfather Mountain. Even now, weeks later, I can’t believe I did it. It all seems like a blur. A very, very cold blur. Have I mentioned I’m deathly afraid of heights and swinging bridges. It was energizing, empowering, and probably a hundred more “e” words I can’t seem to pull from the recesses of my noodle.

And I did it. Even now, I still don’t believe I crossed that bridge. But I did. I was terrified, afraid to cry because my eyes would have frozen shut. It was my moment to “Go Bold.” This is about how I was bold.

Not too many weeks before I crossed the bridge, Southeast Toyota reached out to ask me to check something off my bucket list. In return, they’d loan me a new Camry and cover my expenses to take a weekend and do something bold. Working within a five state region, I brainstormed a list of things I’d love to do and when the time came, they helped me pick something on my list — as a great deal of it was pretty lame. (I’ve done most of what I’ve wanted to do in the other four states, except cook with Alton Brown. If you can arrange that, I’ll swear fealty to you.)

On my list was “crossing the mile-high swinging bridge at Grandfather Mountain.” As a native North Carolinian, I’m pretty sure it’s written somewhere in our DNA that we must cross this bridge, or any bridge that bounces to and fro across a gorge. Same goes with train trestles (which is illegal, by the way). Mary Katherine, who I was vetting my list with, said “that’s it!” And by royal decree only certain public relations officials are granted, she declared I would cross this bridge.

I knew my husband and son would not make me cross the bridge. I’d get to the top of the road, park the car, get out of it and get right back in, crying. So I called out the big guns — my best friend, Dee. I knew that no matter what, Dee wouldn’t let me turn around. We’re best friends and she’s one of my biggest cheerleaders, so she was the right choice.

We set out on Friday morning and made our way across the state to my old stomping grounds and finally arrived at the winding curves of Highway 221 and I felt my anxiety climb higher with each turn in the road. I talked until my throat was dry and I was coughing, trying to ignore the rising bile.

We stopped a few miles short of Grandfather Mountain to take a photo. It was a marker of what I had to do. And I HAD to do it. There was no choice. For me, this was a personal challenge. One that not only terrified me, but annihilated all of my preconceived notions of what I would and wouldn’t do during this lifetime.

Dee at Grandfather Mountain

You see, when I was a little girl, I remember clinging to a swinging bridge, in the middle of it, while it bounced up and down in the wind. I can still see me, paralyzed, not able to move. That’s why I had to do this. I had to cross this bridge and face one of my biggest fears.

When we got to the base of Grandfather, the young lady working the front gates granted me a reprieve. The bridge was closed due to ice, and she informed us it was 7 degrees and the wind was gusting at 26mph on top of the mountain, but we could pay half price to go halfway up to the visitor center to see where Mildred the Bear used to live and enjoys the views from there. Her words were, as far as I was concerned, the angels singing and I swear, for a moment, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir broke into the Hallelujah Chorus, just for me.

Dee and I had filled up on coffee, so we decided to go to the center, take a potty break and we’d come back early Saturday morning before taking a Top Gear-esque drive down the Blue Ridge Parkway to Asheville. I was glowing, because my death sentence had been commuted and for my fear, this was a sentence unlike any other I’d ever been given.

While we were in the center, one of the staff came out to let us know the bridge was now passable and we could go to the top. That sound you hear? My stomach dropping. I remember my throat closing up and my breathing suddenly labored. I’m pretty sure the sound I made was the one Ralphie makes in a Christmas story. Like Ralphie, I didn’t say “fudge.” “It was all over. I was dead.”

Dee, of course, looked like a kid at Christmas who’s wearing their new cheerleading costume, except this one consisted of a North Face jacket and multiple layers. She prodded me out to the car and I drove my way to the top. Now, we’d made a few stops along the way to the top to take photos, and this is what it looked like that day.

Ice covered trees at Grandfather Mountain. November 2014

That’s not snow, it’s ICE. The trees aren’t blowing, they’re frozen in that direction due to the wind. Did I mention that was ice?

Once we were at the top, I got out of the car and just stood there. In awe of this great bridge, knowing it was 5,280 feet above sea level and soon I’d be crossing it’s massive length. I also knew that once I got up there, it was me, looking down on the tops of the trees, on a bridge moving back and forth, up and down, and I was the only person I could depend on to get across.

2015 Toyota Camry, Grandfather Mtn, NC

We made our way inside to check the winds and temps and climbed on the elevator to go upstairs where the entrance to the bridge was. There are steps you can climb, but they were partially iced over and I needed that reprieve in the building.

Once we stepped out again, the wind hit like a knife. It cut through every layer I had on and I stood there, staring at the marker of what was the milestone of this moment. The Bridge. Dee grabbed my arm and let me know it was time — it felt like it was my wedding day and my coordinator had touched my arm to let me know it was time to make my walk down the aisle to meet my husband. Except this was a cruel, unbending mistress I had been running from since I was 10 years old.

As we made our way to the bridge, I was numb. I don’t know if it was from the cold, or from my body shutting down my feelings in a form of emotional compartmentalization, something I had been working on with my shrink in preparation for this crossing.

Mile High Swinging Bridge, Grandfather Mtn,, NC

I remember getting to the bridge and taking the first tentative step, Dee having already taken two steps backwards across this bridge, ready to cheer me on. She would walk backwards across the entire length of the bridge, holding my hand, looking me in the eyes, cheering me on. It was like being in labor, except the miracle being born this time was courage I didn’t know I had in me.

Cheering me along, walking backwards, Dee started moving, and I followed. At about one-quarter of the way out, at most, the wind gusted heavily and the bridge, which is a suspension bridge that moves with the wind, started moving more than I had expected and I looked at her, and said “I can’t do this” and turned around to go back.

Now, that could be the end of this story, but it’s just the beginning. You see, behind me was a couple who had heard Dee cheering me on, encouraging me, rooting for me. They knew I was terrified and when I turned around I saw them. They stood side by side, locked arms, and said “Well, we’re crossing the bridge and in order to get back, you have to cross this bridge, because we can’t let you around us.”

Let that sink in. I was on a bridge I wasn’t going to cross and I couldn’t get off of it. But they then said “we’re going to help you get across this bridge.” And so, that’s where I met Paul and Susanne. Who walked behind me, reassuring hands on my shoulders, talking me across, helping me face my fears, while Dee continued holding my hands, walking backwards, and cheering me on with them. They always say you meet your angels when you least expect it, and that day, I met two of mine. Even now, a month later, I’m weeping as I write this, knowing these angels were there looking over my shoulder, coaxing and prodding me to achieve something I never thought possible.

Before I knew it, I was across the bridge. Paul was shaking my hand, when in reality, I just wanted to hug all of them. People who’d left before us knew what it was taking to get me across the bridge and were cheering for me, for my success. They knew I had faced this formidable task.
Paul and Susanne on Grandfather Mountain
On the other side, I just stood there — on this mountainous rock — looking across what I had just conquered. I’d made it. There wasn’t tears. There wasn’t a feeling of victory. There was just peace. Even walking back across, with Dee walking in front of me, facing forward, Paul and Susanne behind me, gingerly stepping from board to board, catching my breath with each little shift, I was in awe, for the first time in my life, of me.

Even now, when I think I can’t do something, I think of that moment on the bridge when I turned to go back. While there are no celebratory photos of me in the middle of the bridge, I learned something. I just have to keep going, step by step, no stopping, facing my fears. Once we stop, we get stuck and I’m not going to be stuck in the middle of a bridge ever again.

Many thanks to Southeast Toyota, Toyota of Gastonia, Mary Katherine Roardam, Dee Lease, Paul and Susanne. Without you, I’d never know what I’m truly capable of.

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Filed Under: Lifestyle, Travel Tagged With: Boone, grandfather mountain, Life, North Carolina, Toyota, Travel

Conquering the Unconquerable

December 10, 2014 by Prof Pinch Leave a Comment

Mile High Swinging Bridge at Grandfather Mountain. November 2014

black_and_white2

You see that? That bridge? That’s the swinging bridge at Grandfather Mountain, NC. My wife took that shot of the bridge.  A remarkable, yet towering and imposing feat of engineering. It’s the essence of the struggle between man vs. his environment, a mile above sea level. You probably look at it and see a pretty black and white photo. A placid photograph of winter’s splendor.

What you can’t gather through the photo is the fact it was 7 degrees above 0 and there was a 25+ mph wind blowing on the mountain. No matter how I might edit and Photoshop it, you won’t have that perspective unless you were there or you talked to my wife or her friend Dee. This is not a kind photo.

I had heard about the bridge at Grandfather Mountain through the years. It was always talked about with a sense of awe, along with a healthy dollop of both fear and dread. She was on it once before, when she was a little girl. It scared the crap out of her. Wind blowing, bridge swaying, and there she was in the middle. All she wanted to do was get across the damn thing.

And so that’s what she did. It may have been 30 years later, but she did it. She conquered something that was, until that moment she crossed it, unconquerable. I’ve been married to her for 15 years, known her for more than that. This is, technically speaking, a pretty big deal.

Personally, I find this whole story inspiring. Oh yeah, she could’ve waited for better weather. She could’ve decided at the last minute not to do it. She could’ve turned around after she started crossing the bridge. But she did none of those things. She crossed to the other side, in 7 degree weather with a 25+ mph wind.

So forgive me if I get a little wound up over this little feat. Because given the conditions she did it under and the emotional stranglehold this feat has had her in, it’s something worth celebrating. And it means a lot more once you know the back story. If she did this on a 60 degree day with no wind, the crossing wouldn’t have meant much. You – and I – probably would’ve let out a gigantic “meh.” Ok, I wouldn’t have, because she’s my wife and I know it still would have been a huge deal.

But this; this, is not just huge. It’s bold.

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Filed Under: Lifestyle, Travel Tagged With: Boone, grandfather mountain, Life, North Carolina

The Mast General Store — Step Back Into History

November 13, 2014 by Lisa 3 Comments

Come and sit a spell at the Mast General Store in Valle Crucis, NC

Located in the small town of Valle Crucis in the North Carolina mountains, the Mast General Store is a little hidden piece of history. I’ve been visiting since I was a little girl. Originally opened in 1883, the store keepers kept everything on hand the community needed, including caskets. As the years have passed, the Mast General Store has not only strived to serve the local community of Valle Crucis, but the many visitors who pass over it’s threshold daily, serving up Southern charm and coffee at 5 cents a cup (paid on the honor system.)

Come and sit a spell on the back porch at the Mast General Store in Valle Crucis, NC.

Many don’t realize the integral piece the Mast General Store plays in the Valle Crucis community, and to the rural history of the United States. General stores used to dot the landscape of the US and were the hub where you picked up your mail, caught up on what was going on in town, and sold goods you could easily purchase, often on credit or via the barter system, without a multi-day trip to larger cities. I grew up in a town with a general store that was out of business by the time I was born, but you could still look through the windows and see the caskets waiting on their future owners until just a few years ago.

PotBellied Stove Mast General Store, Valle Crucis, NC

I was there during a recent trip to Boone, NC, and as it was a chilly, sunny day, popped in to pick up snacks for my road trip and to warm myself by the potbellied stove located in the center of the store. It was nice to sit in the rocking chairs, play a quick game of checkers, and sip on an RC Cola.

Come and sit a spell at the Mast General Store in Valle Crucis, NC

During my visit, I pulled out my camera and took the time to shoot a few images of the store, but not too many so as not to get in the way of the number of locals who were there picking up their mail (yes, the Mast General Store still has a working post office.) One of the young ladies who lives in the community, no more than 10 years old, watched me as I shot photos and then showed me her family’s mailbox. She comes in every Friday with her Mom and little sister to get the mail and a maple sugar sucker. It reminded me of a the simpler times of when I was a little girl and I’m pretty sure that’s the appeal the Mast General Store holds for so many.

Mailboxes at the Mast General Store in Valle Crucis, NC

Working Post Office, Mast General Store, Valle Crucis, NC

mailboxes_mast_general_Store

Mast General Store

While visiting the Mast General Store, you can pick up snacks for the road, preserved and pickled canned goods (I always buy the Okra), shoes, outerwear, cast iron cookware, home decor, skin care, the list goes on and on. It’s still truly a working store that serves the community at large and the thousands of visitors who wander in to experience a time gone by.

Dry Goods at the Mast General Store in Valle Crucis, NC Dry Goods at the Mast General Store, Valle Crucis, NC

For the history of the Mast General Store, visit their website: https://www.mastgeneralstore.com/history/valle-crucis

Visiting the Mast General Store? Check out the community calendar of events and activities:  https://www.mastgeneralstore.com/calendar?community=ValleCrucis

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Filed Under: Travel Tagged With: North Carolina, Travel, VisitNC

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Lisa is a lifestyle blogger, writer and social media strategist living in Charlotte, NC.

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