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Gobble ‘Til You Wobble

Happy Thanksgiving to our United States readers from TravelByJury.com! Check out all of our great eats as you gear up to gobble ’til you wobble! We’re thankful for you – so keep the reviews coming!

the Cart, Hanoi, Vietnam
Gracie’s, Salt Lake City, Utah
Linger Lodge, Bradenton, Florida
The Wine Shop, Charlotte, North Carolina
Harvest, Louisville, Kentucky
Bison Witches Bar & Deli, Tempe, Arizona
Pachapapa, Cusco, Peru
Ladles, Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina
Loose Meat Sandwiches in Sioux City, Iowa
Granja Heidi, Cusco, Peru
Jack’s Cafe, Cusco, Peru
Caffe Pomodoro, Panama City, Panama
Desserts of Louisville, Kentucky
Gilpin’s Sandwiches, Cincinnati, Ohio
Cafe Campanilla, Madrid, Spain
Dickadee’s Deli, Charlotte, North Carolina
La Bombeta, Barcelona, Spain
Medjool, San Francisco, California
De’Coltelli, Pisa, Italy
Kashmir, Louisville, Kentucky
Barley’s Taproom, Asheville, North Carolina
Maggie Jones; London, England
The General Greene & Cake Man Raven; Brooklyn, New York, USA
La Paella De La Reina; Madrid, Spain
Brasserie Esemeralla; Paris, France
Black Bear Bakery; St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Murphy’s Ice Cream; Dingle, Ireland
Ristorante Zeppelin; Orvieto, Italy
Uto Klum; Üetliberg, Switzerland
Seviche, Louisville, Kentucky, USA
Unnammed; Le Peninsula de Azuero, Panama
Three Carrots Pub; Belgrade, Serbia
White Horse Tavern; New York City, New York, USA
The Duke of York; London, England

JR/Great Eat: The Wine Shop, Charlotte NC

Have you ever wanted to go to a cozy place and get a glass of fine wine without all the pretentiousness of wine snobbery? Maybe you’ve wanted to find a place that is classy and fun without being overly expensive? Then you should check out The Wine Shop located in the Rivergate Shopping Center in South Charlotte, NC. This is a perfect place to hang out with friends or even grab a glass on your own while you ruminate over a good book, your journal, or class notes. The menu consists of quite a nice selection of red and white wines, along with a few dessert and bubbly wines; there is something to fit your taste regardless of what you may be feeling.

Most wine is served in three sizes, a tasting size, a flight (a half glass), or full glass. You can also buy a whole bottle of some of them, but please note there is a uncorking fee for each bottle added onto your tab. What is really nice is to order several tasting sizes and get a panoply of flavors for your tongue to taste, however, getting a half glass is also nice as an appetizer if you know you’ll be having dinner elsewhere.

Although The Wine Shop specializes in wine, they also serve a wonderful menu filled with lunch and dinner options of soups, salads, sandwiches and full entrees. If a whole meal is not to your liking, the menu contains many cheese and meat choices to go with your wine. However, my personal favorites on the menu are the $7 appetizers. Their calamari and crab cakes are excellent and served with spicy pesto aioli sauce. My most recent love is the vanilla crème brûlée with a Muscat dessert wine. There is no need for dinner after having that, and it serves as the perfect treat after a long day. If you can get there between 4-6 Sunday through Thursday, you’ll get the benefit of Happy Hour, with select wines at $5 a glass and $6 appetizers, and on Sundays they also serve brunch starting at 11 am.

The Wine Shop offers a fantastic selection of wine, but if wine is not your forte, feel free to browse all of their world class beers. They have an extensive beer selection sure to please every palate. Beers from around the world, stouts, lagers, ales, and domestics fill their coolers. I’m not a beer drinker, so I can’t say too much about them, so go there and let me know.

More than just a wine bar, The Wine Shop is, as the name implies, a shop. While there feel free to browse the shelves for your own bottle. You can even buy it off the shelves and drink it there, even if it is not on the main menu. They also sell beer and various cigars. There are a few samples of art on the walls that are also for sale.

What I love most about The Wine Shop is its casual atmosphere and great staff. My first time going there I admitted I was clueless about wine selection and my waitress was more than happy to give me a few ideas without acting like I was a complete moron. The prices are not bad for what you are paying for; I normally spend a little under $15 for a glass of wine and an appetizer or dessert. I haven’t had a whole meal there, since I have an odd way of treating it more like a coffee shop than a restaurant, but it would probably be about $25 a person with a glass of wine + meal (that’s on the high side of the scale). But it’s cozy, classy, and unpretentious, and served with a great glass of wine. Those things all together in one place are hard to find and hard to beat.

P.S. They do have a VIP room for private parties and a nice patio for summer evenings. It’s a popular place and you might want to get there a bit early when the weather is warm.

Juror #11

Great Eat: Dickadee’s Deli, Charlotte, NC

As I write about Dickadee’s, my stomach is craving the warm smells of the crisp green interior of a sunny little neighborhood deli near Myers Park in Charlotte, North Carolina. Growing up, I used to marvel at the clean cases of deli meats and cheeses, as well as a prank list of important phone numbers, like the President of the United States “direct” line, that was posted by the register. The bright A.L. Brown root beers and cream sodas always made me feel a bit like I was in a foreign land; there aren’t many authentic delis in the south, and DIckadee’s is even kosher – try the kosher deli dog and see if you don’t daydream about it all day (that is my absolute favorite and standby order – and always, always, always get the chips; they are fantastic!). The Monte Cristo sandwich (go for it and get the side of maple syrup) is delicious, and the dagwoods (my favorite is the Bobcat – marinara and cheese and meatballs, nom) are huge. There are plenty of veggie options at Dickadee’s, and you can pretty much craft your own wrap or sandwich if you’re clever. The people at Dickadee’s are really friendly, and the restaurant’s outdoor patio is a perfect place to watch the young professionals of Charlotte whizzing by on a sunny afternoon.

Dickadee’s Deli, 1419-A East Blvd. Charlotte, NC

Charlotte, NC

Growing up outside of Charlotte, NC meant that I got to watch it grow…and grow and grow. The Charlotte Hornets, nee Bobcats, came in ’87, and the building of the Panthers’ stadium (along with two new basketball arenas) drew some angry responses from the Charlotte folk. As far as sports goes, there’s NBA and NFL, but hockey people might want to check out the Checkers and baseball lovers may enjoy the Knights. Aside from sports, Charlotte hosts all sorts of great opera, ballets, and Broadway acts at the Blumenthal Performing Arts Center in downtown Charlotte, which is a bit of a banker-y area but also home to boutique restaurants and shops. Downtown Charlotte does have the awesome Discovery Place (laser shows at night in their Imax theater!) and the Mint Museum (bigger branch off of Randolph Rd, not far from downtown – free on Thursdays!). Ri-Ra’s is a local favorite bar, but go down N. Davidson (NoDa) for more funky eats, treats, and fun including gallery crawls, drum circles, live bands, the Charlotte Comedy Theater improv – formerly the Legally Dead Parrots – and the Penguin Drive-In. The Manor Theater is a great spot to catch movies that Charlotte’s bigger multiplexes won’t show, and around that theater is Dickadee’s Deli, my favorite spot for NYC-style (kosher!) food (they have veggie stuff too) – but they’re only open for lunch last time I checked. The Dilworth area is arty and pretty and near an upscale Mexican hotspot, La Paz (my personal fav).  Go down South Blvd. and check out Manifest for music – it’s a huge independent music store – vinyl! Try the Little Professor Book Shop (I think it’s now Park Rd. books, on Park Rd.) for intimate book-luva time and great author appearances. Charlotte’s a sprawled out city, so don’t be afraid to explore it and get lost, but traffic is pretty obnoxious – try to get off the roads, esp. I-485 and the Billy Graham Parkway, during morning and afternoon rush, and *stay away* from northeast Charlotte (WT Harris blvd, 49, and 85 north) during race day at the Charlotte Motor Speedway unless you want to spend all your time in your car:) Final thought: get a Creative Loafing magazine (free) to check out the best of Charlotte, or the Charlotte Observer’s Friday weekend-edition.

Shelby, NC

Most people ignore Shelby, North Carolina; it’s generally a pit-stop for gas en route to somewhere else. But don’t entirely ignore the growing town of Shelby; the city was once voted as one of America’s best cities (it was in the Charlotte Observer a few years ago, really) and it is close to the Daniel Stowe Botanical Gardens in Belmont, NC, and isn’t far from Charlotte, NC and Spartanburg, SC.  Shelby has one of North Carolina’s best BBQ joints, Bridges, on “I” 74 (it’s an interstate in some parts of the state – inexplicable), if you’re doing a food tour. Also, Shelby has one of the east coast’s last drive-in movie theaters, the Sunset, on the other side of town, and it’s open on weekends. Friendly folk override the pesky traffic lights in this town that, like many small US towns, should be seen as more than just a disturbance en route to another destination.

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