Search
Follow Us


Blake McGee and Tricia Redleski, who are planning a November wedding at The Carolina Inn.

Brides, grooms, relatives and friends flocked to The Carolina Inn for its annual bridal fair. View the photos ...


Our Sister Magazine

EMAIL ADDRESS: 

Delivered by FeedBurner

Entries in General Store Cafe (3)

Tuesday
Jul212009

"North Carolina Weekend" to Air Segment on General Store Café

Pittsboro’s General Store Café will be featured in primetime this week on UNC-TV’s “North Carolina Weekend.”

Brian Graves, a teaching assistant in communications studies at UNC and a freelancer for UNC-TV, produced the segment, filming the café’s live music on Friday night and interviewing owner Vance Remick, Chef Fabricio Barahona and customers.

“North Carolina Weekend” producer David Hardy says the General Store will be featured in the opening segment of the episode, which will also highlight the mountain town of Hayesville, things to do in Wrightsville Beach, Murray’s Mill in Catawba County and Yanceyville’s Steaks on the Square.

“We try to do little features about small towns – things you might not know as you’re driving down the interstate,” Hardy says.

The show airs Thursday at 9pm and Friday at 8pm.

Wednesday
Jul082009

Discovering Chatham: General Store Café's Burrito Bash

"Discovering Chatham" is an ongoing series of posts on the interesting people, places, events and news from northern Chatham County, published on our blog every Wednesday. You can read previous "Discovering Chatham" entries by clicking here. Leave us a comment and let us know what else about Chatham County you'd like to discover!Amy Elliott and Bonnie Cohen.

Last night, I went to the General Store Café for its monthly Burrito Bash. A $12 advanced ticket covers a vegetarian burrito, chips, salsa and live music. But perhaps the best part of the Bash is that proceeds go to a different nonprofit every month.

Tuesday's event benefited Siglinda Scarpa’s Goathouse Refuge, a cage-free shelter for cats in Pittsboro, and Paperhand Puppet Intervention, which is based out of Saxapahaw and dedicated to bringing many styles of puppetry to the Triangle and around the world. Performers included Jimmy Magoo and the Goodlife and Flatt Tyred.

General Store Café owner Vance Remick says the Burrito Bash idea originated five years ago. The first event raised 

Jimmy Magoo performs.money for the Chatham Arts Council.

“We get people in the store that have never been in the store, and the organization makes some money,” he says. “So it’s kind of a win-win situation.”

The next Bash is scheduled for Aug. 4 from 6-9pm.

Wednesday
May202009

Discovering Chatham: A Land of 'Plenty'

"Discovering Chatham" is an ongoing series of posts on the interesting people, places, events and news from northern Chatham County, to be published on our blog every Wednesday. We hope you enjoy this first edition and let us know what else about Chatham County you'd like to discover in the comments!

Taking the concept of buying local products to the next level, Pittsboro has recently revived its local currency, the Plenty (Piedmont Local EcoNomy Tender).

Courtesy of Plenty Currency Cooperative

Capital Bank in Pittsboro is exchanging Federal Reserve notes for Plenties to consumers at a 10% discount. That is, nine Federal Reserve dollars will get you 10 Plenties. In the marketplace, the exchange rate is 1 to 1. So, say you buy $20 worth of groceries at Chatham Marketplace. You can pay 20 Plenties.

But who eats that 10% discount that customers enjoy?

Nobody, as long as the merchant keeps the Plenties in circulation by buying from other merchants or paying employees with them, says Melissa Frey, executive director of the Plenty Currency Cooperative.

Originally launched in 2002, the Plenty now has a new look, thanks to illustrator Emma Skurnick, and new denominations, which correspond with the denominations of U.S. bills. Previously, Plenties had fractional denominations, which made transactions confusing. And now that they’re backed by a bank, Plenties are more appealing.

Lyle Estill, who is now the president of Piedmont Biofuels, was a studio artist back in 2002 when the “Plenty 1.0,” as he calls it, was around. He once sold a piece of art with a hefty price tag and was left with a large stack of Plenties that couldn’t be exchanged.

“I ended up with a year’s worth of lunches at General Store Café,” he says. Estill now gives his employees the option of receiving their wages, in part, in Plenties.

Currently, about 24 businesses, mostly in Chatham County, accept Plenties. Frey hopes to get other local bank branches to sign on so that Plenties can spread to Orange, Durham, Alamance, Lee and Wake counties.

Frey says Plenties encourage people to support the businesses that are based in their community. “It just takes that whole local consciousness up a notch,” she says. “Plenties can only circulate here. I can spend a dollar at a local store, but there are no guarantees about when that dollar’s going to leave my community. Plenties force the issue. … As more and more Plenties are in circulation, that becomes tangible evidence of our strengthening local economy.”

In addition to endorsing local commerce, Frey says the program also promotes environmental responsibility. As more is purchased locally, fewer fossil fuels are burned through transportation.