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News / Life / Travel

A true blue time in North Carolina

Real Southern hospitality on menu in Chapel Hill

By Debra Bruno, Special to The Washington Post
Published: February 4, 2018, 6:00am
3 Photos
Crispy Whole Fish Châ Cá La Vong at Lantern Restaurant in Chapel Hill, N.C.
Crispy Whole Fish Châ Cá La Vong at Lantern Restaurant in Chapel Hill, N.C. Lissa Gotwals Photo Gallery

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — The University of North Carolina’s gorgeous flagship campus in Chapel Hill, with its towering trees and stately brick buildings, may be the center of life in the classic Southern college town, but it also hosts an impressive art museum, a planetarium and a botanical garden. The home of the Tar Heels is also basketball central, of course. Keep in mind that this is a partisan town: Wear the right color, pale Carolina blue, but never confuse your colors with the darker hue of nearby archrival Duke.

Music is also big here. A popular spot, Local 506, operates as a private club under state law; for $2, visitors can buy a lifetime membership and hear local and national rock bands.

On the horizon: Chapel Hill is getting ready to open the Blue Dogwood Public Market (306 W. Franklin St.), a new food hall on bustling Franklin Street that will include both permanent and pop-up food stalls.

Carrboro is just to the west of Chapel Hill, but it’s so close you can stroll from one to the other in about a half-hour. And it’s important to begin the day at a chill place such as the Weaver Street Market (weaverstreetmarket.coop, 101 E. Weaver St., 919-929-0010) with its hippie atmosphere and live music on Sunday mornings. Weaver Street uses organic flour and makes rolls, bagels and bread daily. In keeping with the welcoming vibe, you don’t need to belong to the co-op to shop the market. Carrboro once was Chapel Hill’s mill town and train depot, and the old buildings near the market have been renovated into restaurants and shops. In the market, the hot breakfast bar offers items such as a tofu scramble, French toast and breakfast burritos for $7.99 a pound. Add some coffee ($2 for a small cup) and an almond apricot scone ($1.69), or a blueberry Danish ($2.49), and either eat inside the building or on the picnic tables outside and take in the scene. The Carrboro store is the flagship market, but newer branches have recently opened in the southern end of Chapel Hill and in nearby Hillsborough, with a branch set for Raleigh this summer.

Sutton’s Drug Store (suttonsdrugstore.com, 159 E. Franklin St., 919-942-5161) — and yes, it is a drugstore — is a Tar Heel tradition. Basketball jerseys hang on the walls and in the front window (including, of course, Michael Jordan’s No. 23), alongside hundreds of photos of Suttons diners — a tradition that started in 1983, although Suttons itself opened in 1923. On game days, expect to wait in line for the store’s burgers ($6.09 for a single burger with potato chips), egg salad sandwiches ($4.99) or chocolate milkshakes ($3.99). Yes, the burgers are simple and the soup all comes straight from Campbell’s, but you certainly know what you’re getting here: Southern hospitality and a reliable lunch counter. On your way out, pick up a box of Chapel Hill Toffee ($6.95 for a five-ounce package).

Even though Lantern Restaurant (lanternrestaurant.com, 423 W. Franklin St., 919-969-8846) has an Asian fusion menu, it’s one with a North Carolina pedigree, because chef-owner Andrea Reusing emphasizes its farm-to-table, locally sourced and seasonal menu, which might include pork or vegetable dumpling appetizers (appetizers from $7 to $14) or chaat, an Indian savory snack with roasted carrots, lentils and cauliflower, served with mint chutney ($12). For entrees (ranging from $25 to $32), try the Vietnamese-style whole fish or the pork chops with papaya sauce. This small space has a cozy bar in the back serving wine and cocktails such as the Dark and Stormy (ginger ale and rum) and the Fin in Vierno, a version of a hot toddy, both for $10.

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