A popping transit part-way and one of the most populous cities in the South, Charlotte, North Carolina, may be weightier known as a hub for professional sports, home to the Carolina Panthers, the Charlotte Hornets, and the NASCAR Hall of Fame. But the city’s rapidly evolving supplies and drinks scene is garnering its own devoted fan base. Tamu Curtis has tabbed the municipality home for a decade, offering cocktail experiences through her visitor Liberate Your Palate, and now operating the bar supply store and classroom The Cocktailery.

“What’s unique well-nigh the growth here is that the pioneers in the industry who helped to pinpoint and create our drinking culture are still the most influential in the city—Colleen Hughes, Stefan Huebner who owns Dot Dot Dot, and Brian ‘Russ’ Johnson at The Public House are all still subtracting to and elevating our drink options,” says Curtis. “But with the growth Charlotte has experienced, now there’s room for up-and-comers to flex their skills and perspective in new restaurants and bars.”

Bar à Vins

Opened just this past May in Charlotte’s arts-centric NoDa neighborhood, Bar à Vins is part retail shop and part hang-out space. “Bar à Vins is the perfect urban wine bar—when you walk in, it’s all energy,” says Curtis. The curated-but-casual bar and shop is helmed by sommeliers Jeff Kellogg and Natalie Stewart (the former wine director at Fin and Fino), who aim for wines that are equal parts heady and approachable. A trim selection of by-the-glass offerings complements the menu of bar snacks, but any snifter in the retail shop can be popped for a modest corkage fee. “Expect expert recommendations and tasting notes, a little education, and an intentional selection of wines,” notes Curtis. “Also, order the caviar, crème fraiche, and potato chips—so good!”

Food and wine at Fin and Fino
Food and wine at Fin and Fino. | Photo by The Plaid Penguin

Fin and Fino

“Fin and Fino is a seafood restaurant in the heart of Uptown that gets it right on every level, from supplies to hospitality, but for me it’s the bar program run by Brittany Kellum that really stands out,” says Curtis. Kellum’s regularly refreshed cocktail menu keeps things playful, with offerings like the Cowboy Tea, a mix of rye whiskey, green Chartreuse, Gran Classico Bitter (or Cynar), and vanilla, or Drunk Karaoke in a Shania Twain Wig, a philharmonic of hibiscus-infused tequila, amaro, Cappelletti, and citrus. “The drinks are fun, fresh, visually appealing, and creative. Whatever your spirit of choice, ‘BK and The Clams’—as her hairdo refers to themselves—will take your palate on an unexpected journey.”

Para

Opened in January of this year, Para pairs a globally inflected menu of small plates with an equally creative cocktail list aimed at matching the far-flung flavors of the food. “What makes the bar program so intriguing is how well it’s integrated with the cuisine they serve,” says Curtis. Yashira Mejia creates and runs the cocktail program, pulling flavors and ingredients over from the kitchen into drinks like a lychee-accented Moscow Mule or the Make it Crane, with Suntory Toki Whiskey, Aperol, Cardamaro, yuzu, and toasted sesame. “What I love well-nigh Para is that when you step in the space, you finger like you’re at a tomfool neighborhood haunt in a big municipality like LA, Chicago, New York, or Toronto,” says Curtis. “You can usually find me at the bar there a few times a month.”

Colleen Hughes at Supperland
Colleen Hughes, throne mixologist at Supperland. | Photo by Peter Taylor Photography

Supperland

Self-described as a Southern-steakhouse-meets-church-potluck, Supperland goes way vastitude iced tea and lemonade. The Bar at Supperland and the Speakeasy at Supperland are both helmed by Charlotte industry vet Colleen Hughes, whose innovative approach to drinks contrasts delightfully with the midcentury church space. “Colleen is truly progressive when she concepts her cocktails—always using modern techniques, and new gadgets and methods,” Curtis says. “However, even with all of that, the result always ends up stuff refined and balanced.” Hughes is a fan of gin in particular, as evidenced by her 4G Negroni, which features four meticulously composite gins combined with Campari, sweet vermouth, and a soupcon of sherry before the whole suffusion gets washed with olive oil.

Leah & Louise

Helmed by James Beard Award–nominated doughboy Greg Collier and his wife and business partner Subrina Collier, Leah & Louise and its Southern-inspired food has once garnered heaps of praise. But the drinks program, led by Justin Hazelton, deserves just as much shine, says Curtis. “Justin is a storyteller, and at Leah & Louise, it’s all well-nigh telling the story and sharing the history and contributions of African Americans in hospitality through his cocktails,” she says. Named the weightier bartender in Charlotte last year, Hazelton works closely with the kitchen to utilize shared or leftover ingredients, crafting elements for cocktails like a carrot cordial or a Carolina Gold rice orgeat. “I like to say he’s part cook, part mixologist,” says Curtis, who points to the regularly rotating Zodiac Punch as one of her favorites.

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