Charlotte Magazine – July 2019

(John Hannent) #1

6 CHARLOTTEMAGAZINE.COM // JUNE 2019


AROUND OUR PICNIC TABLE sat a father
and his two daughters, three couples (two of
them neighbors turned best friends), and me.
Ten strangers, sitting under a red umbrella on
the front patio of Sweet Lew’s BBQ, talking
about our favorite restaurants, the best bris-
ket in town, and Game of Thrones.
We all live in di‡erent neighborhoods—
Starmount, University, uptown, Optimist
Park—and we’re all transplants from di‡er-
ent places like South Carolina, New York,
Maryland, and Delaware. But we all like
barbecue, which is why we were at Sweet
Lew’s QC Cookout on a Sunday evening
in late April. The event raised money for
Bryan Furman, a pitmaster from Charlotte
who lost his Atlanta-based smokehouse in
a recent ’re.
Once we got our trays of ribs and bris-
ket, the table was silent. Almost everyone
bobbed their heads, a nod that translates to,
“This is damn good food.” The nodding con-
tinued as the band started to play an instru-
mental version of “Sunny Days,” the Sesame
Street theme.
“Oh! It’s Sesame Street,” the woman next
to me says. She sings along, “How to get to
Sesame Streeeet.”
A few weeks before, I was at Moo & Brew
Fest, a cra˜ beer and burger festival at the
AvidXchangeMusicFactory. Charlotte maga-
zine was a sponsor for the event, and we set
up a table to pass out magazines and talk
to festival-goers. I asked each person who
approached, “What stories do you want to
read?”
More stories about the LGBT community,
said the ’rst person I asked.
Guns, said the second.
Whew.
There’s a lot to disagree about nowa-
days, especially in a new Southern city like
Charlotte. We straddle the line between
progressive north and traditional south, but
those di‡erent perspectives help build our

vibrant city. Though viewpoints vary, the
fact that Charlotteans are outspoken in their
beliefs means we all have something in com-
mon: We care.
We care about the safety of our city. We
weep when tragedy strikes our neighbors,
our colleagues, our friends, the students at
our local university. We cry out for change.
In April, when I spoke with Charlotte-
based writer Amber Smith about her upcom-
ing novel, she said something that resonated
with this larger idea. “Our di‡erences are
amazing, and they make us who we are, but
there are things we all have in common. We
all know what it feels like to have to ’nd our-
selves and rebuild our lives.”
Furman has faced not one but two ’res
during his time in the barbecue business.
He rebuilt a˜er the ’rst and now has to do
it again—with help from familiar faces in
the city’s dining scene, like Lewis Donald of
Sweet Lew’s, Greg Collier of The Yolk and Lo˜
& Cellar, and Keia Mastrianni of Milk Glass
Pie, who donated their proceeds from the
event to Furman’s rebuilding e‡orts.
When you talk to the people behind a
barbecue joint (and we do, starting on page
50), the arguments around the tradition-
laden meal seem super£uous. Is eastern- or
Lexington-style barbecue better? Is it BBQ,
barbecue, bar-b-que, or barbeque?
Just like our city, barbecue’s variances
based on taste and region only strengthen
the dish’s legacy. Like the di‡erent back-
grounds of the strangers around our table at
Sweet Lew’s, which only made our conversa-
tion that much better.
The morning a˜er the cookout, I Google
the lyrics to “Sunny Days.” “Sweepin’ the
clouds away. On my way to where the air is
sweet.” I spend the next 24 hours humming
the song in my head, bobbing my head with
nostalgia.
Barbecue has the same e‡ect.
LOGAN CYRUS

We straddle


the line


between


progressive


north and


traditional


south, but


those different


perspectives


help build our


vibrant city.


FROM THE EDITOR

SWEEPIN’ THE CLOUDS AWAY


Emma Way
[email protected]

The air is a little sweeter in our barbecue community

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