Author: Ratcliff Andrea  

Tags: magazine indianapolis monthly  

ISBN: 0899-0328

Year: 2023

Text
                    SLEEPING BEAUTy

Another shot

Thirst trap

AN A TO ZZZZ GUIDE

T H A D M AT TA & G R E G O D E N
A R E B AC K I N T H E GA M E

STUNNING BOBA DRINKS

JAN UA RY 2 023

$5. 95

If it's broken, fix it.
Find out where and
how on page 40.


M Y L A G O S M Y W AY C AV I A R C O L L E C T I O N S
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01 2023 ON THE COVER Illustration by Carlo Cadenas 2 40 58 WHERE TO GET STUFF FIXED REBOUND Repairing our belongings, rather than tossing and replacing, saves money and helps the planet. No matter what it is you want to hold on to, our guide will lead you to the local folks who can bring it back to life. From Ohio State Buckeyes to Butler Bulldogs, coach Thad Matta and former player Greg Oden have reunited in Indianapolis, where both men are happy to be home again and involved with the sport they couldn’t leave behind. E D I T E D BY C H R I ST I NA V E RC E L L E T T O BY T ON Y R E H AG E N IM | JANUARY 2023
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01 2023 ISSUE 05 G O OD L I F E 11 21 33 SPEED READ WANTED SWOON Investments in public safety, cleanliness, and outreach are coming to the Mile Square. A petite firepit casts a glow. SHOP TALK Hoosier fine dining is ready for its close-up at Plainfield’s theater-turnedrestaurant, The Prewitt. 13 Streetly brings a sense of community to the east side. 34 ARTIFACT 23 Before cars stole our hearts, Hoosier travelers swooned for the luxury of first-class rail. Sweet sleep awaits. 14 STREET SAVVY TRENDING 24 THE HOOSIERIST Our Indiana expert has a bone to pick about dog parks. 16 TASTE TEST 26 BODY WISE 37 OPEN DOOR Discover a hidden tiki room. 29 18 REALTY CHECK BEST BETS Linden House officially belongs to RH. Five can’t-miss events in Indy this month. 30 TRAVELER Knoxville, the Maker City. 98 IM | JANUARY 2023 36 Bubble tea gets serious in these upgraded boba drinks. 28 Sue Finkam wants to lead Carmel after Jim Brainard’s 27year mayoral run. FIRST BITE Diners make a B-Line to Bloomington’s Hopscotch Kitchen, a TikTok star brews success, and Cha-Cho’s Latin Kitchen is good to-go. Carmel City Center is more enticing than ever. We’re obsessed with the new Chanel eyeshadow palettes. ASK ME ANYTHING 4 T H E DI S H C I RC L E C I T Y 22 VOLUME 46 FOODIE Italian import Lucio Romani gives back the authentic flavors of his childhood at his cheery bakery and takeout on Main Street in Carmel. 38 REVIEW As part of a small-town renaissance, Bargersville’s Pizza & Libations is not as simple and straightforward as its name suggests. 104 RESTAURANT GUIDE BACK HOME AGAIN A tour of the city’s best eats, from fine dining to favorite dives. As a hypochondriac, I make the most of my maladies, describing them to all who listen.
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SPECIAL SEC TIONS CONTENTS ADVERTISING PAGE JANUARY IN THE NEXT ISSUE ... Eye Care SPECIAL ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT IN THIS ISSUE Get advice from qualified professionals about routine eye exams, corrective prescriptions, or specialized treatments to improve vision. SPECIAL ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT AFTER PAGE 64 INDIANA BRIDE Remodeling 8 3 0 M A S S AV E 6 IM | JANUARY 2023 PHOTO BY CURIOUS COURTNEY’S PHOTOGR APHY Are you planning to tie the knot this year? Take a sneak peek at photos of local weddings, get advice from industry experts about planning your nuptials, and consult our directory of more than 140 exceptional event spaces to set the stage for your big day. Attend the Indianapolis Monthly Bridal Show on January 22 at the Ritz Charles in Carmel to consult with an array of area wedding vendors. T H E F O U N TA I N R O O M . C O M If you love your home, but feel ready to reboot your surroundings, it may be time to enlist the services of a remodeler to expand and customize your space. School Guide This annual resource helps parents make educated decisions about where to send their children to school at any stage of learning. We list details and statistics, such as test scores, tuition rates, and enrollment numbers, for a wide selection of Indiana institutions. 4 6 3. 2 3 8 . 3 8 0 0
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E DI T OR’S NO T E NEW YEAR. NEW HOME. Remember the Titans Woodstock Custom Homes specializes in low maintenance, custom designed homes for main level living with indoor/outdoor, open concept floor plans that include jaw-dropping architectural detail... and all in just the right blend of luxury and size for you. If this sounds like what you’ve been searching for, keep reading. We currently own premium lots in Hamilton County’s most sought after neighborhoods like Reserve on South, Grassy Branch at Bridgewater, Sagamore, and Brookside... along with several quick movein opportunities already underway. However, if you have additional time and want to explore all the special touches you’ve imagined; we can help design a very unique home worthy of your dream lifestyle. It all starts with a conversation. To learn more about Woodstock and see the many examples of our lifestyle home design, visit WoodstockCustomHomes.com or give us a call at 317.506.3568. Copyright 2022 Woodstock Custom Homes, LLC 8 IM | JANUARY 2023 I N T H E C OURS E of putting together this issue, Indianapolis Monthly was sold to a company from Detroit called Hour Media. Though the mission to serve our wonderful readers continues, several of the magazine’s longtime employees won’t be part of the new endeavor. Todd Urban had been our design director since 2013. During his tenure, he was the driving visual force behind every magazine cover, every big story. In addition to being dedicated and talented, he possessed a kind and collaborative spirit. Todd made space for others to be great. Mike Botkin was the magazine’s production manager, the crafty veteran who, for 18-plus years, made sure we met our print deadlines while wrangling ad sellers, advertisers, and ads. There wasn’t a single person on staff who didn’t love him, which says more about Mike than any silly job description. Tony Valainis was our staff photographer for 32 years. His influence was tremendous, but, like Tony himself, understated. Generations of readers saw the community through his eyes and art, a well-deserved honor and legacy.
As our vice president of finance, Melinda Marshall’s business was in balance sheets, budgets, and numbers. But her real passion was caring for the people behind those figures for the past 30 years. The moral center of the magazine’s leadership, Melinda was loving, fierce, and true. Keith Phillips was the man who held everything together, a transplant from Jersey who came to Indy for college and never left. He worked here for 31 years, first as a sales rep, then as the magazine’s publisher. He led us through good times and bad. His demeanor could be gruff, but his heart was gold. I will never work with a better man. Michael Rubino Editor-in-Chief ( CONTRIBUTORS ) TERRY KIRTS JAYDE LEARY OWEN MADRIGAL A lifelong tea-lover whose grandmother started him on sugary cups of Lipton when he was barely a year old, contributing editor Terry Kirts downed dozens of new-wave boba drinks for this month’s Taste Test (p. 36). Though he’s partial to citrusy green tea, unsweetened, he was won over by all of the brown sugar syrups, cheese foams, and fruity, popping tapioca available in almost every corner of town. Originally from Greenwood, Jayde Leary, senior journalism and telecommunications major at Ball State University, is an intern for Indianapolis Monthly. She wrote the Collectibles section in this month’s cover package on where to get things fixed (p. 40). “It was by far my favorite project,” she says. “The best part was seeing all the beautiful artwork that had been restored.” Dining intern Owen Madrigal, who this month reports on one of Indy’s newest carryout ventures, Cha-Cho’s Latin Kitchen (p. 34), is pursuing a journalism degree at Butler University with a double minor in creative media and entertainment and film studies. He also works as a writer and editor for the school’s weekly publication, The Butler Collegian, covering issues ranging from universal design on campus to music and film. PRINT | ONLINE | SOCIAL | E-NE WSLET TERS | E VENTS | PROMOTIONS JANUARY 2023 | IM 9
F E E DBAC K Michael Rubino EDITOR-IN-CHIEF DESIGN DIRECTOR LIFESTYLE EDITOR Julia Spalding DINING EDITOR ( BUZZ WORTHY ) DIGITAL EDITOR Dylan Lee Hodges EDITOR EMERITA We heard [the explosion] all the way in New Palestine. Absolutely insane. Loved the way these stories were presented in this month’s issue. I love an oral history! Todd Urban Christina Vercelletto Deborah Paul --------- Robert Annis, Megan Fernandez, Alicia Garceau, Jeana Harris, Terry Kirts, Suzanne Krowiak, Amy Lynch, Sam Stall, Adam Wren CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Jayde Leary, Owen Madrigal EDITORIAL INTERNS KASEY CADWEL via Instagram --------- Margo Wininger ASSOCIATE ART DIRECTOR Recalling Richmond Hill In our November issue, Adam Wren’s oral history with the heroes of Richmond Hill made many reflect on where they were that tragic night 10 years ago. I lived in the apartments off Shelby Street and County Line Road. I thought it was a vehicle collision into a building on U.S. 31. I felt a small rumble with the loud boom. MARYBETH AUXIER via Instagram I’m just getting started on this piece, but holy cow! What a crazy situation. JOEL J MILLER via Twitter This article was so well-written. MARTIE GARRETT HOOFER via Instagram I remember this vividly. So wild. Can’t believe it’s been that long. LINDSAY RILEY KOSKIE via Instagram We lived many miles from here but could feel a small shake in our home and didn’t know what happened until the next day. CHRISTINA SORG-HUDACIN via Instagram PHOTOGRAPHER Tony Valainis --------PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER VICE PRESIDENT / FINANCE Keith Phillips Melinda Marshall David Gerdt, Joe Jarrell, Nancy Oliphant ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Andrea Ratcliff SPECIAL SECTIONS DIRECTOR OFFICE MANAGER Christy Moore IndianapolisMonthly.com/advertise I was a half-mile away. With friends at a bonfire. Everyone but two of us were inside getting drinks. The explosion happened. Force of the blast knocked my friend into me. We both fell. Both of us stunned. Both of us police officers. We couldn’t respond because we both had been drinking. Sirens everywhere. Chaos on the radio. Sky turning white with ash covering everything. We were north of the blast. Prevailing winds going north. Cars covered in ash. We all were unharmed. So many not so lucky. Lives changed. Lives ended. I will never forget the sound of the explosion. It still echoes. DIANE MOORMAN-TRACY --------PRODUCTION MANAGER Mike Botkin --------SPECIAL PROJECTS EDITOR Laura Kruty SPECIAL PROJECTS ART DIRECTOR Allison Edwards --------- NATIONAL SALES REPRESENTATIVES MIDWEST / SOUTHWEST DIRECTOR Cheryl Schuldt, 847-251-3483 FLORIDA / CARIBBEAN / BERMUDA / MEXICO ACCOUNT DIRECTOR Whitney Dick, 954-493-7311 --------- EMMIS COMMUNICATIONS CHAIRMAN AND CEO Jeffrey H. Smulyan PRESIDENT AND CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER Patrick M. Walsh EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT AND CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Ryan Hornaday EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT AND GENERAL COUNSEL J. Scott Enright Send your feedback to letters@IndianapolisMonthly.com, or post a comment on Facebook (Indianapolis Monthly) or Twitter (@IndyMonthly). Letters and social media posts may be edited for length, style, or clarity. Please include your full name for the purpose of verification. PRESIDENT EMMIS PUBLISHING Gregory T. Loewen --------- Indianapolis Monthly One Emmis Plaza 40 Monument Circle Suite 500 Indianapolis, IN 46204 317-237-9288 Subscriptions: 317-237-9288 T H E D IS H N E WS L E T T E R Subscribe at Indianapolis Monthly.com/newsletter to receive a weekly guide to the best local food and drinks. 10 IM | JANUARY 2023 IndianapolisMonthly.com/subscribe Member, American Society of Magazine Editors. ASME works to preserve editorial independence and speaks out on public policy issues, particularly those pertaining to the First Amendment. PHOTO BY MATT KRYGER/THE STAR VIA IMAGN EDITORIAL / ADVERTISING OFFICES
01 2023 ARTIFACT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 ASK T H E HOOSI E RIST . . 14 C I RC L E C I T Y UNSP OKE N RULES . . . . . . 14 ASK M E ANY T H I NG . . . . 16 BEST BETS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 SPEED READ Capital Gains This year, big investments focusing on public safety, cleanliness, and outreach are lined up for downtown’s Mile Square—the small yet significant doorstep to the state of Indiana. Are they enough? I l l u s t r a t i o n b y C U RT M E R L O JANUARY 2023 | IM 11
( SPE E D READ CONT I NUED ) RESCUE EFFORTS. After suffering from what resembled a case of long COVID, with debilitating symptoms impacting both the economic and cultural vigor of Indianapolis, Mayor Joe Hogsett launched the Downtown Resiliency Strategy last year, a program aimed at addressing housing, infrastructure, public spaces, and economic development with earmarked funds from the city’s $419 million American Rescue Plan purse. Last November, an additional $3.5 million was announced, intending to supplement ongoing efforts in the heart of downtown through a partnership with Downtown Indy Inc. While the city has over 400 square miles to consider, DII focuses only on the area immediately surrounding Monument Circle, totaling about a mile and a half. “We really can help to be more flexible, to help add resources, and to be kind of creative and nimble in ways sometimes that [the city] can’t be because they have so much ground to cover,” says Taylor Schaffer, newly instated president and CEO of DII, adding that the longstanding public-private partnership between these two entities is crucial as Indianapolis evolves and more residents make downtown their home. AT A CROSSROADS. Mayor Joe Hogsett’s plan to bring Indianapolis’s Mile Square back to life after COVID is rooted in cleanliness and safety. DESPITE A NEGATIVE PERCEPTION, MAYOR HOGSETT INSISTS THAT DOWNTOWN IS THE SAFEST NEIGHBORHOOD IN THE CITY, ACCOUNTING FOR LESS THAN 5 PERCENT OF ALL CRIME. SAFETY IN NUMBERS. B.link cameras aren’t the only eyes IMPD has downtown (there are 128 camera views and license plate readers currently), but the initial rollout of the program—a partnership between IMPD and the Public Safety Foundation—has already proven beneficial. “IMPD has used it successfully to solve cases along with other investments in technology that we’ve made downtown and throughout our neighborhoods,” says Mark Bode, communications director at the mayor’s office. PARTNERS IN CRIME. For years, DII has reinforced the IMPD presence downtown through off-duty bike patrols (IMPD officers hired by DII outside of their existing contract with the city), explains Schaffer. Part of the $3.5 million will be used to bolster this partnership, adding more patrols for improved visibility and reassurance to those downtown. A KEY TO THE CITY. During the pandemic, a lack of public restrooms created some pretty gross problems. While some of this money will be utilized for expanded alley maintenance and increased power washing, public defecation isn’t the heaping problem it was in 2020. To better address the issue, homeless outreach and public restrooms are also on the agenda. Doug Stephenson, owner of Downtown Comics, says new facilities are essential, but only if there is a plan to have proficient security and staffing, suggesting, “You’ve got to have an attendant all the time, and it’s going to have to have some rules.” Despite a negative perception, Mayor Hogsett insists that downtown is the safest neighborhood in the city, accounting for less than 5 percent of all crime. Even so, publicsafety measures are a big part of this plan. Crime-fighting tech will also be funded, including grants to defray the initial cost of B.link cameras to area business owners. SMILE! YOU’RE ON CAMERA. 12 IM | JANUARY 2023 PILOT PROGRAM CLEARED FOR TAKEOFF. Reinforced by $2 million from the 2023 city-county operating budget, an allnew public-safety program will bring a non-law enforcement, clinician-led mental health response team to the streets 24/7, adding to the growing list of services designed to reform the city’s criminal justice system by shifting nonviolent citizens toward recovery instead of jail time. LET ICONS BE ICONS. “I think there needs to be more focus on Monument Circle,” says Stephenson, who has operated his business in the shadow of the Soldiers and Sailors Monument for three decades. He feels like the city is constantly pursuing and promoting the next big project, citing Georgia Street, Mass Ave, and now Eleven Park at the Diamond Chain site, leaving the Circle to deteriorate, both physically and figuratively. “That same progress needs to be applied here,” he says of the enigma that is the Circle. FULL CIRCLE. Even with its minute representation on the map, the Mile Square generates 20 percent of the city’s tax revenue, making investment in the area essential. Stephenson is hopeful these applications will bring more people downtown, especially to Monument Circle. “You can’t have it all screwed up and dirty and people are afraid to go there. It’s the symbol of the city.” — SUSAN SALA Z
PHOTO BY TONY VALAINIS ARTIFACT Monon Railroad Silver Collections VINTAGE: 1940S TO 1960S Resides in the Monon Connection Museum in Monon, Indiana BEFORE CARS swept Americans off the railroads post–World War II, Hoosiers traveled in style between Louisville and Chicago—at least those who could afford first-class tickets. The luxury of the bygone era is on display at the Monon Connection Museum, believed to be the largest public collection of railroad memorabilia in the country. The 6,500 pieces range from a private train car that belonged to industrialist Henry Flagler (he reportedly sent the company a blank check and asked for the best money could buy) to silver and china collections from 20 different railroads. Among the Monon’s set of stirring spoons and relish forks, butter knives and brandy snifters, the most curious piece is a pair of corn on the cob holders with little feet to keep the vegetable off the table. The museum is open year-round, but the winter season is quiet, giving the staff a chance to polish each silver item by hand. — M E G A N F E R NA N D E Z JANUARY 2023 | IM 13
( UNSPOKEN RULES ) MLK Day ask THE HOOSIERIST Call of Doody Q: WHAT’S WITH ALL THE DOG PARKS AT NEW DOWNTOWN APART- MENT COMPLEXES? WHY NOT JUST HIT THE NEAREST GREEN SPACE? A: Places like White River State Park and Lugar Plaza can indeed be “used” by leashed dogs, so long as their owners pick up after them. But if your pup wants to run free, there’s a distinct shortage of options. Which is kind of a problem, given that around 27 percent of the folks living in the city’s core own dogs. That’s the primary reason many urban complexes boast such private parks. However, downtowners who don’t live in such canine-positive environments have one other option: The Dog Park at Immanuel, a Have questions? Send them to private, not-for-profit setup at 382 Prospect St., hoosierist just south of Eli Lilly’s campus. But given the @Indianapolis Monthly.com. dearth of such pet-friendly turf, you’ll most likely have to line up to sign up. — S A M S TA L L THE STATE STAT 14 74 IM | JANUARY 2023 Number of firearms intercepted by the TSA at Indianapolis International Airport in 2021 Kid-friendly venues such as The Children’s Museum, Eiteljorg Museum, Indiana State Museum, and Conner Prairie offer free admission. Some require advance tickets, so plan ahead. If you prefer the fresh air, lace up your walking shoes for one of local historian Sampson Levingston’s Walk & Talk tours that cover points of interest in Indy’s Black history. For something more solemn, make a stop at the Landmark for Peace Memorial in Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Park. A 3-D portrait of King and Robert F. Kennedy, the bronze statue sits near the spot where the visiting RFK gave an impromptu speech the day King was assassinated in Memphis. That’s more than double the 36 guns intercepted in 2020— a number no doubt reduced by COVID travel restrictions. Thankfully, we’re nowhere near the worst. That “honor” goes to Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, which intercepted 507 packing passengers. ILLUSTRATION BY RYAN JOHNSON; PHOTO BY TONY VALAINIS A MANNER-FESTO FOR OBSERVING THE FEDERAL HOLIDAY HONORING THE CIVIL RIGHTS GIANT.
BUILDING LONGER, HEALTHIER LIVES IN INDIANA Creating a community of lifesavers Reaching girls with STEM programs Educating women about heart disease and stroke Join these leaders as we create a more equitable community Kim Speer Inez Evans Hendricks Regional Health Go Red for Women® Chair IndyGo Circle of Red Chair Show your support by volunteering or donating today! Contact Kristin.Pfaff@heart.org for more information. Nationally sponsored by Central Indiana Goes Red Sponsor Media Sponsors â ck{nVTUrŠˆŠŠ`NnVJAaNAnroocJVArVcašaJ™šAˆ‰¨J©¨‹©acr®Scn®knc€r™^^nVTUronNoNnxNL™c0NLScn:c`NaVoAnNTVorNnNLrnALN`An]cS™ 3UN0NLnNooNoVTaVoArnALN`An]cS4™1™1™4aAsrUcnV~NLsoNkncUVIVrNL™
P h o t o b y T O N Y VA L A I N I S What has outgoing Mayor Jim Brainard gotten right? What has he gotten wrong? He’s done a phenomenal job growing a community that has so much vitality to it, and has been a magnet for people to move, both businesses and residents. I don’t think he’s done anything wrong, per se, but I think there’s just a lot of opportunity. In local government, you don’t have the resources to do everything you want all at one time. You have to make choices. There’s an opportunity to engage residents in a different conversation with local leaders. There’s an opportunity to invest inside the walls of City Hall. What are some of those opportunities? It’s always referred to as “Jim’s vision.” It should be referred to as the community’s vision. People want to be more engaged. They want to be more engaged in restaurants and street life, and have a say in where their kids grow up and what kind of experience they have. That’s a key initiative for sure. And we want to use data for more informed decisionmaking. Does Carmel have enough affordable housing stock, particularly as more and more service workers flock to an increasingly service-based economy? Currently, they have a wide variety of housing options for everybody who wants to call Carmel home. And that’s just one segment of what we need to provide the community. ASK ME ANYTHING Sue Finkam, Carmel Mayoral Candidate THE MARKETING EXECUTIVE AND THREE-TERM CITY COUNCILOR IS RUNNING AGAINST FELLOW REPUBLICAN KEVIN “WOODY” RIDER TO REPLACE THE OUTGOING SEVEN-TERM MAYOR JIM BRAINARD. BY A DA M W R E N Like many Carmelites, you’re not native to the area. What attracted you to the community when you moved here in 2007? I was working on a project at IU Health North while living in the Lawrence and Geist area, and 16 IM | JANUARY 2023 my son was getting ready to go to kindergarten. I was impressed with the Carmel community and just wanted him to grow up here. It reminded me a lot of home. I grew up in a tiny town in Michigan. One town. One school. A lot of community pride. But do we have enough? I think we have opportunities to expand that more. There’s a 99-unit building [in Midtown] going in, and 20 percent of that is going to be affordable housing. Are you concerned about the national trend that’s playing out in Carmel of investors buying single-family homes? I think what is so special about Carmel is we have really strong neighborhoods, something I’d like to make sure we keep that way. And so when you get a neighborhood with 30 percent corporate rentals, and you don’t know your neighbors
because they might be an out-of-state, individual renter or corporate owner, they’re not here to see that. The grass is six inches tall or there are shingles missing on the house. And so there’s just not as great of property maintenance. And some neighbors have little kids and don’t want an Airbnb next to them when people come and go. I want neighbors to be in love with their community. I LOVE THAT WE HAVE THE FREEDOM TO SAY AND DO MUCH OF WHAT WE WANT. I LIKE THAT FREEDOM. I PERSONALLY BELIEVE THAT THE FOCUS FOR A MAYOR SHOULD BE ON THE BASIC BLOCKING AND TACKLING THAT MAKES A CITY GREAT. MY FOCUS IS ON MAKING THIS THE BEST-RUN CITY IN THE COUNTRY. Do you think the social media service Nextdoor has made neighborhoods closer together or driven them further apart? I would say a little bit of both. It’s provided transparency about your neighbors, that’s for sure. I think the good thing about Nextdoor is it’s not quite as anonymous as Twitter where it’s some nameless, faceless [entity]. in the Carmel School Board races, backing Jenny Brake, Greg Brown, and Adam Sharp, who ran on an anticritical race theory platform. Do you think it’s appropriate for a mayoral candidate to wade into what should be a nonpartisan school board race? I love that we have the freedom to say and do much of what we want. I like that freedom. I personally believe that the focus for a mayor should be on the basic blocking and tackling that makes a city great. My focus is on making this the best-run city in the country. And we don’t have jurisdiction over the schools. In the parlance of Parks & Recreation, has Carmel earned its reputation as a kind of “Eagleton,” the hoity-toity suburb that sees itself as better than an inferior Pawnee? I think it’s probably slightly unfair, because it’s a caricature. And it doesn’t do justice to people who live here and care about the community. Carmel is a city built on excellence, and that should attract a wide swath of people. Do you identify with Leslie Knope? No. I think I’m more of a wonk. Why are you a better candidate than your Republican opponent, Kevin “Woody” Rider? Compared to nobody, just in general, I’m prepared. I spent the last several years working on my executive resume. I have marketing and management experience, operations, and HR. So, whenever an opportunity came up like this, I’d be prepared. I’m proven. I’ve spent 11 years performing at a high level on the city council, learning the finance side of things inside and out, and serving my residents to the best of my ability. No one who’s going to enter this race will have that combination of real-world experience with city council experience. Your opponent made an endorsement Carmel is increasingly becoming a blue island in still-red Hamilton County. As a Republican, how do you govern a city that is becoming increasingly dominated by voters who may be of a different party? You listen a lot. I think that’s key and paramount to being a good leader. And I also think that, again, you stay in your lane. That lane is delivering really high-quality services to residents. Who are some mayors—here in Indiana or elsewhere—who you would seek to emulate if elected? I think from a pragmatic standpoint, I really respect what [Fishers] Mayor [Scott] Fadness has done next door, because he’s tried to stay out of the politics and focused more on the operations, and I respect that highly. Mayor Brainard spent a lot of time trying to make Carmel a walkable city. Is there room to improve when it comes to mass transit as you think about potentially linking the city to Indianapolis? It’s something I get asked regularly about. I think we have to evaluate all the opportunities and look at a cost-benefit ratio. I think my big concern is any kind of large capital investment, especially right now when transit is changing so much. I look at the investments Indianapolis and the state of Indiana and the federal government have made in Indianapolis, and I worry that in five or six years it can be completely undone by driverless cars. Does Carmel have too much debt? No. As a city councilor who’s looked closely at the finances, it’s all scheduled debt. There are not things out there or a time—as some residents like to say—“when the chickens come home to roost.” I don’t know what the “chickens” are, but we’re not gonna have any surprises. Carmel, in some circles, has a negative reputation when it comes to race relations. Is Carmel diverse enough? I think what’s really interesting about Carmel is that we look at the kids that are in our schools, there are about 50 different languages spoken at home. I think that’s incredible. And we are quickly becoming more of an international city. I look forward to seeing that diversity grow. Carmel is somewhat famous— infamous?—for how its citizens stake out spots for the Fourth of July Parade days before the actual event. What is the optimal number of days to save your spot prior to the morning of the parade? I don’t think there’s a limit. Go for it. The answer to this next question could be the end of your mayoral quest. What are some of your favorite Carmel restaurants? Anything with a good wine list. JANUARY 2023 | IM 17
2 3 4 5 BEST BETS THIS MONTH’S CAN’T–MISS EVENTS (1) IU Women’s Basketball January 12 No. 20 Maryland is one of several ranked opponents traveling to Assembly Hall to face the No. 4 Hoosiers. iuhoosiers.com 18 IM | JANUARY 2023 (2) Indianapolis Home Show January 20–29 The country’s oldest home show returns to the Indiana State Fairgrounds, where more than 400 vendors showcase home-related products and services. indianapolis homeshow.com (3) Festival of Ice January 21–22 Professional chainsaw-wielding ice sculptors will carve their way through Carmel’s Arts & Design District and the Ice at Carter Green. theiceatcarter green.com (4) Forbidden Broadway: The Next Generation January 22 This satirical off-Broadway show, which spoofs Broadway hits like Frozen, Hamilton, and The Phantom of the Opera, makes a stop at Clowes Hall. butlerarts center.org (5) Beethoven v. Coldplay January 25 At Hilbert Circle Theatre, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra’s Uncharted Series continues with a blend of the German composer’s work and the British rock band’s sound. indianapolissymphony.org (1) PHOTO BY GRACIE FARRALL/INDIANA ATHLETICS; (2) TONY VALAINIS; (3) LEXINGTON ICE SCULPTURES ; (4) CLOWES HALL 1 01 2023

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S H O P TA L K ................... 22 01 2023 T R E N D I NG .................... 23 S T R E E T S AV V Y ............ 24 G O OD L I F E B O D Y W I S E ................... 26 O P E N D O O R ................... 28 R E A LT Y C H E C K ........... 29 T R AV E L E R .................... 30 WANTED Hot Stuff Snuggle up by the fire this winter, outdoors or in, with Cream & Concrete’s personal concrete firepit. This portable (it’s about the size and heft of a big cantaloupe) room and spirit warmer throws off a cozy, clean-burning flame. The petite pit comes with a pad to place it on, a snuffer lid, and one refill of fuel, which is rubbing alcohol. Who says roasting marshmallows is a summer thing? $75, creamandconcrete.com — JAY D E L E A RY JANUARY MONTH 2023 2022 | IM 21
Streetly ADDRESS 6328 E. 10th St. HOU RS Friday–Saturday, noon–6 p.m.; Sunday, 2 p.m.–6 p.m. Dexter Clardy Lead Vocalist, Huckleberry Funk ( SHOP TALK ) Street Wise A NEW RETAIL SPACE ANGLES TO BE BOTH SANCTUARY AND STYLE INSPIRATION. B Y K AT I E M A R P L E I draw style inspiration from artists Lucky Daye and Miguel. But every few months I go shopping to switch things up. I have to keep the people guessing. I N TO T H E up-and-coming eastside arts district comes Sanctuary by Streetly. The streetwear retailer’s October 2022 opening was packed. Yet creator Justin Gordon is clear on what’s more important than being the next hot fashion shop: bettering the neighborhood. “The purpose of Sanctuary is to be a haven, a place to hang and talk about problems in our community. I want all people to feel that their opinions and thoughts are safe inside these four walls,” he says. Those four walls are adorned, gallery-style, with hoodies, basketball shorts, and an array of accessories. Curation is done with an eye toward “unique merchandise surrounding the community we love,” notes Gordon. He sees his wares as pieces of art, grounded in graffiti, hip-hop, and skate cultures. Nothing he sells is mass produced. Sanctuary will be home to Streetly-branded monthly drops, but it will also host pop-ups for other independent Midwest streetwear brands, like Hooligan out of Chicago. 22 IM | JANUARY 2023 I have to make a conscious effort not to dress like I do on stage. With a great outfit on, my attitude and vibe are that much better. (1) The Everyday Rare tote, $35 (2) Wild Nueva sunglasses, $35 (3) Streetly tee, $45 (4) “God Bless the Street Kids” trucker hat, $55 The first CD I bought with my own money was 8701 by Usher. —K.M.
Purest silk wool blankets. $900– $1,000 each. Parkside Linen, 1762 E. 86th St., parksidelinen.com Rose petal body oil, $44. Stardust pillow mist, $26. Willow and Star Flowers, 1760 E. 86th St., willowandstar flowers.com TRENDING Nap Town Lavender-infused eye pillow. $40. Willow and Star Flowers NEED TO CATCH UP ON YOUR BEAUTY SLEEP? LET OUR PICKS USHER YOU INTO DREAMLAND. BY S T E P H E N G A R S TA N G Evening in Missoula herbal tea. $19. Tea’s Me Cafe, 140 E. 22nd St., teasmeindy.com Deep Sleep CBD gummies. $40. Mona, 977 Hosbrook St., getwavymona.com Silk and feather robe. $198. Uplift Intimate Apparel, Carmel City Center, upliftintimate apparel.com Framed artwork by Jefferson Hayman. $1,400. Willa Gray Home, 6516 Carrollton Ave., willagrayhome.com THE THREAD If a late night in Broad Ripple had a smell, what would it be? Red wine, Long Island Iced Tea, and oak, apparently. Local candle-maker Alisha Thompson handpours SOY CANDLES with scents distinctive to Indiana places and experiences, including A Walk on the Canal, A Trip to the Dunes, Walker Theatre, and Hoosier Persimmon Pudding. Shop the Hoosier Collection at shishacandles.com. —CHRISTINA VERCELLET TO JANUARY 2023 | IM 23
T H E T U RF Carmel City Center Hamilton County SEE WHAT’S NEW AND WORTH A FRESH LOOK AT THE SWANKY MIXED-USE COMPLEX ON THE MONON TRAIL. B Y C H R I S T I NA V E R C E L L E T T O CIT Y C ENT ER D R . 1 3 4 HA NOV ER P L ACE V ET E R ANS WAY 5 R A NG EL IN E RD. 2 6 7 8 M ON ON G RE EN B LV D. 9 10 11 Former Purdue football teammates coSTREET own Stretch Zone (1), a SAVVY fitness studio where the therapists do all the work, and clients just lie there. It’s hard not to appreciate an exercise plan like that. “Assisted stretching” increases flexibility, improves mobility, and relaxes tight muscles that come from desk jobs. 31 W. City Center Dr., Ste. 109, 317-344-3082, stretchzone.com/locations/carmel EXTEND Craig Barnum, owner of nearby Matt the Miller’s Tavern, has a home in Hawaii, his inspiration for the fast-casual Manelé Cafe (2). Adorned with vibrant surfboards, the brunchy menu includes açaí bowls, smoked-salmon toast, and breakfast skillets, plus 50th state–inspired salads, huli huli chicken, and ahi tuna poke. This is just the place on a cold January afternoon. 703 Veterans Way, 317-218-7877, manelecafe.com SURF COO Already known among stylish moms and doting grandmas for its curation of eco-friendly duds in a subdued color 24 IM | JANUARY 2023 Clockwise from above: Just a few of the chic accessories on offer at 14 Districts. No matter which team you cheer for, The Shop has the merch. Essential oils for every preference and purpose are on display at Bath Junkie. Owner and wardrobe consultant Andrew Porter displays fabric selections at Andrew Porter Fine Clothiers. palette, Hey Little Diddle (3) has expanded to a second location focused on the littlest of littles: preemies through 12-month-olds. Find sweet take-me-home outfits, organic layettes, rattles, and teethers, plus sibling gifts. They offer a registry for expectant mamas, too. 736 Hanover Pl., Ste. 100F, 317564-4858, heylittlediddle.com DON At 14 Districts (4), the chichi collection has European flair, with many pieces from Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Germany, and Belgium. A Mauritius blue lamb-leather moto jacket stands out, but less splashy purchases are possible. Enamel necklaces and glitter pouches ring up at $28. 736 Hanover Pl., Ste. 100B, 317564-4789, 14-districts.com Suit-maker Andrew Porter just opened a bespoke men’s shop, Andrew Porter Fine Clothiers (5), after years of helming a mobile custom-suit business. Using old-world techniques—one of which is taking 25 measurements, at a bare minimum—the tailors craft suits using premium Italian and English fabrics like MODEL
Clockwise from left: Gwendolyn Rogers showing off her iconic Princess Pink Pixie Fetti birthday cake at The Cake Bake Shop. It’s also available in Baron Blue. Some of the impossibly cute, diminutive duds at Hey Little Diddle, and a client is coiffed by an expert barber at Magic Hat Barber Shop. Ermenegildo Zegna and Scabal. Belts, neck and bow ties, and cufflinks are available off the rack. Appointments encouraged. 736 Hanover Pl., Ste. 100G, 317-4487681, andrewporterclothiers.com paradise of checkered tableware, serving pieces, glassware, decor, and more, the layout is inspired by the brand’s Manhattan flagship. 751 Hanover Pl., Ste. 159, 317253-3400, addendumgallery.com SNIFF Posh, scented pampering products—bubble bath, body scrub, lotions, shower gels, bath crystals, and body mists—are custom-blended at Bath Junkie (6). Take a whiff of Eye Opener, a customer favorite, ripe with mandarin and rounded out with fresh air and rain. Private parties are good, clean fun for kids. 741 Hanover Pl., 317-805-1850, bathjunkie carmel.com SPARKLE The second celebration of buttercream rosettes and “pixie glitter” is as twinkly as its frilly cottage counterpart in Broad Ripple. But the white-on-white wonderland that is The Cake Bake Shop (8) has more substantial fare on its menu, like a 12-layer club sandwich and gumbo poutine. 799 Hanover Pl., 317-257-2353, thecakebakeshop.com A modern barbershop led by celebrity groomer Justin Virgil Gramelspacher, Magic Hat Barber Shop (9) is a haven for haircuts, beard trims, scalp massages, and straight-razor shaves. Sip a beverage and browse Ursa Major and Brosh products in the industrial, loft-like space. 885 Monon Green Blvd., Ste. 101, 317663-9413, magichatbarbershop.com PREEN Fanciers of MacKenzie-Childs’s playful prints are flocking to the Addendum MacKenzie-Childs Shop (7). A COLLECT TAKE IT HOME The Shop (10) is where to buy any and every kind of hometown sports apparel and accessories. The locally owned shop proffers T-shirts, hats, sweatshirts, and more paying tribute to Indy teams. Clothing is pre-laundered for a soft, vintage-y feel. 836 S. Rangeline Rd., 317740-0021, theshopindy.com ROOT Roselyn Bakery foam trucker hat. $28. Many other hats available. The Shop Albi Italian leather glitter pouch with zipper. $28. More colors available. 14 Districts The Rosette Pixie Cake Doll has been sprinkled with “pixie glitter” and smells like cake. $68. The Cake Bake Shop If all dogs go to heaven, Canine Cloud Nine (11) is where they wind up. The cage-free grooming salon and daycare fusses over all breeds. Staff members are first-aid certified. Pick up toys and collars, too. 885 Monon Green Blvd., Ste. 114, 317-999-5444, caninecloudnine.com FETCH JANUARY 2023 | IM 25
The Big Chill BODY WISE Wink Wink Intense, warm shades are the winter makeup vibe. Hello, CHANEL LES 4 OMBRES TWEED MULTI-EFFECT QUADRA EYESHADOWS . Each posh palette is dressed up in coordinating tweed, the fashion house’s signature fabric since Coco donned it in the 1920s. Infused with extra-long-lasting pigments, the shadows deliver rich and cozy color that pops. Brenda Sotolongo, owner of Pro Soto Beauty Studios in Castleton, loves them for a smoky eye with a bright finish. “Use the lightest color over your entire lid, then either of the medium ones over that. Next, with the dark shade, make an upside-down ‘7’ on the outer part of each eye, from the end of the lash line to just above the crease. Finish with a dark liner, and blend.” $88, a Nordstrom exclusive, The Fashion Mall — JAY D E L E A RY 26 IM | JANUARY 2023 D OES being tucked in a minus 220-degree chamber to ease aches entice you? No worries. Cryotherapy at Restore Hyper Wellness has its takers, but the studio offers another way to leverage cold. The most booked treatment is Cryoskin Slimming, says owner Heather Mesalam. It promises to beat back another bane of middle age, love handles. With a wand, “alternating heat and cold is applied to stimulate the natural process of releasing fat cells through the lymphatic system,” Mesalam explains. It’s painless and noninvasive, and adherents swear they lose inches— over time. Four to six treatments are typically needed to evenly “freeze away” fat from the front of the belly. “It isn’t magic, but it can make toning up quicker,” says Mesalam. The 2,200-square-foot studio also has aestheticians and RNs on staff. “Carmel gets a lot of love, but Zionsville is an incredible community,” says Mesalam. “People really care about feeling their best.” 11100 N. Michigan Rd., Zionsville, 317-3243731, restore.com —CHRISTINA VERCELLET TO PRODUCT PHOTOS COURTESY CHANEL; RESTORE PHOTO COURTESY HEATHER MESALAM Carmel native opens a Zionsville wellness studio where Father Time is freezed out.
An innovative take on a traditional steakhouse. For More Information Please Call 317-740-0900 or Visit www.anthonyschophouse.com For More Information Please Call 317-740-0930 or Visit www.3uprooftop.com CARMEL, INDiANA Carmel Arts District 201 W Main St, Carmel, IN 46032 Bring the party to new heights, all year long. Images Provided By Erin Feldmeyer, Erin Kay Photography LLC EAT DRINK VIEWS EVENTS
Our Tiki Bar OPEN DOOR RIC MILLS AND MATT MCELFRESH OFTEN ESCAPE TO THE TROPICS: THE BASEMENT OF THEIR MIDCENTURY-MODERN ABODE IN HISTORIC LADYWOOD ESTATES. BY M I C H E L L E M A S T R O (1) Painted in 1945, this mural once adorned the men’s bar inside Indy’s erstwhile Claypool Hotel. (2) The live-edge bar top lends warmth to the room, offsetting concrete floors. (3) An elephant sculpture bought at the Palm Springs shop of midcenturymodern–inspired artist, Shag. 1 8 5 7 (4) The spill mat hails from Trader Vic’s in Oakland, California. (5) Vintage Hawaiian shirts and fedoras are standard dress for “tikiphiles.” 6 10 4 (6) A Tiki Diablo 2 3 mug, which came from The Inferno Room in Fountain Square. (7) The couple collects carved wooden Polynesian tikis, the first man created by the gods, according to Māori mythology. 9 (8) A vintage rain lamp enclosed in a bamboo birdcage holds a faux feathered friend. (9) The base of the bar is covered in bamboo fencing. (10) The pair takes a swizzle stick as a memento from each tiki bar they visit. 28 IM | JANUARY 2023
SOLD Showroom Stopper RH IS MOVING FULL SPEED AHEAD WITH CONVERTING CHRISTEL DEHAAN’S MANSION INTO A HOME GOODS HAVEN LIKE NO OTHER. BY J E A NA H A R R I S LI NDE N HOUSE, the mansion of late philanthropist Christel DeHaan, has sold for an eye-watering $14.5 million. It is now the highest residential property sale in Indiana’s history. What buyer managed to nab this magnificent piece of Indianapolis history? None other than high-end furnishings giant RH (formerly Restoration Hardware). Technically, a Colorado real estate developer, M Development, purchased the estate. RH will lease and operate the 150-plus-acre property as a branded lifestyle destination, with highly curated furniture showrooms, an interior design gallery, an upscale restaurant, a wine bar, and an outdoor furniture showplace. According to co-listing agent, Mike Johnson at Encore Sotheby’s, multiple offers were on the table for Linden House, but RH’s was the most attrac- its new incarnation this summer. The peaceful, verdant grounds were once home to the Benedictine Monastery of St. Maur. Trees are everywhere you look, chief among them the Linden species that DeHaan imported from her native Germany, and from which Linden House got its name. A 35-acre lake, plentiful wildlife, an outdoor pool that bests those at lavish resorts, and immaculately manicured gardens all contribute to the Italian villa feel. The sale proceeds benefit DeHaan’s nonprofit, Christel House International, which helps impoverished children around the world. PHOTOS BY THE HOME AESTHETIC, COURTESY ENCORE SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY REALTY CHECK tive. With similar expansive galleries in New York, San Francisco, Chicago, and Boston, some might wonder how Indiana managed to grab RH’s attention. To Johnson, it’s simple. “Linden House has no equal,” he says, citing a number of jawdropping features in the 41,000-square-foot veritable palace, including a main hall large enough to seat 100 people for dinner, three kitchens, heated floors throughout, and two-story pied-à-terres for guests on each wing of the home. Its classic elegance was aligned with the RH design ethos that “simplicity is the ultimate sophistication,” so well in fact that, according to Johnson, RH will not be making any significant changes to the property. The goal is to open it up in JANUARY 2023 | IM 29
From right: A vibrant mural welcomes guests to the Maker Exchange; The Tennessean’s lobby; the Sunsphere glitters over Knoxville. Knoxville, TN DISTANC E 362 miles DRI V E T I M E 5¼ hours Make A Break TAKE A WEEKEND TO SAVOR LOCAL FLAIR AND FLAVORS IN TENNESSEE’S MAKER CITY. B Y L O U H A R RY Pulitzer winner, A Death in the Family, gave TRAVELER us a vision of Knoxville, Tennessee, born of images like “evening, when people sit on their porches, rocking gently and talking gently.” The city’s warm, downhome reputation is still earned, but these days, energy and individuality also draw visitors. When Etsy named Knoxville its first Maker City, it began to embrace its new distinction. Take The Tennessean (thetennessean hotel.com), a buzzy hotel with a massive lobby that doubles as Maker Exchange (makerexchangeknox.com), a shoppable public gallery of jewelry, sculptures, paintings, ceramics, and more by local creatives. Even the hotel’s coffee mugs and many of the furnishings, including the shuffleboard table in the game room, have been handcrafted locally. Landmarks to literary luminaries with connections to Knoxville pepper the neighborhoods. You might stumble upon 30 IM | JANUARY 2023 a plaque with a quote from Cormac McCarthy, a statue of Alex Haley, a historical marker commemorating Nikki Giovanni’s essay “400 Mulvaney Street,” a elegy to her grandparents’ home, or James Agee Park, to name a few. Matthew Cummings embodies Knoxville’s creative spirit. A few years ago, the accomplished glass artist made a special glass for craft beer at the request of a buddy. Before he could say “juicy IPA,” orders were pouring in. He soon wanted to have a hand in what went into his glasses. Now, Cummings’s Pretentious Glassblowing Studio (pretentiousglassco.com) and Pretentious Brewpub (pretentiousbeerco.com) sit in neighboring storefronts connected by a beer garden. “We take our work seriously, but not ourselves,” says the brewer of such beverages as Chug Life, Sveldt (a tongue-in-cheek nod to a coworker’s dad bod), and Big Kitty Energy. Cummings is proud to have been a pioneer in a movement that now helps define his city. Although, he laughs, “I’m still trying to get people excited about lagers.” IF YOU GO SAVOR The Tavern at Maker Exchange (maker exchangeknox.com) offers a knockout split-pea soup with Benton’s ham and honey-roasted carrots. Toast innovation with a Sunrise in the Smokies, starring tequila and coldpressed watermelon juice. HIKE A five-minute drive from downtown, Ijams Nature Center (ijams .org) has hiking trails with beautiful quarry views. BIKE Knoxville is serious about dirt biking. Join a trek with Knoxville Outdoor Tours (knoxout doortours.com). RISE Ride to the observa- tion deck of the Sunsphere (worldsfairpark.org), a tower built for the 1982 World’s Fair. DOWNTOWN PHOTO COURTESY GETTY IMAGES; MAKER EXCHANGE EXTERIOR PHOTO COURTESY JOE THOMAS; LOBBY PHOTO COURTESY THE MAYFIELD GROUP JAM ES AGE E’S
IMAGES PROVIDED BY TIFFANEY CHILDS WEDDING PL ANNING BY PART Y LIT TLE THING 317.846.9158 | RitzCharles.com Ritz Charles | Garden Pavilion at Ritz Charles | Coxhall Gardens Indianapolis Public Library | Lindley Farmstead at Chatham Hills Indianapolis Artsgarden | The Bluffs at Conner Prairie | Artisan Acres Estate
COMING SEPTEMBER 2023 Dream Home is the premier high-end show home in Indianapolis. Built and designed by teams led by Brad Bowman of Homes by Design and Jennifer O’Connor of Dare 2 Design, the 2023 Dream Home offers visitors the opportunity to tour a custom designed residence with picturesque views and luxurious furnishings, finishes, and amenities. Located in Zionsville’s scenic Holliday Farms community, the house is open to the public during select weekends in September. H O M E B U I LT BY I N T E R I O R D E S I G N BY BENEFITING Firefly Children & Family Alliance connects Indiana children, families, and individuals with the resources and services they need to live successfully.
ROAD T RIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 01 2023 NEW IN TOWN . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 T HE FEED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 T H E DI S H PI NCH OF W ISDOM . . . . . 34 TAST E T EST . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 FOODI E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 REVIEW. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 SWOON Featured Attraction The historical site that houses downtown Plainfield’s most ambitious new restaurant, The Prewitt, originally served as an auto parts shop before L.M. Prewitt opened his theater there in 1927. The venue closed in the early 2000s, but the curtain rose again in November, with executive chef Ricky Hatfield throwing the spotlight on elegant Hoosier-inflected dishes like the Sticky Foot, a date bread pudding with whiskey anglaise and caramel-corn ice cream that takes its name from the theater’s former nickname. 121 W. Main St., Plainfield, 317-203-5240, prewittdining.com — J U L I A S PA L D I N G P h o t o b y T O N Y VA L A I N I S JANUARY 2023 | IM 33
PINCH OF WISDOM “Any fruit or herb you like on its own can be a great addition to brewed tea. For every teaspoon of whole tea leaves, add 2 to 3 teaspoons of muddled fresh fruit or half a teaspoon of ground dry fruit.” —Terrell Davis, the content creator whose viral TikToks helped jump-start his home biz, Minty Bong Water ( NEW IN TOWN ) ( ROAD TRIP ) Jump In BLOOMINGTON’S OFF-CAMPUS HOPSCOTCH KITCHEN MAJORS IN LOCALLY SOURCED CAFE FARE. B Y J U L I A S PA L D I N G AF T E R Jeff Grant and Jane Kupersmith opened Hopscotch Coffee B-Line Cafe along a stretch of Bloomington’s popular converted rail trail in 2015, they eagerly awaited a restaurant to open next door. They waited for years. “It just never happened,” Grant says. And so, a year ago next month, they opened one themselves. At Hopscotch Kitchen, customers order from a brief but inspired menu assembled by a staff that originally included both a bread specialist and a fermentation specialist. Hefty rice bowls range from a Red version that contains kimchi and jalapeño brine and a Green one with ’shroom bacon. Among the fine-tuned sandwiches, a roast lamb panino is layered with cheddar, pickled onion, housemade mustard, cashew cream, fig jam, and a bright green pop of the Yemeni hot sauce, schug. The lineup, as well as occasional movie nights and science lectures, appeals to a clientele that Grant describes as “college folks who are a little more settled in town.” 235 Dodds St., Bloomington, 812-369-4500, hopscotchcoffee.com CLAIM TO FAME THE FEED 34 Latin Lover This carryout menu covers a lot of territory. THE MENU at Cha-Cho’s Latin Kitchen transports diners far beyond its counter inside downtown ghost kitchen Circle City Eats. The carryout business, which takes its name from the Spanish word muchachos, packs up a sampling of Latin foods. That includes a generous serving of arroz paisa, meaty fried rice filled with chunky Colombian sausage. A bright Peruvian ceviche of fresh fish, Andean toasted corn nuts, pickled onions, mint, corn, and lime juice that was introduced shortly after Cha-Cho’s opened over the summer has become an all-seasons fan favorite. The Dominican RikiTaki sandwich presses tangy lemon-adobo beef, pickled cabbage, and egg inside a wide ciabatta roll. “You don’t need a passport,” says co-owner Mario Lomeli. “You just need one place.” 1021 N. Pennsylvania St., 317-8003885, cha-choslatinkitchen .com —OWE N MADRIGAL Housed inside a historic theater in downtown Plainfield, The Prewitt premiered in November, serving elevated comfort dishes … GLOW UP Soulshine Vegan Cafe has taken the place of Ezra’s Enlightened Cafe in Broad Ripple, showcasing a menu of meatless sandwiches, wraps, and tacos … RUM DIARIES The Daiquiri Factory is expected to open this spring in the Bates-Hendricks neighborhood. IM | JANUARY 2023

Bubble Up TASTE TEST A GROWING CROP OF BOBA SHOPS IS TAKING THIS TEA-BASED ASIAN REFRESHER TO THE NEXT LEVEL WITH LUXURIOUS SYRUPS, FOAMS, AND BUBBLES. BY T E R RY K I RT S Send It Orange Creamsicle Cocoa Cream Wow Ann’s Boba Tea, Paula Curia’s boba stand inside Plaza Urbana on the far east side, whips up bright, true-to-life flavors such as this pleasantly refreshing version of the icy orange treat you devoured as a kid, here enriched with extra-chewy bubbles. 3827 N. Mitthoefer Rd., 317-681-3143 The drinks at Kung Fu Tea, an international chain with outlets in Cambodia and Taiwan, always reflect the latest boba innovations, such as this delightfully understated caramelized brown sugar tea with warm, fresh tapioca bubbles, a salty milk cap, and a dusting of cocoa. Multiple locations, kungfutea.com Oreo Green Tea Matcha Crème Brulée Matcha Latte The matcha in this shake-like treat at Kotoyama Ramen lends a grassy, earthy edge that balances the crushed Oreo cookies arranged on top. 13398 Tegler Dr., Noblesville, 317-588-1888, kotoyamaramen.com 36 IM | JANUARY 2023 The clever barkeeps at Bodhi: Craft Bar + Thai Bistro like to take diners on a journey with their internationally inspired elixirs, as in this recent seasonal concoction of Icelandic Askur Yggdrasil gin, hints of orange black tea, peach liqueur, lime, and both lychee jellies and juicy bubbles. 922 Massachusetts Ave., 317-941-6595, bodhi-indy.com The specialty drinks at the elegant two-story Latea Bubble Tea Lounge on Mass Ave recall your favorite fine-dining desserts, none better than when crème brulée syrup enlivens a full-bodied matcha base. 530 Massachusetts Ave., 317-4058138, latealounge.com Mango Jasmine Green Milk Tea with Cheese Foam The classic gets an upgrade at Harmony Tea Shoppe, an Indy chain, when aromatic jasmine tea mingles with sweet mango and fruity pops of soft bubbles, capped with a creamy foam with cheesecake overtones. Multiple locations, harmonyteashoppe.com Canary Boba Shake There’s a whiff of secrecy and internet insider intel to the Uber Eats/Grubhub menu offered by Boba Milk Tea Snob, an offshoot of Liftoff Creamery. If you’re old school, you can stop by the ice cream shop for this bubbly take on strawberry cheesecake with bits of graham cracker. 111 E. 16th St., 317-426-2641
Rome Service ITALIAN IMPORT LUCIO ROMANI GIVES BACK THE FLAVORS OF HIS CHILDHOOD AT HIS CHEERY BAKERY AND TAKEOUT. BY T E R RY K I RT S FOR LONGT I M E chef and restaurateur Lucio Romani, a love FOODIE affair with all things American began almost the moment he stepped off the plane. Schooling his customers on the true, authentic cuisine of his native Italy, however, took a little longer. Growing up in the seaside town of Ladispoli, about 20 miles west of Rome, Romani enjoyed classic dishes such as pasta carbonara and amatriciana, as well as fresh seafood from the Mediterranean coast. In the States, Italian food meant chicken Alfredo and spaghetti with meatballs. “At the first Italian place where I worked,” Romani says, “they still threw pasta against the wall to see if it was done.” But Romani is no purist, and he started his career in food with an Italian dairy company that produced highend cheese and yogurt, as well as less expensive grocery-store brands. His introduction to America came in 1995 when his older sister, a doctor, came to do research on diabetes at Method- FAVORITE THINGS (1) 101 Beer Kitchen. “The pierogi, soups, fish, and burgers are great.” (2) Chinese food. “My dream is to go to Beijing to try the real stuff.” (3) Amarone wines. “A bold red wine that always makes me happy.” (4) Sushi. “Wherever we go, we always try to find the great sushi spot.” (5) Artichokes. “My Italian hometown has a festival for them every year.” (6) Italian cookies. Try Romani’s recipe for crispy white wine cookies at IndianapolisMonthly.com. ist Hospital, and Romani paid a visit. Instead of returning home, he began a series of kitchen jobs, eventually opening his own place, Ristorante Roma, with his pastry specialist girlfriend, Christine Jourdan. Seeing a lack of quality gelato in the area, the couple then opened Mammamia Gelato, featuring frozen treats and indoor seating. During the pandemic, Romani added takeout pizzas, pastas, and sandwiches, and Jourdan perfected the recipes for Ital- ian cookies, pastries, and cakes. While Romani makes plenty of concessions to American tastes (like putting chicken with pasta), he goes to lengths to keep the dishes as truly Italian as possible. His slightly thicker Roman-style pizza, for example, is the same style he grew up eating at a pizzeria in Ladispoli. “I even found the woman who owned the place and called her to ask for tips,” he says. “She said she couldn’t take the recipe to her grave, so she read it to me over the phone.”
Slice of Life AT BARGERSVILLE’S PIZZA & LIBATIONS, ONE MAN’S DESTINATION DINNER IS ANOTHER MAN’S HOMETOWN PIZZA SHOP. BY J U L I A S PA L D I N G PIZZA & LIBATIONS 75 N. Baldwin St., Bargersville, 317-771-3165, pizzaandlibations .com HOURS Mon.–Thurs., 4–10 p.m.; Fri.–Sun., noon–10 p.m. VIBE Pizza lounge TASTING NOTES BACK I N 2014, Nathan and Leah Huelsebusch chose the sleepy Johnson County REVIEW town of Bargersville as the site of their first Taxman Brewing Company gastropub. Inspired by the three years they lived in Belgium for business, the couple started serving small-batch dubbels and steak frites in the shadow of the hulking Umbarger & Sons grain elevators across the road, a farmtown metropolis that is equal parts Marvel Universe and Petticoat Junction. The Huelsebusches’ southside base kept its rural charm while they added taprooms on Fortville’s main drag and in a renovated 38 IM | JANUARY 2023 1850s livery building downtown, as the Taxman brand grew to include a robust line of Belgian-inspired beers, farmhouse ales, and Midwest saisons sold around the state and beyond. It should have come as no surprise when the owners returned to Bargersville for their latest venture, Pizza & Libations, or that the bartender would tell me, as she prepared Leaning Tower of Piscos and Fig’ Get About Its one Saturday afternoon less than a month after the restaurant’s lateOctober opening, that they were expecting yet another packed house that night. “Who in the world is coming all the way to Bargersville for pizza and libations?” I asked. “Bargersville,” she replied. Duh. Individual-sized fermented-crust pizzas, fresh pastas, and housebrewed beers. NEIGHBORHOOD Bargersville MUST-ORDER The classic Margherita or delicate whitesauced P+LT pizza with mozzarella, prosciutto, capers, and a sprinkle of smoked sea salt. Order a Prosecco spritz, and save room for gelato. 3 STAR RATING +
Clockwise from top right: The octopus with blistered tomatoes and squid ink sauce; owners Nathan and Leah Huelsebusch; classic tiramisu; the Hen of the Woods pizza; and the Fig’ Get About It and Juliana’s Last Word cocktails. The owners knew what they were doing when they planted their flag beside the Indiana Rail Road tracks 20 miles south of downtown Indianapolis. The acres of new, well-off residential development surrounding their quiet dip in the road supply a steady stream of customers hungry for Neapolitan-style pizza and Prosecco spritzes in their neck of the woods. “We kind of modeled this after our own personal story,” Nathan says. “When we moved from Belgium to Indiana, we ended up living right outside of the Bargersville city limits. Both of us worked at Cummins, and there were a lot of people like us in these communities who have corporate jobs.” The Huelsebusches envisioned that the area would continue to grow, that people like them would keep moving to the south side. “Fortunately, that’s exactly what happened,” Nathan says. Presumably, the residents of Saddle Club South, Kerrington Proper, and Banta Road Estates will claim all of the spots in the dusty gravel lot that edges P&L’s patio buildout that, come spring, will be able to seat 72 diners beside a sleek linear fireplace. Inside, the dining room designed by DKGR Architects is all muted blacks and natural wood tones, filled with dreamy murals by Liverpool artist Danny O’Connor. Later this year, the pizzeria will connect to a bakery and upper-level speakeasy with a rooftop deck. Customers get a tease of these two upcoming businesses when they enter the Pizza & Libations lobby, a gleaming atrium of shiny white tile and exposed brick. It’s hard to ignore the two particleboard door cutouts, where temporary signage explains that Cellar’s Market bakery and a lounge named Up Cellar are coming soon. In the meantime, executive chef Daniel Keiner’s menu of blistered-crust pies and housemade pastas should hold people’s attention. As Taxman’s culinary director of operations, Keiner leaned hard on the Campania motif here, delivering classic flavors in his red-sauced Margherita as well as an understated Bianca laid with ricotta, fresh mozzarella, Capriole goat cheese, and sea salt. The menu also goes way off script. The Light Em Up layers on the heat mercilessly with chili oil, ’nduja, spicy pickle, Calabrian chili, and hot honey. You can order both a BBQ chicken ranch and a buffalo chicken pizza, and even the Hawaiian pizza fortifies its pineapple with fig jam and spiced almonds. Some of those risky flavor combinations work, as in the well-balanced P+LT that calibrates the saltiness of prosciutto, Parmesan, capers, and smoked sea salt with the smoothness of white sauce and mozzarella. Others—like a pizza riff on the Cuban sandwich slicked with Dijon mustard and dotted with pickle slices and unwieldy cubes of city ham— take too many liberties with the fermented-crust canon. If you want to try something a little different, opt for the Hen of the Woods pizza, or the olive-oiled That’s My Jam, which combines the standard mozzarella, Asiago, and capocollo with fig jam and goat cheese. The 12-inch pies bake in what Nathan describes as a “super-high-temp deck oven” that goes up to 932 degrees (though these cook at 700 in about two minutes). In addition to the pizzas, Italian-style pasta dishes like carbonara and scallop linguine are assembled with housemade noodles. Nicely crusted Faroe Island salmon shares the plate with pestocoated pappardelle. For the Bolognese, Keiner melds tender pasta rags with Fischer Farms beef and pork. He offers octopus with squid ink sauce along with mushroom risotto and sage-spiked sweet potato gnocchi. And if all of this sounds a little too fancy for the far-south suburbs, you must not be from around here. JANUARY 2023 | IM 39
´ Even if something can be replaced, you might not want to. Maybe your item has sentimental value, or they just don’t make ’em like they used to. Repairing things, rather than tossing and buying new, saves money and helps the planet, too. From stuffed animals to sewing machines, screens to stained glass—and just about anything else—this guide will lead you to a local shop that can bring it back to life. Find new favorites or rediscover old standbys that are always worth a shoutout (hey, Kimmel!). These 62 handypeople and craftspeople will give a second chance to whatever it is you want to hold on to. Edited by CHRISTINA VERCELLETTO Written by MEGAN FERNANDEZ, JAYDE LEARY, AMY LYNCH, MICHELLE MASTRO, EMILY UDELL, AND NIKO VERCELLETTO Photography by TONY VALAINIS
Anthony Ray, brass and percussion repair tech at Musicians’ Repair & Sales, does a final check on a customer’s tuba. JANUARY 2023 | IM 41
HOUSEHOLD GOODS GRANDFATHER CLOCKS POWER TOOLS CUSTOM TIME, 1586 E. 400 S, LEBANON, 317-508-8463, CUSTOMTIME.NET VAMACO TOOLS AND EQUIPMENT, 6718 E. 38TH ST., 317-632-2208 Time might be eternal, but a grandfather clock isn’t. It’s possibly the most delicate item in your house, believe it or not. Bill Moore has been repairing them for 42 years. He is one of Indiana’s few licensed and certified clock-makers (the certification program itself ended in 1989.) For three generations, his family has been fixing timepieces. The average grandfather clock repair takes 90 minutes to three and a half hours, and costs about $350. If you have a vintage workhorse made with metal parts instead of plastic, it’s worth a visit to Joseph Fowley at Vamaco Tools and Equipment to see if new parts exist. Either Joseph will do—father or son. The elder Fowley is 83, still at the bench repairing cordless drills, pressure washers, sanders, miter saws, and anything else you use to fix stuff at home. Vamaco is also an authorized repair shop for most top brands. Basics—new switches, fresh brushes—cost around $50 to $100 and take three days. SEWING MACHINES SELECT SEWING MACHINE, 2415 E. 65TH ST., 317-255-6332, SELECTSEWINGSER VICE.COM Owners Karen and Jim Bennett see a steady stream of “traumas,” a machine with a garment stuck under the presser foot or knotted up around a needle. The service technicians—some have worked at the second-generation business for more than 35 years—can usually rescue a curtain or a school costume from ruin, so don’t try to yank it free. Plenty of bigger jobs come in from Butler Ballet and Beef & Boards, but a quick fix runs $35 and usually just requires oiling or resetting the tension. And that’s about all the Bennetts can do for an heirloom cabinet model—the parts aren’t available anymore. MARIE HARNISH QUILT CREATIONS, 317-650-6388, MARIEHAR NISHCREATIONS.WORDPRESS.COM, QUILTGUILDINDY.NET Quilts The fourth-generation quilter behind Marie Harnish Quilt Creations loves to label quilts, so in addition to replacing stitches, securing shredded sections, completing an unfinished heirloom, or taking off a row to remove damage beyond repair, she will embroider or print the quilt’s entire provenance on a swatch and attach it to the back. Whole obituaries and photos can go on a label. She once deconstructed an entire quilt to replace innards destroyed by a cleaning product. MIRRORS BULLDOG GLASS AND MIRROR, 464 SOUTHPOINT CIR., BROWNSBURG, 317858-7246, FURNITUREFIXINDY.COM Seven years is just the beginning of the bad luck when it comes to broken mirrors. That little chip is often evidence of an invisible crack underneath the surface, and flaking silver that causes black spots is a lost cause unless it’s close enough to the edge to be cut off and repolished. But Bulldog can replace glass, including with the smoked looks often found behind bars, as well as the low-iron type salons use for maximum clarity. Owners Candice and Rob Staley, who installed the elevator mirrors at Hotel Carmichael in Carmel and can custom cut any shape, often surprise clients by uncovering a stamp on the back of an antique mirror that reveals exactly when and where it was made. WOODEN FURNITURE CARMEL CUSTOM REFINISHING, 4275 W. 96TH ST., 317-872-3999, CARMELCUSTOM REFINISHING.COM Most clients of Carmel Custom Refinishing have a rocking chair or a dining set that they’d like to maintain for future generations. But occasionally movers put a forklift through an armoire, and the 32-year-old business can handle that, too. And don’t toss out that chair with a wobbly turned leg— owner Jason Haggery can match an ornate design. Dresser refinishing runs $975 to $1,200; 60-inch tabletop refinishing, $1,000; chairs, $250 each. Turnaround time on a full dining room set is six to 10 weeks. Pickup, delivery, and shipping are available.
LAMPS AND LAMPSHADES ZIONSVILLE LIGHTING CENTER, BY APPOINTMENT ONLY, 317-733-0233, INFO@ZIONSVILLELIGHTINGCENTER.COM If you’re still using incandescent bulbs, those will burn out a lamp socket eventually. LED bulbs won’t. Zionsville Lighting Center swaps those out (along with bad and brittle wiring) in no time. The owners also convert showpieces purchased in Europe to American wiring. But no lamp is too ordinary to shine again. Lampshades can also be relined once the bulb burns through them, or re-covered with provided or special-ordered fabric. JANUARY 2023 | IM 43
TRUNKS KASNAK RESTORATIONS, 5505 N. COUNTY RD. 1000 E, BROWNSBURG, 317-679-3650, KASNAK RESTORATIONS.COM In more than 40 years, master craftspeople Bob and Leslie Kasnak of Kasnak Restorations have never turned down a job, whether the work came from Newfields, the SullivanMunce Cultural Center, or the proud owner of a late-19th-century steamer trunk. Those old travelers were built to last and are surprisingly tough, Bob says, so they usually just need a deep clean, new latches, and fresh leather handles, which run $450 to $850. He’s been known to use his own belt for the handles if it had the perfect age. More extensive damage to the wood is in good hands, too—Bob studied antique furniture restoration at the Smithsonian Institution and Winterthur Museum, handling Chippendale furniture valued at millions. RUGS ROYAL GALLERY OF RUGS,12345 OLD MERIDIAN ST., INSIDE JOHN KIRK FURNITURE, CARMEL, 317-848-7847 Most handknotted rugs only need to be cleaned every 10 to 15 years, and Royal Gallery of Rugs will take care of popping out the furniture dents at the same time. (A high-quality, thin rug pad is a better choice than thick pads, which cause deeper dents.) Other common repairs include fixing the stitching around the edges or replacing the fringe—or just removing it altogether, a more modern choice. Those everyday fixes run about $200. For heavier jobs, like patching moth-chewn holes, replacing worn spots, cutting rugs down to a smaller size, and restoring color, owner Dave Farahan sends out the rug to a specialist. Cleaning, though, is done in house, by hand, in a way that will remove the odor or stain without damaging the wool. 44 IM | JANUARY 2023 UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE FROST UPHOLSTERY, 4024 E. MICHIGAN ST., 317-3531217, FROSTUPHOLSTERY.COM Did any couch survive COVID without lumps? For nearly 50 years, Bessie Carter, with help from her sons, Gregory and Jeffrey, has been plumping cushions back up, usually by just steaming the foam and adding an extra layer of Dacron. The service costs less than $100 per cushion. Re-covering a standard skirted armchair with supplied fabric runs $600. Odors, though, are a tough ask. Try this: Cover the furniture with a sheet and place a bowl of white vinegar under it overnight. They offer free pickup and delivery in Indianapolis, with a one-day turnaround on cushions, a month on bigger projects.
KNIVES VACUUM CLEANERS CHINA MIKE BILLINGS KNIFE SHARPENING, 1317 S. EAST ST., 317-597-0126, MIKEBILLINGS KNIFESHARPENING.COM A-1 VACUUM, 9235 CRAWFORDSVILLE RD., 317-347-0214 SNODGRASS & DAVIS STUDIO FINE ART RESTORATION, 2123 BOULEVARD PL., 317722-0343, SNODGRASS-DAVIS.COM Funny thing about expensive kitchen knives—the owners are never the ones to damage them. It’s always someone else. But the owner of Mike Billings Knife Sharpening won’t judge. He’ll just fix those chips, dents, and broken tips by the time you’re ready to swing back around and pick up your blade. Rusty straight razors can be reborn, pocket knives repaired, and paper cutters made menacing again. He gives referrals for antiques restoration, but for the customer who just wants his Civil War sword to look good, Billings makes the cut. Whatever’s stuck in your Hoover’s hose, A-1 Vacuum owner Tony Stahl can usually free it for about $25 while you wait. Don’t be embarrassed, whatever it is—you won’t be the first person who has tried to vacuum up a dead mouse. Stahl will also tell you bluntly why he hates bagless models, and what the gold standard in vacuums really is: a classic Titan machine that was reissued in 2016. Let’s say you knock a piece of your mom’s beloved china off the rack and want it to be your little secret. Turn to Guy Davis. You don’t have to have every last shard—he can fill in a few small spaces. As long as you have the big pieces, Davis can cover your tracks by gluing, filling, coloring, and glazing. A simple break costs $80 to $120. Whatever you do, don’t try to glue it yourself. That just makes his job harder, and the cost higher. JANUARY 2023 | IM 45
PERSONAL EFFECTS LEATHER CLOTHING, WEDDING DRESSES, VINTAGE LACE AND BEADING ALEX’S TAILOR SHOP, 5858 E. 82ND ST., 317-594-8982, ALEXSTAILORSHOP.COM Sonia Garcia and her sister, Luz, have more than two decades of experience sewing and tailoring all types of clothing, including leather, wedding gowns, and dresses with vintage lace and beading, all notoriously tricky to work with. “We do magic,” Sonia says. “People laugh when I say that.” She recalls a bride and her mother coming in just a few weeks before the wedding, crying because another tailor had cut the front part of the dress too short. “When they picked it up, they cried again, from relief.” A simple hem starts at $12; more complex alterations scale up from there, depending on the garment. SWEATERS LEON TAILORING, 809 N. DELAWARE ST., 317-634-8559, LEONTAILORING.COM Every mover and shaker in the state has patronized this Mom-and-Pop business at one time or another, according to a former Indiana governor. Founded by European immigrants, Leon Tailoring has been a downtown fixture for more than a century. The shop offers repairs and alterations on men’s and women’s clothing of all types, including sweaters with frays and holes, which can be particularly tricky. They will even alter sweaters that are too large. This is also the place for custom-made suits. SHOES KIMMEL SHOE REPAIR, 733 BROAD RIPPLE AVE., 317-255-0740, 1327 S. RANGELINE RD., CARMEL, 317-846-9996; KIMMELSHOE REPAIR.COM “We save soles everyday but Sunday” is the motto of this family-owned business offering the full spectrum of repairs. Founded in 1942 and originally located in the basement of L.S. Ayres, Kimmel Shoe Repair now serves two locations (and the family running it these days is the Tomasellos). In the spring, summer, and fall, service takes about a week, but winter turnaround times may be up to a month. Thank punishing rock salt—and the rush to spiff up shoes for the winter holidays. LUGGAGE GREENFIELD SHOE REPAIR, 70 MCCLANNON DR., GREENFIELD, 317-477-7463 If your suitcase has gotten into too many brawls with baggage carriers, Valdonero Martinez can fix the stitching, zippers, leather, and more in his small shop. For more than nine years, he’s been extending the lives of shoes, boots, and handbags as well. Where can I donate books? Indy Reads (1066 Virginia Ave., 317-384-1496, indyreads.org) accepts donations of new and gently used books the first Friday of every month from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Check the donation guidelines on the website before you head in, though. It’s also possible to sell a book here on consignment. 46 IM | JANUARY 2023
BOOKS WALKER RESTORATION BOOKBINDING, 1920 DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. ST., 463-202-5519, WALKERRESTORATION-BOOKBINDING-LLC.BUSINESS.SITE Family Bibles and valuable books are the bulk of this small bindery’s business, with one of its oldest cases being a 1634 edition of the New Testament. “Someone had stuck some awful kind of cover on it. I made it look a whole lot more respectable,” recalls owner Teresa Walker. A simple book repair could cost $50, but most jobs average between $200 and $400. A large family Bible could run upward of $1,000. More intensive projects might take months, as certain steps need drying time. STUFFED ANIMALS AND DOLLS INDIANA DOLL HOSPITAL, 679 W. 375 N, GREENFIELD, 317-326-2229, DOLLREPAIRLADY.COM Has a timeworn teddy or childhood doll seen better days? Carol Ratliffe has decades of experience transforming worn old friends back to like-new, huggable condition. When one client’s mom fled Germany during World War II, she could only bring the head of her favorite doll. At the Indiana Doll Hospital, she got a whole new body, complete with a period-appropriate outfit. “They took it to the nursing home for her birthday, and she cried,” Ratliffe says. A head-to-toe restoration starts at $110, and typically takes a while, since Ratliffe is both the sole proprietor and a perfectionist. “It won’t go home unless I love it, and it’s display-worthy.” JANUARY 2023 | IM 47
PHOTOGRAPHS PICTURES TO DIGITAL, 1717 E. 116TH ST., CARMEL, 317-6074984, PICTURESTODIGITAL.COM WATCHES AND JEWELRY RUDY’S WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIR, 124 E. NORTHFIELD DR., STE. G., BROWNSBURG, 317-2936698, RUDYSWATCHANDJEWELRYREPAIR.COM When the tick tock stops, the founder of this independent shop, Rudolph Hollein, will draw on his extensive education in Germany, arguably the land of clocks, to get it started again. Revive your retro wristwatch with its inventory of vintage parts. Services also include jewelry resizing and remounting. Finally ready to restore that photograph of your grandparents’ wedding or digitize those shoeboxes full of prints? Owner John Moeller does bulk scanning of slides and negatives, videotape conversion, and digital restoration of photographs and documents. Average prices are around $50, and jobs take a week or two. When a former Marine needed a high-quality photo of his time in the service for an event in his hometown, Moeller was able to clean up a 1949 image well enough to enlarge on a banner. HANDBAGS AND EQUESTRIAN ACCESSORIES RON’S SHOE REPAIR, 8512 WESTFIELD RD., 317-255-6370 This father-and-son shop, which once removed barbecue sauce from the Christian Louboutins of an IndyCar driver, repairs and restores purses and equestrian gear, including replacing zippers and buckles, rebuilding straps, and reconditioning the leather. Most repairs wind up costing between $30 and $40, but can reach 10 times that in unusually time-consuming cases. ARCHITECTURAL ANTIQUES SLATE ROOFS BLACKMORE AND BUCKNER, 9750 E. 150TH ST., UNIT 1700, NOBLESVILLE, 317-263-0707, TECTAAMERICA.COM Being of a certain age has its perks. The slate on older Indianapolis homes is a stone material that doesn’t wear away as easily as asphalt shingles, says Matthew Cole, vice president of business development. “Slate is much more of a specialty and difficult to work with, but it will last hundreds of years.” Falling trees tend to be what takes out a slate roof. Started in 1919, Blackmore and Buckner merged with the largest roofing company in the U.S., but the Noblesville outpost still retains that local feel. They never contract out work, and the family still oversees much of the operation. LIGHT FIXTURES AND CEILING FANS ZIONSVILLE LIGHTING CENTER, BY APPOINTMENT ONLY, 317-7330233, INFO@ZIONSVILLELIGHTINGCENTER.COM This respected shop restores chandeliers and antique pieces, as well as new high-end fixtures—as long as they can be brought into the shop. (They don’t handle onsite repairs, but can dispatch a trusted electrician.) One Old Northside homeowner brought in the parts of a deconstructed chandelier, but didn’t even know what it was supposed to look like. With 35 years of experience, owners John Spurgeon and Tim Overmyer were able to figure it out—a 3-foot-by-4-foot design with 12 arms and tiers of prisms. WOOD CABINETRY N-HANCE, 1601 COUNTRY CLUB RD., 317-273-8500, NHANCE.COM White kitchens are everywhere, but wood grains are experiencing a revival, notes owner Kevin Jones. N-Hance can color-match your wood cabinets and add a colorless polyurethane for protection. Or just opt for new hinges, knobs, and handles, which in itself can freshen up your kitchen. Jobs start at $1,500 and one business day, depending on kitchen size.
BATHTUBS SUZETTE’S TUB SAVER, 5610 S. CONCORD ST., 317-710-3228 Owner Suzette Dewey has been repairing and resurfacing tubs, including old-fashioned cast-iron clawfoot tubs, for 25 years. Whether your tub has chipped or faded over time, or both, reglazing is a simple solution. That’s true whether your tub is finished in classic vitreous china, glazing, or porcelain. “Once reglazed, they look new again and can last another 20 years,” she says. Repair time can take one to two days and prices range from $225 to $850 on average, based on the tub’s condition and what supplies Dewey needs. FLOORS MIDWEST FLOOR RESTORE, 1361 MADISON AVE., 317-6369316, MIDWESTFLOORRESTORE.COM If you have a classic floor in your home, wear and tear is no longer an issue. Midwest Floor Restore specializes in stone floors like granite, travertine, terrazzo marble, and polished concrete. Polishing can wear away, and staining and grout tend to be porous, making these pieces discolor over time. Pricing varies depending on square footage, the condition of the floor, and what it’s made of. FIREPLACES AND WOODSTOVES ELY STOKES, 4720 N. KEYSTONE AVE., 317-259-4084, ELYSTOKESFIREPLACE.COM The first certified chimney sweeps in Indianapolis, Ely Stokes has been in business since 1977. The showroom has been a North Keystone Avenue fixture for decades. The logo, with a top-hat-tipping gentleman, isn’t just for show. “My dad would wear the top hat and coattails to job sites,” says co-owner Stephanie Brinkley. Ely Stokes restores masonry and chimneys, and they can build you a new fireplace, too. Repairs can run from $200 all the way up to $10,000. METALWORK AND RAILINGS SCHOUTEN METALCRAFT IN PENDLETON, BY APPOINTMENT ONLY, 317-546-2639 While period-specific fixtures can look great, today’s building codes often don’t play nice with them. “A 4-inch gap is the max on any railing on a second-floor stairway,” notes owner Paul Schouten, whose expertise extends back to his ancestors in the Netherlands. Schouten spends much of his time updating older railings to modern codes. He recommends maintaining and repairing any exterior wrought iron, rather than replacing it. “It handles the elements better than carbon-steel railings, which just rust away.” DOORS HEARTWOOD ENTERPRISES, 3317 W. 96TH ST., 317-8720756, INDYDOORS.COM Little-known fact: Doorframes tend to sag as the house settles. But Heartwood Enterprises has been perking up these old beauties since 1989. They also replace older handles, and help ensure doors seal properly by adding new copper weatherstripping. They can fix antique locks, as long as they’re not a mortise style, since parts are exceedingly scarce. Repair jobs can take from a few hours to a full day. Stainesds G la Got a craftsman-style built-in hutch or a Tiffany lamp from a flea market needing repair? “We can find a close match for just about every glass,” says owner Kevin Phillips. Historic glass can be a challenge, since the chemical composition of today’s glass is different. But you’ve got your best shot with Camden. Back in 2019, the team restored the stained glass of Holy Cross Church on Oriental Street, taking the original panes apart, repairing them, and releading them. A true craft, stainedglass repair can take anywhere from six to eight weeks. JANUARY 2023 | IM 49
COLLECTIBLES ANTIQUE TOYS RANDY’S TOY SHOP, 165 N. 9TH ST., NOBLESVILLE, 317-776-2220, RANDYS TOYSHOP.COM If you’re a sucker for antique toys and need a few wheels tightened and painted, dents repaired, or a windup key replaced, you might want to make a stop here. A retired diesel mechanic, Randy Ibey began collecting antique toys and soon grew to love restoring them, as well as the boxes they came in. With expertise in paint matching and aging and custom parts fabrication, Ibey is a repair whiz, but he also sells vintage toys on consignment. MODEL TRAINS, RC, AND RIDE-ON VEHICLES HOBBYTOWN INDIANAPOLIS, 8265 CENTER RUN DR., 317-845-4106, HOBBYTOWN.COM HobbyTown is both nostalgic and futuristic, catering to enthusiasts of trains, models, and vehicles. The starting price for repairs on ride-ons is $50; everything else starts at $25. “My favorite jobs are the ones that can be a little more challenging, so I can better understand the products we work with,” says one of the owners, Dustin Collins. “For instance, I had one oddball repair recently, on a kid’s Power Wheels vehicle with a controller. The customer wanted us to switch out the electronics to make it faster.” 50 IM | JANUARY 2023 PAINTINGS SHARON D. BATTISTA PAINTING CONSERVATION, 5430 N. NEW JERSEY ST., 317-989-2133, SDBATTISTA.COM Battista regularly repairs punctures, tears, cracks, flaking paint, and discolored layers from even the most fragile paintings. She strictly adheres to the American Institute of Conservation’s Code of Ethics, which requires that the work is documented and photographed. “Having been in business for 35 years, I have worked on an amazing variety of paintings,” says Battista.
e Arcamdes Ga DOC PINBALL, 285 W. 200 N, GREENFIELD, 317-326-3533, DOCPINBALL.COM Mark Wagner received his electronics training in the military. He later opened up Doc Pinball, where he fixes and restores coin-operated amusement machines. Mark’s son, Jason, began following in his father’s footsteps at 14, and it’s his full-time job now. “I can even recall being a toddler, sitting and ‘testing’ equipment,” he says. “I guess you could say it’s in my blood.” TEXTILES AND CERAMICS EASTER CONSERVATION SERVICES, 1134 E. 54TH ST., STE. J, 317-3960885, EASTERCONSERVATION.COM Jean Easter has led her own conservation business since 2001. She devotes much of her time to rejuvenating textiles, whether that’s a tapestry, a piece of art, vintage draperies, or an upholstered footstool. Repair of ceramics is also in her repertoire. Pricing can be hard to determine with certainty at the outset. Some items respond well to minimal techniques, while others wind up needing a more comprehensive process, explains Easter. But each piece is given a condition report, and the price is determined from there. The most common repair she sees is the result of artwork falling due to incorrect hardware. HUMMEL/GOEBEL FIGURINES SNODGRASS & DAVIS STUDIO FINE ART RESTORATION, 2123 BOULEVARD PL., 317-7220343, SNODGRASS-DAVIS.COM Snodgrass & Davis Studio offers an array of art restoration services, but can be a particularly valuable resource with a niche specialty, like restoring historic documents, renewing fire- or water-damaged items—and fixing rare, collectible figurines. “There are two price ranges,” says owner Guy Davis. “One is if the husband has tried to repair it and left old glue on it. The other is if the wife brings it in with clean breaks.” The latter range is $150–$250. The other can cost up to $450. JANUARY 2023 | IM 51
ELECTRONICS TVS, VCRS, AND STEREOS CIRCUIT SQUARE TV, 9613 COLLEGE AVE., 317-844-4000 Circuit Square TV is a family business, but the timeline wasn’t typical. Mark Greenspan started it 45 years ago, and then his parents joined him after they retired. Circuit Square repairs TVs, VCRs, and stereos, starting at $35. They can take three to four weeks, longer than in the past due to supply issues with parts. Greenspan says that the most common problems he sees are due to clumsiness—an item’s been dropped. Turn-s table AFFORDABLE HIFI IN SOBRO, BY APPOINTMENT ONLY, 317-209-5838, AFFORDABLE HIFIAUDIO.COM After being dethroned by cassette tapes and then compact discs, the vinyl record once seemed bound for extinction. And now … Taylor Swift’s Midnights came out in four vinyl versions. Keeping those platters spinning is the mission of John Sheets. He tackles everything from “the least expensive turntables to ones that cost more than my car.” His hourly rate is $65; house calls are an additional $70. Many turntable problems, he says, are caused by faulty cables, which are almost always due to age or mice. Sheets originally wanted to call his business The Needle Exchange, but then wryly adds, “That name was taken.” How can I get rid of my castoff electronics? It’s against the law to toss electronics into your regular trash. The city hosts recycling days for anything with a cord, as long as it works. Broken electronics can be dropped off on the first, second, or third Saturdays of each month, but locations differ. Go to indy.gov/activity/electronics-recycling-sites for details. 52 IM | JANUARY 2023
CAMERAS ROBERTS, 220 E. ST. CLAIR ST., 317-707-6193, ROBERTSCAMERA.COM Roberts Camera is one of the largest photo specialty stores in the country. This third-generation business repairs cameras, as well as individual lenses and video equipment. All repairs take at least three weeks. Roberts hasn’t seen a loss of business since phone photos became ubiquitous. Employee Meredith Reinker actually refers to the mobile phone as the “gateway drug.” Phones pique interest in photography, and people upgrade, she explains. “This especially happens during life episodes like marriage, a new baby, or a dream vacation.” COMPUTERS AND PRINTERS A+ AFFORDABLE COMPUTER DOCTOR, 549 FLEMING ST., 317-9387711, INDYCOMPUTERDOCTOR.COM Steve Freeze once taught computer technology. Twenty-five years ago, he gave those chops to the public, opening A+ with his late wife. Freeze cures problematic laptops, desktops, and any printer besides 3-D, making repairs at residences and places of business. Failing hard drives are always an issue, he reports. But by replacing those with a solid-state drive, he can almost always save the day. When asked if people still use printers, he has a ready answer: “Every package has a label on it.” CELLPHONES CPR CELL PHONE REPAIR, 5971 E. 82ND ST., 317-842-2000, CELLPHONEREPAIR.COM CPR resuscitates just about any phone: Motorola, Apple, Samsung, OnePlus, and LG. Average repair prices are $89–$220 for an iPhone, $210–$319 for a Samsung Note, and $150–$250 for a Motorola. The typical repair takes less than two hours if parts are in stock. Spokesman Matthew Burton says that CPR sees broken screens all day, every day, adding that many repairs could be avoided if everyone would protect their phone with an outer case. JANUARY 2023 | IM 53
SPORTS AND HOBBIES GUITARS ARTHUR’S MUSIC STORE, 931 SHELBY ST., 317-638-3524, ARTHURSMUSIC.COM With a rich 70-year history, Arthur’s Music Store has been a fundamental part of Indianapolis. Linda Osborne and Amy England, daughter and granddaughter of the original owners, now run the shop. The repair department can do everything, from basic cleaning and restringing to crack repair and electronic fixes. You won’t be waiting long; basic services are finished in two days and more repairs are finished within the week. England recalls the most memorable customization on a guitar. “A collector asked us to recreate the iconic red guitar played at the dance scene in Back to the Future. He even got the original cast to sign it.” TENNIS RACQUETS IRC PRO SHOP AT INDIANAPOLIS RACQUET CLUB, 8249 DEAN RD., 317-712-3099, INDY RACQUETCLUB.COM Voted the best tennis pro shop in the nation by the Tennis Industry Association, the IRC Pro Shop has a solid reputation. Opened in 1965, IRC will restring and regrip your racquets within two business days, so you’ll get to your next straight set faster. You can also take advantage of its Frequent Stringer Program to earn credit toward future repairs. PIANOS BARBARA MARTIN PIANO SERVICE, 5425 W. 71ST ST., 317-293-3410, BARBARAMARTIN PIANO.COM They do way more than tune a piano. Scratched Steinways and square grands with sticky keys are no problem for the mother-and-daughter duo that runs this long-beloved service shop. They even provide full restoration services on vintage pianos; the cost will vary based on size and condition. DRUM SETS INDY DRUM PRO, 6305 ENGLISH AVE., 317-2893492, INDYDRUMPRO.COM Broaodswsind MUSICIANS’ REPAIR AND SALES, 332 N. CAPITOL AVE., 317-635-6274, MUSICIANSREPAIR.COM This family-run shop, opened in 1948 by Maurice Oldham and eventually handed down to his son, services all brass instruments, as well as woodwinds. As the oldest music store in Indianapolis, there aren’t many problems that Musicians’ Repair hasn’t seen and conquered. Head in to replace your sax neck cork, have a missing water key soldered on, or for help with anything else that’s keeping you from making beautiful music. and w ument s instr 54 IM | JANUARY 2023 Yes, drums are made to take a beating. But Indy Drum Pro knows how to treat them with care when they’ve taken one too many. Damaged bearing edges, stripped cymbal stands, and cracked cymbals are no match for their team of drummers and technicians. Have a vintage kit? Take it in to be restored. FISHING RODS TACKLE SERVICE CENTER, 246 E. WASHINGTON ST., MOORESVILLE, 317831-2400 Anything that has to do with fishing, including fly fishing, the folks here can handle. The team will cheerfully and speedily fix a broken fishing rod, replace the tips and guides, provide a new cork handle, and will even repair trolling motors. They may request you bring in your equipment before providing a quote. BICYCLES BICYCLE GARAGE INDY, 242 E. MARKET ST., 317612-3099, BGINDY.COM It would be hard to name a wheeled challenge that the team at Bicycle Garage Indy has not faced. Sameday repairs include flat tires, gear adjustments, and wheel repairs. More complex repairs, like bent handlebars or accident damage, require an appointment, but many are completed on the same day. The shop’s regular customers include local commuters and delivery folks. The shop services all types of bicycles and “sometimes, things that are not bicycles,” says sales manager Sean Hawk. Unicycle? Scooter? Tricycle? Bring it by. (They’ll take a look at e-bikes, but in some cases the electric variety can’t be serviced.) And when it’s finally time to upgrade, Hawk will have your back. “We had one customer who used to ride a bike that was so old. Eventually we sold him a new cargo bike for his deliveries. We don’t see him often anymore,” he laughs.
CLASSIC CARS POOL TABLES EXTREME BILLIARDS INDY, 9529 CORPORATION DR., 317-436-8072, EXTREME BILLIARDSINDY.COM In business for more than 25 years, Extreme Billiards takes the game of pool seriously. Its team has extensive experience in helping clients maintain their billiards tables and accessories in top playing condition, and looking beautiful, too. The team here has expertise in table releveling, bumper replacement, wood refinishing, and felt re-covering. VAIL’S CLASSIC CARS, 2633 W. MAIN ST., GREENFIELD, 317-462-7705, VAILSCLASSICS.COM Who doesn’t love seeing a fully restored classic car coming down the street? It’s even more fun to be driving one. And if yours needs an extra dose of tender loving care these days, head to Vail’s Classic Cars. Specializing in classic Ford models, especially Mustangs, the shop has been restoring and repairing pieces of Americana since 1985. One of its more recent projects is a 1967 Ford Mustang convertible. “That car is getting a full restore done on it,” says owner Ron Vail, whose clients include several of the Indiana Pacers. “After the paint is finished, we will be putting this car back together to make it exactly like the customer wants it.” VIOLINS GOLF CLUBS MOTORCYCLES VIOLIN SHOP OF OLD CARMEL, 1121 S. RANGELINE RD., CARMEL, 317-818-2326 FAIRWAY CUSTOM GOLF, 12500 BROOKS SCHOOL RD., FISHERS, 317-842-0017, FAIRWAYCUSTOMGOLF.CO HARLEY-DAVIDSON OF INDIANAPOLIS, 12400 REYNOLDS DR., FISHERS, 317-2038474, HDOFINDY.COM Self-described as a shop that unites American tradition with European expertise, the Violin Shop of Old Carmel handles the servicing of most orchestral string instruments. Tuning, chin-rest and shoulder-rest fitting, and restringing are the most common requests, but more services are available. They even deftly handle foreign instruments, recently making a large, damaged Taiwanese cello as good as new. Keeping golf clubs in peak condition is more time consuming than some may think. Fairway Custom Golf provides new club heads and shafts or grips. They will even adjust the swing weight and loft and lie of your club. Did we mention the custom wedge grinding and paint fill? The service experts at Harley-Davidson of Indianapolis have been fixing problems with Hogs for 42 years. While they will only service Harley-Davidson bikes, they will tackle any problem, including brake repairs, chain replacement, and even full rebuilds. Free pickup and delivery is offered as long as you live within 10 miles of the shop. Farther out? A modest fee of $70 to $140 is required. JANUARY 2023 | IM 55
GARDEN PATHS AND PATIOS PRECISION OUTDOORS, 317-691-8663, PRECISIONOUTDOORS.COM Repairing a cracked or uneven garden path or patio can take from several hours to four or five days, depending on how extensive the damage is. Prices run the gamut, too, wholly dependent on size of the area and materials used. Options are concrete ($15 per foot), sand concrete ($25 per foot), pavers ($45 per foot), and tile or stone ($60–$70 per foot). According to managing partner and founder Caleb Harbert (who began his career at the age of 10 as “the local lawn care kid”), damage is often caused by cutting corners at the get-go. “People scrimp on the foundation, then the patio or pathway degrades over time. The ultimate result is settling and cracking.” POOLS OUTDOORS GARDEN STATUARY SNYDER’S CONCRETE STATUES, 7570 STATE RD. 46, GREENSBURG, 812-663-5041 Rick Snyder and his son, Elliott, work together to lovingly restore weathered outdoor statues. So whether it’s a deer family, a gnome, or a bird bath that needs mending, they’ll replace broken horns, heal chipped ears, and repaint. Timing for job completion is running about two weeks. Rick emphasizes that their pricing is based on their motto that “getting it fixed should be cheaper than a new one.” But if you want to add, say a garden fairy to your collection, they can accommodate you on that, too. PATE’S POOL SERVICE AND SUPPLY, 5016 E. 62ND ST., 317541-1300, PATESPOOL SERVICE.COM Pate’s repairs pumps, heaters, liners—everything poolwise except for the concrete around it. (Caleb at Precision Outdoors can help you out there.) The average repair takes an hour or two, according to spokesman Daniel Schumann. Labor generally is between $200 and $300, while equipment usually runs from $500 to $1,500. The most frequent pain point, Schumann says, is pumps that leak, make noise, or just stop pumping. Pate’s installs winter safety covers, which will help keep problems from cropping up What about plants and trees? They’re part of the reason we like to be outdoors in the first place. And while they can’t technically be repaired, even those without a green thumb can take lifesaving measures with help from the Purdue Plant Doctor (purdueplantdoctor.com). Just enter the name of your tree, shrub, or houseplant and its “symptoms,” and get actionable information. 56 IM | JANUARY 2023 in the first place. And the company is in the process of branching out into hot tub servicing. FENCES RICHARD WARREN INDIANAPOLIS FENCE COMPANY, 3909 ALODA ST., 317-893-6465, TOPFENCECOMPANY INDIANAPOLIS.COM When you have a damaged fence, time is a big factor, especially if you have kids or pets. One of Richard Warren’s priorities is building flexibility into his schedule, so if you need your repair quickly, he can accommodate you. He fixes any kind of fence, both commercial and residential. Generally, repairs take about a day. Fallen tree limbs take the biggest toll on fences, with drunken drivers a close second, says Warren. This is a true family business: Warren’s dad and his brother join a few other employees in doing repair work, while his mom manages the front office. LAWN MOWERS AND SNOW BLOWERS SHARPMOWER, 317-340-3637, SHARPMOWER.COM Sharpmower services residential lawn equipment, snow blowers, and wood chippers with small gasoline engines. The business makes house calls; indeed, that’s its norm. A repair typically takes about an hour on site. “We try to do repairs as fast as possible,” says spokesperson Kevin DeWitt. The complaint they hear all the time is simply, “It won’t start!” It’s easier to prevent problems than to correct them, so Sharpmower offers a simultaneous tuneup for lawnmowers and snowblowers in November, with a guarantee that the mower will start the following spring. Pro tip: Never leave a mower sitting all winter with fuel still in the tank.
FOUNTAINS AND PONDS AQUATIC SERVICES OF INDIANA, 17903 SUN PARK DR., WESTFIELD, 317-889-6363 Electric motors and aquatic environments don’t always mix well. Damage to fountains and ponds can also be caused by critters, in particular muskrats. Aquatic Services’s specialists are trained through the Office of Indiana State Chemist. Their team not only repairs broken fountains and ponds, but they maintain them, so they stay clean and in good working condition. Aquatic Services also has a winterization program to protect your fountain when the cold comes. They will take it to their facility, where it can hibernate in climate-controlled conditions until it’s time to put it back into action. SCREENS SULLIVAN HARDWARE & GARDEN, 6955 N. KEYSTONE AVE., 317-255-9230; 4838 N. PENNSYLVANIA ST., 317-9244050; SULLIVANHARDWARE .COM What is a screen’s enemy No. 1? Pets, says Mark Brown, who oversees screen repair at Sullivan’s, an Indy mainstay since the 1940s. If your screen has had a run-in with a surly tabby or terrier, Brown can replace it within the existing frame or build a whole new frame. The average cost of a repair is $20 to $25, and, come the spring rush, will take a week to 10 days. That wait is due to the volume of repairs. The actual fixing usually only takes 20 minutes. If It is Broken, Don’t Fix It As much as we’re all about upcycling and reducing waste, sometimes a repair just doesn’t make any sense. Unless you’re handy enough to do the repair yourself, remember the half rule. Consumer experts often advise that if it’s going to cost more than 50 percent of the value to fix it, you’re better off replacing it with a new one. “When something breaks, take a deep breath and think logically, not emotionally,” advises Naomi Bechtold, a Purdue Extension Specialist in Financial Resource Management. “Doing a little consumer research can help you make an informed decision.” That is especially true when it comes to these six types of products. MICROWAVES Small issues like a broken door handle or cracked rotating plate probably aren’t a big deal to fix. However, operational malfunctions may be more trouble to repair than they’re worth, especially if your unit is more than five years old, and you’ll need to have someone wrestle it out of its built-in home above the stove. GAMING CONSOLES Swapping out a joystick is one thing. Overhauling a serious hardware issue is another. A repair may buy you some time, but for serious gamers, upgrading is usually the way to go. BOATS If the structural bones of the boat are still good, your trusty vessel may be worth holding onto. However, if you don’t love it like you used to, or don’t see yourself using it as much going forward, it may be time to bail out. Just make sure to disclose any needed repairs and potential safety issues to prospective buyers. SMALL APPLIANCES Countertop mainstays like coffeemakers, waffle irons, and air fryers that cost less than $100 to begin with are easy to replace, especially if you can wait for a sale. Exceptions include pricey stand mixers and high-end espresso machines, although you may be hard-pressed to source replacement parts and service on those. LARGE APPLIANCES Once a fridge or dishwasher conks out, you’re on a slippery slope if it’s not under warranty. If possible, try to time your purchase with the best times for sales on new appliances: Fourth of July, Labor Day, and Black Friday. And keep an open mind about brand names. “A well-known brand is not necessarily going to be the best value or have the best reputation,” Bechtold adds. CARS Had an accident, but the vehicle’s not totaled? Get your insurance company’s advice about how the damage, even if fixed, might affect the resale value of the car. Low inventory and high interest rates can make purchasing a new car unappealing right now, but it may be well worth it to bite the bullet for safety and peace of mind. JANUARY 2023 | IM 57
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THAD M AT TA 60 IM | JANUARY 2023 disabled, his right foot dragging when he walked. He was unable to put on or take off his own shoes and socks, useless to follow his daughters at cross-country meets, confined to a special chair when coaching his players. He had gritted through a decade of bus rides, recruiting flights, and long days and nights in the film room, his office, and on the bench only to be cut loose. If Ohio State was done with him—or basketball in general, for that matter—so be it. “It was time,” he says. “It was just time.” It took four years after his firing for Matta to even get close to basketball again, when in March 2021, he accepted a job as associate athletic director for Indiana University. But as far as returning to coaching and limping up and down the sideline, Matta was less than enthusiastic. Then his phone rang. On the other end of the line was Barry Collier, Matta’s former coach and boss as a fledgling assistant at Butler. Collier was now longtime athletic director for the Bulldogs, and he wanted to know if Matta thought it was time to come home. G R E G O D E N was in Columbus, Ohio, when he heard that his former coach had accepted the position of head coach of Butler men’s basketball. For Oden, the announcement came “out of the blue.” He was surprised because, as a student manager for Matta’s 2016-17 Ohio State team, Oden had had a courtside seat for his mentor’s demise. He witnessed what had once seemed destined to be a Hall of Fame coaching career gradually diminish over the course of a season before burning out. He saw the mental and physical toll it took on his friend. And perhaps more than anyone, Oden understood how Matta felt in that frustrated, defeated moment. That’s because at the precipice of his own promising basketball career, Oden’s body had turned on him, too. Even before he had helped launch Matta’s coaching trajectory by becoming the highest-rated basketball recruit in Buckeye history, Oden was pegged for mega-stardom. He was National High School Player of the Year, a two-time All-American, and Mr. Basketball USA at Indy’s Lawrence North High School. More than that, he was being featured on ESPN and written about in Sports Illustrated; widely hailed as the next LeBron James; a court-smart, quick-stepping 7-foot, 250-pound force of nature who was bound to make an immediate impact at the highest levels of the game. After one season at Ohio State, during which he was named first-team All-Big Ten, Portland made him the No. 1 overall pick in the 2007 NBA Draft. Then, little more than a month before his scheduled NBA debut, Oden was sidelined with a microfracture in his right knee. He missed the entire season. The following year, he left his first-ever professional game with a foot injury after 13 minutes. Two months into his third campaign, he injured his left knee and was hauled off the court on two stretchers strapped together to fit his massive frame. It was, for all purposes, the end of his playing career before it began. The next four years were a blur of surgeries, a failed comeback attempt, and a very public arrest for punching his ex-girlfriend. That’s when he got a call from Matta inviting him back to Columbus to be student manager. “I was in a bad place mentally after the arrest,” says Oden. “I didn’t know which way my life was going. Coach Matta’s was the call that got me back around the game and back to college to finish my degree.” The move back to Ohio also put Oden on a path to being a coach. He was a graduate assistant for the Buckeyes when Matta called again last April offering Oden a position as Butler’s director of basketball operations. More than a job offer, Matta PHOTO COURTESY OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY was finished with coaching. It was April 2022, and the 54-yearold for me r c o ac h was vacationing on Florida’s Marco Island—literally on the beach—while the NCAA Final Four was going on in New Orleans. Not that the college basketball calendar mattered much to him anymore. He was five years removed from an unceremonious split with Ohio State University, where, over 13 seasons as head basketball coach, he had won five conference titles, made nine NCAA tournament appearances and two Final Fours, won Big Ten Coach of the Year three times, and amassed a school-record 337 wins. The divorce was abrupt and complicated: The student-athletes had suddenly stopped responding, five top-rated recruits left the program, and for the first time since Matta’s first season, the Buckeyes had missed postseason play. But underlying all of that was the fact that Matta’s own body had simply betrayed him. For years he’d suffered through back discomfort. But in 2007, a botched surgery to alleviate that pain left him permanently
was inviting his protégé back home to Indy, where together the two of them could try and start the second act of their respective careers. MAT TA NEVER wanted to leave Indy in the first place. He remem- bers walking through Hinkle Fieldhouse in 2001, during his first season as a head basketball coach at his Indy alma mater, on his way to the office of then–athletic director John Parry. He stopped at a framed photo of the arena’s namesake, who had coached the Bulldogs for the better part of five decades. “I told myself, I’m not leaving,” says Matta. “I’m going to be the next Tony Hinkle.” At the time, it was an audacious claim. Matta had been a twoyear starter as a player at Butler, a team co-captain his senior year. After graduation and a quick detour at Indiana State, he spent three years as an administrative assistant under then– head coach Collier, before leaving for his first full-time assistant coaching gig at Miami of Ohio. In 1997, Collier brought Matta back to be his top assistant. Together, they led the Bulldogs to three straight seasons of 20-plus wins and three consecutive postseason berths—the first time that had ever happened at Butler. The success carried Collier to a head coaching job at the University of Nebraska in 2000. Parry named Matta as Collier’s successor. “I thought he would get the job—if he hadn’t, I definitely wanted to take him with me to Nebraska,” says Collier. “To succeed at Butler, you’ve got to recruit well and develop the individuals. I think he was a really good recruiter. It’s one thing to believe that the school you’re recruiting players to is a great place; it’s another to have lived it. Thad has lived it as a Bulldog. He’s always loved Butler, and the longer he’s been associated with the school, the deeper that love has become.” Matta believed that feeling was mutual, especially after a rookie season that saw his Bulldogs finish with a school-record 24 wins, a Midwestern Collegiate Conference season and tournament title, and Butler’s first NCAA tournament win since 1962. He was named MCC Coach of the Year. His wife had just given birth to their second daughter, and after paying homage to Mr. Hinkle’s shrine, Matta walked into Parry’s office looking to negotiate a long-term deal that would keep him at Butler at least until his youngest child graduated from college a Bulldog. But it was not to be. “The meeting didn’t go well at all,” says Matta. “At the time, I was told that I hadn’t proven myself. They only offered me, I think, four years or something. I came out and was Once Matta’s top recruit like, My God, I think I need to go.” at Ohio State (opposite So when Xavier approached that page), Oden is now a offseason with an opportunity to valued member of his coach in the Atlantic 10 Conference, former coach’s staff at Butler as the director of a clear step up from the little MCC, basketball operations. Matta took the gig. He moved his family out of their dream house in Indy to a new home in Cincinnati. Looking back, he says he has no regrets, and if he did at the time, it certainly didn’t impact his performance. He immediately led the Musketeers to three straight 26-win seasons and consecutive conference titles in 2002 and 2003. They made the NCAA tournament all three years, advancing as far as the Elite Eight in 2004. He was also a finalist for the 2002-03 Naismith National Coach of the Year Award. That was enough to draw the attention of major programs, including Ohio State, which was emerging from a scandal JANUARY 2023 | IM 61
involving improper benefits being given to players, a clear NCAA rules violation. The school had fired its previous coach over the affair and was looking for someone young, with a clean record to pick up the pieces. From Matta’s position, this was more than just a promotion, it was a chance for the Hoopeston, Illinois, native to coach in the Big Ten, the conference he grew up watching. The Buckeyes announced Matta’s hiring in July 2004. In his first year at Ohio State, Matta cleaned up the mess left from the NCAA ruling fallout, even though the team was banned from postseason play, and won 20 games, including an upset of top-ranked and undefeated Illinois. In 2005-06, the Buckeyes won the Big Ten. Meanwhile, Matta set to building the program’s future. This was going to be a new test of his recruiting expertise. At schools like Butler and even Xavier, the task was to find players who had been overlooked by bigger schools, usually raw talent that could be developed over the course of four years. But to compete at the highest levels, teams in the Power Five conferences gamble on blue-chip prospects with the knowledge that, if they are as good as advertised, they’ll jump to the NBA after only a year or two. This meant that coaches had to repeatedly reload year after year to stay on top. Complicating that situation was the fact that in 2005, the NBA instituted a rule requiring all players to be out of high school for a year before entering the league. That meant even prep stars who might be NBA-ready were now fair game for college coaches. Matta responded by landing the second-highest-rated recruiting class in college basketball, the so-called “Thad Five.” He got commitments from in-state natives David Lighty and Daequan Cook, and junior college transfer from North Carolina, Othello Hunter. But for the crown jewels of the class, Matta went back to Indianapolis, where he had been scouting two AAU and high school teammates since his days at Butler. One of them was Mike Conley Jr. The other was the top prize in the country, Mr. Basketball himself, Greg Oden. I N DY H A S always been where Oden fits in. Obviously, that’s no easy feat for someone 7 feet tall, let alone a 7-foot-tall teenager who is hyped as a future basketball Hall of Famer before he’s old enough to drive. Mark Titus grew up in Brownsburg and played AAU ball with Oden from middle school on. He remembers how quickly the circus of scouts, coaches, and media started following Oden’s every step. “With the snap of a finger, we went from playing in front of just our parents to gyms packed to the gills with people to see Greg and [Conley Jr.],” says Titus. “It was a whirlwind for him and for me too. My friend was being pulled away from me. We’d go on these trips, and he suddenly wasn’t as available as he used to be. People were always noticing him, always bothering him when we’d go out to eat. They’d come up to him for a photo or an autograph.” By the time Oden got to high school and the hype machine reached critical mass, just about every student at Lawrence North knew the big man. But in those hallways, Oden could tower over the masses and not be hounded—even when ESPN or other national media invaded to chronicle his every move. He was allowed to just be the quiet bookworm he wanted to be. He was allowed to just be Greg. The same went for Lawrence and even much of the larger city in the places where he and his mother, brother, and closest friends would frequent. Strangers would obviously notice him, even shout out his name, but then they’d move on and let him be. Perhaps that’s part of the reason why Oden was drawn to Matta, someone he had been familiar with and seen in the crowd at AAU games from the earliest days when the coach was still 62 IM | JANUARY 2023 at Butler. Matta certainly possessed the Hoosier sincerity that Oden had grown to appreciate. “Once you meet the guy, his personality, his humor, and his storytelling are second to very few,” says Oden, looking back. “He’s genuine.” For instance, whenever Oden would call Matta, he’d introduce himself as “Greg Oden from Indianapolis.” Matta would quickly reply: “Who?” Columbus wasn’t Indy, but it was close, both literally and figuratively. By bringing in Conley Jr., Oden’s teammate at Lawrence North; Cook, whom Oden and Conley had played with in AAU (both stars and coveted recruits in their own right, by the way); and Titus, who enrolled and walked on to the Buckeyes, Matta had, in effect, transplanted a piece of Oden’s Indiana to Ohio. The rest was just two and a half hours west on Interstate 70. Still, Matta remembers Oden was reluctant to leave his comfort zone. “Greg called me the summer when he was getting ready to come to Ohio State and said, ‘Coach, I’m kind of nervous that the Oden, a former Mr. Basguys won’t like me,’” says Matta. “I ketball, took a long and told him, ‘Greg, if they don’t like you, winding road to happiI’ll get rid of them.’” ness and a job at Butler, which included an injuryOden’s “one-and-done” year at Ohio shortened professional State wasn’t eye-popping from a stacareer and a bout with tistical standpoint. He didn’t even alcohol and painkillers. play until December due to a wrist injury he’d sustained his senior year
of high school. But he still averaged a double-double, was still an All-American, and, further, it was the flashes of greatness he showed in his time, particularly during the Buckeyes’s NCAA tournament run to the finals, that really excited NBA front offices. He had a game-saving block in the Sweet Sixteen win over Tennessee, and 25 points and 12 rebounds in the championship loss to Florida. Before he would solidify his own greatness as head coach of the NBA’s Golden State Warriors, Steve Kerr wrote of Oden on Yahoo Sports: “[He] is a once-in-a-decade–type player, and if a team has any chance of getting him, it has to hang on to that chance.” After the NCAA championship game, Oden announced he would enter the 2007 NBA Draft, in which the Portland Trailblazers picked him first overall, ahead of future Hall of Famer Kevin Durant. Before Oden’s first practice, he signed a contract for four years and $22 million. But while the world saw it as the next step in Oden’s inevitable rise, Matta knew better. He knew that Oden was largely doing this because he felt he had to. He didn’t want to go. P O R T L A N D , O R E G O N , is 2,263 miles from Indianapolis, city center to city center. But today, when Oden talks about the loneliness he experienced almost immediately upon arrival in the NBA, he’s not referring to geographic isolation or even the awkwardness of being a painfully shy 19-year-old showing up to prove himself among grown men on the world’s biggest hardwood stage. He’s remembering what it was like to be sidelined from your life because of injury. When a professional athlete is hurt, not only are they not playing, they’re not participating. While their teammates are practicing on the court, they are in the training room getting checked out or in the gym rehabbing. While the team is traveling nonstop to and from away games, the injured stay home. During that missed rookie season, Oden had nothing but time to dwell on his misfortune and fret about his future alone. “I was lonely and missing family,” he says. “It definitely got to me sometimes—more than few times.” Oden has been open about his use of alcohol and painkillers during this period of his life, to ease the physical pain, the loneliness, and, eventually, the creeping notion that by not living up to the impossibly high expectations heaped on him since he was in middle school, he was letting everyone down. Adding to the frustration was the fact that, when he was able to step onto the court, he was showing promise. In 2008-09, his belated rookie season, Oden had 16 double-doubles, averaging about nine points and seven rebounds in 61 games. But four days after setting a career high with 20 rebounds, he chipped his kneecap, which sidelined him for three weeks during the season and led to his second surgery. Just 21 games into the 200910 season, the team announced Oden’s year was over due to another knee surgery. He renegotiated his contract. Three more knee surgeries later, the Trailblazers waived him. After a year of rehabbing his physical injuries, Oden caught on with the Miami Heat in 2013-14. Playing alongside LeBron James, the wunderkind to whom he was once compared, Oden played in 26 “[GREG’S] IQ WAS ALWAYS SO GOOD AS A BASKETBALL PLAYER. I KNEW THAT HE COULD TEACH THE GAME. AND I LOVE HIM BEING AROUND THE GUYS. GREG HAS SEEN EVERYTHING, FROM THE TOP TO THE BOTTOM. FOR HIM TO BE AS HUMBLE AND EVEN-KEEL AS HE IS, IT BLOWS MY MIND.” games, including three playoff games in which he pulled down a single rebound. After the season, the Heat let his one-year contract expire. That summer of 2014, Oden called Matta one night after midnight. He told his old coach that he didn’t think he could do this anymore. Matta invited him back to Columbus to volunteer on a summer tour with the team, but Oden backed out. Weeks later, police responded to a 911 call from Oden’s mother’s house in Lawrence. Oden told the cops that he had hit his then-girlfriend after an argument. He later pleaded guilty to felony battery and got probation, a fine, and an order to attend counseling. This time, Matta called Oden, urging him to come back to Columbus, to come back to basketball. This time, Oden followed through. WH I LE M AT TA watched the prolonged heart-wrenching down- fall of a favored pupil from afar, he also had a basketball program to run and a reputation to uphold. On the backs of Oden, Conley, and company, he had launched Ohio State basketball into the national spotlight. But only two of the Thad Five, Hunter and Lighty, stuck around for an encore Buckeye season. The next year’s team missed the NCAA tourney altogether and ended up winning the NIT. Since this was officially Matta’s first full-time tenure of more than four years at the same school, the gift for recruiting talent that Collier had spotted more than a decade prior was about to tested again. He passed. The buzz from the Thad Five created some momentum that Matta was able to carry over from year to year for the next decade. Oden and Conley Jr. were followed by a cavalcade of McDonald’s High School All-Americans (Kosta Koufos, William Buford), future first-round NBA draft picks (B.J. Mullens, Jared Sullinger, and D’Angelo Russell), and others who would eventually work their way into the league or play professionally abroad (Dallas Lauderdale, Jon Diebler). And they weren’t all one-and-done guys; many were three- and four-year studentathletes whom Matta was able to develop, like Evan Turner, who was only a four-star recruit that left after his junior year at Ohio State to be drafted second overall by the 76ers. Matta characterizes his recruiting approach as specializing in guys “who don’t want to be recruited.” In other words, they just wanted to be treated like a human being. “As a recruit, you could be talking to him, and 20 minutes go by and he’s hardly talked about basketball,” says Diebler, who played four years for Matta between 2007 and 2011 and is now Matta’s director of recruiting at Butler. “It’s not just about basketball. He cares about his players as individuals. And that’s why former players continue to talk to him, continue to come back and support him and the culture he develops.” Of course, a great selling point of any program is sustained CONTINUED ON PAGE 97 success, which seemed to come JANUARY 2023 | IM 63
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S P EC I A L A DV E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY Dearrly Belloved THIS ALBUM OF FIVE INDIANAPOLIS–AREA WEDDINGS INCLUDES DETAILS ABOUT THE VENUES AND VENDORS THAT MADE THESE EVENTS MEMOR ABLE. OPENING PHOTO BY Curious Courtney’s Photography JANUARY 2023 | INDIANA BRIDE 5
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY Nicole + Andrew AUGUST 30, 2022 6 INDIANA BRIDE | JANUARY 2023 ARTISAN ACRES ESTATES
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S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY Max + Brandon SEPTEMBER 17, 2022 8 INDIANA BRIDE | JANUARY 2023 INDUSTRY
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S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY Hailee + Jacob OCTOBER 15, 2022 10 INDIANA BRIDE | JANUARY 2023 RITZ CHARLES
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S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY Pai tyn + Alexander OCTOBER 21, 2022 12 INDIANA BRIDE | JANUARY 2023 THE SIXPENCE
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S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY Danielle + Belinda OCTOBER 22, 2022 14 INDIANA BRIDE | JANUARY 2023 INDIANAPOLIS ARTSGARDEN
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY Details Tushona Monét Photography • PLANNING & FLOWERS Tori Leigh Events • CATERING Ritz Charles • DJ DJ DayDay • MUSIC Saxophonist Curtis Williams • OFFICIANT Simone • HAIR Bae Bar Indy, Magichands Mitch the Barber • MAKEUP Jon Gregory • WEDDING GOWN House of Breton • BRIDESMAIDS DRESSES Bella Bridesmaids • TUXES Formally Modern Tuxedo • RINGS Fair Trade Jewellery Co. PHOTOGRAPHY JANUARY 2023 | INDIANA BRIDE 15
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY COME TOGETHER A WELL-CHOREOGR APHED WEDDING REQUIRES GOOD TIMING, RESEARCH, AND COORDINATION, BUT THE END RESULT MAKES IT ALL WORTHWHILE. Kristen and Patrick were married July 23 at the Indiana Statehouse. Their reception, held at the iconic Indiana Roof Ballroom, was catered by Crystal Signature Events. Photo by Jessica Strickland Photography. BY LORI ROBERTS HAVE YOU EVER PLANNED A PARTY for a couple hundred guests? A fancy dinner for friends you want to impress? For most people outside the hospitality industry, a wedding is the first experience with coordinating an event of this magnitude. How can you stay on top of pre-wedding tasks while enjoying this special time in your life? Relax. We have a to-do list ready for you. Whether you’re taking a year or more to iron out details, or you have only a few months to plan the big day, we have expert advice from pros in the business. The good news is your wedding can be as extravagant or simple as you want. The better news? At the end of it all, you’ll be married to the love of your life. “Don’t overcomplicate your day,” says Cody Bailey, owner of Rogue Images 16 INDIANA BRIDE | JANUARY 2023 Photography. “The most important thing that has to happen on your wedding day is you get married. The rest is just semantics.” GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY I t’s not mandatory, but most wedding planning starts with the bling. Dana Friedman, owner of Petite G Jewelers, says happy couples tend to come together to choose an engagement ring. “These days, people usually have something in mind,” Friedman says. “There’s usually a Pinterest page.” Friedman encourages couples to select jewelry that speaks to them, regardless of whether the style is currently popular. If anything, Friedman tells couples not to worry about the design becoming dated. Weddings are trendy, she points out. Think about the Art Deco or Edwardian periods. Changing aesthetics during those times resulted in lovely pieces people treasure today. Couples now are moving away from the tungsten and titanium wedding bands in favor of traditional gold, Friedman says. Brides may mix materials between engagement rings and wedding bands, eschewing the matched and soldered versions from previous decades. “The rings can stand alone,” Friedman says of engagement and wedding rings. “With today’s active wearers, we want them to be able to wear their wedding band independently.”
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY SITE MANAGEMENT B efore you start interviewing vendors and touring venues, take some time to think about who you want nearby on the big day. That’s going to dictate your budget and, in turn, narrow your venue options. What sounds better? A big blowout wedding in downtown Indianapolis, or a smaller group surrounding you at a destination ceremony? How many people should you invite? Can you afford to feed them all? “There are going to be some hard decisions,” says Bethany Hill, a wedding planner and owner of Bethany’s Classic Events. Once you have a theoretical budget, it’s time to start shopping for venues. If your heart is set on a specific officiant or house of worship, start there. Then you can begin looking at site schedules to find spaces with availability on your chosen date. The Indianapolis area boasts many different wedding venues, from the ultra-fancy Indiana Roof Ballroom to more industrial settings like The Heirloom at N.K. Hurst and The Crane Bay Event Center. Couples may want to visit several potential venues, because the ceremony of their dreams may not be the type of event they really want once they’ve considered all their options. Ideally, you’ll be making this important selection 12 to 18 months ahead of the big day to give you a greater selection, says Kile Shaw, a sales manager for the Indiana Roof Ballroom specializing in weddings and social events for Crystal Signature Events. If your heart is set on a Saturday wedding in the spring or fall, give yourself more lead time, she advises. Those are peak dates. “Everyone’s priorities are different,” Shaw says. “We love Friday weddings. If you have a smaller group, you can benefit from lower food and beverage minimums on Fridays.” P worked a friend’s wedding or a professional recommended by the venue. “We’re very lucky in Indianapolis,” Shaw says. “There’s a strong network of vendors, from photographers to bakeries, DJs, and bands. We have great outlets and get to know each other.” Bailey suggests interviewing several photographers before making your choice. The pros bring an array of different styles to wedding photos. Some are more artistically inclined, while others focus on traditional portraits. Don’t take chances with this investment. Ask prospective photographers about details like file storage policies and methods of delivering proofs and final images. Find out how they’ll operate on the big day. Are they willing to act as the heavy when annoying relatives try to photobomb a special moment with your parents? “We need to understand family dynamics and who needs to be important on that day,” Bailey says. B ALL DRESSED UP y the time you have chosen a venue and photographer, you probably have a good idea about the ideal look of your wedding. Are you getting married in a field of flowers or a stately cathedral? Keep these styles in mind as you shop for your wedding attire. Spoiler alert: Chances are, your gown isn’t going to be the one you’ve always imagined. “Try on every dress you can possibly get your hands on,” Hill says. “Try on all different kinds of dresses. Nine times out of 10, the bride ends up buying a dress that is nothing like what she thought she’d wear.” Most bridal boutiques can give you an estimate of how much lead time you will need to ensure the gown arrives in time. Consider alteration time as well. Are you planning to lose weight before the wedding? That’s great, but it’s wise to go ahead and order the size you usually wear. PHOTO READY hone cameras are great, but you want to make sure your wedding is commemorated by a professional photographer. That’s why this key personnel selection should happen early, typically after you’ve nailed down a venue and date. Many people find their photographers through word-of-mouth, whether it’s someone who A qualified wedding photographer can capture and highlight the tone, mood, and scenery of a couple’s nuptials. Photo by Rogue Images Photography. JANUARY 2023 | INDIANA BRIDE 17
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY them. Some brides want their party to wear identical dresses, while others might simply ask their attendants to select dresses in a coordinating color or palette. You can shop department stores or online sites that allow you to order dresses in different sizes and colors. Allie and Kevin, married Nov. 5, 2021, chose a coordinated look for their party featuring shades of rose, crimson, and navy to complement the bride’s gown from Blue House Bridal in Carmel. Photo by Kyle Helmond Photography. “Unless you’re on a weight-loss journey and truly making progress, buy a dress that fits you right now,” Hill says. “It’s always easier to take it in. You can’t let it out as easily.” 18 INDIANA BRIDE | JANUARY 2023 Bridesmaid dresses are a little easier to choose. Hill recommends scheduling a lunch or virtual call with your bridesmaids to share ideas and find out what works for KITCHEN CONFIDENTIAL T alk to your venue before you start to interview caterers and bakeries. Some sites require you to use an in-house caterer or choose from a list of approved vendors. Take advantage of group tasting events, which many caterers schedule periodically. “Taste many bakeries. Taste many caterers. Don’t stop at one,” Hill says.
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY BLOOMING BUSINESS F lorists are a lot like photographers— their calendars can fill up quickly, depending on the time of year and date you want. But choosing flowers can be one of the most enjoyable aspects of wedding planning. “When they reach out to us, we suggest they send in their color palettes,” says Karen Morgason, senior wedding designer with JP Parker Flowers. “If they have some inspiration photos, feel free to send them as well.” Good florists often have connections around the world to ensure that you carry your favorite flowers down the aisle. Even so, there may be some limitations. If you have your heart set on a bouquet of fragrant peonies in November, you might be disappointed. Fortunately, florists can often offer substitutes or alternatives like weaving finequality silk flowers into the bouquet. “I do my best to accommodate what they’re looking for,” Morgason says. “I don’t try to steer brides away from their favorite, because that’s why they’re coming to us.” PLANNING ON THE FLY L ife happens. Some couples don’t have the luxury of time when it comes to scheduling and coordinating their weddings. They are no less deserving of a special day, though. Our vendors offered the following tips for planning a wedding in three months or less: • Choose a non-traditional day or time. There are 52 Saturdays in a year, but the total number of days is 365. Opting for a Friday evening or Sunday brunch can open up a wider variety of venue options. • Use what’s available. Most florists can create a lovely bouquet and other decorations with flowers they have on hand. The same philosophy applies to wedding attire. You can look just as beautiful in a borrowed dress as you do in a custommade frock. Plus, you’re already covering the “something borrowed” requirement. • Accept your second or third choice. If your preferred venue isn’t available on the day you need it, keep looking. You may discover an alternate location that is even better than you imagined. • Let go of perfection. This applies to every happy couple, whether they’re pulling together a quick gathering or planning an extravagant event. Sometimes things don’t happen according to plan, and that’s OK. “If the best man forgets his tie at the hotel, it’s not the end of the world,” Hill says. “If there’s not enough greenery in your bouquet, it’s not the end of the world. You don’t want your wedding to be boring. You want it to be memorable.” Tents | Tables | Linens | Chairs | Chair Covers China | Flatware & Glassware | Dance Floors & Staging 8020 Zionsville Road, Indianapolis, IN 46268 | 317.251.7368 | aclassicpartyrental.com JANUARY 2023 | INDIANA BRIDE 19
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY the bride MORE THAN 140 INDY-AREA CEREMONY AND RECEPTION FACILITIES EQUIPPED TO HOST GATHERINGS OF ALL SIZES Alexandra and Brad were married Oct. 16, 2021, at the Hotel Carmichael in Carmel. Photo by Tiernae Salley Photography. 20 INDIANA BRIDE | JANUARY 2023
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY BALLROOMS & EVENT FACILITIES 416 WABASH 416 E. Wabash St. 317-389-5455 • 416wabash.com 502 EAST EVENT CENTRE 502 E. Carmel Dr., Carmel 317-843-1234 • experiencebyrds.com THE SITES LISTED IN THIS SECTION are in Indianapolis unless otherwise noted. This roster is not fully inclusive of all wedding and event venues in the area, and a listing does not imply a recommendation or endorsement by Indianapolis Monthly. Does a particular space appeal to you? Call the listed phone number or check the website for specific information about details like guest capacity, vendor policies, and availability well in advance of your preferred date. THE ATRIUM BANQUET & CONFERENCE CENTER 3143 E. Thompson Rd. 317-782-4467 • theatriuminc.com THE BALMORAL HOUSE 10101 Hamilton Hills Ln., Fishers 317-288-8741 • thebalmoralhouse.com BASH 1235 N. Keystone Way, Carmel 812-994-1052 • bash.828venues.com BEESON HALL 396 Branigin Blvd., Franklin 317-736-3689 • franklin.in.gov BILTWELL EVENT CENTER Anderson Madison County Wedding Guide 950 S. White River Pkwy. W. Dr. 317-916-6000 • biltwelleventcenter.com BLACK IRIS ESTATE 5801 E. 116th St., Carmel 317-542-8333 • blackirisestate.com THE BLUFFS AT CONNER PRAIRIE 13080 Allisonville Rd., Fishers 317-846-9158 • ritzcharles.com/venue/ the-bluffs-at-conner-prairie BULLSEYE EVENT CENTER 723 S. Capitol Ave. • 317-800-5689 bullseyeeventgroup.com/bullseye-event-center COMMUNITY LIFE CENTER 10612 E. Washington St. 317-396-3728 • monumentalweddings.com THE CRANE BAY EVENT CENTER 551 W. Merrill St. 317-423-2999 • thecranebay.com DALLARA INDYCAR FACTORY 1201 Main St., Speedway 317-243-7171 • indycarfactory.com FORUM EVENTS CENTER 11313 USA Pkwy., Fishers 317-558-6060 • forumeventscenter.com THE FOXHOLE AT HOTEL TANGO DISTILLERY 670 Virginia Ave. • 317-653-1806 hoteltangodistillery.com/venues/the-foxhole THE HEIRLOOM AT N.K. HURST 800.533.6569 VisitAndersonMadisonCounty.com/weddings 230 W. McCarty St. 317-585-3955 • theheirloomindy.com JANUARY 2023 | INDIANA BRIDE 21
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY INDUSTRY VISIONLOFT EVENTS 545 Kentucky Ave. 317-561-0028 • industry.828venues.com 235 N. Delaware St. 317-762-4233 • visionloftevents.com IRON & EMBER EVENTS THE WELLINGTON FISHERS BANQUET & CATERING CENTER 12120 Brookshire Pkwy., Carmel 317-776-2300 • ironandemberevents.com 9775 North by Northeast Blvd., Fishers 317-712-3475 • thewellingtonfishers.com MAVRIS ARTS & EVENT CENTER 121 S. East St. 317-917-9999 • mavris.net MILL TOP BANQUET AND CONFERENCE CENTER 802 Mulberry St., Noblesville 317-219-3450 • milltop-indy.com MONTAGE 8580 Allison Pointe Blvd. 317-577-3663 • themontage.info ONYX EVENT CENTER 7545 Rockville Rd. 317-591-9936 • onyxeventcenter.com THE PALOMINO BALLROOM 481 S. 1200 E, Zionsville 317-769-4180 • palominoballroom.com PRIMO BANQUET & CONFERENCE CENTER 1503 N. 10th St., Noblesville 317-846-9158 • artisanacresestate.com AVON GARDENS 6259 E. County Rd. 91 N, Avon 317-272-6264 • avongardensweddings.com AVON WEDDING AND EVENT BARN 7424 E. County Rd. 100 N, Avon 317-430-5391 • avonweddingbarn.com BARN AT BAY HORSE INN 1468 W. Stones Crossing Rd., Greenwood 317-760-8778 • barnatbayhorse.com THE BARN IN ZIONSVILLE 8556 E. 300 S, Zionsville 317-732-1998 • thebarninzionsville.com REGIONS TOWER COXHALL GARDENS AND MANSION RITZ CHARLES 12156 N. Meridian St., Carmel 317-846-9158 • ritzcharles.com SAXONY HALL 13362 Pennington Rd., Fishers 317-618-5478 • playfishers.com/226/saxony-hall THE SILVER CENTRE EVENT HALL 11677 Towne Rd., Carmel 317-846-9158 • ritzcharles.com/venue/ coxhall-gardens-and-mansion EAGLE CREEK PARK 7840 W. 56th St. 317-327-7193 • eaglecreekpark.org FINLEY CREEK VINEYARDS 795 S. U.S. 421, Zionsville 317-283-2776 • finleycreekvineyard.com 10202 E. Washington St. 317-969-6555 • thesilvercentre.com GARFIELD PARK CONSERVATORY AND SUNKEN GARDEN SKYLINE CLUB 2505 Conservatory Dr. • 317-327-7183 garfieldgardensconservatory.org/ wedrentphoto One American Square, 36th Floor • 317-263-5000 invitedclubs.com/clubs/skyline-club-indianapolis THE SPEAK EASY 5255 N. Winthrop Ave. speakeasyindy.com THE SYCAMORE AT MALLOW RUN INDIANA BRIDE | JANUARY 2023 ARTISAN ACRES ESTATE 2615 E. National Ave. 317-788-4140 • primobanquetsouth.com 211 N. Pennsylvania St. 317-348-0006 • jpsevents.com 22 BARNS, GARDENS & OUTDOOR VENUES KENNEDY ESTATE 525 N. State St., Lizton 317-646-9191 • kennedyestate.com LINDLEY FARMSTEAD AT CHATHAM HILLS 7070 W. Whiteland Rd., Bargersville 317-530-6463 • sycamoreevents.com 20820 Lindley Farm Rd., Westfield 317-836-3801 • chathamhills.com/events/ lindley-farmstead THE TINKER HOUSE EVENTS LIZTON LODGE 1101 E. 16th St. 317-607-2521 • tinkerhouseevents.com 1392 Wyatt Way, Lizton 812-414-1830 • liztonlodge.com
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY MUSTARD SEED GARDENS 77 Metsker Ln., Noblesville 317-776-2300 • mustardseedgardens.com Beginning to the very end wedding planning assistance: THE SIXPENCE 4400 N. 1000 E, Whitestown 317-296-8200 • thesixpence.com GOLF & COUNTRY CLUBS THE BRIDGEWATER CLUB 3535 E. 161st St., Carmel 317-399-244 • thebridgewaterclub.com Full planning & day of management options to fit your needs. Wedding Planning Services 317-702-7305 “Be present, enjoy your day… Let Bethany handle the details!” BETHANYSCAKES@YAHOO.COM WWW.BETHANYSCLASSICEVENTS.COM BROADMOOR COUNTRY CLUB 2155 Kessler Blvd. W. Dr. 317-251-9444 • broadmoorcc.com THE CARDINAL ROOM AT GOLF CLUB OF INDIANA 6905 S. 525 E, Lebanon 317-550-3990 • thecardinalroom.com THE CLUB AT CHATHAM HILLS 1100 Chatham Hills Blvd., Westfield 317-836-3800 • chathamhills.com/ events/weddings THE COUNTRY CLUB OF INDIANAPOLIS 2801 Country Club Rd. 317-291-9770 • ccindianapolis.com HARBOUR TREES GOLF & BEACH CLUB 333 Regents Park Ln., Noblesville 317-877-3612 • harbourtrees.com THE HAWTHORNS GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB 12255 Club Point Dr., Fishers • 317-806-5016 thehawthornscountryclubevents.com HILLCREST COUNTRY CLUB 6098 Fall Creek Rd. 317-251-1425 • hillcrestccindy.com INDIANAPOLIS YACHT CLUB 12900 Fall Creek Rd., McCordsville 317-335-2588 • indianapolisyachtclub.org PLUM CREEK GOLF CLUB 12401 Lynnwood Blvd., Carmel 317-993-3924 • plumcreekgolfclub.com PRAIRIE VIEW GOLF CLUB 7000 Longest Dr., Carmel 317-816-3100 • prairieviewgc.com PURGATORY GOLF CLUB 12160 E. 216th St., Noblesville 317-776-4653 • purgatorygolf.com VALLE VISTA GOLF CLUB & CONFERENCE CENTER 755 E. Main St., Greenwood 317-882-2955 • vallevista.com JANUARY 2023 | INDIANA BRIDE 23


S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY WOOD WIND GOLF CLUB 2302 W. 161st St., Westfield 317-502-8082 • woodwindgolf.com WOODLAND COUNTRY CLUB 100 Woodland Ln., Carmel 317-846-2588 • woodlandcc.com HISTORIC LANDMARKS 1899 VENUE 164 Steeples Blvd. 317-426-0576 • 1899events.com ALLISON MANSION AT RIVERDALE 3200 Cold Spring Rd. 317-955-6324 • marian.edu/conference-andevents/wedding-and-special-events THE BENJAMIN HARRISON PRESIDENTIAL SITE 1230 N. Delaware St. 317-631-1888 • bhpsite.org/visit/rentals THE BENTON HOUSE 312 S. Downey Ave. 317-357-0318 • thebentonhouse.org THE CYRUS PLACE 237 N. East St. 317-721-4555 • thecyrusplaceeventcenter.com THE EVENT CENTER AT HISTORIC SAINT JOSEPH HALL 617 E. North St. 463-206-2127 • northstevents.com THE CABARET THE FOUNTAIN SQUARE THEATRE 924 N. Pennsylvania St. 317-275-1169 • thecabaret.org 1105 Prospect St. • 317-686-6010, ext. 2 fountainsquareindy.com/fountain-square-theatre COLUMBIA CLUB THE HISTORIC AMBASSADOR HOUSE AND HERITAGE GARDENS 121 Monument Circle 317-761-7515 • columbia-club.org CONNER PRAIRIE 13400 Allisonville Rd., Fishers 317-776-6000 • connerprairie.org 10598 Eller Rd., Fishers 317-201-6359 • ambassadorhouse.org INDIANA LANDMARKS CENTER 1201 Central Ave. 317-639-4534 • indianalandmarks.org INDIANA ROOF BALLROOM Lauren and Thomas were married October 15 at the Bottleworks Hotel. Photo by Alison Mae Photography. 140 W. Washington St. 317-236-1870 • indianaroof.com INDIANAPOLIS PROPYLAEUM 1410 N. Delaware St. 317-638-7881 • thepropylaeum.org LAUREL HALL 5395 Emerson Way 317-275-3390 • laurel-hall.org THE MANOR AT THE CHILDREN’S MUSEUM OF INDIANAPOLIS 3050 N. Meridian St. • 317-334-3314 childrensmuseum.org/visit/events/weddings MORRIS-BUTLER HOUSE 1204 N. Park Ave. 317-639-4534 • indianalandmarks.org THE NEIDHAMMER 2104 E. Washington St. 317-759-0602 • neidhammer.com THE PARAMOUNT THEATRE CENTRE & BALLROOM 1124 Meridian St., Anderson 765-642-1234 • andersonparamount.org/rental PIPERS AT THE MAROTT 2625 N. Meridian St. 317-926-2600 • piperscatering.com THE RATHSKELLER AND ATHENAEUM 401 E. Michigan St. 317-636-0396 • rathskeller.com THE SANCTUARY ON PENN 701 N. Pennsylvania St. 317-602-3264 • indysanctuary.com SCOTTISH RITE CATHEDRAL 650 N. Meridian St. 317-262-3110 • srcevent.com 24 INDIANA BRIDE | JANUARY 2023
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY HOTELS & INNS THE ALEXANDER 333 S. Delaware St. 317-624-8200 • thealexander.com BOTTLEWORKS HOTEL 850 Massachusetts Ave. 317-556-1234 • bottleworkshotel.com CONRAD INDIANAPOLIS 50 W. Washington St. 317-524-2552 • conradindianapolis.com/weddings EMBASSY SUITES BY HILTON INDIANAPOLIS NORTH 3912 Vincennes Rd. • 317-872-7700 indianapolisnorth.embassysuites.com FORT HARRISON STATE PARK INN AND THE FORT GOLF RESORT 5830 N. Post Rd. • 877-937-3678 in.gov/dnr/state-parks/inns/fort-harrison-inn -at-fort-harrison-state-park/groups THE GRAND HALL AT HISTORIC UNION STATION 5447 East 82nd Street Indianapolis 317.849.9980 gretchensbridalgallery.com 123 W. Louisiana St. • 317-236-7456 downtownindianapolisweddings.com HILTON GARDEN INN INDIANAPOLIS/CARMEL 13090 Pennsylvania St., Carmel • 317-581-9400 indianapoliscarmel.gardeninn.com HILTON INDIANAPOLIS HOTEL & SUITES 120 W. Market St. 317-972-0600 • indianapolis.hilton.com HOTEL CARMICHAEL One Carmichael Sq., Carmel 317-688-1700 • hotelcarmichael.com HOTEL INDY 141 E. Washington St. 317-735-2527 • hotelindy.com HYATT REGENCY INDIANAPOLIS 1 S. Capitol Ave. 317-632-1234 • indianapolis.hyatt.com INDIANAPOLIS MARRIOTT DOWNTOWN 350 W. Maryland St. 317-822-3500 • indymarriott.com INDIANAPOLIS MARRIOTT EAST 7202 E. 21st St. 317-352-1231 • indianapolismarriotteast.com IRONWORKS HOTEL INDY 2721 E. 86th St. 463-221-2205 • ironworkshotelindy.com )PUFM$BSNJDIBFMJTB CFBVUJGVMCPVUJRVFIPUFM MPDBUFEJOUIFIFBSUPG $BSNFM */$POUBDUVTUP MFBSOIPXXFDBOIPTU ZPVSIBQQJMZFWFSBGUFS vdohvCkrwhofduplfkdho1frp KrwhoFduplfkdho1frp Ckrwhofduplfkdho JW MARRIOTT 10 S. West St. 317-860-5800 • jwindy.com JANUARY 2023 | INDIANA BRIDE 25
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY LE MÉRIDIEN book your stay for the big day Explore your boutique options at the Bottleworks Hotel & Ironworks Hotel 123 S. Illinois St. 317-737-1600 • marriott.com/en-us/hotels/ indmd-le-meridien-indianapolis/overview MARRIOTT INDIANAPOLIS NORTH 3645 River Crossing Pkwy. 317-705-0000 • marriott.com/hotels/travel/ indno-marriott-indianapolis-north/overview OMNI SEVERIN HOTEL EVENT DESIGN 40 W. Jackson Pl. 317-634-6664 • omnihotels.com/hotels/ indianapolis-severin DÉCOR • FLORALS • RENTALS • TENTS PRAIRIE GUEST HOUSE BED & BREAKFAST 13805 Allisonville Rd., Fishers 317-634-6664 • prairieguesthouse.com É ÖÛ Û Ó Ì ÞÖ Ù Ò Ú Ï ÖÛ Ì Ó ÊÖ Ô  ¼  !  %  # # $   ! " RENAISSANCE INDIANAPOLIS NORTH HOTEL 11925 N. Meridian St., Carmel 317-663-8728 • marriott.com/en-us/hotels/indbr -renaissance-indianapolis-north-hotel/overview SHERATON INDIANAPOLIS CITY CENTRE HOTEL 5353 W. 79TH ST., INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46268 ACEITINDY.COM | INFO@ACEITINDY.COM OFFICE: 317.872.8368 31 W. Ohio St. • 317-635-2000 marriott.com/en-us/hotels/indsc-sheraton -indianapolis-city-centre-hotel/overview ironworkshotelindy.com • 463.221.2200 SHERATON INDIANAPOLIS HOTEL AT KEYSTONE CROSSING 8787 Keystone Crossing • 317-846-2700 marriott.com/en-us/hotels/indsi-sheraton-indiana polis-hotel-at-keystone-crossing/overview THE WESTIN INDIANAPOLIS 241 W. Washington St. • 317-262-8100 marriott.com/en-us/hotels/ indwi-the-westin-indianapolis/overview WYNDHAM INDIANAPOLIS WEST 2544 Executive Dr. • 317-248-2481 wyndhamhotels.com/wyndham/indianapolis -indiana/wyndham-indianapolis-west/overview NBͥA οåĈåőåœĈĀĎāāå χ ƶƶƶ͟åĈåőåœĈĀĎāāå͟āŜő χ ĮĎʼnʼnŜοåĈåőåœĈĀĎāāå͟āŜő MUSEUMS & CULTURAL DESTINATIONS BUTLER UNIVERSITY 4600 Sunset Ave. 317-940-9352 • butlerartscenter.org/ facility-rentals-services/weddings THE CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS 1 Carter Green, Carmel 317-819-3526 • thecenterpresents.org/venue-rental THE CHILDREN’S MUSEUM OF INDIANAPOLIS 3000 N. Meridian St. • 317-334-3314 childrensmuseum.org/visit/events/weddings 26 INDIANA BRIDE | JANUARY 2023
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY EITELJORG MUSEUM OF AMERICAN INDIANS AND WESTERN ART 500 W. Washington St. 317-275-1329 • eiteljorg.org/event-spaces/wedding EUGENE AND MARILYN GLICK INDIANA HISTORY CENTER 450 W. Ohio St. • 317-234-0081 indianahistory.org/explore/facility-rentals GALLERY FORTY-TWO 42 E. Washington St. 317-213-6171 • galleryfortytwo.com GERMAN AMERICAN KLUB OF INDIANAPOLIS 8602 S. Meridian St. 317-888-6940 • indianapolisgak.com HARRISON CENTER 1505 N. Delaware St. 317-396-3886 • harrisoncenter.org HILBERT CIRCLE THEATRE 45 Monument Circle 317-231-6798 • indianapolissymphony.org/visit/ private-events INDIANA STATE MUSEUM 31 SOUTH RANGELINE ROAD CARMEL, IN 46032 317.683.3574 • BluehouseBridal.com 650 W. Washington St. • 317-233-9983 indianamuseum.org/facility-rentals INDIANAPOLIS ART CENTER 820 E. 67th St. 317-255-2464 • indyartcenter.org/weddings INDIANAPOLIS ARTSGARDEN 0DNH 0 NH 0D N <RXU < XU <R X 'D\ MAGICAL 110 W. Washington St. • 317-624-2565 indyarts.org/artsgarden/rent-the-artsgarden INDIANAPOLIS CENTRAL LIBRARY `ÁúĆÚÁě `ĩġäĢőʼn Ćʼn Á ùŖěě 40 E. St. Clair St. 317-275-4200 • indypl.org/event-meeting-rentals ʼnäŅŪĆÚä ūäààĆĢú ÁĢà äŪäĢő łěÁĢĢĆĢú ÚĩġłÁĢű͠ INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY MUSEUM ©ä ÁŅä Á ġĩőĂäŅ àÁŖúĂőäŅ àŖĩ ĂäŅä őĩ Ăäěł űĩŖ 4750 W. 16th St. 317-492-6784 • imsmuseum.org INDIANAPOLIS ZOO AND WHITE RIVER GARDENS 1200 W. Washington St. 317-630-2001 • indianapoliszoo.com/visit/ private-events/weddings-receptions àäʼnĆúĢ ÁĢà ÚĩĩŅàĆĢÁőä Á ĩĢäͿĩùͿÁͿėĆĢà͡ äŰőŅÁĩŅàĆĢÁŅű äŪäĢő͠ 17 Indiana Locations fitting affiliates coast-to-coast MADAM WALKER LEGACY CENTER 617 Indiana Ave. • 317-236-2099 madamwalkerlegacycenter.com NCAA HALL OF CHAMPIONS 700 W. Washington St. • 317-917-6467 ncaahallofchampions.org/our-conference-center NEWFIELDS 4000 Michigan Rd. • 317-923-1331 discovernewfields.org/about/event-rentals FREE GROOMS RENTAL Plus save $50 on every rental package www.louiestuxshop.com ! ""!. i /ͶΡͶđ΢ BÐaÝÝÅݸ Ba~Ïa¸™ !ͶÐÐ BÐaÝÝÅݸ Ba~Ïa¸™ a΢ æ­ ææđŒÅÝaͨÅæÝ ™~æđ a݌ ™ėÅ¸Ý Ba~Ïa¸™ +*00 /g ÅÝ­ærØa¸Å~aÐØæØ™Ýͨė™Ν™ÝͨùÐaÝÝÅݸÿ~æØ ΠΠΠÿØa¸Å~aÐØæØ™Ýͨė™Ν™ÝͨùÐaÝÝÅݸÿ~æØ 8Πݙđ† /æđa B™ÝÝÅݸͨæÝ BÂæÝ™† ͫïĜğ´¯àğ à JANUARY 2023 | INDIANA BRIDE 27
S P EC I A L A D V E R T I S I N G S U P P L E M E N T T O I N D I A N A P O L I S M O N T H LY OLD NATIONAL CENTRE 502 N. New Jersey St. 317-536-6507 • oldnationalcentre.com/events RESTAURANTS, BREWERIES & WINERIES DANIEL’S FAMILY VINEYARD & WINERY 9061 N. 700 W, McCordsville 317-248-5222 • danielsvineyard.com HARRY & IZZY’S At Rogue Images Photography, our goal is to make your photos 100% about you. 4050 E. 82nd St. • 317-915-8045 153 S. Illinois St. • 317-635-9594 harryandizzys.com Your wedding day. Your images. Your photographer. HOLLYHOCK HILL 8110 N. College Ave. 317-251-2294 • hollyhockhill.com LATE HARVEST KITCHEN 8605 River Crossing Blvd. 317-663-8063 • lateharvestkitchen.com MAGGIANO’S LITTLE ITALY 317.749.6333 | Zionsville, Indiana noteworthy-expressions.com info@rogueimagephoto.com 317.964.1619 www.rogueimagephoto.com 3550 E. 86th St. 317-814-0727 • locations.maggianos.com MATT THE MILLER’S TAVERN 11 W. City Center Dr. 317-805-1860 • mtmtavern.com THE MELTING POT 5650 E. 86th St. 317-841-3601 • meltingpot.com/indianapolis-in MESH ON MASS 725 Massachusetts Ave. 317-955-9600 • meshrestaurants.com RICK’S CAFE BOATYARD 4050 Dandy Trail 317-290-9300 • ricksboatyard.com RUTH’S CHRIS STEAK HOUSE 2727 E. 86th St. • 317-844-1155 45 S. Illinois St. • 317-633-1313 ruthschris.com ST. ELMO STEAK HOUSE 127 S. Illinois St. 317-635-0636 • stelmos.com SULLIVAN’S STEAKHOUSE 3316 E. 86th St. • 317-580-1280 sullivanssteakhouse.com/indianapolis TRADERS POINT CREAMERY Custom bags and tins from Kernels Gourmet Popcorn are perfect for welcome baskets, bridal showers, and wedding favors. Let us help you make your day a success with our beautiful charcuterie boards! Our boards are perfect for small gatherings— like your shower—and weddings of all sizes. KERNELSCARMEL.COM WINEANDRINDCARMEL.COM 28 INDIANA BRIDE | JANUARY 2023 9101 Moore Rd., Zionsville 317-733-1700 • traderspointcreamery.com WEST FORK WHISKEY CO. 10 E. 191st St., Westfield • 317-643-1103 westforkwhiskey.com/book-your-event
THE BLUFFS AT CONNER PRAIRIE IMAGES BY DANIELLE HARRIS PHOTOGRAPHY 317.846.9158 | RitzCharles.com Ritz Charles | Garden Pavilion at Ritz Charles | Coxhall Gardens Indianapolis Public Library | Lindley Farmstead at Chatham Hills Indianapolis Artsgarden | The Bluffs at Conner Prairie | Artisan Acres Estate

| | CONTINUED FROM PAGE 63 easy to Matta. Through it all, he maintained the same laidback approach as a coach that he brought as a recruiter. “He’s one of the worst yellers I’ve ever seen,” says Titus, who played four years for Matta between 2006 and 2010. “He can yell, and his face will turn red, but you don’t trust it. You’re so used to him being a lovable guy. He’d drop-kick a ball, and it’s almost funny. I’d have to hide my face in my jersey. He wasn’t there to get you to fall in line. He was there to help you become the best version of yourself. That made you respect him.” But as the years went by, and Titus returned to Columbus to visit, he noticed a change in his former coach. “My freshman year, he’d be diving after loose balls to make a point to his players about not hustling,” he says. “After I graduated, there’d be times during halftime of games when he’d be laying on his back trying to figure out how he was going to make it through the rest of the game.” Matta had had back issues that dated back to his playing days at Butler. In 2007, a surgery that was supposed to fix the issue instead left his back as messed up as ever and with a “drop foot” on his right side that required a metal brace to help him walk. He never made excuses, in public or private. He didn’t have to— he was winning. That changed quickly in 2015-16, when the team still won 21 games, but finished seventh in the conference and missed the NCAA tournament. Worse, that offseason, four players from a 2015 recruiting class that had ranked fifth in the nation left after their freshman year for other schools. A fifth just quit the team altogether before being arrested on misdemeanor charges of public intoxication and criminal mischief. The next season, what was left of the Buckeyes won only 17 games, finishing 10th in the Big Ten. “I saw players not gravitating to the guy that I’ve known,” says Oden, the student manager for that final season. “The younger kids that didn’t appreciate the type of coach that he is and the type of motivation he used. It definitely felt like selfishness in the players. He was still trying to be Thad, to teach them how to play the game the right way and put them in the best spot to get them to wherever they wanted to go in life. It just wasn’t clicking. And it seemed like it beat him up.” After his firing, Matta moved back to Indianapolis, to a house not three minutes from Butler’s Hinkle Fieldhouse. But he didn’t even want to look at a basketball. IT ’S E A RLY November 2022, and the light of a waning afternoon streams in through the windows of Hinkle Fieldhouse. Matta walks through the glass door of the Butler men’s basketball offices, past a miniature billboard with his picture next to bold white type: WELCOME HOME, THAD MATTA. The ever-present brace beneath his black running pants notwithstanding, the 55-year-old coach walks briskly, with purpose, still wet from a post-workout shower and ready to get to work at 3 p.m. practice. Matta’s abstinence from the game lasted little more than a year. He couldn’t resist checking in on Butler basketball, as he had done periodically throughout his career in Cincinnati and Columbus. After a couple years he even entertained some offers to coach, but none was a fit. When he accepted the front office job in Bloomington last year, Collier took notice, though he had no opening for his old protégé at the time. When the Bulldogs parted ways with head coach LaVall Jordan at the beginning of April, Collier figured he’d give Matta a call. “Anytime you get the chance to hire a Hall of Fame coach who’s got a bunch of gas in his tank, you do it,” says Collier. “I had never discussed the job with him and had no idea if he’d take it. But you don’t do something for 20 years and not like it a lot. Beyond that, he loves Butler, and he knows Butler.” As Matta enters the gymnasium cacophonous with bouncing basketballs, squeaking sneakers, and shouting student-athletes, he’s aware he’s stepping into a completely different job from the one he left. Butler is no longer a barely mid-major MCC program vying for the only bid that its conference will get to the Big Dance. It is now a nationally recognized brand and member of the Big East conference—more like Ohio State than the Butler of 2001. The many banners that have been hung since his departure, including two NCAA tournament runners-up, attest to the new expectations. Matta won’t try to live up to them by himself. Following behind the head coach, Oden ducks his head through the doorway and onto the Hinkle hardwood. He’s carrying a stack of papers, one-sheet rundowns of practice, and he hands a few of them out to some alumni who have been invited to observe. They all smile in recognition and a few exchange fist bumps with the Hoosier celebrity, happy to see him. Oden says that’s indicative of most of his interactions since returning home to Indy, where his support group now extends beyond family and friends who knew him when. “The people who recognize him in Indy, it’s different,” says Titus, who has gone out to dinner with Oden since the return. “Part of the reason he loved Ohio and he loves Indianapolis is because they are the two places where no one cares how many points he scored in the NBA. They’re all strangers, but they talk to him like he’s a native son. It’s an understood thing: You fist bump and move on.” But Oden isn’t here to hide or even just get on with life. He’s here to coach, to help these players succeed, and, he hopes, one day follow in the path of his mentor. Matta didn’t hire him out of pity; he believes his friend is wise beyond his 34 years. “His IQ was always so good as a basketball player,” says Matta. “I knew that he could teach the game. And I love him being around the guys. Greg has seen everything, from the top to the bottom. For him to be as humble and even-keel as he is, it blows my mind.” Neither is Matta here as some sort of coach emeritus, easing into his sunset years. He wants to get Butler back to winning, a tougher ask in the Big East than in the MCC. But just because he’s driving toward the future doesn’t mean he doesn’t feel nostalgic for his beloved alma mater. Interestingly, he thinks back to the promise he made himself in front of the portrait of Tony Hinkle, that he’d be coach here when his newborn daughter graduated. As it turns out, that daughter is scheduled to walk with her degree from Butler this spring. “These guys go out in the world, and they see success and failure,” says Titus. “But either way, as you get older, where you want to be is around your people.” JANUARY 2023 | IM 97
01 2023 new and updated R E S TAU R A N T S EASY RIDE R DINE R . . . . . . . 99 NATURAL STATE PROVISIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 FIE LD TO FORK . . . . . . . . . . . 103 QUE E N EGGROLL. . . . . . . . . 103 Field to Fork’s Franklin Jam croissant, p. 103 98 IM | JANUARY 2023
designed to melt on the tongue, as well as buttermilk fried chicken with wildflower honey. The labor-intensive cocktails are spot-on. 1844 E. 10th St., 317-419-3471, beholderindy.com V $$$ DOWNTOWN INCLUDES Fletcher Place, Fountain Square, Mass Ave, Mile Square broken-yolk sandwiches are a perennial lunch favorite. 225 W. Washington St., 317-632-0765, V $$ cafepatachou.com The Capital Grille ++ Bluebeard +++ Aroma ++ INDIAN Familiar tandoori and tikka masala staples mingle with heartier, more elevated offerings at this elegant pan-Indian spot that opened in the former Rook location in early 2021. Lunchtime lamb and chicken rolls in crispy flatbread wrappers stand out, as do hearty chaat dishes dressed up with yellow peas, yogurt, and chutneys. An impressive lamb shank is the highlight of the chef’s specialties and easily feeds two or more. A full bar and an artful array of desserts help round out a special-occasion meal. Opt for the orange pudding, a creamy, lightly sweet rice pudding served in an orange shell with a chocolate tuille. 501 Virginia Ave., 317-602-7117, aromaindy.com V $$ Bodhi: Craft Bar + Thai Bistro + THAI Three generations of women form the culinary foundation of this Mass Ave restaurant serving a small, focused menu of Thai dishes like Massaman curry with braised beef and Bodhi’s own version of non-Americanized pad thai. Cocktails get a lot of attention on a drinks list designed by Ball & Biscuit’s Heather Storms. Try the Thai Iced Tea cocktail with bourbon, rye, spiced ginger liqueur, demerara sugar, orange peel, and housemade Thai iced tea. 922 Massachusetts Ave., 317-941-6595, bodhi-indy.com V $$ Ash & Elm Cider Co. Restaurant and Cider Bar ++ A long-awaited move to the historic former Ford Assembly Plant building on East Washington Street not only brought Indy’s premier cider-maker a few blocks closer to downtown but also ushered in a full menu of snacks and dinner dishes created by chef Tracey Couillard. Start with a cider slushie or a cidermosa (peach, mango, or guava) to enjoy with tangy, rich deviled eggs or crisp, light elote fritters with a bright cilantro crema. Then move to a flagship cider such as the semi-sweet or tart cherry for the main courses, including a standout roasted chicken breast with a crispy hasselback potato, hanger steak with chanterelles, or pan-fried walleye. But don’t pass up the apt apple-cheddar melt or the burger of the moment, lavished with crab dip or garlic scape pesto. 1301 E. Washington St., 317-600-3164, ashandelmcider.com $$ GASTROPUB A theme of decadence permeates this steakhouse adjoining the equally posh Conrad hotel, from the gilded-framed pastoral paintings that hang on its dark-paneled walls to the selection of elaborate steaks (one of them drenched in a Courvoisier cream sauce, another flavored with aged balsamic—and some of them dry-aged). The servers are exquisite, of course. 40 W. Washington St., 317-423-8790, thecapitalgrille.com $$$$ CLASSIC Bluebeard opened in 2012, and crowds still roll in for chef Abbi Merriss’s take on seasonal comfort food. Start with the bread baked next door at Amelia’s—it’s especially delicious slathered with anchovy butter—and build your meal from the ever-changing menu of small and large dishes. Fried morels may show up on a spring picnic plate, while winter nights call for a comforting butcher-shop Bolognese. For a special-occasion meal, rent out the private upper-level dining room. 653 Virginia Ave., 317-686-1580, bluebeardindy.com V $$ CONTEMPORARY Bru Burger Bar ++ GOURMET BURGERS The generous patties here combine sirloin, chuck, and brisket and are paired with cocktails and craft beers. Highlights include the signature Bru Burger, with bacon, Taleggio, sweet tomato jam, and porter-braised onions. 410 Massachusetts Ave., 317-635-4278, bruburgerbar.com $$ Easy Rider Diner + Chef Ricky Martinez oversees this colorful Fountain Square diner that connects to the HI-FI music venue. The daylight menu applies some Latin flourish to breakfast and brunch dishes, including a chorizo omelet with roasted tomato salsa, queso, and lime crema, shrimp and grits, and a waffle flight. For dinner, Martinez spotlights fried chicken and steak sandwiches, along with an appropriately indulgent late-night lineup of garbage can nachos and Cubanos from 10 p.m. until the entertainment next door calls it a night. 1043 Virginia V $$ Ave., 463-224-0430, easyriderindy.com DINER NEW Fat Dan’s Deli ++ MEAT AND POTATOES Brisket cooked for 14 hours is a mainstay of the made-from-scratch menu, as is the house corned beef. Get an order of tender smoked wings and some tots for the table, served no-frills on a spread of craft paper. Whatever you do, don’t miss the plump Vienna dogs that will transport you straight to Wrigleyville. 410 E. Michigan St., 317-600-3333, fatdansdeli.com $ Gallery Pastry Bar ++ Cafe Patachou + Beholder ++ CONTEMPORARY A former car-repair shop sets the stage for daring performance art that has featured pig-skin noodles and granita-topped uni The second location for the popular Broad Ripple bakery and brunch spot specializes in European-inspired pastries, brunch, dinner, and cocktails. 110 S. Pennsylvania St., 317$$ 820-5526, gallerypastryshop.com CONTEMPORARY The original Meridian-Kessler “student union for adults” continues to draw in the morning crowds and has inspired citywide offshoots, such as this sleek downtown location, a huge hit with the business and weekend hordes alike. The cinnamon toast remains as thick as a brick; the produce is still locally sourced; the massive omelets continue to have cheeky names; and the CAFE Harry & Izzy’s ++ Craig Huse’s casual alternative to big brother St. Elmo holds its own as a clubby STEAKHOUSE key NORTHWEST p. 103 69 College Park Lafayette Square Traders Point 65 MERIDIAN STREET 96TH STREET DOWNTOWN p. 99 Fletcher Place Fountain Square Mass Ave Mile Square Carmel Fishers Noblesville Westfield Zionsville 31 465 74 NORTHEAST p. 102 465 38TH STREET 70 WEST p. 103 10TH STREET Brownsburg Plainfield 465 SOUTH SUBURBAN p. 103 Greenwood NORTH SUBURBAN p. 101 Broad Ripple Castleton Geist Herron-Morton Kennedy-King Keystone at the Crossing Meridian-Kessler Nora SoBro 74 70 EAST p. 100 31 65 Beech Grove Irvington SYMBOLS Brunch Outdoor seating Reservations V Vegetarian friendly $$$$ $$$ $$ $ $30 and up $20–$30 $10–$20 Under $10 +++ Excellent ++ Very Good + Good NEW ADDED UPDATED Recently opened establishment. Open for more than five months but making its first appearance in the guide. Recently revisited and reevaluated. Restaurants included in this guide are selected at the discretion of the Indianapolis Monthly editorial staff based on food quality, innovation, atmosphere, service, value, and consistency. IM does not accept advertising or other compensation in exchange for dining coverage. Price symbols indicate the average cost of a meal per person (without tax, tip, or alcohol). Due to limited space, this list does not cover every evaluated restaurant. For a more comprehensive guide to Indianapolis dining, visit IndianapolisMonthly.com/Dining. Feedback? Please email TheDish@IndianapolisMonthly.com. JANUARY 2023 | IM 99
hangout worthy of destination-steakhouse status itself. The marbled bone-in ribeye sizzles in its juices, a smart umami-rich pick among the high-quality (and high-priced) Midwest-sourced prime cuts. The menu expands to thin-crust pizzas, sandwiches, salads, and seafood selections like pan-seared scallops. 153 S. Illinois St., 317635-9594, harryandizzys.com $$$ King Dough ++ PIZZA Chewy and with just the right flop in the middle, the pizzas are bona fide craft, from the dough to the quality toppings. Standouts include the Stinky Pete with wild mushrooms, gorgonzola, and plenty of garlic and herbs. Burgers, including one made from chorizo and topped with manchego cheese, play surprisingly close second fiddles to the pies. Cocktails concocted from boutique liqueurs and aromatics are reason enough to drop in, and they make for perfect sippers while you wait for your pie on the patio. 452 N. Highland Ave., 317-602-7960, kingdough pizzas.com V $$ doors. Sip a Singha or a citrusy Tokyo Exchange Rate under the glow of dangling pendants and soak up the thoughtfully preserved vintage vibe. 850 Massachusetts Ave., 317-316-0470, modita.com $$$ Nesso ++ ITALIAN Highly stylized seafood and meats paired with small pasta courses and shared a la carte sides add up to a sumptuous dining experience inside the Alexander hotel. Pass around a plate of prosciutto-wrapped prunes or crab arancini, but keep the tortelloni and sea bass to yourself. 339 S. Delaware St., 317-643-7400, nesso-italia .com $$$ Ruth’s Chris Steak House ++ STEAKHOUSE While nightly specials at this stately steakhouse include innovative seafood and poultry options, supper-club classics abound, from the succulent, fat-marbled ribeye to a delicate petite filet, all served on sizzling-hot plates. 45 S. Illinois St., 317-633-1313, ruthschris.com $$$$ Livery ++ Shapiro’s Delicatessen + This place feels like a hidden urban treasure, especially when the mezcal cocktails are flowing and the partially open kitchen is sending out plate after plate of contemporary Latininspired fare. Favorites have included a salad tucked inside a folded manchego crisp, meltingly tender steak fanned over a block of polenta, and a silky tres leches cake to die for. Snag a spot on the upper-level deck for a real treat. 720 N. College Ave., 317-383-0330, livery-restaurant .com $$ DELI Slide your tray along and take your pick of kosher comfort foods at this downtown institution. Hot pastrami and corned-beef sandwiches on rye have drawn long lines for more than a century. The Reuben contends for the city’s best, and heartier fare such as potato pancakes, stuffed cabbage, and matzo-ball soup are perennially satisfying standbys. Load up on a massive wedge of pie, or you haven’t really had the proper Shapiro’s experience. 808 S. Meridian St., 317-631-4041, shapiros.com $$ Love Handle ++ Spoke & Steele ++ Daily lunch and brunch features such as schnitzel and waffles and a pulledchicken Hot Brown are the main draw at Chris and Ally Benedyk’s cheeky sandwich shop. The chalkboard menu also offers side options in the form of braised greens and potato salad with roasted tomatoes. 877 Massachusetts Ave., 317384-1102 $$ CONTEMPORARY LATIN SANDWICHES Maialina Italian Kitchen + Bar ++ Straw-wrapped chianti bottles, wooden cross-back chairs, and family photos give a throwback trattoria feel to this addition to the city’s Italian scene, opened by Ambrosia heir Francesca Pizzi and stepbrother Lawrence Green. Meatballs, from a family recipe, are always a good choice with a solid house marinara. Pastas range from a straightforward toss of rigatoni with sausage and broccoli rabe to a rich, three-meat Bolognese lavished atop plump gnocchi. The Torta della Nonna, a light and lemony ricotta sweet, is the perfect way to end a meal. 1103 Prospect St., 317-982-7676, maialinaindy.com $$$ ITALIAN Milktooth +++ This diner-style cafe has a playfully gritty vibe. The early-morning counter service featuring pastries and coffee gives way to a full-service brunch menu with daytime craft cocktails. 534 Virginia Ave., 317-986-5131, milk V $$ toothindy.com BRUNCH Modita ++ ASIAN-INSPIRED The lavish restaurant in Bottleworks District’s showpiece slot gets extra style points for its gorgeous industrial-sleek decor that is equal parts silk wallpaper and factory-grade 100 IM | JANUARY 2023 At the sleek lobby restaurant of Le Méridien, French classics with fusion touches imagined by chef Joel Scott Johnson include a spiffed-up bouillabaisse with wasabi tempura cod, steak tartare with fennel and watermelon radishes, and a Niçoise salad with fried potatoes standing in for the traditional tuna. Entrees feature hearty pastas, steak au poivre lavished with bone marrow butter, and chicken paillard accompanied by broccolini. A perfectly cooked burger made with Fischer Farms beef is crowned with Colby and shaved garlic. 123 S. Illinois St., 317-737-1616, spoke $$$ andsteele.com St. Elmo Steak House ++ Since 1902, this stately house of red meat has served as the unofficial ambassador of downtown Indianapolis—the walls carry decades’ worth of celebrity photos, the burnished bar hearkens to an earlier era, and the servers remain starched and bow-tied. The drill remains the same as well: a generous martini; a shrimp cocktail with that infamously hot sauce; the bean soup or tomato juice; the wedge; and one of the large steaks. 127 S. Illinois St., 317-635-0636, stelmos.com $$$$ cheesy shrimp and grits. 310 S. Delaware St., 317734-3107, taxmanbrewing.com $$ Tinker Street ++ NEW AMERICAN Reservations are a must, so snag whatever date you can get and hope there’s a warm-night seat on the twinkling patio. Then settle in for small plates such as surprisingly light and flavorful chickpea ravioli with vegan ricotta and a host of colorful garnishes. Or try one of the always-vegan soups or a seasonal salad such as a refreshing mix of greens with asparagus, pickled rhubarb, and tangy blue cheese. Fall-apart pork belly with kimchi, forbidden rice, and a duck egg is perhaps the star of the main dishes, though shrimp and grits with green-tomato chow-chow and a refreshing halibut with carrot soubise are excellent bets. 402 E. 16th St., 317-925-5000, tinkerstreet V $$$ indy.com Upland Brewing + GASTROPUB Bloomington’s Upland Brewery brings its casual-dining experience to Indy’s near southside, with an open-concept dining room and a popular dog-friendly patio. The Upland repertoire gets proper representation in the wall of taps behind the bar. You can casually sip a flight of sours and snack on smoked chicken wings, or get busy with dishes plucked from the chef’s rotating seasonal menu. 1201 Prospect St., V $$ 317-672-3671, uplandbeer.com EAST INCLUDES Beech Grove, Irvington 10th Street Diner ++ Surprisingly familiar and hearty plantbased takes on diner classics occupy the entire menu at this rehab of a former pawn shop, a comfy backdrop for enjoying such tasty fakeouts as a gooey and satisfying seitan Reuben, a “chicken” pot pie, and house chili that rivals your favorite con carne version. Showstoppers include the many-layered lasagna with plenty of fresh veggies, a bright tomato sauce, and a tangy “cheese” concocted from tofu and cashews. Arrive early, before the day’s supplies run out. 3301 E. 10th St., 463-221-1255 V $$ VEGAN STEAKHOUSE Taxman CityWay + Soaring ceilings, rustic candelabra lighting, brick walls, and a 3,000-square-foot beer-garden patio make this one of Indy’s most welcoming drinking spots. The gastropub menu includes some of the city’s best frites, served with more than half a dozen sauces or loaded with bacon, beer cheese, and scallions. Liège waffles are topped with hearty add-ons like fried chicken and rosemary-scented maple syrup or GASTROPUB Landlocked Baking Company + CAFE What began life as a production bakery along Irvington’s tucked-away Audubon Road has expanded into a full-service daytime spot serving sandwiches and plated entrees. The menu keeps things brief, with a special focus on the array of fresh-baked carbs. The LGBT is a BLT enhanced with guacamole and tangy fried green tomatoes, and the focaccia grilled cheese includes local ham and cheese, plus pickled peaches. Gorgonzola grits topped with poached egg and hot honey, crispy-skinned confit potatoes, signature lattes, and a brunchy cocktail list make this sunny dining room more than just a neighborhood favorite. 120 S. Audubon V $$ Rd., 317-207-2127 Natural State Provisions ++ NEW CASUAL Customers order at the counter and find a table inside this former microbrewery reinvented as an endearingly
kitschy eatdrinkery. The food is rooted in homestyle Arkansas cooking from co-owner Adam Sweet’s native state, heavy on the deep frying and sweet-tea brining. Order a Sling Blade cocktail, get a side of collard greens with your fried bologna sandwich, and don’t miss the daily soft serve ice cream flavor. 414 Dorman St., 317-4929887, naturalstateprovisions.com $$ NORTH SUBURBAN INCLUDES Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Westfield, Zionsville 101 Beer Kitchen + CASUAL The energy is high and the flavors are forward at this Ohio import. In a dining room that combines the best parts of a craft brewery and an unfussy family haunt, crowd-pleasing dishes like loaded tater tots, Andouille sausage– spiked shrimp and grits, and brown-buttered pierogies have lots of moving parts, complex but more fun than fancy. The Yard at Fishers District, $$ 317-537-2041, 101beerkitchen.com 9th Street Bistro +++ BISTRO In a snug cafe off Noblesville’s town square, owners Samir Mohammad and Rachel Firestone Mohammad create meals worth lingering over, from a lamb shank slow-smoked to buttery tenderness and served on top of fresh pappardelle pasta to a housemade burrata that makes several appearances on the menu. Hyperlocal ingredients fill out thoughtful seasonal dishes, such as butternut squash bisque and duck confit toast. Chef Samir’s rotating Fried Thing of the Day (from tofu to artichoke hearts) should not be missed, and neither should the rustic desserts. 56 S. 9th St., Noblesville, 317-774-5065, 9thstbistro .com $$$ 1933 Lounge ++ STEAK AND COCKTAILS This clubby cocktail lounge offers a younger, sexier take on finedining institution St. Elmo Steak House. The twist here is that the black-vested servers deliver Oysters Rockefeller and 45-day dry-aged ribeyes to diners tucked into noir-lit corners where no one can see their faces melt into a brief ugly-cry at that first bite of incendiary shrimp cocktail. The Yard at Fishers District, $$$ 317-758-1933, 1933lounge.com/fishers Brunch · Lunch · Dinner Carmel at Proscenium The Yard at Fishers District Anthony’s Chophouse ++ The interior of this swanky heavy hitter along Carmel’s Main Street has the polished gleam of a new Vegas hotel, with an upper-level lounge containing the salvaged mahogany bar from The Glass Chimney, a fine-dining legend. The food has equal flourish. Lobster bisque with a hunk of tempura-fried meat begins a meal that might include a cowgirl ribeye, a flight of filets, or a domestic Wagyu smashburger. Black-suited servers and wellcomposed cocktails keep the high-dollar meal running smoothly. 201 W. Main St., Carmel, 317$$$$ 740-0900, anthonyschophouse.com STEAKHOUSE Auberge + Brick Street Inn’s classic French bistro installed talented chef Toby Moreno (The Loft at Traders Point Creamery, Plow & Anchor) in FRENCH stay connected. subscribe. Indianapolismonthly.com JANUARY 2023 | IM 101
early 2022 and immediately sent him to Paris, where he trained in the kitchens of famed chef Alain Ducasse. Moreno has added that continental know-how to the vintage dishes he makes fresh with as much local produce, meats, and cheeses he can. That translates to an impressive plate of buttery escargot topped with croutons, seasonal salads, and a deeply flavorful French onion soup with a rich broth. Seafood stars among entrees, especially crispy-skinned roasted cod with browned-butter sauce, though diver scallops with asparagus puree, showered with herbs and toasted almonds, also impress. Quiche of the day is a solid choice, as is the house burger, made with Angus steak and slathered with a tarragon aioli that’s especially good on a side of pommes frites. Old-school cocktails are even better when enjoyed on the streetside patio. 175 S. Main St., Zionsville, 317-733-8755, auberge$$$ restaurant.com The Cake Bake Shop ++ The fairy tale continues at Gwendolyn Rogers’s second tribute to layered cakes and buttercream icing, a pristine Carmel expansion dripping with chandeliers. There are hints of the twinkly, cottage-like Broad Ripple original in the white-on-white-on-white decor, but Cake Bake 2.0 is polished to a brilliant sheen, and the patisserie menu has expanded to include delicate fare like the esteemed Chicken Velvet soup and frites. 800 S. Rangeline Rd., Carmel, 317-257-2253, $$ thecakebakeshop.com ELEGANT The HC Tavern + Kitchen ++ The term “tavern” hardly captures this swank addition to the Huse Culinary Group/St. Elmo family. A hit among starters is the lobster “cargot” with lumps of lobster meat in garlic butter and melted Havarti. Chops include the supper-club darling steak Diane with mushroom cream sauce and horseradish mashed potatoes, though equally regal is the Wagyu meatloaf enriched with pork and veal, sauced with a truffle mushroom demi-glace. The Yard at Fishers District, 317-530-4242, atthehc $$$ .com CONTEMPORARY Moontown Brewing Company + The craft beer and barbecue come with a side of Hoosier hoops nostalgia at this popular Boone County hangout. Its location, a former high school gymnasium, drips with vestiges of its hardwood past, but Moontown’s house-brewed beers are constantly evolving, from the Moon Lite Cream Ale quencher to Moontown’s robust porter, Into the Void. The food is kissed with just the right amount of smoke, served on paper-lined trays, and not limited to conventional barbecue. Though the beef brisket and pulled pork have that thick Southern dialect, the adobo brisket nachos, smoked Portobello burger, and Nashville hot chicken sandwich prove that nothing should be sacred. 345 S. Bowers St., Whitestown, 317-769$$ 3880, moontownbeer.com BREWPUB Noah Grant’s Grill House & Oyster Bar ++ The sushi list is solid at this packed surf-and-turf spot, but even better bets are super-fresh oysters and savory short rib wontons to nibble on while you explore the voluminous menu. It’s hard to go wrong here. Entrees range from fish and chips to coconut-crusted mahi mahi to internationally inspired dishes CONTEMPORARY 102 IM | JANUARY 2023 like Korean bibimbap. 91 S. Main St., Zionsville, 317-732-2233, noahgrants.com $$$ Osteria by Fabio Viviani ++ You would never guess that the Top Chef alum’s modern Italian restaurant takes up residence in a dining room connected to Carmel’s mega Market District supermarket. Rustic fresh pastas, including pesto gnocchi with pistachio and a creamy pasta alla boscaiola with nubs of sausage and mushrooms, share the spotlight with oven-fired, Neapolitan-style pizzas. 11505 N. Illinois St., Carmel, 317-689-6330, $$ osteriacarmel.com ITALIAN Sangiovese Ristorante + ITALIAN The ebony walls, gilded frames, and soft glow from pendant orb light fixtures set a dark and sexy scene at this longtime Indianapolis favorite. The food is luxuriously authentic—a tribute to Italian pastas, from the showstopping lasagna with both béchamel and marinara to the delicately sauced linguini frutti di mare, a light, luscious, garlicky tangle of shrimp, calamari, mussels, and clams in white wine. 2727 E. 86th St., 317-757-5913; The Yard at Fishers District, 317-219-6413, sangiovese ristorante.com $$$ IPAs. The menu is always filled with fun surprises (a Taco Bell–inspired pizza, for example, or a “horseshoe of the week” inspired by the gloppy sandwich of Springfield, Illinois) as well as excellent poutine, salads, and sandwiches, none more macho than the Nashville Hot Chicken. 1435 E. 86th St., 317-672-3503, biglug canteen.com $$ Bocca + A dark and sleek renovation of the former Shoefly Public House location, this modern-Italian eatery shares DNA with siblings Ambrosia, Maialina, and Blupoint Oyster House—all branches of Indy restaurateur Gino Pizzi’s pasta family. Executive chef Ricky Martinez adds some flash to the date-night calamari standards. His seared scallops share the dish with little cheese-filled sacchetti dumplings, and the lasagna is a light, mushroomlayered variety sauced with bechamel. The hulking lamb shank served with polenta is a showstopper, though. After dinner, descend the stairs behind the host stand to the basement speakeasy, for some sofa lounging and mixology magic. 122 E. 22nd St., 317-426-2045, $$$ boccaindy.com ITALIAN Delicia ++ NORTHEAST INCLUDES Broad Ripple, Castleton, Geist, Herron-Morton, Kennedy-King, Keystone at the Crossing, Meridian-Kessler, Nora, SoBro Apocalypse Burger ++ The Patachou crew repurposed its shuttered Crispy Bird location into this modern-day diner. The focus is on a handful of burger variations and clever greasy-spoon sides like Old Major bacon–loaded fries and blocks of fried macaroni and cheese washed down with canned wine. For dessert, it’s a toss-up between Ding Dong cake or a root beer float with gelato. 115 E. 49th St., 317-426-5001, apocalypse V $$ burger.com BURGERS Aroma ++ See Downtown listing for description. 4907 N. College Ave., 317-737-2290, aromaindy .com V $$ INDIAN Baby’s ++ This playful, family-friendly joint limits its menu to smashburgers, broasted chicken, milkshakes (spiked or not), and cocktails, which means it hits every pulse point for its faithful Herron-Morton clientele. Housed in a former drag-show bar, it also has fun with the building’s artsy legacy—the house burger is called a Strut Burger, and all of the cocktail names come straight from the RuPaul meme factory. Sip a Tongue Pop or a Sashay Away as you polish off the last of the Talbott Street Style fries dressed with bacon, cheese sauce, white barbecue sauce, and pickled jalapeño. 2147 N. Talbott St., 317-600V $$ 3559, babysindy.com BURGERS Big Lug Canteen + BREWPUB In this spacious hangout steps from the Monon Trail, seasonal beers and house standards include spins on wheats, ales, and NEW LATIN Since it opened in 2013, this sexy SoBro spot has served up classic sips and easyon-the-eyes Caribbean dishes to a chic and boisterous crowd. The Fire ’n’ Ice is still the go-to cocktail for its chile-dusted rim and mix of tequila, hibiscus, and basil. Standards include tender, smoky octopus tostones; bright guacamole dusted with pistachios; and rich, aromatic enchiladas de pato filled with tender shredded duck and topped with habanero sauce, lime crema, and plenty of bubbling Chihuahua cheese. Churros with chocolate sauce make for the perfect finale. 5215 N. College Ave., 317-925-0677, deliciaindy $$ .com Diavola ++ Pies emerge expertly bubbly and charred from a centerpiece brick oven. Ingredients are simple but top-shelf, including homemade meatballs, which join the likes of spicy sopressata, smooth clumps of fior di latte, torn basil, and EVOO. Deep booths are perfect for leaning in over a luscious mound of burrata. 1134 E. 54th St., 317-820-5100, diavola.net V $$ PIZZA Fat Dan’s Deli ++ MEAT AND POTATOES See Downtown listing for description. 5410 N. College Ave., 317-600-3333, fatdansdeli.com $ Big Bear Biscuits + Longtime supper club specialist Dean Sample turns his focus toward brunch at this colorful 96th Street spot where the classic Southern biscuit serves as his canvas for culinary improvisation. Sandwich-style stuffed versions have some of the more ambitious fillings, whether a pork chop with fig jam and brie for breakfast or fried bologna, jalapeño jelly, and mornay sauce for lunch. And open-faced platters such as a spin on the Kentucky Hot Brown with turkey and bacon or the playful Petting Zoo with roasted tomatoes, avocado, and goat cheese will satisfy your midday cravings. But perhaps the best way to appreciate Sample’s buttery, fluffy biscuits big enough for a bear is simply straight up with homemade strawberry jam or apple butter, lo- BRUNCH
cal honey, fruit, and candied pecans. Salads, omelets, and selected favorites from Sample’s previous kitchens, including his always-excellent shrimp and grits, broaden the offerings at this full-service morning and afternoon pleaser. 3905 E. 96th St., 317-343-2103, bigbearbiscuits $$ .com caroused a bit too much the night before, a wellstuffed breakfast burrito or the Huevos Divorcé, with fried tortillas and two salsas, hits the spot. 1435 E. 86th St., 317-735-1293, theroostindiana .com/nora V $$ Festiva ++ NORTHWEST This lively Latin spot puts a gourmet flourish on south-of-the-border fare. The menu includes tacos, plus an old favorite: poblanos stuffed with housemade chorizo and queso. 1217 E. 16th St., 317-635-4444, festivaindy.com $$ INCLUDES College Park, Lafayette Square, Traders Point Grump’s Slice Stop + Byrne’s Grilled Pizza + Futuro’s emo brother pays tribute to the extra-wide New York slice in a fun, colorblocked industrial space connected to Black Circle Brewing. The menu is posted over the cash register and mentions just a handful of judiciously adorned options. But every one of them is a hit, from Grump’s balsamic-drizzled take on a margherita pizza to the bold, banana pepper–dotted TurboKid. Nurse a basket of stretchy mozzarella sticks while you wait for your slice to cool off, and order a pizza puff to go. 2201 E. 46th St. V $ PIZZA What began as a food truck became one of Butler-Tarkington’s most popular brick-andmortar eateries in 2015. The simple menu here focuses on a tasty gimmick: Pizzas are grilled over an open flame, which chars the thin crust in a manner familiar to Neapolitan lovers. The Hey Zeus (pepperoni, sausage, mushrooms, onion, banana peppers) is a favorite. 5615 N. Illinois St., 317-737-2056, byrnespizza.com V $ MEXICAN PIZZA Half Liter ++ In the airy back half of the complex that houses its sister event center, Liter House, owner Eddie Sahm’s Bavarian-themed barbecueand-beer hall has all the rollicking energy of Oktoberfest with the laidback charm of a Texas brisket pit. 5301 Winthrop Ave., 463-221-2800, half literbbq.com $$ BARBECUE Oakleys Bistro ++ CONTEMPORARY The meticulously plated fare at Steven Oakley’s eatery hails from a culinary era when sprigs of herbs and puddles of purées provided the flavor, and every single element on the plate served a purpose. The presentations are wild, with menu descriptions giving little more than clues as to what might arrive at the table. Heads-up on anything that appears in quotes, such as a creative “Coq au Vin.” 1464 W. 86th St., 317-824-1231, oakleysbistro.com V $$$ Late Harvest Kitchen ++ CONTEMPORARY A luscious comfort-food menu delivers top-shelf versions of family-table dishes, such as chunked kielbasa (on a base of mustard spaetzle browned in dill butter) and braised short ribs. Dessert is all about the sticky toffee pudding. 8605 River Crossing Blvd., 317-663-8063, $$$ lateharvestkitchen.com SOUTH SUBURBAN INCLUDES Bargersville, Greenwood FRENCH-INSPIRED The sweet-or-savory crepe dilemma is no contest: dessert. The brown-sugar version delivers gooey caramelized filling, velvety bananas, and sugar that crystallizes as you eat. 823 E. Westfield Blvd., 317-259-0765, petitechou bistro.com V $$ The Roost Nora + Locally inspired bennies, dolled-up pancakes, and a variety of cheesy midday melts top the menu at the recently converted Sahm’s Alehouse along the Monon Trail in Nora. The second location of The Roost in Fishers, opened in 1996, the new spot next to the popular beer draw Big Lug has its own unique menu and feel, as well as plenty of options for the brunch set. Big Lug’s beers are still on tap, but don’t resist the bottomless mimosas or your choice of four brands of bubbly. For gut-busting day-after nourishment, try the two-egg Hoosier Benedict with a pork tenderloin and loads of sausage gravy on a buttery biscuit. The Roost’s spin on chicken and waffles, with a savory bacon-and-cheddar waffle, is a good bet, but be sure to add some fluffy flapjacks, whether or not you dress them up with cinnamon apples or pecan granola. A la carte eggs, sausage, and toast, as well as breakfast combos, are available for the purists. And for those who BRUNCH SUSHI/MONGOLIAN STIR-FRY This fresh take on Mongolian barbecue adds solid sushi offerings to mix-and-match stir-fry bowls in a well-appointed storefront setting. First-time customers should opt for building their own bowls from a buffet of ingredients, with suggested sauces and seasonings that are then stir-fried and brought to your table. 8810 S. Emerson Ave., 317-586-8212, yummybowl.business.site $$ WEST INCLUDES Avon, Brownsburg, Plainfield, Speedway Big Woods Speedway + Pulled-pork nachos reign among starters at this Main Street Speedway reboot of the Brown County fave. While pizzas and street tacos get the most attention on the menu, ribs and chicken may be the best bets for dinner. Of course, you will want to finish the meal with a Nashville fried biscuit tossed in cinnamon sugar and served with apple butter and toasted coconut rum sauce. 1002 W. Main St., Speedway, 317-7573250, bigwoodsrestaurants.com $$ BREWPUB Che Chori ++ ARGENTINEAN Marcos Perera-Blasco’s colorful westside drive-thru restaurant offers a delectable introduction to full-flavored Argentinean street food. A selection of traditional butterfliedsausage sandwiches and warm empanadas filled with seasoned meats are the focus of the menu. But do not overlook the seasoned burgers and cook-at-home sausages, from Spanish-style chorizo with smoked paprika to rich Argentinean black sausage. 3124 W. 16th St., 317-737-2012, chechori.com $$ Queen Eggroll + Field to Fork + Petite Chou ++ Yummy Bowl + This gourmet market and NEW local meat counter that set up shop along Franklin’s small-town main drag puts its inventory center stage in a bantam menu of sandwiches, including the Well-Dressed Italian that is built around thin-sliced salami, provolone, and banana peppers and the fig-forward Franklin Jam that puts thick-sliced Fischer Farms ham and Gruyere to delicious use. 90 W. Jefferson St., Franklin, 463-710-6170, fieldtofork .shop $$ SANDWICHES SmockTown Brewery + Brother-in-law duo Mark Sublette and Ken Johnson’s Old Town Greenwood brewery and Attic Hardware walk-up speakeasy do double duty for day drinking ambers and porters or sipping Old Fashioneds in the evening on the second-story veranda. Hot Pink Pepper Catering has been adding some beer-worthy eats, including snackable fried pickle spears with a kicky dipping sauce, Everything pretzel bites with Scottish-ale beer cheese, and a meaty flatbread. But don’t pass up the rich and well-dressed short rib nachos, with all of the garnishes and a bright cilantro-lime crema. Slider combos and tacos are also great for staving off the munchies, but save room for some cinnamon-dusted fried biscuits. 223 W. Main St., Greenwood, 317-215-4836 $$ BREWERY Fans of Filipino-style food can get their lumpia, pancit, and teriyaki-ona-stick fix at this small Brownsburg business. The selection does not venture far beyond the name of the place, focused on plump eggrolls packed with both standard meat and veggies and creative innards like crab rangoon and strawberry cheesecake, offered alongside the finger-sized Filipino version called lumpia, filled with perfect bites of beef or pork. 773 E. Main St., Brownsburg, 317-286-7049, queeneggroll.net $ FILIPINO NEW INDIANAPOLIS MONTHLY (ISSN 0899-0328) is published by Indianapolis Monthly, One Emmis Plaza, 40 Monument Circle, Suite 500, Indianapolis, IN 46204. 317-237-9288. Issues appear monthly for a total of 12 issues annually. The one-year domestic subscription price is $24. Periodicals postage paid at Indianapolis, Indiana, and additional mailing offices. For subscription inquiries: phone 317-237-9288. Postmaster: Send address changes to Indianapolis Monthly, 40 Monument Circle, Suite 500, Indianapolis, IN 46204. 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BAC K H OM E AGA I N Sick With Worry I SWEAR TO MY DEARLY DEPARTED GALLBLADDER, 2022 PUT ME THROUGH THE RINGER. THANKFULLY, I’M A HYPOCHONDRIAC. BY P H I L I P G U L L E Y NOW T HAT we’ve safely arrived in 2023, I can say that 2022 was an utter disaster for me, healthwise, due to a gallbladder that went south the first part of April and was eventually removed in August, after a midnight visit to the emergency room where the pain was so intense I jumped out a hospital window to end my life. Unfortunately, I was on the first floor and hit my head on the sidewalk, though not hard enough to die, just to get a headache. My wife leaned out the window, saw me lying in a heap holding my head, then told me to get my butt back in the emergency room if I knew what was good for me, so I did, and a nice doctor gave me Oxycodone and I felt really good really fast, until I got nauseous from the Oxycodone and barfed on the nurse, giving her COVID, which I didn’t know I had, but had apparently picked up in Alaska while visiting our son and his wife. If that had been the extent of my poor health, I 104 IM | JANUARY 2023 I l l u s t r a t i o n b y RYA N S NO O K wouldn’t complain, but a of all evil. Electricity, she month before my first explained, escapes from the gallbladder attack, I had my wall outlets and wreaks all annual eye exam and was told kinds of mayhem on the I had cataracts, which human body—cancers, explains why the world had cavities, tumors of various turned blurry the last few sorts, baldness, and even years. The surgery for erectile dysfunction, which cataracts involves the patient she refers to as “wiener wilt” (me) lying flat on a table while and cures using lanolin from the eye doctor straddles my sheep’s wool, applied directly chest, pinning me down, to the affected area. She and while scouring the lens of my her husband had nine eyes with a belt sander. As children, so I assume it works. bad as that is, it used to be Despite the blows to my even worse. When my health this past year, it wasn’t grandmother had her cataract altogether unpleasant. As a surgery, she had to lay on a hypochondriac, I made the workbench with her head in a most of my maladies, describvise for three weeks while the ing them to anyone who eye doctor removed her would listen, including cataracts with a hammer and strangers in line at the grocery chisel. store. I start by describing my As painful as cataracts and midnight trip to the emergeninfected gallbladders are, cy room, culminating with my they’re a walk in the park gallbladder removal, then compared to my other health catch my breath before challenge, type 2 diabetes, lamenting my cataract-cloudwhich will eventually lead to ed vision, caused, no doubt, by blindness and the amputation rogue electrical currents. If of my legs so I’ll end up a glob I’m talking with an older man, of human tissue unable to do I’ll ask, with a knowing wink, anything but nap and eat Ding if he’s had any problems Dongs, which is how I got type “down there,” and tell him 2 diabetes in the first place. about my Amish herbalist and My wife has already told me her theories regarding lanolin. she’s not going to take care of At this point, the store me if my legs get lopped off, manager is usually sumbut she’ll change her mind moned, and I’m escorted to once she sees me dragging the door and warned never to myself across the floor to use return. the bathroom and feels sorry Yes, I’ll admit it’s disapfor me. pointing that so many people Weary of the folly that is these days seem resistant to Western medicine, I’ve since scientific research, but it’s not fired all my doctors and am my job to make people accept now using an Amish herbalthe truth. That’s up to them. ist, who heals All I can do is warn people right and them about electricity Philip Gulley is left using tonics she and promote the a Quaker pastor, concocts in her curative powers of author, and barn. She believes pickle juice and lanolin. humorist. Back Home Again my bad gallbladder I wish I had known chronicles his could have been about pickle juice when views on life in cured by drinking I got COVID in Alaska. Indiana. pickle juice, a Instead, I wasted all my veritable miracle money on bleach, cure, one glass a day for 30 which, in addition to tasting days, while not using electrichorrible, did nothing to cure ity, which she says is the root my COVID.
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