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East Nashville businesses

Locally-owned businesses in the neighborhoods of East Nashville.

Mad Donna’s New Menu Turns Up the Heat

East Nashville locals have always had a soft spot for Mad Donna’s, but there’s even more to like now that the kitchen’s new management team has rolled out a new menu. We had the chance to drop by a few nights ago and try out some of the new dishes for ourselves, and if that sampling is any indication the new offerings should be a big hit.

At the heart of the new Mad Donna’s menu is a fondness for heat and spice, no big surprise given that owner Rachel Fontenot originally hails from Louisiana. The new habañero mac and cheese ($12.50) has a liberal dose of the hot peppers throughout and a spicy crunch topping that’s offset nicely by the cream sauce. Then there’s the new Spicy Latina burger ($9.50), which is topped generously with hot queso and fresh jalapeños. The epitome of this new spiciness is the “Hades” hot wings ($6.25 for six, larger orders available). Where the “medium” and “hot” versions are made with a chili paste cut by butter and olive oil, the Hades version delivers that chili flavor without an editor and should satisfy even the most hardcore spiceheads. (If you’re not normally one for a mouth full of hellfire but decide to be adventurous and go the Hades route, count on a solid 20 minutes of burn from just one of these wings – they’re really hot.) While you savor the burn, take the time to enjoy the rich chili flavor that lies below all that heat.

If you’re looking for something a little different than burgers and wings, there’s still plenty to like about the new menu. The new mac and cheese roster is of particular note, sporting Pesto Chicken (pesto, spinach and chicken topped with Parmesan, $14.95), White Truffle (four-cheese bechamel sauce with white truffle oil, herb breadcrumbs and Parmesan, $12.95) and Mardi Gras (Cajun spices, Andouille sausage and mixed peppers, $13.25) offerings. Sweet potato fans will love the delicate sweet potato enchiladas ($10.95) and the light and delicious sweet potato fries ($3.95), which are served with a sweet chili sauce. The current seasonal special, a light pumpkin bread topped with cranberry sauce, will delight those who find themselves ruing the end of late fall every year.

The biggest hit of all, though, may be Mad Donna’s brunch offerings. Every Saturday and Sunday from 10am-3pm, six dollars will get you 2-for-1 Mimosas (orange, black raspberry, peach, pineapple or pomegranate) or a visit to the Made-Your-Own Bloody Mary Bar. If you don’t require a strictly liquid diet before noon, you’re in luck: if the Captain’s French Toast (twice-dipped Provence Tuscan bread crusted with Cap’n Crunch cereal, drizzled with maple syrup, with a side of bacon, $8.95) doesn’t satisfy you, the variety of omelets ($7.95-$9.95), grilled turkey melt (turkey, bacon, Swiss cheese, spinach and artichoke on Provence Tuscan bread, $9.50) or vegan MD Black Bean Burger ($7.95) just might.

You can download the lunch, brunch, and dinner menus as PDFs to explore further. Mad Donna’s is located at 1313 Woodland Street in the heart of East Nashville and is open Tuesday to Thursday 11am-10pm, Friday 11am-11pm, Saturday 10am-11pm and Sunday 10am-10pm.

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Dinner Goes Homestyle With The Good Wife Supper Club

If you’re looking for a place to bring your friends for a unique dinner experience without leaving East Nashville, consider an evening at The Good Wife Supper Club.

The neighborhood’s first supper club is the brainchild of Avon Lyons, a native Nashvillian who has logged a lot of miles pursuing her love of food since graduating from Harpeth Hall and the University of Mississippi. Her travels have taken her to Darina Allen’s Ballymaloe Cookery School on the southern coast of Ireland, where she learned the importance of fresh ingredients, and to the Rose Bakery in Paris, France, where she was given the freedom to create daily menus filled with fresh fruits, vegetables and grains. She inaugurated her return to Music City with a two-year stint in the kitchen at East Nashville’s celebrated Margot, and now she’s bringing the joy of home cooking to our part of town.

Lyons had her first experience with a supper club while living in Paris in 2007. “There was an American couple cooking dinners on the weekends out of their small apartment – nine courses and wine was about 70 Euros, which at the time was close to $110 US,” she says. “My friend and I saved our money for a few weeks and went. We both loved the setting – intimate, casual and relaxed – but we both felt like they tried to do too much. Nine courses from a home kitchen is a lot. I wanted the meal to be more homestyle but it’s hard to be homespun in Paris.”

So what can diners expect when they arrive at the GWSC? For starters, this isn’t a restaurant: though both Lyons and her partner in the kitchen, Olive & Sinclair chocolatier Casey Dailey, have restaurant work experience and training, they are both passionate about home cooking and the meals they will be serving will reflect that. All reservations and payments are handled online so the entire night’s experience is about the food. The menu is set in advance and there are no substitutions, so visitors should be prepared to eat what the cooks are serving. Seating is family-style with two tables seating 10 people each. (“But if someone walked up or called us and we had space, it would be no problem for them to eat,” says Lyons. “And if the tables are full and they don’t mind sitting at the coffee table, we’d do our best to feed them too.”) Guests will also be able to come into the kitchen, ask questions, give suggestions, look into the pots and easily see into the kitchen throughout the meal, since the dining room is only one room away.

You’ll be treated to five courses on Saturdays and four courses on Sundays with a focus on local and seasonal produce and meats, with the occasional addition of more exotic things like Italian salamis, French cheeses or Maldon Sea Salt. What’s being served changes weekly, but with winter coming up Lyons and Dailey say to expect a lot of soups, braises, roasts and stews. They plan to work in some wild game like pheasant, quail, deer, rabbit and dove during the appropriate hunting seasons, though the focus won’t necessarily be on game every week. Throw in some hearty kale and collard greens, salads and simple desserts, and the occasional nice shellfish dish, and it’s safe to say that variety won’t be an issue at the Good Wife Supper Club. With a BYOB policy and wine recommendations from nearby Woodland Wine Merchant, you can round out your meal like a Parisian while keeping things homespun.

“I hope people take away the sensual experience of what it feels like, tastes like and looks like to be well-fed. It can be very moving,” Lyons says. “Our dining room is inviting and relaxing and it will be a fine place for people to unwind. I also hope that the GWSC becomes a resource for curious cooks and food-minded people. We are all for building a strong community of people who care about where their food comes from, and equally as important, want to know how to make delicious meals with whats available.”

The Good Wife Supper Club is located at a historic home here in East Nashville. You can see the menu for upcoming weeks here. Reservations can be made here – price is $40 for Saturdays and $35 for Sundays. And you can follow the GWSC on Facebook.

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Data Modern Furnishings Brings Style, Tradition to East Nashville

High-quality, modern furniture for business and home environments is just around the corner for East Nashvillians these days thanks to Data Modern Furnishings. Data combines classic style with modern sensibility in its furniture. Its experienced craftsmen employ traditional techniques, but steel and wooden components used in Data furniture are cut quickly and precisely with computerized equipment before those craftsmen ever get their hands on them.

Data's Kubbi bookshelf - click image for high-res version

“It may seem contradictory to blend these two seemingly opposing styles into the production of Data products,” says Ryan Richardson, Data’s owner and lead furniture designer. “The reason that I’ve taken this approach is to keep each design as affordable as possible, allowing as many people as possible to enjoy quality modern furniture in their homes. Data products are not inexpensive, but they are available at prices comparable to high-volume manufacturers through the use of these techniques.”

Data products are made to order based on the options selected by its customers, so you can get exactly what you want. Once you’ve made your choices, ordering from the website is a breeze; you can even check out with Paypal. And since Data is based in a studio and production facility here on our side of the river, turnaround time is very short. “Due to their expertise and their experience with these designs, our production team ensures that our customers won’t wait long for furniture ordered,” says Richardson.

Data's Folio magazine rack - click image for high-res version

You can get a look at some Data products in the wild at Portland Brew East on Eastland Avenue, and also at Casablanca Coffee over in the Gulch. And when you’re ready to order a piece of your own, check out the online store at the Data Modern Furnishings website.

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Eastside Bicycle Club To Hear From Bike Advocates

Your input is needed to make East Nashville more bike-friendly

East Nashville cyclists of all levels will want to make room on their calendars later this month to hear from Toks Omishakin, Mayor Karl Dean‘s Director of Healthy Living, about the city’s plans to make our area more bike-friendly.

Omishakin, a former bicycle planner for Metro Public Works and the mayor’s liaison with the Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee, will speak to the Eastside Bicycle Club at Eastside Cycles on September 28 at 7 p.m. Topics for discussion include the current status of the Strategic Plan for Sidewalks and Bikeways, utilization of Greenways and bicycle lanes, the city’s proposed bike share program and current efforts to fund and expand infrastructure for biking and walking.

Joining Omishakin at the meeting will be Thomas F. “Freddie” O’Connell, Chairman of the Board of the Metropolitan Transit Authority; Pat Clements, President of Bike Walk Tennessee; and Leslie Meehan, Senior Planner with the Metropolitan Planning Organization. All four will take questions from attendees.

The Eastside Bicycle Club is a new organization dedicated to improving cycling opportunities in the East Nashville community. For more information contact Dorothy Stannard by phone (615-364-5117) or email (dorothy1705@comcast.net), or Francie Hunt by phone (615-469-1079) or email (bikeeastside@gmail.com).

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East Nashville Art Classes by Saschi and Squee

Get creative with Saschi and Squee at Fairytales Bookstore

If you’re not an artist but you’ve been looking for a way for you or your teenagers to get more creative, you’ll want to check out a new series of art classes hosted by two local East Nashville artists.

Local art duo Saschi and Squee have teamed up with Fairytales Bookstore to offer three-hour art classes twice a week. The first set of beginner-level classes focuses on making art boxes using pre-made art prints. Connie “Saschi” Schwarz will guide students in using a variety of techniques to create their own art box to amaze friends and family. The rest of September’s classes will be split between making a Mother Mary Box and a This Way Up Box.

“We will be continuing to develop and offer new classes each month, and we are hoping to be able to branch out to different areas around Nashville,” says Ashley Dudenbostel, the “Squee” half of this dynamic pair.

The cost of the classes is $45 for one student, or $80 for two students, with all materials included. Each class session is limited to 10 students, and they are designed for aspiring artists aged 15 and up. You can register by visiting Saschi and Squee on the web. For more information, email saschiandsquee@gmail.com or call Fairytales Bookstore at 615-915-1960.

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Go Gaga For Rayfo at Mad Donna’s This Saturday

Everyone's going Gaga tomorrow night at Mad Donna's

If you can’t get enough Lady Gaga, you’ll want to drop by Mad Donna’s tomorrow night for the “Go Gaga For Rayfo” party. “Rayfo” is Rachel Fontenot, owner of East Nashville bar and restaurant Mad Donna’s, and the party is a celebration of Fontenot’s birthday. To keep with the theme, the party will be a costume ball with everyone encouraged to channel their inner Gaga.

It won’t be hard to get in the spirit, since the room will be filled with Gaga go-go dancers outfitted by Hue, Adam Biga and Blu Zombie Designs. Plus there will be Gagacentric drink specials – the Disco Stick (vanilla vodka with grape & raspberry liqueur, garnished with a Pixie stick), Poison Apple (whiskey and apple liqueur, garnished with a Jolly Rancher) and Poker Face (tequila, triple sec and pineapple juice) are all $4, and there will be free Jello shots for everyone.

The party gets started at 8:00 p.m. tomorrow night, September 11. Mad Donna’s is located at 1313 Woodland Street here in East Nashville.

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Ryan Griffin, Mad Donna’s August Artist-in-Residence

Local restaurant and lounge Mad Donna’s has announced that singer/songwriter Ryan Griffin is its August 2010 artist-in-residence.

“Music is about so much more than fame and stardom,” says Griffin. “It’s about having a voice and being able to use it to make a difference. For a brief moment I can help others escape and find happiness, strength, peace and love.

Singer-songwriter Ryan Griffin will play Mad Donna's throughout August

The Mad Donna’s artist-in-residence program will allow Griffin to play to audiences at the Woodland Street mainstay four times in August. The first show is tomorrow, August 4th, where Griffin will be joined by fellow singer/songwriters Lisa Carver and Bonnie Baker.  Carver has had her songs recorded by classic country artists like Willie Nelson and Tanya Tucker, while Baker, who founded the Mad Donna’s artist-in-residence program, has won three ASCAP awards since arriving in Nashville in 1992.

The rest of the month will see Ryan Griffin play three more Wednesday night shows, on August 11th, 18th and 25th. There’s no cover charge, and draft beers are 2-for-1. And those of you who work in the service industry can catch an even bigger break – show a valid ABC card or check stub and you’ll get 30% off drinks and food.

Mad Donna’s is located at 1313 Woodland Street here in East Nashville. You can preview the music you’ll hear every Wednesday this month by checking out Ryan Griffin on Myspace.

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East Nashville Community Acupuncture

If you have always wanted to try acupuncture but could never afford it, I strongly advise that you check out East Nashville Community Acupuncture, located next to Pad Thai Kitchen in the 2-story brick building at 604 Gallatin Ave. I’m not sure how long this place has been there, but I went for the first time recently and had an extremely satisfying experience.

First of all, acupuncture is usually pretty expensive – $60 or more for a single visit – but at ENCA they do a sliding scale for payment, so you only pay between $15 and $35 depending on how much you happen to feel like paying that day. It’s worth that price and way more. The staff is friendly and helpful and Alexa Hulsey, the owner/acupuncturist, was very professional and really took the time to talk to me about the issues I was there to treat.

The acupuncture room at ENCA is calm and soothing

The acupuncture itself takes place in a quiet, dimly lit room with about 10 or so super-comfy reclining chairs where Alexa can treat many clients at once, but never once did I feel bothered by people coming and going, even when the room was almost entirely filled. Calm, soothing music plays softly in the background so you can zone out to while resting, or you can bring headphones and listen to your own music. Alexa also gives each person a comfy blanket, eye pillow, and a bell to ring if you need to get her attention.

The East Nashville Community Acupuncture website has lots of useful information for new patients, including paperwork that you can fill out and bring with you to save time. Payment is by cash or check only, and be aware that there is a one-time $10 application fee in addition to your visit fee the first time you go.

Follow East Nashville Community Acupuncture on Facebook, or contact them by phone at (615) 457-1979.

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