The Charlottesville 29

Where to eat in Charlottesville

Tag: Brian Helleberg

Petit Pois Fundraiser Honoring Brian Jones

jonesSmiling

Restaurant break-ups can be messy, but there could hardly be a more pleasant one than Brian Jones’ parting with Petit Pois, the restaurant whose kitchen he has run for eleven years. This is Jones’ last week at Petit Pois, and in tribute to his time there, the restaurant is donating $.50 of every lunch and $1.00 of every dinner to Jones’ favorite charity, Charlottesville Abundant Life Ministries. “We will donate the money in Chef Jones’ name to honor him for all the hard work and love that he put into the restaurant for the past 11 years,” says co-owner Brian Helleberg. “Over the years, Brian has been consistently generous with his time and talents to his church and other charitable causes, so supporting his favorite charity this week seemed like the best way to send him off.”

That’s just special.  Go eat at Petit Pois.

Brian Jones Era Ending at Petit Pois

Pois

A change of guard is coming to a post at the heart of Charlottesville dining. For eleven years, Brian Jones has overseen the kitchen of Petit Pois, one of Charlottesville’s most dependably excellent restaurants. Nowhere in town more closely resembles a classic French bistro, which is no wonder given that, before coming to Charlottesville, Jones had worked with some of the nation’s best French chefs, including Daniel Boulud, Eric Ripert and Jean Georges Vongerichten.

At the end of June, Jones is leaving to prepare to take over the kitchen of Timberwood Tap House, set to open this fall in the 5th Street Extended shopping center housing Wegman’s. Petit Pois owner Brian Helleberg, who also owns Fleurie, knows how much Jones will be missed. “As good as he is as a chef and leader,” says Helleberg, “he is an even better person, and I will truly miss interacting with him day to day.” Anyone who has come to rely on Petit Pois’s spot-on renditions of steak frites, chicken liver mousse, and French onion soup knows that Jones’ successor has big shoes to fill.

That task belongs to John Shanesy, of Parallel 38, who says leaving was difficult. “I am sad to be leaving Parallel 38 and most importantly [co-owner] Justin [Ross],” says Shanesy. “He has changed everything for me and I can never thank him enough.” But, Shanesy is fully focused on the future and the responsibility of overseeing a Charlottesville fixture like Petit Pois. “I am very honored that I was chosen,” says Shanesy, “and am going to do everything in my power to maintain the great respect and solid name that Petit Pois has established in our community.”

In today’s era, it is rare for a chef to stay at any one restaurant for long. Thank you, Brian, for eleven superb years at Petit Pois. Helleberg says it best, calling Jones a “special person” with a “unique impact”:

Brian has had a unique impact on myself, his coworkers and our customers by bringing positive energy and professionalism to work every day. That is rare in the restaurant business, but Brian showed us all how it’s done.  He really cares about people and his relationships with them, whether it be a new dishwasher, the wine delivery man or the upstairs neighbor. It’s not all that complicated but to make it look so effortless for 11 years takes a really special person. I’m really proud to have had Chef Brian set the standard at Petit Pois and happy for his new opportunity.

– Brian Helleberg

Fleurie

Fleurie108 3rd St. NE . Charlottesville, VA . (434) 971-7800
http://fleurierestaurant.com/

Why Fleurie?

Rumors of fine dining’s demise have been greatly exaggerated. Sure, there’s been a surge in downscale eats. All the while, though, chef-owner Brian Helleberg has sustained his serene temple of elevated French cuisine on the downtown mall, Fleurie.

How has Helleberg bucked the downscale trend? It’s not stubbornness. It’s passion. Having worked under such legends as Yannick Cam, Gerard Panguad, and Jean-Yves Schillinger, Helleberg loves everything about sophisticated French dining – the experience, the service, the presentation, and of course the food. Fleurie reflects Helleberg’s passion, remaining one of the few places in town where you can still dine on crisp, white table cloths, and where the servers are committed professionals. The food is exquisite, too, celebrating the attention to detail demanded by classic French cooking, with the kitchen’s own riffs. Jose De Brito’s return to the kitchen in 2023 makes the food as good as ever.

What to Order

Fleurie offers a daily three-course prix-fixe menu. Since it changes often, dish availability can vary. Below are our picks, Helleberg’s picks, and appearances in Five Finds on Friday, where a local chef or personality has named an item from Fleurie as one of the best in town.

Our Picks

  • Autumn Olive Farms’ Heritage Pork, Prepared Nose to Tail (2018 Dish of the Year)
  • Seared Foie Gras
  • Sautéed Skate
  • Dover Sole
  • Whole Poached Lobster
  • Lamb du Jour
  • Warm Chocolate Cake

Chef/Owner’s Picks

  • Sautéed Veal Sweetbreads with sunchokes, pickled pearl onions and veal jus
  • Lamb Carpaccio with haricots verts and shallot salad
  • Vanilla Mille Feulle with inverted puff pastry, candied orange and thyme

Five Finds on Friday Picks

Fleurie plate

Photo by Tom McGovern