19.Best live music venue:
WINNER
Higher Ground
RUNNER-UP
135 Pearl

20.Best dance club:
WINNER
Club Metronome

21.Best instrumentalist:
WINNER
Gordon Stone

22.Best vocalist:
WINNER
Grace Potter
RUNNER-UP
Tammy Fletcher

23.Best local band:
WINNER
Grace Potter & the Nocturnals

24.Best Vermont writer:
WINNER
Chris Bohjalian
RUNNER-UP
Howard Frank Mosher

25.Best Vermont poet:
WINNER
Coach Tom Brennan
RUNNER-UP
David Budbill

26.Best visual artist:
WINNER
Matthew Thorsen
RUNNER-UP
Katharine Montstream

27.Best art gallery:
WINNER
Firehouse Gallery

28.Best arts-and-craft supplies:
WINNER
Creative Habitat at Ben Franklin
RUNNER-UP
Boutilier's

29.Coolest craft gallery:
WINNER
Frog Hollow
RUNNER-UP
Artisans Hand Craft Gallery

30.Best moviehouse:
WINNER
Merrill's Roxy Cinema
RUNNER-UP
Majestic 10

31.Best museum:
WINNER
Shelburne Museum
RUNNER-UP
ECHO at the Leahy Center for Lake Champlain

32.Best fest:
WINNER
Burlington Discover Jazz Festival
RUNNER-UP
Vermont Brewers Festival

arts & entertainment '05

Burlington's American Flatbread is on the rise. Last summer at this time, the new eatery was just opening its doors across from City Hall Park. This year, it came out on top in two crucial categories: It's the best place to have dinner in Chittenden County if you're paying, suggesting affordability and a dining demographic broad enough to include babes and babies.

In a larger upset, though, the restaurant beat out long-loved Leonardo's for best pizza. Lucky for Leo, Flatbread doesn't deliver, but it's part of a successful franchise -- out of Waitsfield -- that manufactures the best frozen pizza on the planet. So, if you can't get in to the restaurant on a weekend night, you can always swing by City Market and pick up a cold one.

Outside of Chittenden County, the cheap eater's dining destination of choice is still the Black Sheep Bistro in Vergennes. Somehow -- in the dead of winter? -- Chef Michel Mahe also found time this year to design the menu for a new restaurant-nightclub in Montpelier: After seven months in operation, the popular Black Door Bar & Bistro is already on our runner-up radar.

Sarducci's won hands-down, though, for best place to have dinner outside Chittenden County if someone else is picking up the tab. A surprising outcome, perhaps, since dining there doesn't exactly break the bank. Conoscenti, Chef's Table, Christophe's -- now those are expense-account eateries. Is selecting Sarducci's an indication of economic decline or a measure of Montpelier's meal-time modesty? Maybe Vermont diners just can't get enough of those wood-fired wonders.

A Single Pebble turns out Asian delicacies from the other side of the world and still ranks number one in Chittenden County for "best place to have dinner if they're paying." They could wok around the clock and still have to turn people away. Last summer, Vermont magazine put chef-owner Steve Bogart on its cover and proclaimed the Pebble "the best restaurant in the great, green state of Vermont."

The competition is stiffer in the a.m. arena -- but with the closing of Waterbury's Mist Grill, the best-breakfast battle is down a serious contender. Last year Penny Cluse cleaned up in Chittenden County. This year Sneakers -- home of the morning "Jump Start" -- chased down the prize for "best Sunday brunch." For breakfast, Penny Cluse is still the chorizo-and-cheese champ.

If you want catfish and grits first thing, go and get it at River Run. The best beyond-Burlington breakfast is plainly in Plainfield. For brunch, central Vermonters are sticking with the NECI-run Main Street Bar & Grill.

The lunch crowd is loyal, too: Readers continue to favor flavors at Eat Good Food in Vergennes, Cobblestone Deli in Burlington, and, for veggie fare, Stone Soup. No time to sit at a table? The pickiest palates grab gourmet-to-go from Fresh Market or shop for natural goodies by the cartful at City Market. Burlington's best bakery -- Mirabelles -- makes sweet and savory croissants.

On-the-go eaters have discovered Hong's Chinese Dumplings on Church Street. The proprietor rolls and fries 'em while you wait. Along with the pork-and-chicken and crab-and-cream cheese, she's got meatless varieties.

Technically speaking, Nectar's famous fries -- sans gravy -- are also veggie. This retro restaurant is flexible and fast. More importantly, it serves until 2 a.m., and the walk-up window stays open for 30 minutes after that. For after-hours eating, it's definitely, well, the best.

Apres ski? This year, The Shed overtook The Matterhorn in a classic Daysie flip-flop.

In Burlington, Red Square is the watering hole of choice --

Ri Ra The Irish Pub came in a close second. No doubt both bars sell plenty of Magic Hat, voted "best Vermont beer." For wine, though, readers prefer the classy atmosphere of Wine Works.

Last year, the grape escape was also runner-up for "best first-date spot." So when the Waiting Room went away, we expected Wine Works would take its place. Or even Muddy Waters, the area's best coffeehouse, where a living-room ambiance lends itself to intimate exchange.

In fact, the number-one hot spot in northwestern Vermont is the Burlington Waterfront. The lake is a lure for wannabe lovers. That should be good news for Roque's, Taste or Breakwater -- except most people didn't mention a food source. So, we're assuming, al fresco? Depending on the season, that could be a real ice breaker.




NOCTURNAL MISSION Grace Potter & the Nocturnals haven't had any trouble getting noticed lately, so it's only natural that Seven Days readers would pick 'em as "best band." And you'd be hard-pressed to find an act more deserving of the accolade. Their hard work is paying off -- the Waitsfield-based group was recently selected to open for the Dave Matthews Band on tour. Not bad for a bunch of twentysomethings who live together in a rural compound called "Hobbitsville." How long before Vermont can claim another superstar band? PHOTO: MATTHEW THORSEN



THE D.I.Y. WAY The store that once resembled an old-fashioned five-and-dime, and is named after an American Founding Father, is cool and au courant now. The South Burlington store off Shelburne Road got a new look and a new name last year, and this year Creative Habitat at Ben Franklin won a Daysie for primo purveyor of "Best arts-and-crafts supplies." At Ben Franklin, making stuff has always been in -- from candles to needlepoint, floral arrangements to scrapbooks. But its new Knitting Lounge, opening August 15, is right on the purling edge. For more info, check out the groovy website at www.craftvt.com. PHOTO: JORDAN SILVERMAN



THAT'S ALL FOLK With 45 acres, 39 buildings, one former riverpaddler, 400 lilacs and more than 150,000 items, there's a lot to love at the Shelburne Museum. Founder Electra Havemeyer Webb's collection of folk art and Impressionist paintings launched the museum in 1947; since then it's become a top spot for tourists as well as an educational resource for locals. Not to mention wedding parties: Museum marketing guy Sam Ankerson says 15 to 20 couples tie the knot in the gardens or the 1840 Meeting House every year. This season the Shelburne is showing off exhibits of vintage toy trains, hooked rugs, Quebec country furniture and never-before-seen tinsel pictures.



GETTING GROUNDED Last year at this time, anticipation for Higher Ground's South Burlington rebirth couldn't have been, well, higher. Now that they've been open for nearly two seasons, the verdict is in: Seven Days readers think the new digs rule. With its swank Ballroom and intimate Showcase Lounge, the club provides a comfortable way to catch your favorite acts, have a drink and satisfy the munchies. And the premier sound and lighting systems rival those in bigger burgs. But what really makes Higher Ground work is the great entertainment, from reggae to heavy metal, to live comedy and theater. Rock on. PHOTO: JORDAN SILVERMAN



STEEL STRINGER With his incredible versatility and star-studded resume, Gordon Stone is one of Vermont's most in-demand musicians. From his days with bluegrass legends Pine Island to his work with a little band called Phish, Stone has been at the forefront of the local music scene for decades. Plucking the banjo or laying down some slick pedal steel, his sheer musicality shines through in a variety of styles -- we've been trying to assign him a genre for years. This "stone" truly gathers no moss. PHOTO: MATTHEW THORSEN



HANDMADE HEAVEN All Vermonters know that Frog Hollow neither houses frogs nor sells them -- except for those little pewter pins of the store's web-footed logo. In three Vermont locations -- Middlebury, Burlington and Manchester -- it presents juried, high-quality crafts by local and national artisans. This is wedding-gift central: Items such as beautifully turned wooden bowls and exquisite quilts will last longer than many people's marriages. With its second Daysie for "coolest craft gallery," Frog Hollow is also famous for its "tadpole" and master-level classes. Hop in sometime. PHOTO: MATTHEW THORSEN

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