Copper & Thyme founder Alicia Charolle bets big on local produce and small-scale hospitality.
Inside the career pivot, market tours, and personalized menus behind Ballantyneâs boutique chef service
By Nell Thomas
Strolling Ballantyne
When Alicia Charolle quit finance, she didnât just trade spreadsheets for sautĂ© pansâshe rewrote the dinner script entirely. Now the founder of Copper & Thyme, a personal-chef studio headquartered in Ballantyne, Charolle serves Charlotte households with custom-prepared meals, private dinners, and market-to-menu cooking classes. Her operation is small by design, and every client starts with a question: âWhat does food mean to you?â

Turns out, that questionâs hard to dodge when your chef is in your kitchen, next to your fridge, chopping local squash while your cat stares her down.
From Compliance to Cumin
Charolle spent nearly two decades in financial services, a tenure she politely describes as âenough.â A burnout-induced leave turned into culinary school in Boston, which led to a personal-chef certification and, eventually, the first iteration of Copper & Thyme. In September 2023, she moved to Charlotte to be closer to family. Her husband Dennis, and their two cats, Cookie and George, made the trip too.
âWhen I left finance, I didnât want another hustle. I wanted something that felt like care,â she said. âI cook in peopleâs homes, not because itâs scalableâbut because itâs personal.â
Whatâs On the Menu? You Tell Her.
Copper & Thymeâs entire model hinges on customization. Clients fill out a detailed food questionnaire before Charolle even preheats a pan. Preferences, allergies, family quirksâeverything goes into the planning. Vegan but hates mushrooms? Keto but addicted to Thai food? Charolle adjusts, adapts, and occasionally, gently negotiates.
One clientâs family hadnât eaten the same meal together in yearsâvegan daughter, paleo son, lactose-intolerant mom, carnivore dad. âWe found the overlap,â Charolle said. âAnd it wasnât just rice.â
She shops farmers markets religiously, tailoring menus based on the season. On September 13, sheâll host a chef-led tour of the Charlotte Regional Farmers Market. (Sign-up link: copperandthyme.co/farmers-market-tour).



âNo Restaurant Can Compete With This.â
Charolle is betting that what todayâs time-strapped families want isnât another restaurant reservationâitâs presence. Her weekly and biweekly meal prep services deliver that, plus leftovers.
Also on the menu: private in-home dinners (from fancy brunches to cocktail-heavy soirĂ©es) and cooking classes, either group or one-on-one. âPassport-level flavor, no plane ticket required,â she said, not-so-subtly winking at the global cuisines she teaches.
Her upcoming demo at the Cotswold Farmers Market on August 9 will feature seasonal ingredients and free samples. Another follows September 27. No ticket required. Curiosity welcome.
Local Flavor, National Shift
Charolle isnât alone. Former corporate pros are starting to swap W2s for chef coats, massage tables, and infrared saunas.
Over at Perspire Sauna Studio Ballantyne, franchise owners Demetrius Jackson and Paul left tech careers to open an infrared therapy center designed for recovery, calm, and SNĂ showers. (Yes, thatâs 45 degrees Fahrenheit, and yes, you should probably try it.)
And just a few doors down, Einstein Bros. Bagels in Ballantyne is doing more than slinging coffee. Theyâve become the unofficial meeting point for Charlotteâs freelancers, parents, and infrared-sweat survivors. Credit store manager Phillip Rice and his âcheddar-bacon-honey-almond-shmearâ diplomacy.
Donât Call It a Side Hustle
âThis isnât a hobby,â Charolle said. âItâs hospitalityâdeliberate, thoughtful, earned.â
For now, sheâs cooking three to five days a week. Booking is selective. âI turn down clients who want fast volume. Iâm not a caterer. Iâm a chef.â
And if you need more proof? She knows which farmer sells the best radicchio on Wednesdays.
Want In?
â
Book a complimentary consult at copperandthyme.co
đ Follow Alicia at @copper_and_thyme
đ Reserve a spot on the farmers-market tour
đ Gift a cooking class to the stressed-out friend still trying to boil rice in 2025
About the Author
Nell Thomas writes for Strolling Ballantyne and The Charlotte Mercury, though most of her best thinking happens halfway through an iced latte from Einstein Bros. Bagels Ballantyne. Youâll find her lurking near the 13736 Conlan Circle location most mornings, judging herself for ordering both the cinnamon sugar bagel and the protein panini. She lives in South Charlotte and swears she goes to yoga âeventually.â
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Creative Commons License
© 2025 Strolling Ballantyne / The Charlotte Mercury
This article, âShe Left Wall Street for Your Kitchen,â by Nell Thomas is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.
âShe Left Wall Street for Your Kitchenâ
by Nell Thomas, Strolling Ballantyne (CC BY-ND 4.0)