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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Sweet Grass Chef Ryan Trimm to Open New Spot in Regalia

What was formerly Circa in the Regalia Shopping Center in east Memphis will soon be Southward™ Fare and Libations, a new concept from Sweet Grass and Next Door chef Ryan Trimm.

Regalia Shopping Center in east Memphis

In January, John Bragg announced he would be moving Circa westward, with Sekisui leaving its Humphreys location to move into Regalia. The arrangement with Sekisui fell through.

Now Trimm and his team, Shady Grove Restaurant Group, are set to open a restaurant in the 3,700 square foot space by mid-June.

The new restaurant will cater to the area’s large business community, offering a sophisticated Southern lunch and dinner Monday through Friday, and brunch and dinner Saturday and Sunday. Trimm says the restaurant will be similar to Sweet Grass in style and French in technique, but will expand beyond his familiar low country cuisine into a wider “tour of the South.” With a more executive bent, Southward™ will cater primarily to business lunch, happy hour, and private dinners, and the full bar, which will include wine and craft beer, will focus on “interesting and unique” cocktails with plenty of infusions.

Dinner should run around $20 to $30 and lunch around $15 or less.

Southward™ Fare and Libations, Regalia Shopping Center, 6150 Poplar Ave

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Cake Talk

Scan the menu at The Corked Carrot and you’ll find all the familiar cupcake flavors, like chocolate and vanilla. But then you’ll notice some not-so-familiar, like the Memphis barbecue cupcake.

“This isn’t your traditional restaurant or bakery,” says Neil Armstrong, owner of the Corked Carrot wine and cupcake bar. “It’s got its own little niche, and I thought the South Main area would be perfect because it’s eclectic and it’s definitely on the rise.”

With an unusual name and an unusual concept to match, the Corked Carrot is slated to open in South Main’s restaurant and retail district on April 27th and feature both sweet and savory cupcakes paired with wines and champagnes.

Owner Neil Armstrong — yes, that is his real name — has been working on this concept since before he moved back to Memphis a few years ago. It was only when he found out the building at 314 South Main was available for purchase that Armstrong decided the time was right for his cupcake and wine bar to make its debut.

With the help of executive chef Masami Yenson, Armstrong is working up a small but creative menu of six to eight cupcake flavors like root beer and salted caramel popcorn, as well as savory cupcakes like that Memphis barbecue cupcake made with cornbread, pulled pork, and a barbecue icing on top.

“It’s actually part of the liquor license,” Armstrong says. “To get that, I need to serve a meal. The requirements for what constitutes a meal aren’t very specific, so to accommodate that, I want to maintain the cupcake theme and do savory cupcakes like shepherd’s pie or chicken and waffles.”

Cupcakes will come in traditional and mini sizes. The wines, selected by Armstrong, will be primarily from the West Coast, with some European wines thrown in. Armstrong plans to use kegged wine as well as the Wine Station, a temperature-controlled system that keeps open bottles of wine fresh for up to 60 days. As a result, patrons will be able to sample more expensive wines by the glass without having to purchase the entire bottle.

The Corked Carrot, 314 S. Main (606-9680)

@cravethecarrot

If you’ve raved about the coconut cake at Jim’s Place or the strawberry cake at the Bar-B-Q Shop or the banana cake at Soul Fish, you’ve been raving about All American Sweets, which makes cakes and pies, from scratch, for a long list of local restaurants.

“We’ve heard stories of people arguing over which restaurant has the best cake, without realizing that they’re all our cakes,” says Bill Kloos Jr., who owns and operates the wholesale bakery in Bartlett with his parents, Bill and Lynn Kloos. In addition to providing cakes for area restaurants, they also take orders for intricate, personalized birthday cakes and extravagant wedding cakes.

And soon, the Kloos family will be opening a retail store, Frost Bake Shop, in Laurelwood Shopping Center. Frost will feature the same cakes from All American Sweets, sold whole or by the slice, plus cookies, pies, and cupcakes. They are set to open in the space next to James Davis this summer.

The secret to their cakes is born of years of experience and a little science, courtesy of Bill Sr.’s engineering background. According to Bill Jr., they have perfected their from-scratch cake mix to yield the right combination of moisture, crumbing, and softness. Coupled with real cream cheese frosting and real fruit for their strawberry and banana cakes, the Kloos family cakes are something worth arguing over.

Frost Bake Shop, Laurelwood Shopping Center, 426 S. Grove Park (652-8815)

allamericansweets.com

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Cover Feature News

Beer Me!

In 2012, the hundred or so additions to Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary included “game changer,” a newly introduced element or factor that changes an existing situation or activity in a significant way, and “craft beer,” specialty beer produced in limited quantities.

As craft beer puts the squeeze on Big Brewing’s market share each year, “game changer” is an apt description for this revival of local, small-batch brewing.

Within the next year, Memphis will have three new craft breweries. And though this isn’t the first time craft beer has made a play for Memphians’ hearts, this time around big differences in the market climate promise an easier road for these upstart microbreweries. Not only are changes to state and local laws making life easier for craft brewers — the Beer Tax Reform Act of 2013 sponsored by state senator Brian Kelsey of Germantown certainly lifts some of the disproportionate tax burden from craft brewers — but also beer drinkers are more savvy.

Craft brewing entered the Memphis scene in the mid-1990s, when the first Boscos brewery and some other, less successful brewpubs opened around town. Chuck Skypeck of Boscos and Ghost River Brewing recalls a brewery in the old Greyhound station on Union Avenue, a chain brewpub on Winchester called Hops, and the Breckenridge Brewery above what is now the Majestic Grille, which still houses all the old brewing equipment. Aside from Boscos, none of these brewpubs lasted more than a few years.

In the mid-’90s, homebrewing hobbyists and beer nerds, whom Skypeck refers to as “old guys with beards,” were determined to create an alternative to the big brewing industry: Anheuser-Busch and MillerCoors. The enterprising ones among them opened brewpubs, assuming the quality product would drive demand and a market for craft beers would build up around them.

“I called it the Field of Dreams scenario,” says Brad McQuhae of Newlands Systems, a brewing equipment manufacturer in Abbotsford, British Columbia, that furnished Ghost River’s brewery. “These guys had a great idea of making wonderful styles of beer, but they weren’t marketers and they thought their beer was going to sell itself. In some cases, it worked, and, in most cases, it didn’t.”

Skypeck believes their craft beers were an unfamiliar product, and many beer drinkers, particularly young beer drinkers, weren’t buying.

“The people who liked craft beer then were old guys with beards. The younger consumer was drawn to Smirnoff Ice and flavored malt beverages and froufrou cocktails,” Skypeck says. “I told people that craft beer has to attract the 21-to-25-year-old, or it’s not going to go anywhere. The sea change that’s made craft beer grow now is that the younger consumer is now on board.”

Indeed, the demand for craft beer has been steadily growing, so much so that a second wave of craft breweries has been rolling in to meet that demand. According to the Brewers Association, in 2011, 37 breweries closed, but 250 new ones opened; in 2012, there were 43 brewery closings but 409 brewery openings, bringing the total number of breweries to an all-time high of 2,347.

“Distributors wouldn’t carry craft beer years ago,” McQuhae says. “Nowadays, we have clients starting up. They’ll have three distributors approach them and say, ‘Whatever you can make, we’ll take 100 percent.’ So you have a guy getting into business with three distributors knocking on his door and saying, ‘I’ll take all of whatever you brew.'”

With this new wave of craft breweries, beer drinkers young and old are driving the market with a seemingly insatiable appetite for craft beer.

“There are about 10 or 12 breweries that really connected with younger consumers and helped expand craft beer’s market share in those younger consumers,” Skypeck says. “And once your idea of the world of beer includes craft beer, it’s always going to include craft beer. Now, every new beer consumer when they turn 21 is a craft beer drinker.”

Twenty years into the business, Skypeck is the godfather of craft brewing in Memphis. He opened Boscos, the first brewpub in the state, in 1992 in the Saddle Creek shopping center in Germantown. While other brewpubs popped up around Memphis and shuttered within a few years, Skypeck expanded to Little Rock and Nashville and then opened Ghost River Brewing Company in 2007. Since then, Ghost River has expanded three times and is already working on a fourth expansion.

Skypeck attributes his success to two things: Memphis water (“which is really good and awesome for making beer,” he says) and his focus on the local market.

“There have been some other people who have come and gone, and very interestingly, most of those people who came and went weren’t locals,” Skypeck says. “We’re more of a local brand than a craft brand. We turn our beer over so quick, there are times we would keg a beer Friday morning, the distributor would pick it up Friday afternoon, and it would go straight down to Beale Street. You’d be having beer on Beale Street that was kegged at the brewery that morning.”

The immediacy of Boscos and Ghost River is central to Skypeck’s vision. Though pressed at every turn to expand beyond the Mid-South market, Skypeck has resisted, choosing instead to fill the ever-expanding local market. Supplying that market is plenty of work, he says, noting that Ghost River still hasn’t been able to fully meet demand because demand is so high and their brewing capacity is limited by space (hence the upcoming fourth expansion).

“Honestly, I’ve always contended this since the day we opened Boscos: Beer is a fresh, local food product,” Skypeck says. “It isn’t meant to ship around the country, much less around the world. After the 1950s and the development of the Interstate Highway System, we just got used to everything being national brands, but, before that, beer was always something fresh and local.”

(This mid-century shift likely precipitated the downfall of Memphis’ Tennessee Brewing Company, a behemoth former brewery that was once one of the largest breweries in the South. It now looms over Tennessee Street downtown, unused and in near-hopeless disrepair. Established in 1877, the brewery survived Prohibition but closed in 1954 after national brands like Budweiser swept in with national advertising campaigns, which caused local brands like Goldcrest 51 to lose favor.)

A burgeoning enthusiasm for all things local has included a demand for local beer, for an alternative to the mass-produced. With this demand for local beer has come the revival of the neighborhood brewery across the country, including in Southern cities like Birmingham and Asheville.

“There are lots of examples of craft breweries being urban pioneers and becoming an anchor for neighborhoods, especially if they have restaurants or taprooms associated with them. They help activate the streets and become gathering spots for the neighborhood,” says Tommy Pacello of the Mayor’s Innovation Delivery Team. “Like how Boscos was a pioneer in Overton Square.”

The three new breweries set to open in Memphis within the next year also follow this trend.

“All three of them have these common patterns,” Pacello says. “They’ve chosen core city neighborhoods, the key being neighborhoods. They’re not choosing to be buried in an industrial park. It’s a key part of revitalization. Is it a silver bullet? Probably not. But it’s definitely a key part.”

As for how Skypeck, who has enjoyed two decades free of local craft beer competition, will adjust to the addition of three new breweries, he remains sanguine.

“The fact that we’ve existed without a lot of other breweries is unique in the world of craft brewing,” he says. “Portland supports about a hundred. On a very basic level, they aren’t going to cut into our sales. The market’s growing so fast. It’s been demonstrated over and over in other markets in the United States that a rising tide floats all boats.”

High Cotton Brewing Company

The story of High Cotton Brewing Company begins like a joke: A lawyer, a pilot, an engineer, and a home brewer walk into a home-brew shop. From there, Brice Timmons, Ross Avery, Ryan Staggs, and Mike Lee began the whirlwind process of starting a brewery.

“As any home brewer does, we had this grand illusion, a pipe dream, that we would own a brewery,” Avery says.

“Only, Ross Avery’s way of dealing with a pipe dream is a little different from most people’s,” Timmons shoots back. “Ross already owned all the equipment.”

Eight years ago, Avery went to an auction and purchased all the brewing equipment from a former brewery. But without an actual brewery to put the equipment in, Avery’s auction purchase sat in storage. When the four finally got together, meeting through Mike Lee and his home-brew supply shop, Mid-South Malts, the fact that the equipment was on hand expedited the opening process. They purchased the space at 598 Monroe in June 2012, started construction in August 2012, and now brewing is under way. It’s impressive, especially considering all four of them have day jobs.

“It was the right mix of people at the right time,” Timmons says. “Memphis was really ready for it. Mike has been brewing here for 35 years. Ross has been at it for 20 and had all the equipment. And having a lawyer and an engineer handy was not unhelpful.”

Having a lawyer also helped when it came to changing a few laws in the process of opening the brewery.

In July 2012, Timmons, an attorney, worked with city councilman Jim Strickland and Josh Whitehead from the Office of Planning and Development to remove the city alcohol code’s food requirements for brewpubs and allow microbreweries to have taprooms on site for on-premises consumption of pints. Before the code change, brewery owners had to offer meals, including a meat and vegetable prepared on the premises, in order to open a tasting room.

High Cotton Brewing, set to begin full-scale operations this spring, plans on eventually having a tasting room in the front of its warehouse space on Monroe. Directly down the street from Sun Studio and AutoZone Park, High Cotton’s tasting room will feature 10 to 12 beers, including seasonal and experimental varieties, large open windows, and the reclaimed bar from the erstwhile Butcher Shop downtown. But for now, the group is focused on getting kegs out the door — and into local restaurants like Jim’s Place, Hog & Hominy, Central BBQ, Ciao Bella, and Bayou Bar & Grill.

Wiseacre Brewing Company

From Davin Bartosch’s brewing degrees to Kellan Bartosch’s custom sneakers with “wiseacre” on the heels, this band of brewing brothers behind Wiseacre Brewing Company has craft beer covered from head to toe.

“We went about this in the most comprehensive way possible,” Davin says. “I over-engineer everything. When Kellan said, ‘Let’s open a brewery,’ I said, ‘Okay, let’s make sure we know how to do this better than anyone who’s ever opened a brewery before.'”

Graduates of White Station High School, the Bartosch brothers are best friends, beer lovers, and, yes, wiseacres. Kellan, 32, spent five years working on the business side of brewing, first as a distributor in Nashville and then as sales rep for Sierra Nevada. Davin, 33, has been homebrewing since he was 19, before going to brewing school in Chicago and Germany and then working for Rock Bottom Brewing in Chicago. Finally, after 10 years of planning, the two have returned to their hometown to start Wiseacre Brewing Company.

“Having a brewery is about more than having great beer,” Kellan says. “You can have awesome beer, but if you don’t have someone who knows how to move it, how to approach people with it, how to tell the story of your beer, then it’s not going to go anywhere.”

The Bartosch brothers purchased warehouse space at 2783 Broad Avenue, where they hope to have their brewery open by this fall. Like High Cotton, they are building a taproom into their brewery plans, a place for patrons to try whatever Davin has brewing. And, like Ghost River, they’re focusing on the local market.

“People want to know who made what they’re eating and what they’re drinking,” Kellan says. “Right now, people are grasping for what they can get locally. It has to do with people wanting to see their dollars go to people locally. But even the huge conglomerates are cranking out stuff that looks like craft beer, that looks like someone took care of it, when, in reality, it’s mass-produced.”

Wiseacre won’t be cranking out the same beers over and over again. Though the model has been successful for Ghost River (80 percent of Ghost River’s production is in its Ghost River Golden Ale), Davin’s brewing repertoire will be more fluid.

“We’re going to make everything. We don’t ever want to lose the experimental side of making beer,” Kellan says. “For Davin, as a brewer, it’s about inspiration, and if something comes to mind and he wants to make it, we don’t want to be handcuffed by any kind of calendar we’ve created for ourselves.”

And though they are self-professed beer nerds, the Bartosch boys aren’t looking to bring craft beer snobbery to town.

“Craft beer is so cool. I think some people are turned off by that,” Kellan says. “We don’t ever want this to be pretentious. We don’t want to condescend to people for what they enjoy drinking.”

Memphis Made Brewing Company

The Memphis Made Brewing Company T-shirt will win fans long before they taste a drop of Memphis Made beer. “When you’re bad, you get put in the corner,” the shirt reads, with a map of the state of Tennessee below it and a star to mark the spot where Memphis sits. Outside the brewery, which is located at 768 Cooper, the “I Love Memphis” mural echoes owner and brewmaster Drew Barton’s love of his hometown. Inside, Barton’s plans for the brewery bespeak a second passion.

“I started homebrewing when I was in college in Michigan, and I fell in love with it,” he says. “I bought a homebrewing book and read the whole thing cover to cover. Twice.”

He returned to Memphis to finish his schooling and got a degree in zymurgy management, the art and science of fermentation. Barton left again to work in a brewery in Asheville, the French Broad Brewery. He started out as a delivery driver, and within 18 months, he was head brewer. In 2010, after a few years running French Broad, he moved back to Memphis to work on starting his own brewery. Construction is under way, and Barton hopes to be open by late summer or early fall of this year.

“Right now, we’re looking at doing an IPA and a Kölsch,” Barton says. “Those will be our year-round beers. Everybody’s making IPAs, and IPAs sell. So, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. The Kölsch will be something nice and new for this market. It’s a German golden ale, very clean, crisp with a slight, spicy, hot note. It’s good in the summertime, so on a hot summer day in Memphis, it’s going to be gangbusters.”

Barton is limiting the number of year-round beers to two, making room for plenty of seasonal and small-batch brews. They will also have a taproom eventually, though Barton admits that will come later in the process. As for how he feels about the influx of breweries in Memphis, Barton says there is plenty of room for more beer.

“In terms of competition, there’s room for a lot more here,” he says. “Having four breweries located in Memphis? I don’t think that’s a problem. We could have 15 breweries here. The craft brewing industry is such that we could all get together on a Friday night and drink beers and talk shop. For the most part, craft brewers help each other out. And if you’ve got good product, you don’t have anything to worry about.”

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Style Sessions We Recommend

Madewell Store Now Open in Saddle Creek

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Madewell opened its first Memphis store yesterday at the Shops of Saddle Creek and — quelle surprise! — it is the glorious mix of urbane-tomboyish-cool you expected.

This Memphis location marks the 50th store for the company, which opened its first in Dallas in 2006. The younger sister of the preppy color splash that is J. Crew, Madewell is more subdued, a little more casual, and a lot more pared down.

There are pops of color, to be sure, but denim is the dominant hue of this chic store modeled after its 1937 manufacturing namesake. Chambray, dark wash, distressed: The denim bar features every cut and color you can imagine, and for an $8 fee, any pair can be sent off to be hemmed by the nearby Webb’s Tailor Shop.

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This nod to local businesses in the area was evident at yesterday’s celebrations. Donuts from Gibson’s were set out mid-afternoon, followed by cupcakes from Muddy’s Bake Shop, and the official party, from 5 to 8 p.m. last night featured catering by Another Roadside Attraction, music from a local D.J., and a special appearance by Nashville style blogger Pennyweight.

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Free clutch with purchase this week only.

  • Free clutch with purchase this week only.

The first 25 customers yesterday were treated to Madewell gift cards, but if you missed that giveaway, pop into the store this week and get a free polka dot clutch with any purchase.

Madewell, The Shops of Saddle Creek, 7509 Poplar Ave., 309-4759, www.madewell.com

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Booked to Perfection

Angela and Paul Knipple were still working on their first book, World in a Skillet: A Food Lover’s Tour of the New American South, when the idea for a second book fell into their laps.

“We were discussing with the [University of North Carolina Press] marketing department the ways that World in a Skillet would be marketed, and they showed us an example of a postcard they would send out. The book on the example was Farm Fresh North Carolina,” Paul says. “We said, ‘We should do that for Tennessee!'”

The couple then spent the next year traveling throughout the state to document all the farms, dairies, farm stands, U-picks, farmers markets, festivals, breweries, and distilleries they could find. Starting in West Tennessee and working eastward, the Knipples explored more than 360 farms and farm-related activities — from an exotic animal zoo in Alamo to the nation’s southernmost native cranberry bog in Shady Valley.

Farm Fresh Tennessee documents their journey, laying out a clear and concise road map for any agritourist to swoon over. The tour comes complete with farm-fresh recipes, stories of local farmers, and handy info boxes on myriad agricultural topics, from century farms to hydroponics.

The book is available at the Booksellers at Laurelwood, online at Amazon, or at uncpress.unc.edu.

In 40 Days to Better Living Cookbook, Carolyn Nichols has collected 200 recipes from her 10 years serving as nutrition education coordinator for the Church Health Center. Divided into breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks, each recipe is healthy, portion-controlled, and readily accessible to untested culinary newcomers.

“These are all original Church Health Center recipes,” Nichols says. “It’s a way to live and eat a little healthier. We’re trying to get people back into the kitchen. All the recipes are user-friendly. We went to a regular grocery store, not a health-food store, for the ingredients. We wanted to include recipes that are easily accessible, made from pantry items. We thought, What are recipes that people are actually going to go home and make? Not many people are going to make tofu tacos and jicama slaw.”

Each recipe comes with a nutritional analysis and a guideline for serving sizes. Most of the recipes are familiar favorites, made with recognizable ingredients, some of which — butter, cheese, chocolate — breach the conventional dieter’s taboos.

“What we teach in the kitchen is all things in moderation,” she says. “As long as you’re exercising and eating the right portion sizes, including plenty of fruits and vegetables, it’s okay to have a cookie every now and then.”

40 Days to Better Living Cookbook is available at the Booksellers at Laurelwood and online at churchhealthcenter.org.

What’s so different about a single girl’s style of cooking that it deserves its own cookbook?

“I’m teaching them how to cook for one, save money, and also have food available for the next day,” says Ragan Oglesby, author of The Single Girl’s Guide to Great Cooking: The Cosmopolitan Cook. “A lot of times women don’t want to cook meals, because they’re single and don’t want to cook for one person.”

Oglesby’s book is a roundup of simple recipes for traditional American cuisine (chili, chicken pot pie), but she throws in some challenges for her newbie chefs as well, including saffron risotto and pecan-crusted lamb. The idea is to take single ladies from kitchen-phobes to confident queens of the kitchen.

The Single Girl’s Guide to Great Cooking will be on sale at Oglesby’s book-release party on April 20th at 7:30 p.m. at 300 South Main, where guests will enjoy cocktails and samples of select items from the book. After April 20th, you can purchase the book at Barnes & Noble, on Amazon, or at theragancompany.com.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Future Planning

After a decade as CEO of Planned Parenthood Greater Memphis Region (PPGMR), Barry Chase left his office this month, handing over the reins to former board member and longtime Planned Parenthood supporter Ashley Coffield.

Previously a project director for the Washington, D.C.-based organization Partnership for Prevention, Coffield brings a career of public health experience to the job, as well as nine years serving on PPGMR’s board of directors.

Coffield is inheriting a state-level political climate that has been openly antagonistic to Planned Parenthood. Chase’s tenure saw the election of self-proclaimed Planned Parenthood adversary Governor Bill Haslam, as well as the state legislature’s warpath against the family-planning organization.

“Haslam made the statement when he was running for governor that he was going to put Planned Parenthood out of business,” Chase said. “Because of that, we ran into a problem with the state and our family-planning funding.”

Chase is referring to the Title X funding showdown that took place last year, in which state legislators attempted to divert federal family-planning dollars away from Planned Parenthood, first foisting the dollars on an unprepared county health department and then agreeing to let counties subcontract with other health-care providers. The Shelby County Commission selected Christ Community Health Services, an organization that does not perform abortions, to receive the Title X subcontract.

In a display of tit-for-tat political strategy, Planned Parenthood Greater Memphis Region then bypassed the state and applied for and received Title X funding directly from the federal government. Though the grant amount was lower than they were accustomed to, PPGMR made up for the reduced amount with donations from supporters.

By the time the Title X showdown took place, Chase was well-accustomed to the challenges of running a polarizing nonprofit. When he took the helm of Planned Parenthood, the organization was saddled with debt and uncertainty about its lease. Over the next three years, Chase used his business background to nudge the nonprofit’s ledger from red to black. Then he tackled the organization’s real estate problem, securing its current location at 2430 Poplar.

“When we lost our lease at the [former Union Avenue] building, no one would rent to us,” Chase said. “We were 60 days from when we had to be out of the Union location, and we had nowhere to go.”

The country’s recession provided some fortuitous help in that regard. A bank eager to get a foreclosed Midtown office building off its books sold the Poplar Avenue location to PPGMR, where it has been housed for the past three years.

Coffield now sits in the corner office of that centrally located building off of one of Memphis’ busiest arterial roadways and looks ahead to the opposition and opportunities that await.

“Our number-one priority is to make sure patients get high-quality health care and they have a positive, satisfying experience,” Coffield said. “Of course, we’re paying attention to what’s going on in Nashville, and of course, it’s threatening to us, so that also has to be a focus.”

She points outside to the space where protesters regularly camp out, including one particularly vocal anti-abortion activist they have dubbed “megaphone man.”

“The sidewalk bullying is the least of our concerns,” Coffield said. “It’s the bullies in Nashville that we’re worried about.”

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

James Beard Dinner; Big Plans for Hog & Hominy Patio

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An elegant table setting for the Friends of James Beard Dinner.

  • An elegant table setting for the Friends of James Beard Dinner.

While Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen was hosting the prestigious Friends of Beard Dinner on Sunday, sister restaurant Hog & Hominy was preparing to give sneak peeks of its next project — a new dive bar on its back patio.

For Sunday’s Friends of Beard dinner, Chefs Andy Ticer and Michael Hudman welcomed five up-and-coming guest chefs from across the country to Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen: David Posey of Blackbird in Chicago, Jason Fox of Commonwealth in San Francisco, Jason Stanhope of Fig in Charleston, Jeff McInnis of Yardbird in Miami Beach, and Stephanie Prida of Manresa in Los Gatos, CA.

The theme of the evening was “Know Your Food, Know Your Roots,” an exploration of hometown, ancestry, or childhood inspirations. And while the prep work was a fascinating display of some of the country’s best chefs buzzing around the Andrew-Michael kitchen, the actual dinner cost $300 a person, effectively pricing out this writer. (Proceeds went to support the James Beard Foundation, whose mission is to “celebrate, nurture, and preserve America’s diverse culinary heritage and future.”)

Three lambs roasting while chefs prepare for the Friends of Beard Dinner.

  • Three lambs roasting while chefs prepare for the Friends of Beard Dinner.
Chef Jeff McInnis of Yardbird stuffs quail with fois gras, grilled peaches, and cornbread.

  • Chef Jeff McInnis of Yardbird stuffs quail with fois gras, grilled peaches, and cornbread.

After the Friends of Beard Dinner, chefs enjoy a late-night dinner on Hog & Hominys back patio.

  • After the Friends of Beard Dinner, chefs enjoy a late-night dinner on Hog & Hominy’s back patio.

But I was able to return once the Friends of Beard Dinner wound down, when the chefs and some of the guests moseyed on over to Hog and Hominy to get a taste of what Ticer and Hudman have been working on for the past couple of years since Andrew Michael opened. I hung out by the open kitchen, drinking an Old Fashioned and sneaking little tastes of things, which is how I found out about what Ticer and Hudman have planned for the back patio of Hog & Hominy.

What was formerly a fairly lackluster patio is already being transformed into a side concept for the restaurant: A no-frills dive bar with a seriously pared down menu. There, surrounded by distressed wood and corrugated steel, patrons will suck down oysters on the half-shell, boiled peanuts, cheap beer, and the J.T. Burger — Ticer and Hudman’s homage to Oxford’s ambassador of Southern cuisine, John T. Edge.

(Hudman says he and Ticer have been working on perfecting this burger for a long time, settling on a classic cheeseburger with American cheese, onions caramelized into the patty, chopped lettuce dressed in pickle juice, tomato, mustard, and ketchup. The result is close-your-eyes-and-sigh good.)

And that’s it: Three menu items, cans of Schlitz and Pabst, white and brown well liquors, and old records spinning in the background. Ticer and Hudman plan to close in the currently open-air space, adding large barn doors that will open in nice weather and stay shuttered for winter use.

The meticulously tested and fussed over J.T. Burger, to be served at Hog & Hominys new back patio dive bar.

  • The meticulously tested and fussed over J.T. Burger, to be served at Hog & Hominy’s new back patio dive bar.

Hog & Hominy staff preparing for chefs meal after Beard dinner. H&H is converting its back patio, shown here, into a dive bar.

  • Hog & Hominy staff preparing for chef’s meal after Beard dinner. H&H is converting its back patio, shown here, into a dive bar.

We can’t wait for the idea to be fully realized, which should be happening in the coming months. In the meantime, next time you pop over to Hog and Hominy, stick your head out the back door and start imagining late night revelry and cheeseburgers. Don’t forget the cheeseburgers.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Out of the Bleu Week

Last night, my pal/foodie comrade Stacey Greenberg and I enjoyed a tasting of the new menu at Bleu Restaurant and Lounge in the downtown Westin Hotel. I won’t mince words: We gorged ourselves.

The evening began with some signature cocktails, including the sweet and tangy Blueberry Lemon Drop (like the traditional lemon drop but with fresh muddled blueberries thrown in the mix). Then, Chef Robbie Cirillo started churning out tasting plates:

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There was the hummus trio with edamame ginger hummus, roasted red pepper and chickpea hummus, and black bean and grilled jalapeño hummus, served with fried wontons. Then char-grilled oysters with jalapeno butter and parmesan cheese. Then tender, flavorful bulgogi beef wraps with kimchee:

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And lobster tempura rolls:

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We probably could have stopped there, but there was watermelon salad to be had, garnished with feta, red onions, and drizzled with a mint basil oil and kiwi vinaigrette.

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And then the entrees began. Perhaps the most impressive concept of the evening was the dashi, a soup made with snow crab legs, smoked turkey, carrots, mushrooms, noodles, and nori, all topped with an egg. Chef Robbie came to the table to pour the broth over the other ingredients and the result was an eclectic mix of flavors steeped in a rich broth, though it needed a pinch of salt.

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The bigger hit of the entrees was Cirillo’s play on chicken and waffles, featuring barbecued chicken atop a perfectly savory potato hash with pancetta and set aside fresh jicama slaw.

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For dessert, we managed to continue our streak of overindulgence with a sampling of five, count them, FIVE desserts, including a delectable trio of whoopie pies in chocolate peanut butter, watermelon kiwi, and raspberry mint chocolate.

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We also sampled a chocolate trifle, a mini lemon ice box pie, and flan served atop a strawberry shortcake and topped with fresh strawberries and mint syrup. Finally, Cirillo had us sample some of his mochi, a traditional Japanese rice cake that Stacey informs me is very difficult to make. (She added that Cirillo’s mochi was exceptional, not a sticky mess like some batches she’s tried to make at home.)

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Though we practically had to be rolled out of the restaurant, we agreed the meal was an impressive showcase of Cirillo’s talents and his creative spirit. If you haven’t made it to Bleu yet, don’t pass it by. And if you have been there, now is the time for a return visit.

Bleu, 221 S. Third, 334-5950, www.downtownbleu.com

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Twilight Sky Terrace

Downtown has a new rooftop hot spot, complete with a fire pit, a full bar, mood lighting, a big-screen TV, and did we mention a fire pit?

Swanky amenities aside, the Twilight Sky Terrace‘s biggest asset is its view of the Mighty Mississippi, which stretches out below the rooftop of downtown’s Madison Hotel. The rooftop lounge faces due west, directly into the setting sun, and this picturesque vista — the Mississippi River at twilight — is the source of the lounge’s name. It is also the primary reason the Madison Hotel decided to make over its rooftop space, which had been used primarily for Thursday-night parties.

“The sunsets are absolutely spectacular,” says Chey Fulgham, director of food and beverages for the hotel. “There’s not a better view of the river in the city that’s publicly accessible.”

Fulgham says the success of the hotel’s Thursday-night “Sunset Atop the Madison” events encouraged management to develop the space into a regular downtown destination.

“It was such a spectacular space but with such a basic setup,” Fulgham says. “The owners wanted to make it more special. Now, it’s a chic, edgy, sexy but casual destination spot.”

The lounge fits about 120 people standing or around 60 people seated at the communal table, nestled in upholstered chairs around the fire pit, or in any of the other seating areas positioned around the terrace. Large, white sails overhead offer a little protection from the elements but are primarily a decorative backdrop when the sun goes down and the lounge’s colorful lights come up. Fulgham says they won’t have live music as before, opting instead for a local DJ with a relaxed vibe. And as it’s an open-air venue, smoking will be allowed.

Twilight Sky Terrace’s primary focus is cocktails and, in particular, a selection of six specialty concoctions with an emphasis on artisan and small-batch spirits, freshly squeezed juices, and house-made bitters, tinctures, and syrups. Fulgham has been growing a small herb garden especially for use at the bar on a section of rooftop above the Twilight Sky Terrace.

Whereas the rooftop bar formerly had only a house wine, limited beer selection, and well liquor, Fulgham has upped the ante with higher-quality spirits, an expanded beer selection on tap (including Ghost River and Yazoo brews), and a larger wine and champagne list.

A small menu of about 12 shareable dishes, what Fulgham calls “delectable bites,” will be available from the lounge’s small kitchen space. (Hungrier patrons can always order larger items from the hotel’s kitchen downstairs.) The 12 items range from charcuterie plates to paninis to house-made chocolates.

“The quality of the ingredients used in our food far exceeds what you would expect at a pre- or post-dinner lounge,” Fulgham says. “They’re very well thought out, very well put together, and perfect for sharing.”

Much of the menu is borrowed from the restaurant in the hotel, eighty3, where the time-tested grilled cheese with Gruyère, leeks, and a Parmesan crust is split into smaller bites for sharing, as is the “Italian Stallion,” a panini made with homemade tomato chutney, provolone, capicola, salami, and prosciutto and grilled with that same Parmesan crust. Chef Adrianna Shea brings her Sicilian background to the table with items like the charcuterie plate’s imported Italian meats, and she will also be serving up her signature trios of handmade Godiva bites, made from Godiva liqueur-infused custard covered in dark chocolate.

On Saturday and Sunday mornings from 6 to 10 a.m., the Twilight Sky Terrace will offer a small breakfast and brunch of scones, muffins, and quiche as well as Bloody Marys, mimosas, and coffee drinks.

Twilight Sky Terrace is set to open on April 26th. For more information, follow @TwilightMemphis on Twitter, visit twilightskyterrace.com, or call 333-1200.

Twilight Sky Terrace, The Madison Hotel, 79 Madison (333-1200)

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Pearl’s starts afresh; DejaVu to open second location.

When Joe’s Crab Shack closed its downtown location in 2006, Pearl’s Oyster House on South Main quickly stepped in to fill the void.

But, as new manager and chef KC Lambert tells it, service and quality slowly declined over time. Loyal patrons visited less and less. Lambert, who joined the restaurant last summer, is on a mission to restore Pearl’s status as a quality seafood and Creole restaurant on South Main.

“A lot of people kept coming in, hoping it would get better, and it just didn’t,” Lambert says. “We’re trying to take it back where it needs to be. Consistency, great service every time, no exceptions, a great product at a very fair price, and showing some loyalty to our customers.”

Lambert brings to Pearl’s a career of hotel and resort experience that he has already used to book more banquets and dinners in the downstairs event space — which comes with its own separate bathrooms, pool tables, and a full bar. He’s also revamped the menu, refining their seafood options.

“We’re a full-on seafood restaurant now,” he says. “It’s not just oysters, shrimp, and crab legs. It’s fresh fish. We have corvina, snapper, grouper, tuna, swordfish, halibut. Whatever’s being caught.”

Pearl’s has a Sunday brunch now, complete with seafood twists on brunch staples, like a blackened catfish Benedict, a chargrilled-oyster omelet, and crab cakes topped with a poached egg and Creole hollandaise.

A new lunch menu with lower prices and additions like the vegetarian po’boy (marinated grilled zucchini, squash, peppers, and onions served on a hoagie) are other ways Lambert hopes to lure former fans and new faces to Pearl’s.

“It’s about making portion sizes meet fair price points,” Lambert says.

Lunch prices range from $5.99 to $9.99, and dinner from $7.99 to $17.99.

Longtime patrons shouldn’t worry about missing their favorites. Lambert isn’t touching classics like the chargrilled oysters, doused with garlic chipotle butter, sprinkled with Parmesan cheese, and set ablaze on the open grill behind the bar.

“I just focus a lot on cooking techniques,” Lambert says. “Searing correctly, sauteeing correctly, grilling correctly, baking correctly. I think that’s what’s made the difference in our food in the last few months. We really focus on quality products cooked with the proper techniques.”

Pearl’s Oyster House, 299 S. Main (522-9070)

pearlsoysterhouse.com

Come this May, if you drive from 936 Florida Street to 51 South Main, you’ll experience a bit of DejaVu.

Cajun/Creole restaurant DejaVu is expanding, maintaining its original location on Florida Street and opening a second spot next door to Flight in the heart of downtown. The target date for opening this second restaurant is May 1st.

“We needed a larger location, and we wanted to have more visibility in the area,” owner and chef Gary Williams says.

They’ll have a full bar and the same Creole soul menu — including plenty of vegetarian and vegan options — that fans are accustomed to at the Florida Street location. But Williams says they will also have space to expand their offerings, adding items like beignets and coffee and chicory.

“We’re going to be more visible, get more foot traffic,” Williams says. “And we’re going to bring the same great taste we’re doing here to downtown.”

DejaVu, 936 Florida (942-1400)

dejavurestaurant.org