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We Saw You

WE SAW YOU: Friends and Family Night at Bishop

I attended the friends and family night at Bishop restaurant August 3rd at Central Station Hotel. According to the invitation, the event was held so Bishop could reveal its new menu.

The restaurant was closed several days prior to the event. The invite stated, “We are using this time as a reset. We have spent this week fine-tuning our space, while revamping and refreshing our current systems.”

I asked Andy Ticer, who, along with Michael Hudman, owns the restaurant (along with Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen, Catherine & Mary’s, and Hog & Hominy restaurants), what that meant.

“Sometimes we need to take a second and re-evaluate what we’re trying to achieve and how we’re getting there,” Ticer says. “And if the way we are doing it is the best version of that. 

“And we felt we needed to dive into the food and the hospitality and just kind of do a refresh. Slow it down for a second and really concentrate on training. And just focus on getting dialed in there. Sometimes we need to do that every once in a while.

“That takes a couple of days to get in there and talk to people. What works and what doesn’t. Ways to become better.”

I asked what ways they felt they could get better. “Hospitality. From when you walk in the door, our table-side service, and, of course, the menu and the knowledge that the team has on cocktail, wine, and food.”

Brittney Bohannon, director of food and beverage for Central Station Hotel; Alex Grant, operations manager for Enjoy AM Restaurant Group; Ingrid Meza Carcamo, Bishop general manager at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Ryan Radish, wine director of Enjoy AM Restaurant Group at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)

They also have a new chef: Christopher Zelinski, who started two weeks ago at Bishop, Ticer says.

Chef Christopher Zelinski at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)

First of all, I think Bishop is one of the most beautiful restaurants in Memphis. I’ve heard the view from the inside looking out compared to being in a restaurant in New York or Paris.

The interior of the 3,500 square-foot space has black-and-white Cathedral-style flooring and lots of windows. Natalie Lieberman of Collect + Curate Studio with the help of Anna Wunderlich designed the interior, which Lieberman told me in a 2019 story that she created as a narrative based on the name “Bishop.”

As my story states: “Earthly elements, including leaves and mushrooms, combine with objects, including keys and bells, that go along with ‘Bishop,’ Lieberman says.

“There’s also a ‘spiritual underlying theme’ with the stars, beads, and tarot card, she says.

“A bishop’s cape from France is in a frame on one wall. Butch Anthony of the Museum of Wonder in Alabama created the hand painting in the dining room.

“‘Moody and rich textured’ was the feel she was going for at Bishop, Lieberman says.”

I loved everything I ate. My favorite was the escargot with persillade, country ham, lemon butter, and popovers. And make sure you try the shishito peppers with potatoes, lemon, chives, and crispy onions.

Escargot at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Shishito peppers at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Josiah Hoss at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)

I also loved the tuna carpaccio with green beans, sun gold tomatoes, bell peppers, tarragon, olives, and capers.

Tuna Carpaccio at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Alexandra Mobley at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)

The tasty “Steak Frites” was a New York strip, French fries, and sauce au poivre. They also serve chicken, snapper, lamb chops, “Mussels & Frites,” and the “Bishop Burger.”

My all-time-favorite Ticer-Hudman restaurant dessert, “Sticky Toffee Pudding,” is on the menu. I also tried the perfect creme brûlée with vanilla, orange, and caramelized sugar.

Sticky Toffee Pudding at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Creme Brulee at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)

As the menu describes the restaurant, Bishop is “a fine place at the corner of South Main and G. E. Patterson.”

I agree.

Webb and Tate Wilson at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Tonia Bailey and Tyra Johnson at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Henry Turley and Wanda Shea at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Billy and Robin Orgel, Susan Lindy, Jim McGoff, Lauren McGoff, Jay Lindy at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Abigail and Sam Stovall at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Sabine Bachmann, David and Libby Huffman, Rena Chiozza, and Katie, Corrie, and Ellie Hudman at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Karie Ticer, Brandon Ticer, Janet Ticer, Bill Ticer, Brandon Ticer, Jim McGoff at Bishop friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
We Saw You
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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Award-Winning Chefs Ticer and Hudman Talk Bishop, the Fire at Hog & Hominy, and More

Andy Ticer and Michael Hudman have been busy opening a new restaurant, reacting to a fire at Hog & Hominy, and being honored by the James Beard Awards. Here’s a look at what’s happening with the award-winning chef team.

MF: How does your new restaurant, Bishop, complement or contribute to the presence of French cuisine in Memphis?

Hudman: Memphis is always, to us, a place that starts by acknowledging where we come from. French cooking is rooted in that same style of techniques, passed down, done right. It’s about mentorship. These are things that we value in our company. We’re always looking for ways to build our people, and this was a natural entry point. When the idea came to us, it just made sense to flex those old muscles as a callback to where we started. The moment that we saw the space that Natalie Lieberman had designed and the collateral and branding from Loaded for Bear, it clicked. We’d wanted to do a French brasserie for a while, and here it all was, ready to go.

Ticer: It’s funny. My brother Olivier is from France, and he just happened to be in town the week we soft opened. He told us that, often, brasseries are attached to train stations and breweries, and here we were opening one in a train station. It just made sense. We have our homage to Downtown trattorias at Catherine & Mary’s, our riffs on Southern food and oysters from the fire at The Gray Canary, and then our classic French spot attached to a train station.

Memphis-based restaurateurs Andy Ticer and Michael Hudman (left to right)

What was it like opening a restaurant in the Central Station Hotel?

Ticer: There are challenges to opening any restaurant, but a restaurant in a hotel is a fun experience. We have to focus on all aspects of the food and beverage, from Eight & Sand and Bishop, to the events in the Grand Hall. The biggest challenge is that we really opened three spaces at once, so there are a lot of moving parts that needed to be focused on all at once.

Hudman: For us, it’s all about assembling the right team who can carry that culture of our restaurants. We want everything to feel like it was paid attention to and thought about for our guests, and that takes some time to get right. We opened in the middle of the holiday season, too, which was pretty intense.

How did your experience at Chez Phillippe contribute to the development of the menu and culture at Bishop?

Ticer: Chez Phillippe was such an amazing experience where we really learned to cook and really understood for the first time what it meant to cook with high standards. Chef Jose Gutierrez taught us so much about how to cook, how to pay attention to the details. A lot of the traditional menu items we first tasted cooking there, and after, when we were in Lyon, we were like, “Oh, this is how that started.”

The new Bishop restaurant inside Central Station Hotel

What are some menu recommendations you would make for someone visiting Bishop for the first time?

Hudman: That’s always so hard because we love everything. But the tinned seafood is really special and really specific to European cuisine. We have a lot of classic items to French cooking that we’re not trying to reinvent the wheel on, just make it properly. Salade Lyonnaise, French onion soup, tarte flambée, the raclette. It’s about the classic preparation, and we had fun testing until we had it right.

Ticer: I love to start with the grand aioli or the escargot, and the spinalis is beautiful. But there are lots of things. I think go in with an open mind and try things you haven’t heard of. And drink some wine! Ryan Radish, our wine director, really had a field day putting together this 150-bottle, all-French list that is really beautiful and fun to drink from.

How does Bishop benefit from being part of the Central Station Hotel?

Ticer: When we first met with McLean Wilson about the hotel and he gave us his vision of it, we were like, yeah, this will be a cool thing to be a part of, a place that celebrates Memphis and really feels local. We really appreciated that McLean wanted us to open our restaurant inside the hotel and not the other way around, a hotel restaurant. It allows us a lot of freedom to do exciting and fun things with the menu. Just like our experience with Ace, there’s a lot of infrastructure that the hotel has that gives us the ability to do things we’ve never done before, including working with these awesome design teams. Because the hotel really wants to function as the living room of South Main, we see a lot of guests from all over, but we’re still a part of the fabric of South Main and the Memphis community, rather than separate from it.

Another of your restaurants, Hog & Hominy, suffered an electrical fire earlier this year. How has the restaurant and the staff recovered since then?

Hudman: It’s been a real process. Our first priority was to get everyone working, and we met with everyone as a group, and individually, to make sure they were happy going to another restaurant. Our team was loyal to Hog & Hominy, and none of them wanted to leave, but they understood and are now doing their thing throughout the company. They’ve added a lot, too, to those restaurants, and when they come back for the reopening, they’re going to have learned a lot. It’s like an extended externship for them.

Ticer: We’re going through the insurance process now, which can be pretty frustrating at times. But what we know is that we’re bringing the existing structure down and starting over. Fitting Hog & Hominy into a ranch house was always something we were working around, even during the remodel that started last year. So now, we’re starting over with a blank slate. It will always need to feel like the old Hog & Hominy, but we have an opportunity to address things like comfortable chairs, noise, kitchen layout, server stations. It’s going to take longer than we hoped, but we’re not afraid of taking our time to get it right.

The James Beard Awards are an extremely high honor, recognizing chefs and restaurateurs from across the country. How did it feel to be named semifinalists once again — and also to be the only semifinalists from Memphis?

Hudman: It’s a huge honor to be on the list. I mean, just looking over the list of the chefs on there from our region and around the country, it’s really humbling to see your name on there. Our teams work so hard to produce in the restaurants, so while it is our name, it’s a nod to them as well. We can’t do it without them.

Ticer: Memphis is growing around the country as a place to come and visit, to see, to move to. We’re a city of history, culture, and great food in all kinds of restaurants. It’s an honor to represent that on a stage like the James Beard Awards.

What’s it like representing Memphis cuisine to those who may not be familiar, or who might think of Memphis food as just barbecue and fried chicken?

Ticer: You know, I think that Memphis might be known for barbecue and fried chicken, but we think of Memphis food as coming from the family table. It’s about feeding people because you care. We grew up and got into food because of our grandmothers and our family meals. Sure, you might get yelled at, but there was always good food, and everything came from a place of love. If we can make people feel cared for, then we’re showing them what Memphis food is.

What’s next for the Andy Ticer and Michael Hudman team?

Hudman: We are mainly focused on getting Hog & Hominy back open, but we do have lots in the pipeline. We’re just about finished with the redesign of the interiors at Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen that Natalie Lieberman has headed up. We’re trying to make that restaurant feel updated and even more comfortable for our guests. And we have some plans to move into Catherine & Mary’s for some adjustments as well. It’s been running for four years and needs a little love. Mainly, we’re focusing on making sure that the restaurants feel good for the guests and work for the staff.

Learn more about these award-winning chefs at enjoyam.com.

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We Recommend We Saw You

Raiford’s is Everywhere, Bishop guest chef dinner, “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory”

I didn’t get to every party in 2019, but one event I wish I would have attended was the wedding of Lauren and Alex Solomito.

Their wedding had a semi-Paula & Raiford’s Disco theme.

“We had the light-up dance floor at the wedding,” says Lauren, 27. “And my bridesmaids and I got ready with custom shirts that had the Raiford’s Disco logo on the front. On the back it says, ‘I know Paula Raiford.’”

Lauren says she worked with Paula Raiford, owner of the club, over a month “to get the right colors and sizes. I went down to Raiford’s in the daytime a few times.”

She and her bridesmaids wore the T-shirts before they donned their wedding attire.

The light-up dance floor, which they rented, was similar to the one at Raiford’s. “It was some company Lauren found in Memphis,” says Alex, 28. The dance floor “did not just light up, but changed colors.”

Raiford’s is where Lauren and Alex rekindled their relationship after many years.

“We’ve known each other since third grade,” Lauren says. “And I liked him and he didn’t like me all through school. Then we kind of separated after middle school. He went to ECS (Evangelical Christian School) and I transferred to ECS. We were boyfriend-girlfriend in eighth grade and we went to church together. And then we were best friends in high school. We tried to date in high school. Seven years after high school we lost touch. We ran back into each other at Raiford’s on January, 2017 and started dating again. Then we got engaged in June of 2018.”

Raiford’s had to be a part of the wedding. “Raiford’s was my favorite place,” Lauren says.

“I absolutely love Raiford’s,” Alex says. “I’ve probably not been there as many times as her. Raiford’s is different from any other dance club in Memphis. It’s fun. Everybody is there. It’s solely just to have fun.”

And, he says, “Of all places to run back into her, it would be Raiford’s.”

Alex’s attire also had a nod to Raiford’s. “I even ordered light-up shoes. So, the soles of the shoes flashed different colors to make it more exciting. At one point I got out of my tux shoes and put on some light-up shoes. You constantly change colors like the dance floor did.”

His socks had a special meaning, too. “They were socks with corn dogs on them. We both are obsessed with Pronto Pups. And we actually had a Pronto Pup stand at our wedding. You know how people have light-night Krystal burgers or Taco Bell tacos? Something really simple. We decided to do Pronto Pups.”

They held the wedding September 21st 2019 at the Children’s Museum of Memphis complete with the carousel.

The Soul Shockers performed. The band performs “music like they play at Raiford’s,” Lauren says.
  

She set the date on September 21st because her favorite song, Do You Remember by Earth, Wind & Fire, includes the line, “Do you remember the 21st night of September?”

She wanted to hold her wedding whenever the 21st of September fell on a Saturday. “I planned my wedding five years before this wedding happened,” she says. “I wanted it to be on that date because of that song.”

Lauren didn’t know at that time who the groom was going to be, but, she says, “I thought, ‘Surely, I’ll find someone by then.’”

The song also is special to Alex. “It happened to be one of my favorite songs,” he says.

Paula Raiford says others have used Raiford’s in some form at their wedding event.

One wedding reception had an entertainer dressed like her father, the late Robert Raiford, “with the hair, suit, and glitter,” she says.

She’s had several wedding proposals at Raiford’s “Two or three of those.”

And people take wedding photos at Raiford’s before their wedding. “They do an outside inside photo shoot.”

Kelly Ginn Photography

Alex Solomito gets down – literally – on the Raiford’s style dance floor at his and Lauren Solomito’s (standing) wedding reception.

Kelly Ginn Photography

Lauren Solomito and her bridesmaids wore Paula Raiford T-shirts before they dressed in their attire for Lauren and Alex Solomito’s wedding.

Kelly Ginn Photography

Michael Donahue

Stephen Stryjewski guest chef dinner at Bishop

Stephen Stryjewski was the first guest chef at Bishop, the Andrew Ticer/Michael Hudman restaurant at Central Station Hotel. Bishop is the chef/owner duo’s newest restaurant. The dinner, a benefit for The Madonna Learning Center, was held on January 6th.

Stryjewski is chef/partner of New Orleans award-winning restaurants, including Cochon, Cochon Butcher, and Pêche Seafood Grill.

He joined Ticer and Hudman in the kitchen to prepare the five-course dinner, which included crab au Gratin with chili oyster crackers and sauteed speckled trout with fried squash and crushed herbs.

Dessert was individual king cakes from La Boulangerie bakery and cafe, another Stryjewski establishment.


MIchael Donahue

Stephen Stryjewski guest chef dinner at Bishop

Michael Donahue

Stephen Stryjewski guest chef dinner at Bishop

Michael Donahue

Ashley Calhoun and Marty Brooks at the ‘Charlile and the Chocolate Factory’ Memphis premier at The Orpheum.

First nighters got the first chance to see Charlie Bucket and his Grandpa Joe visit Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory in the musical, “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” which opened January 14th at the Orpheum. The musical, which was adapted from the book of the same name by Roald Dahl, also was made into two movies: Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971) with Gene Wilder and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory with (2005) with Johnny Depp.

I never saw any of the movies or read the book. And everybody I confessed that to before I saw the musical was astonished. I do know how to play The Candy Man on the piano. Anthony Newley and Sammy Davis Jr. made recordings of the song.

“Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” will run through January 19th at The Orpheum.


Michael Donahue

Mason Gast and Katie Upton were at the ‘Charlile and the Chocolate Factory’ Memphis premier at The Orpheum.

Michael Donahue

Landon Fox and Jessie Yelvington were at the ‘Charlile and the Chocolate Factory’ Memphis premier at The Orpheum.

                                      WE SAW YOU AROUND TOWN

Michael Donahue

James Alexander and Alice Henry, founders of Kaleidoscope School of Memphis, at the Little Tea Shop.

MIchael Donahue

Gina Picerno, Brett Healey, Carson Irwin, and Tim Guarino at Strano by Chef Josh.

Michael Donahue

Onie Johns and Betty Winter at Caritas Community Center & Cafe.

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News News Blog

Downtown Business Owners Urge Tom Lee Park Renovation

Aldo’s Pizza Pie’s, Catherine And Mary’s, The Majestic Grille (Facebook)

Owners of nearly 70 Downtown businesses support the renovation of Tom Lee Park

Owners of well-known Downtown restaurants — Aldo’s Pizza Pies, The Majestic Grille, Catherine and Mary’s, and more — say they, and nearly 70 Downtown businesses fully support a renovated Tom Lee Park. (Read the letter in full at the bottom of the story.)

The group made public Thursday a letter of support it sent to Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland in June. The letter urged Strickland to move ahead with the Mississippi River Park Partnership’s (MRPP) $60 million plan for the park.

That plan adds contours, trees, facilities, and more to the now-wide-open Tom Lee Park. The plan was unveiled in February and raised concern for Memphis In May (MIM) officials, worried that their month-long festival would not fit inside the new park.

Studio Gang

A view of Tom Lee Park from Studio Gang’s 2017 Riverfront Concept Plan.

That concern simmered to a boil for some citizens, afraid the new plan is taking precedent over the MIM tradition. A Facebook group called “Save Tom Lee Park & The Festivals” has nearly 2,500 members. Another Facebook group called “Memphis-Wake Up Save Memphis In May, Riverside Dr. and Tom Lee Park” and signs for another group read, “Let Tom Lee Be.”

The group of Downtown business owners said they want to set straight “recent inaccurate news reports that the majority of Downtown businesses are opposed to the transformation of Tom Lee Park and other misinformation being disseminated on social media.” They say ”a world-class, riverfront park that is activated 365 days per year will be better for business, better for Downtown, and better for Memphis as a whole.”
[pullquote-1] “We need this park to happen” said Andy Ticer, partner in Catherine and Mary’s and The Gray Canary. “Downtown has seen such positive growth over the past two decades, and because of this momentum, we chose to open two signature Downtown restaurants.

“A re-envisioned Tom Lee Park affirms ours and others’ investments in Downtown, and helps our businesses and Memphis continue to move forward.”

The group said they collectively employ thousands of people and generate tens of millions of dollars in annual tax revenues for the city. The group includes creative agencies, developers, retailers, major corporations, tourist destinations, “and contrary to the official stance of the Memphis Restaurant Association, over 40 restaurants and bars.”

Studio Gang

“I hate to think that all the joys of Memphis are relegated to just one month in the springtime,” said Aldo Dean, owner and operator of Bardog Tavern, Aldo’s Pizza Pies, and Slider Inn. “While I understand the economic impact of May’s festivities, as an owner of multiple Downtown businesses, I’d rather see my chosen city benefit from the year-long activity and density that a single month’s revenue can’t hope to match.
[pullquote-2] “The re-imagination of the riverfront seeks to deliver it from the dormancy of mediocrity. The prototype at River Garden exists as a glimpse of the long-term vision of this much needed improvement, and any argument against the proposal is short-sighted and self-defeating.”

The letter was delivered to Strickland on June 26. It says ”pedestrian connections between the Downtown core and the riverfront are crucial for Memphis to continue to be an attractive hub for headquarters, creative agencies, and entrepreneurs, for our identity as a top tourist destination, and for our continued growth as the most diverse, inclusive neighborhood in the MidSouth.”

City of Memphis

Strickland

Renovation construction was slated to begin right after the festival ended this year. It was pushed back to the fall in May. Strickland announced in late July that MIM would return to the park next year, be held at an alternate location in 2021, and return to Tom Lee Park in 2022.

“We are pleased that Mayor Strickland has shown such strong leadership and vision by announcing that this project is moving forward,” said Patrick Reilly, co-owner of The Majestic Grille. “The revised timeline ensures Memphis in May ample time to plan for alternate sites in 2020 and almost two years to plan the evolution of the festival to the new space and a new era.

“We’re looking forward to experiencing a new and improved festival and a world-class park that both reflect the current trajectory of our great city.”
[pullquote-3]
Bruce VanWyngarden

Tom Lee Park model at Beale Street Landing.

[pdf-1]

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

All-Star Chef Lineup to Celebrate Andrew Michael’s 10th

andrewzimmern.com

No two have done more than Michael Hudman and Andy Ticer (Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen, Hog & Hominy, Catherine & Mary’s, Gray Canary) to make Memphis a really interesting place to eat. Sure, good food was here eons before Ticer and Hudman, but what they’ve brought is style, drive, and wit to their food. They both push boundaries while paying upmost respect to their forebears.

On October 22nd, Andy and Michael are marking the 10th anniversary of Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen with a block party at Old Dominick Distillery, next door to their latest restaurant The Gray Canary. And, they invited some guests to help celebrate — some top-notch guests …

Carey Bringle (Peg Leg Porker, Nashville); Sean Brock; Gerard Craft (Pastaria Nashville; Sardella, Taste Bar, Brasserie by Niche & Porano Pasta, St. Louis); Kelly English (Restaurant Iris); Jose Enrique (Jose Enrique, Puerto Rico); Sarah Grueneberg (Monteverde, Chicago);Kevin Gillespie (Gunshow, Atlanta); Erling Jensen (Erling Jensen); Jeremiah Langhorne (The Dabney, Washington, DC); Jonathan Magallanes (Las Tortugas); Kevin Nashan (The Peacemaker & Sidney Street Café, St. Louis); Ryan Prewitt(Pêche Seafood Grill, New Orleans); Patrick Riley (The Majestic Grill); Chris Shepherd (UB Preserv, Houston); Jason Stanhope (FIG, Charleston); Stephen Stryjewski (Cochon, New Orleans); Ryan Trimm (Sweet Grass & Next Door); Jason Vincent (City Mouse, Chicago); and more chefs to be announced.

Expect a toast or two …

Davin & Kellan Bartosch (WISEACRE Brewing Co); Alba Huerta (Julep, Houston); Jayce McConnell (Edmund’s Oast, Charleston); RoyMilner  (Blackberry Farm Brewery, Maryville, TN); Preston Van Winkle (Old Rip Van Winkle Distillery, Louisville); and more to be announced.

Tickets are $250; $350 VIP. Benefiting St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. 

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

A Sneak Peek at the Gray Canary

It was the hottest ticket in town. Marc Gasol was there! I had to invite myself.

Saturday evening saw a soft opening of the Gray Canary, Michael Hudman and Andy Ticer’s latest restaurant in the Old Dominick Distillery.

The decor is stark chic — with interesting light fixtures and art. Dark wood four tops, booths along the wall with a stunning view of the bridge and river. Lots of gray accents. There are sound buffers on the ceiling, but it is still quite loud.

The food is centered around an opened fire. I approve. On the current menu is octopus and clams. The country ham was praised as was the hearty t bone steak. I had the Maitake Mushroom — charred mushrooms with an eggy mayonnaise. An interesting dish, sour/rich, loved the char.

One thing the boys have in the bag is their cocktails and pastries by Kayla Palmer.

Can a girl marry a cobbler? I’m in love.

Gray Canary is opening Wednesday at 5 p.m.

[slideshow-1]

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Now open: Char and Catherine & Mary’s

Earlier this year, restaurateur Ben Brock took home the Restaurateur of the Year award from the Memphis Restaurant Association.

Brock owns 11 restaurants in Tennessee and Mississippi, including Amerigo and, most recently, Char, a seafood and steakhouse in the Highland Row development near the U of M.

This is the second Char location after 15 years of success in Jackson, Mississippi. From floor to ceiling, kitchen to table, it is no surprise that Brock can add the MRA trophy to his mantel.

“It’s unlike your typical steakhouse,” Brock says. “It has a little more personality, a little more Southern charm.”

It’s a perfect mixture of old and new, with dark wood and white tile, big open spaces and large windows, and a menu that will inspire a following of regulars who will want to check off every item.

Brock says their gumbo won a Jackson, Mississippi, gumbo contest, with its thick, dark roux and generous chunks of crab, sausage, and chicken ($5/cup, $7/ bowl).

“It’s stirred a lot,” Brock says. “It gets a lot of love.”

The Cornbread Dusted Redfish, which has been getting a lot of attention from the clientele, is served with Delta Grind grits, spinach, and Abita Amber crab pan sauce ($15 lunch, $28 dinner).

“That’s a recipe from [chef] Steven Howell,” Brock says. “He’s newer to our concept, so he gives everything a new spark.”

Ben Brock’s Char — not your typical seafood and steakhouse

Char-Jackson veteran Anthony Hatten is the other half in the kitchen, the brains behind the longtime favorite, the filet, a cut of tenderloin served with two choices of sides ($36/eight ounces, $51/12).

And Brock swears by his pecan pie.

“We also sell them whole during the holiday season,” he says. “[In Mississippi], we’ll sell up to 150 during Thanksgiving week. It’s one of the best, and we make it in-house, every day.”

Char is located at 431 S. Highland, #120. Brock owns the restaurant along with three partners through his company 4-Top Hospitality.

Open 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Mon. through Sat., and Sun., 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. 249-3533, memphis.charrestaurant.com.

Childhood friends, co-chefs, and business partners, Andrew Ticer and Michael Hudman have done it yet again.

The pair behind Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen, Hog & Hominy, and Porcellino’s Craft Butcher have branched out of their familiar Brookhaven Circle multi-digs and headed west with their latest edition of traditional Italian cuisine with a Southern flourish, Catherine & Mary’s.

Housed in the ground floor of the Chisca on Main, this iteration of their brand of distinct Italian food would make their grandmamas proud.

It is named for them, after all — from Hudman’s grandmother, Catherine Chiozza and Ticer’s Mary Spinosa.

The approach can be bracketed between Andrew Michael and Hog & Hominy, according to Ticer and Hudman.

There are no shrinking violets on the menu, with oysters served with spinach, brandade, paddlefish, caviar, and panna gratta; radiatore served with pistachio pesto, mint, basil, and smoked ricotta salata; monkfish; cassarecce served with foie gras and giblets; and yes, they have Maw Maw’s gravy … with meatballs.

With a menu like that, you need a knockout setting, and the Chisca delivers.

Full windows flank the northwest walls with enviable views of Main Street.

Walls are left rough, and I kind of want to take all of the furniture home with me.

A 27-foot bar seats 20 along the north wall, and they offer a private dining room with access to a Chisca event room.

In 2008, they opened their flagship restaurant, Andrew Michael, followed by the more casual Hog & Hominy in 2012. Porcellino’s, which, in my opinion, offers some of the strongest coffee in town, made its debut in February of last year, and early this year New Orleans hipped themselves to the Memphis duo with the opening of Josephine Estelle in the new Ace Hotel.

Catherine & Mary’s is located at 272 S. Main. Open Mon.-Thurs., 5-10 p.m., and Fri. and Sat., 5-11 p.m. 254-8600, catherineandmarys.com.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

A Peek at Porcellino’s

Porcellino’s Patissier Kayla Palmer

Porcellino’s, the latest venture from Andy Ticer and Michael Hudman, is opening any day now. 

In the meantime, John Klyce Minervini offers a glimpse at what this ambitious butcher/sundry/breakfast and lunch spot has to offer.

[slideshow-1]