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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Back to School

Bully stole your sack lunch? No problem. Lunchbox Eats, a school-themed spot with plenty of lessons in good eating, is now open on Fourth just off Linden. This is one school cafeteria worth checking out: If not for its thorough adherence to the theme (the bathroom sink is set in a school desk; the menus are printed on loose-leaf paper), then for its selection of school lunches — way better than your elementary cafeteria fare but still served on a plastic tray.

If you’re thinking cold mystery meat, you’re way off. Try Homeroom Chicken and Grids with fried chicken, cheddar waffles, Muenster cheese, and green tomato relish or the Graduation Burger, made with pepperjack meatloaf, creamy mashed potatoes, tomato gravy, and crispy Tabasco onions. I can personally recommend the 3rd Period Smoking Birds, which puts pulled Cajun turkey, molasses chicken, duck, veggie slaw, and pan liquor between two slices of fresh baked bread. And I’ll admit I have a bit of a schoolgirl crush on the mac and cheese, with its warm spice and perfectly crisp crust.

Kaia Brewer, owner and chef, attended Johnson & Wales before taking a job as the executive chef at the downtown Doubletree. Her lunchbox concept began as a catchy marketing vision. “I always wanted an easy name that people could identify and remember,” Brewer says. “Then the school thing reminds people of growing up. I always felt like if you had a concept like that it would bring them back.”

The concept might bring them in, but the food is what will keep them coming back. Lunchbox Eats is open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., and because of its proximity to FedExForum, Brewer hopes to stay open later on game nights.

Lunchbox Eats, 288 S. Fourth (526-0820)

Last Wednesday, Automatic Slim’s celebrated their new chef, David Schrier, formerly of Currents at River Inn, and their new menu, which takes a farm-table approach to the restaurant.

“We’ve changed the concept,” Schrier says. “We’re highlighting local farms and ranches and stepping away from the Caribbean and Southwest style infusion that [Automatic Slim’s founder] Karen Carrier was so great at. It was just time for a change.”

The new menu is what Schrier calls “globally inspired with a little Memphis Southern flair.” French, Asian, and Italian influences emerge with a local spin, as in the crudo style of raw fish paired with local watermelon. The menu is also geared toward small and shared plates. “We want people to come in and try as many things as they want to,” Schrier says. “You can get three, four, or five things for under $35.”

Entrées range from $15 to $25 and include lemon-oil poached corvina (a firm, mild fish) with spinach, grapefruit-fennel salad and dill hollandaise, and braised pork cheeks with collard greens, smoked onions, mustard potatoes, and bacon jus. Starters, which range from $5 to $7, include house-cured gravlax with salmon roe, fresh dill, and whipped brie; a spinach salad with candied Benton bacon; a pumpkin-truffle risotto; and veal sweetbreads with bleu-cheese flan, pickled carrots, and celery-leaf salad. Sunday brunch includes the delectable crab cakes Benedict. The soup will change daily.

Some familiar names pop up on the vendor list: Donnell Farms beef, Newman Farms pork, Springer Mountain chicken, Whitton Farms produce. As for the wine menu, Schrier says they’re making improvements every day, and the martini list still features 56 varieties.

Automatic Slim’s is open for lunch Monday through Saturday at 11 a.m. The kitchen is open until midnight on weekdays and until 3 a.m. on the weekend, and Sunday brunch begins at 10 a.m.

Automatic Slim’s, 83 S. Second (525-7948)

automaticslimsmemphis.com

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

15 Years and Still Wacky

Automatic Slim’s Tonga Club celebrates its 15th anniversary this Friday with music by the Coolers, the restaurant’s former house band, with the Wild Magnolias as the opening act. Diners can order off the original menu and pay the prices from 1991, when dishes were in the $9 to $16 range and had peculiar names such as the Cowboy Travis Steak.

Although Automatic Slim’s actual anniversary date was on July 18th, owner Karen Carrier chose not to celebrate it then because she felt that too many people would be on summer vacation and thus wouldn’t get a chance to be part of the party. Then, just three weeks ago, it occurred to Carrier that many of those people would be in town for Thanksgiving, so the party was on.

What was Automatic Slim’s like 15 years ago? “Crazy. It was just crazy,” says Carrier. “People literally went nuts. The Coolers played every Saturday, and when they started playing, the restaurant transformed into a wild nightclub in a matter of minutes,” Carrier remembers. “The band had this thing they called the ‘love train.’ Everybody would jump up and start dancing, and people danced out the door up on Second, around the block, down on Union, and back to the restaurant — partying like that until 2 a.m.”

In 1991, you better believe that there was nothing like Slim’s downtown, much less Memphis. The menu reflected an eclectic mix of Southern, South of the Border, Asian, and Cajun/Caribbean cooking: a seemingly tame corn chowder served with grated cheese and roasted poblano peppers ($2); coconut mango shrimp that has since made its way from menu to menu to menu for 15 years and is still one of the restaurant’s top sellers ($6.75); the Caribbean Voodoo Stew, described as an island bouillabaisse ($13.95); and the Huachinanga, a whole crispy red snapper with marinated tomato, red onions, and jalapenos ($15.95).

The restaurant’s interior was recently revamped with a newly designed mezzanine by Wayne Edge, new seating (except for the oh-so-loved bar stools), lighting, and a stage for the bands (finally!).

Over the past 15 years, Automatic Slim’s has become a downtown institution, and Carrier has since put what a reviewer called her “ingenious, wacky, and very dedicated” mark on Cielo, the Beauty Shop, and DŌ. What patrons find at the restaurant could be described as wacky and eccentric, but Automatic Slim’s remained consistent in its eccentricity for 15 years. Now, if that isn’t a reason to celebrate …

Automatic Slim’s way back when

Automatic Slim’s Tonga Club’s 15th Birthday Party is Friday, November 24th. Dinner service starts at 5 p.m.; live music starts at 9:30 p.m. and continues, as Carrier puts it, “’til the cows come home.”

Automatic Slim’s Tonga Club,

83 S. Second (525-7948)

From an August 1991 Flyer review of Automatic Slim’s by Tim Sampson:

“This restaurant is like a cross between Pee Wee’s Playhouse and a chic island getaway where Truman Capote might have jotted cocktail-napkin notes for his Martinique-set story Music for Chameleons.

“As far as I’m concerned, the city can build all the Pyramids, trolley lines, and revamped Mid-America Malls it cares to, but it’s little, innovative, breath-of-fresh-air places like this that give Memphis some semblance of being the kind of cosmopolitan city it’s begging to be.”

siba@gmx.com