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Cover Feature News

Desiree Robinson: For the Owner of Cozy Corner, it’s a Family Affair

For the past 20 years, Desiree Robinson has been the heart and soul of the Cozy Corner Restaurant. At 83 and “semi-retired,” she is the lynchpin that keeps the family business running. Known for their slow-cooked racks of ribs and immaculate service, the tiny establishment at North Parkway and Manassas has made a name for itself in a city filled with barbecue restaurants.

Desiree herself has also made waves. Earlier this year, she was inducted into the American Royal’s BBQ Hall of Fame, becoming the first African-American woman inducted. The national group, which inducts three new members a year, looks for those who “have made an outstanding impact on the world of barbecue.” The honor came as a surprise. She had never been inclined to push for any kind of recognition when it came to her work. For years she just tried to make Cozy Corner a place Memphians would love.

Brandon Dill

Cozy Corner owner and American Royal’s BBQ Hall of Fame inductee Desiree Robinson

“I almost passed out,” she says. “I just couldn’t believe it, because I never thought of us as more than a great mom-and-pop restaurant where people would come in and bring their children for good food. I never thought about anything like this. It never crossed my mind. I was just amazed when they started talking about me.”

Desiree and her family moved to Memphis when she was young in search of better opportunities. “My mom said I would be going to school in Memphis,” she says. “So, I was 4 or 5 when we moved from Mississippi into the city. I pretty much grew up at 1201 Tutwiler in Memphis.”

Karen Focht

The Cozy Corner Restaurant at North Parkway and Manassas

From an early age, Desiree found herself working in the kitchen with her grandmother and mother, making family dinners. For years she would spend time perfecting her craft and trying new recipes while gaining a love for cooking.

“When I was 8 years old, I was cooking dinner for the family,” she says. “It had to be on the table at 5 o’clock Monday through Thursday. Cooking, and cooking for my family, was something that was always important for me when I was growing up.”

Desiree went to Manassas High School, where she met her husband, Raymond. The two were an instant match. They were engaged before they left high school and moved to Denver after Raymond got a job at Martin Marietta, a building-materials firm.

The Robinsons settled down in Denver, starting a family and cooking for their co-workers and neighbors on the weekends. People would often comment on Raymond’s prowess behind the grill.

“Raymond was an awesome cook from day one,” she says. “Early in our marriage he sat me down one day and told me, ‘I love to cook!’ I remember smiling at him and telling him, ‘Okay then, I want to keep you happy.’ I didn’t do a lot of cooking. I’m an excellent cook, too, but I stepped back because he would enjoy himself so much when he was cooking. He would plan stuff out and always be testing new recipes. We had company almost every other day because people wanted to try his food.”

Brandon Dill

Desiree Robinson

It was the initial interest from friends and co-workers in Denver that led to the creation of their first restaurant, Ray’s Barbecue, in Denver. Though successful, the couple’s time in Denver was limited. Both Raymond and Desiree came from single-parent households and neither wanted their parents, who were still living in Memphis, to struggle.

“We never meant to stay in Colorado for as long as we did,” she says. “Raymond and I were both only children and we didn’t want other people taking care of our parents as they grew older. We said when we went out there we would only stay a couple of years, actually. It just so happened that I liked it very well and we were out there for eight years. When we came back to Memphis, it was because both Raymond and I felt like we needed to take care of our parents. We both liked Colorado, but we knew we had to come back home.”

When the duo returned to Memphis, Raymond found work doing odd jobs in the city while Desiree opted to stay home and raise their children. By the time their two children, Ray Robinson Jr. and Val Bradley, had begun high school, memories of their Denver restaurant had started to linger on their minds.

Brandon Dill

Desiree Robinson with her grandkids

“After Colorado, Raymond had been missing the restaurant business. One day he came to me and said, ‘I want to open another restaurant.’ We both were qualified to do it. I then remember him saying, ‘One of us is going to run the restaurant and the other one is going to have to get a job.’ It was funny because prior to this he had told me that he didn’t want me to work after our kids were born. He forgot all about them!”

In 1977, Desiree and Raymond opened the Cozy Corner. Despite her involvement in the initial opening, Desiree ended up taking a job at BellSouth. Through the years, she would work at Cozy Corner during the weekends but largely spent her time away from the restaurant.

“By the time the restaurant opened, the kids were teenagers and worked there more than I did! I went with BellSouth and worked there until I retired. I did work in the restaurant some, but for the most part, it was Raymond and the kids running the show. The kids would leave school and go straight to Cozy Corner.”

Michael Donahue

a barbecued Cornish hen

During the first few years of Cozy Corner, the Robinsons worked with a single barbecue pit and a limited menu. At the time, Raymond was also the only chef. Nonetheless, the quality of the food and service kept hungry Memphians coming back for more.

“When we first opened, Raymond ended up doing all of the cooking. In hindsight, he probably wanted to do all of the cooking. He could turn a plain meal into a fabulous meal in a minute after I put it on the table. We played off each other really well. Even though I wasn’t in the kitchen at the time, I learned from just hearing him talk about what he was doing.”

Raymond’s warm personality was a reason for Cozy Corner’s early success, bringing in a stream of regular customers. “I think it was good that Raymond was at the restaurant in the beginning because of his personality,” Desiree says. “He was one of the nicest people you will ever meet. We had known each other for a long time and were married for 43 years before he passed away. In all that time, there was not one person who didn’t like him. He was so nice to be around. There was no one he wouldn’t talk to, and don’t you dare look discouraged. He would talk you out of it. We were exact opposites! I learned a lot from just watching him interact with others. I think it rubbed off on me over the years.”

While Desiree worked at BellSouth, Raymond kept Cozy Corner growing. They added more menu items, another barbecue pit, and survived a fire that forced them out of their original restaurant and into a smaller location while they underwent repairs. Time and time again as challenges arose the Robinsons overcame struggles together.

When Raymond died suddenly in 2001, it was a shock for the entire family. As a whole, they were devastated and his death put the future of Cozy Corner in limbo. While the family was mourning the loss, one of the first questions Desiree remembered asking the family was, “How are we going to keep the business open?”

After deliberating for a few days, she decided to step into Raymond’s place and run the business.

“After he died, I went full-time at Cozy Corner. I wouldn’t have dreamed of doing it any other way. It was fun for everybody, and the customers were so glad they didn’t know what to do. Raymond had never met a person that didn’t like him, and he brought that energy to Cozy Corner every day. He was very likable, and I just wanted to keep that up.”

Desiree tried to maintain the small mom-and-pop feeling of the restaurant after Raymond’s death. Cozy Corner is a gathering ground for the Robinsons; four generations of the family now work in their kitchen. Her office in the back of the restaurant was converted to a nursery so that family members could still work in the restaurant with their young kids. Most of the staff in the restaurant are friends or family.

“It’s really a family thing,” she says. “We just added another one who’s only 8 months old, and we are trying to figure out how to get him in there. It’s a place where we can come together and laugh and enjoy life.”

Desiree can take credit for the continued success of Cozy Corner after Raymond’s death. She took the reins at the restaurant making sure that customers were shown the same attention and care that they had under Raymond’s ownership.

Under her leadership, Cozy Corner continued to make a name for itself in the local scene. It has won local and national awards and started making lists as a regional barbecue powerhouse. As Desiree pushed into her early 70s, she helped the restaurant expand its hours from closing at 5 p.m. to 9 p.m., a move that also expanded its popularity.

Today Desiree Robinson is still a regular around Cozy Corner but has passed much of the day-to-day business off to her grandkids. Though retired, she still makes her way down to the restaurant now and then to make sure that all of her guests feel like they are family.

“Come and eat with us,” she says, “and have the best food you’ve ever had with the best people you could ever meet.”

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Cookston to Judge American Barbecue Showdown on Netflix

Melissa Cookston

Mid-South barbecue celebrity Melissa Cookston will judge a Netflix food competition called American Barbecue Showdown, which airs September 18th.

Cookston is the owner of Memphis BBQ Company in Horn Lake, Mississippi and Dunwoody, Georgia. She’s the author of two cookbooks, Smokin’ In the Boy’s Room and Smokin’ Hot in the South. Her wins on the competitive barbecue circuit have earned her the title as the “Winningest Woman in Barbecue.”

Judging the competition with Cookston is Kevin Bludso, founder of Bludso’s BBQ in Los Angeles. The show is hosted by AP Bio star Lyric Lewis and Floor is Lava host Rutledge Wood. Melissa Cookston

Each episode has Cookston and Bludso tasking the contestants — “the best backyard smokers” — with a challenge that will test their barbecue skills “in ways they couldn’t possibly imagine,” reads a news release. “The contestants will have to prove they have the skills to smoke another day while navigating obstacles such as unique meats and old school techniques.” The winner will be dubbed American Barbecue Champion.

“I am thrilled to be a judge on American Barbecue Showdown on Netflix working alongside Kevin Bludso, Lyric Lewis, and Rutledge Wood,” said Cookston. “The contestants were all great and we had so much fun! We can’t wait to watch it when it launches on September 18th”
Melissa Cookston

John Hesling, president of Maverick TV USA, one of the producers of the show, said, “distinct flavors, techniques, creativity, and humor are all on display as our barbecue competitors are put to the test in the hottest battle they’ve ever faced in American Barbecue Showdown.”

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Memphis Ranked Best Barbecue City in America

Justin Fox Burks

Ribs. Pulled pork. Brisket. Memphis is synonymous with barbecue, so it should surprise no one that we’ve just ranked #1 on yet another national BBQ list (eat your heart out, Nashville).

A new report from Apartment Guide has named Memphis the #1 Best BBQ City in the US. As the home of barbecue nachos, fries, pizza, and even spaghetti, it’s clear that Memphis is the place to be if you’re a barbecue fanatic.

The Apartment Guide report ranked every U.S. city by the percentage of barbecue restaurants to all restaurants to determine the top 10 best barbecue cities in the country.

The study recognized 6,300 cities across the U.S. with at least one barbecue restaurant each (based on a database of more than 8 million commercially available business listings.) They then weeded out cities with less than 50,000 people and divided the number of barbecue restaurants by the total number of restaurants in each city to determine the percentage of barbecue establishments for each. The cities with the highest percentage of barbecue restaurants were then deemed to be the best barbecue cities in the country.

Memphis tops the list at #1, with the highest percentage of barbecue restaurants (12.09%), followed by Minnetonka, Minnesota, at #2 and DeSoto, Texas, at #3.

According to the report, “Not only does the River City have the highest ratio of barbecue restaurants in the nation, but it also has the third overall most barbecue joints behind only the much larger Houston and Chicago.” The report lists the world-famous Central BBQ, Payne’s, and Charlie Vergos’ Rendezvous as quintessential examples of our city’s best ’cue.

So there you have it: Memphis might not be the biggest or most populous barbecue city, but we sure do take our barbecue the most seriously –– proudly touting roughly 142 total barbecue joints in the city limits alone.

Read the full report at apartmentguide.com.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Best Bets: The Sippi at Clancy’s Cafe

MIchael Donahue

The Sippi at Clancy’s Cafe in Red Banks, Mississippi.

While I recently was on vacation, I tried a fabulous Southern culinary item.

Barbecue? Fried dill pickles? Pimento cheese?

Yes.

The Sippi is all of that. And it’s delicious. But you have to travel about 20 minutes from Memphis to try one. Tyler Clancy put this sandwich together at his restaurant, Clancy’s Cafe in Red Banks, Mississippi.

They run The Sippi as a special, but it’s going on the menu in September, Clancy says.

He describes The Sippi as “everything that is Mississippi in a bun, basically. Pimento cheese — the unofficial state dish. Fried dill pickles, being created at The Hollywood in Robinsonville, Mississippi. Pulled pork barbecue.”

These were all items Clancy already had on hand. “We’ve always done barbecue. We had fried dill pickles on the menu since day one. Pimento cheese from catering events.”

He originally made The Sippi as a special two years ago. “The flavors all worked well. It took off,” Clancy says.

Clancy smokes his own pork, he says: “We smoke all our meats on site.”

He uses extra sharp white and extra sharp yellow in his pimento cheese. He grates his own cheese. “We get 10 pound blocks,” Clancy says.

And, he says, “Instead of pimentos, we use roasted red peppers.”

Also, “Our blackening season for our fish. We put that in there.”

And Clancy adds, “Texas Pete hot sauce. It’s the best hot sauce you can get.”

Clancy uses Clausen pickles for his fried dill pickles, which are hand battered in house.

To top off the sandwich, Clancy uses his “sweet Sippi” barbecue sauce, which is tomato-based and includes brown sugar.

Everything just comes together. “The saltiness of the pickles, the sweetness of the sauce, the smokiness from the meat, and the crispy texture of the fried pickles,” Clancy says.

The only thing missing in The Sippi is fried chicken.

Clancy’s Cafe is at 4078 MS-178, Red Banks, Mississippi; (662)-252-7502


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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Memphis Filmmakers Extoll The Virtues Of Barbecue With New Short

You know what brings out the A-list Memphis filmmakers? Barbecue.

We in the film community are united in our admiration of the glories of our civic dish. Local hero Craig Brewer got together folks like editor Edward Valibus, producer Morgan Jon Fox, cinematographer Ryan Earl Parker, and sound enginner Kevin Houston to produce this two-minute short film for Memphis Travel. Let this whet your appetite.

Behold, “Memphis Que”, then head out for lunch to your favorite barbecue joint.

Memphis Filmmakers Extoll The Virtues Of Barbecue With New Short

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Cover Feature News

’Cued Up

Where There’s Smoke

Cozy Corner rises from the ashes.

By Chris Davis

It’s the kind of story that instantly becomes a local legend. Should you ever find yourself in a position where you need to communicate the essence of Memphis to an outsider who knows nothing of the region’s peculiarities, all you need to do is to describe the events of Thursday, January 8, 2015: the day Cozy Corner, a beloved barbecue shack in a city overflowing with beloved barbecue shacks, caught fire and burned. It sounds like a readymade urban myth, too perfect to be true. But every bit of it is “actual fact,” according to Cozy Corner pit master Bobby Bradley Jr., the grandson of the restaurant’s founders Raymond and Desiree Robinson. “It really happened, and my sister can tell you all about it.”

The day started out like any other Thursday, although the lunch rush was somewhat slower than usual. Customers were still dribbling in, but by 1:30 p.m., things seemed to be winding down. That’s when a member of the Cozy Corner kitchen staff informed Bradley’s sister India Howard that she’d been hearing popping sounds coming from the back of the building.

India kept her cool and went immediately to warn her customers. “I’m sorry to interrupt your lunch,” she said, stepping out from behind the counter and into the restaurant’s tiny dining area. “But we’ve just learned that we have a fire here. What I need is for everyone to stay calm, grab your things, and exit the building as quickly and as orderly as possible.” When Howard stopped talking she expected to see some movement. “I was thinking it was going to look like ants running here and there,” she says. Nobody moved. They just sat there as if nothing was happening, sucking on their spicy rib bones and digging into the restaurant’s signature smoked game hens.

“It was the strangest thing ever,” Howard says, recalling that perfect Memphis moment when even the threat of a burning building wasn’t enough to make people put down their barbecue. “Because I’m thinking to myself, Did I not just run in here and and yell fire? And nobody — not one single person in the whole restaurant — moved?”

Howard began to clap her hands emphatically and took on a more authoritative tone. “WE. HAVE. A. FIRE!” she repeated. “And unless you want to go down with the building, you need to pick up your things and leave right now.” Reluctantly, and in no obvious hurry, the customers packed up their belongings and the remainder of their lunches and began to exit the building. Many of them lingered for a while longer, to finish off their plates in the parking lot.

“All the customers were leaving when I pulled up,” says Bradley, who was returning from a trip to the nearby Lit Restaurant Supply on Union Avenue. “Because of what I do, I kind of think of myself as a moonlight fireman anyway, so I went in and grabbed a fire extinguisher. My brother-in-law, he grabbed one as well, and we both went back to see what we could do. We’re trying to stay low, but when we got to the room where the fire had started the smoke was serious.”

Chris Davis

Cozy Corner after the fire

Eight firetrucks arrived on the scene from every direction. “It was really funny,” Howard says, remembering how the firemen had anticipated a pit fire instead of an electrical malfunction. “At first, they didn’t have the right equipment,” she says, remembering how the firefighters had to take axes to the back door and cut an enormous hole in the ceiling. “But they did a great job.”

Bradley didn’t realize just how badly his building had been damaged. “I thought we’d be able to open up right away,” he says. “I think I even went on the TV news that night, right after the fire, and said that we’d be opening back up the next day, or something stupid like that.” Although the original location remains shuttered and won’t be reopening anytime soon, there is at least some good news for Cozy Corner fans in need of a fix. A limited version of the restaurant’s meaty menu is currently being served from a window inside the Encore Cafe at 726 N. Parkway, directly across the street. The partnership is a fortunate one that lets Bradley “sling a little barbecue” and exposes Cozy Corner regulars to the newer business.

Chris Davis

The sign directing diners to its temporary location

Before the fire, Encore Cafe owner Monroe Ballard had been one of Bradley’s tenants, operating Optimum Studios in the Cozy Corner building’s westernmost bay. But Ballard had already purchased the empty building across the street and was laying the groundwork for his own restaurant.

“Support from the community has just been incredible,” Bradley says, as he takes orders from the kitchen and tends to racks of ribs and stacks of Cornish hens in the cramped trailer he built this past winter with the help of family and friends. It gets hot in the mobile unit, built around a flatbed car hauler, and it’s just large enough to contain a pair of Chicago-style aquarium smokers and a small work station. But it smells like barbecue heaven.

A benefit was quickly organized by Andy Ticer and Michael Hudman of Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen, Porcellino’s Craft Butcher, and Hog & Hominy. The ongoing Cozy Corner GoFundMe campaign raised $7,612.

“We’re so grateful. We’ve had so much help from people,” Howard says. “We’ve had so much help from other restaurants offering storage and refrigeration and even sending over workers to help us do anything we need.”

Chris Davis

Bobby Bradley Jr.

Bradley doesn’t want to be compared to his grandfather, whom he describes as a “people person” and the best barbecue cook he’s ever known. “It’s not fair to compare Michael Jordan’s son to Michael Jordan,” he says, reaching deep into the smoker and pulling out a mahogany-colored hen. “But there aren’t many family businesses that survive when the founder dies, let alone continue for three generations. I’m the third generation. And I’d like to think that he would be proud of what we’re doing.”

Workin’ Man’s ‘Cue

Craig David Meek hits the road to find the best barbecue in the

Mid-South.

By Toby Sells

Craig David Meek peeks inside the smokehouse. Like Dorothy at Emerald City, Meek is hoping to see the pit master, the Wizard of A&R Bar-B-Que.

Meek gets closer to the screen door, takes off his sunglasses, shades his eyes with a hand, squints, but still can’t tell if anyone’s home. A thick fog of wood smoke obscures every corner inside the one-room brick house and the beautiful, complex smell of burning wood and rendering fat permeates the air outside. Meek knocks politely and soon the door is open with a “Hey, Craig, come on in!” from the smiling pit master inside. Smoke pours profusely — comically — from the opened door like maybe Cheech and Chong are inside the smokehouse, too.

Toby Sells

Craig David Meek talks with the pit master at A&R Bar-B-Que

About 15 minutes before, Meek sat in his big, white work van collecting an assortment of small auto parts from his mobile inventory of nuts, bolts, rivets, fuses, spray paint, and more. He supplies these small parts to a list of auto body shops, car dealerships, or “basically anybody who’s putting cars back together.” He and his van visit shops from Jackson, Tennessee, to West Memphis, Arkansas. From Hernando to Atoka.

I meet him at a body shop on Elvis Presley Boulevard. He fills out an invoice slip, slips quickly inside (knowing the secret to the trick door), and in a flash he’s back in the parking lot with a smile. “All right, want to go eat?”

I do. Because if eating barbecue around Memphis was like a fishing trip, I was on the boat with the best guide around. For this trip, he suggests A&R’s South Memphis location, just down the street from the body shop.

Meek’s been making his rounds in the van for about 10 years. But nearly three years ago, he stopped at Collierville’s Captain John’s Barbecue and found a question that would change his route, his hobby, and writing career: “How many places like this do I drive by all the time?”

He set out to find out. He told Facebook friends that he was going to eat at every barbecue place he encountered on his routes.

• That’s where Craig David Meek barbecue tip No. 1 comes from: You can lose weight and eat barbecue. Drink water and don’t eat the bread.

“When I started eating barbecue every single day, my friends were taking bets on how huge I was going to get,” Meek says. “Then, I lost like 20 pounds and it dumbfounded them. Like I said, I drink water and only eat the meat, beans, and slaw.”

Toby Sells

The menu board during lunch at A&R Bar-B-Que

A&R was busy, not packed, but I was a newbie and felt the need to be quick and get out of the locals’ way. But I got lost in the two-column letter board menu over the cash register with barbecue, sides, and drinks. I mean, barbecue’s barbecue unless you’re on the hunt for the good stuff. Meek read my expression and stepped to the register.

“The rib tips are good today,” the cashier said. “Just off the pit.”

Without blinking an eye or looking at the menu, Meek said, “We’ll have a plate of that with onion rings and beans. We’ll also have a pulled pork plate with greens, slaw, and beans.”

Toby Sells

The pulled pork plate at A&R Bar-B-Que

• Craig David Meek barbecue tip No. 2: Ask “What’s good right now?” Pit-fresh specials and seasonal dishes come and go and don’t always make the menu.

Meek says he stayed true to his intent, just seeing a barbecue place and stopping in. He started a barbecue blog mainly to answer his friends’ questions, but it spread to a larger audience.

As we wait, he tells me about KC’s Southern Style Rice, a red trailer in a flea market that serves rib-tip fried rice that’s “just unreal.” He says Big Bill’s Barbecue is just around the corner, and even though it’s in a strip mall, they have a real charcoal pit and the food is good. You can get hot links “ultimate style,” topped with peppers, onions, and tomatoes.

• Craig David Meek barbecue tip No. 3: When you’re looking for good barbecue, follow your nose. Sniff out the wood smoke. “Anytime you see a big smoke house like the one here [at A&R] you’re in for some good barbecue. Or, look for a big barrel smoker with plenty of wood and real charcoal.”

“Craig! I got a Craig!” the cashier shouts in the next room. We shoot out of our chairs and return with legal-pad-sized platters heavy with a saucy pile of rib tips, pulled pork perfected with strata of red, brown, and burnt ends, and all of the accoutrements.

With portions of this-and-that divvied up between us, we get to work and things get quiet. Eyes meet. Heads nod. Napkins pile up. If I were a food writer, my one-sentence review would be more poetic. But here goes: That food was damn good.

Meek’s book Memphis Barbecue: A Succulent History of Sauce, Smoke & Soul was published last year and covers a spectrum from DeSoto bringing pigs to the Mid-South to Corky’s on QVC. History Press liked his barbecue blog and approached him about writing a book. He revisited his favorite restaurants, introduced himself, interviewed owners, pit masters, and more.

• Craig David Meek barbecue tip No. 4: Get off the beaten path. “I do feel bad when people come in from out of town and say, ‘I wanna go to Beale Street and get great Memphis barbecue.’ There is some pretty good barbecue on Beale, but there’s nothing there that is that real Memphis-style [barbecue].”

Meek grew up eating Memphis barbecue. His childhood favorites were Jack’s Rib Shack and Three Little Pigs at Quince and White Station. But as a Memphian, he wasn’t aware barbecue was in his cultural DNA. It was always just there.

“You sort of assume that whenever people get together to watch a game or for a family reunion, that there is always big aluminum tubs of barbecue sitting out,” Meek says. “You realize that it’s a regional thing a little later and that other places either don’t have barbecue or have something they call barbecue, but it’s not the quality you were used to growing up.”

Scraping the last of the greens from the bowl, I think about it. I don’t want to do it, really, but I know I kind of have to. I know he’s heard the question a thousand times. But I go ahead and blurt, “Where do you like to eat barbecue?”

But he’s nice about it and quick with a good answer. He points me to his list of favorites he recently wrote for Thrillist. It includes everything from A&R, Germantown Commissary, Cozy Corner, Elwood’s Shack, and the Bar-B-Que Shop in Midtown.

Toby Sells

Craig David Meek pays a visit to A&R Bar-B-Que in South Memphis

We bus our table, shake hands, and head out the door. I eye him in the back parking lot talking with an older guy. Meek shakes his hand and approaches me, laughing. He says the guy had a Canadian accent and asked if the barbecue was good here. He said it was and showed him a picture of the place in his book. Looking confused, the man eyed him suspiciously until Meek turned the book over and showed him his own picture on the jacket. The man laughed, thanked him, and carried on inside. Call that the official Craig David Meek stamp of approval.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Bastet’s Vegan Lunch Delivery

ed16/1249588874-bbq_mock_chicken_pizza.jpg

Memphis ‘cue just got a meat-free facelift with this scrumptious personal pan-sized vegan pizza. Tender morsels of fried mock meat are coated in a tangy barbecue sauce and accompanied by sliced carrots, spinach, and vegan cheddar atop a homemade crust.

Bastet Ank Re, formerly of Deju Vu Creole & Vegetarian Restaurant, has launched Healthy Meals on Wheels, a new vegan lunch delivery division of her catering company, OC Vegan Foods. The BBQ pizza is just one of many delicious noontime options. Every Friday is vegan pizza day, but other days of the week have a rotating menu.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Test Your Cue IQ

When it comes to barbecue, Memphians have bragging rights. But really astute bragging shows a knowledge of the competition.

While we may know a thing or two when it comes to pulled pork and ribs, what about other regions’ specialties? Where is mutton the end-all, be-all, for instance? Where can you order your meat “inside” or “outside”?

Take this test to measure your ‘Cue IQ.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

See and Eat

Hanna Raskin is driven by a basic belief about people and their relationship with food.

“It’s amazing how many people watch TV shows or movies about food, but I think food is meant to be eaten,” says Raskin, a food writer and restaurant critic who has founded American Table Culinary Tours. “I also think if you’re going to eat it, you ought to see where it comes from.”

In fact, Raskin often sounds like the graduate student that she was until 2001, when she finished a master’s thesis on the relationship between Jews and Chinese food (more on that later). Here’s what she had to say about the mission of American Table Culinary Tours:

“The most important thing is to contextualize the food that we’re eating. Obviously, if you just want to eat a bunch of food, you can stay at home. We want to impart to people the important role food plays in American culture. It’s more than sustenance; you can use it as a prism through which to view so many issues facing our culture.”

If that doesn’t whet your appetite, consider Raskin’s first offering: a September 13th to 15th tour to the heart of barbecue culture in and around Memphis. The tour kicks off at the Center for Southern Folklore with a meal and a lecture by Lolis Eric Elie, a columnist for the New Orleans Times-Picayune and author of Smokestack Lightning: Adventures in the Heart of Barbecue Country. The next day includes a judging seminar at The Peabody, hosted by the Memphis Barbecue Association, then an eating tour with behind-the-scenes visits of local ‘cue spots. Day three is a tour of West Tennessee with Joe York, maker of the documentary Whole Hog. Through York’s local connections, the group will follow pitmasters as they buy their wood, meet local barbecue purveyors, and even witness the slaughtering of a pig. And eat a whole mess of barbecue, of course.

As may be obvious by now, this is not a gourmet foodie tour.

“We won’t be talking about which wine or champagne to pair with pig,” Raskin quipped. “We want to give people the chance to get out into the field and have the experiences that typically only the hosts of TV shows get to have. We want people to actually meet the people who are keeping these food traditions alive.”

The tour price of $595 per person includes all meals and activities but not lodging. (Group participants do get a break on the rates at The Peabody and the downtown Sleep Inn.) Raskin is also offering a discounted rate of $275 to anyone living within 100 miles of Memphis.

Two tours are set for 2008: one to Detroit in June, looking at the impact of immigrant workers on American food, and an October bourbon-focused tour of Kentucky.

Raskin is drawing on not only her academic and professional experience in writing about food — she’s the food editor and restaurant critic for the Mountain Xpress in Asheville, North Carolina — but also the connections she made during a year she spent as “field-trip maven” for the Southern Foodways Alliance. The Alliance gave her its blessing to start American Table and also granted her access to their oral-history library, which she’s using as a basis for her itineraries.

Raskin uses the word “foodways” often; she says it “encompasses everything pertaining to what ends up on your plate: fishing, farming, and all of the production, in addition to the preparation and how it’s served.”

She says the tours aren’t focused on what’s new and exciting: “For example, there’s a big trend for eating local and organic, and then there’s the Slow Food Movement. We’re less aspirational and more about authenticity.”

Now, about Jews and Chinese food. Raskin says she grew up in a Michigan family with no good cooks, so she was always interested in eating out. She also noticed that her Jewish family, and many of their Jewish friends, had a fondness for Chinese food. Years later, after getting a history degree at Oberlin College, she was a grad student at the State University of New York and decided to explore this for her thesis.

She says there are several theories for this “cherished Jewish tradition of eating Chinese food once a week,” most often on Sunday evenings. One, which she didn’t think too much of, is that since Chinese food is so chopped up, “you can’t tell that it’s not kosher.” Another theory is that Chinese restaurants tended to be open on Sunday evenings and didn’t discriminate against Jews because they didn’t make a distinction between Jews and other whites. Raskin’s favorite theory is that American Jewish culture basically adopted New York Jewish culture, and everyone in New York eats Chinese, especially the large Jewish community that once populated the Lower East Side, adjacent to Chinatown.

Whatever the reason, Raskin says nobody had ever bothered to ask why this was the case, much less written about it. And that’s just the kind of thing she hopes her food tours will impart to people — even to Memphians who are surrounded by barbecue culture.

For more information on American Table Culinary Tours, visit tabletours.org.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall

Engrish

It’s no secret that many American businesses, including newspapers, have been outsourcing work to Third World countries. We had no reason to suspect that The Commercial Appeal was engaging in this practice until a headline appeared on their Web site a little over a week ago: “June 29 is last day to apply for be city schools interim boss.” Please for you to make papers by this delighted date.

Ask the Kid

Cookies and milk, peanut butter and jelly, beer and barbecue. Some flavors seem to go together. Take the partnership of Memphis’ colorful golf pro John Daly and Kid Rock. The two became friends seven years ago after Daly bought $4,000 worth of merch at a Kid Rock concert. Here are a few things Rock told the Detroit Free Press about his BFF.

— “I’ve never seen him play. He hits balls off Coors Light cans at my pool. I’ve seen that — that’s fun. He’s the only real pro out there, when it comes down to it: a star.”

— “When you’re on the road … you start to get in trouble when you don’t have anything to do. You’re sitting in a hotel room, waiting for the next round. You play golf for, what, four hours? What do you do for the other 20 hours in a day? Sleep for eight of them. That leaves a whole bunch open. You get in trouble.”

Fighting Words

In honor of Independence Day, online travel agency Cheaptickets.com recently identified the best places in America to eat barbecue. Memphis is ranked 10th, behind New Orleans, Kansas City, and Little Rock. But the biggest insult is ranking New York City — where zoning and vertical architecture prevent pit smoking — as the number-one spot to eat barbecue in the United States. That could be true, we suppose, if the ‘cue is FedExed from Memphis.