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Feast & Graze’s Cristina McCarter Makes Food Look Pretty

Cristina McCarter loved to dance growing up. She danced around the kitchen.

Around it, figuratively speaking. As in mostly staying away from it. “I never really liked cooking,” says McCarter. “I just like to eat.”

McCarter now is owner of Feast & Graze, which specializes in cheese and charcuterie boards. It’s also one of the participants in Black Restaurant Week, which runs through October 2nd.

She’s co-owner with Lisa Brown of City Tasting Box, a service that features products ranging from barbecue sauce to popcorn from local restaurants and food artisans.

A native of Memphis, McCarter’s first creative outlet was dancing. She danced all through college — “ballet, majorette, pom, hip-hop.” She still dances on her Instagram posts. “It’s like your workout for the day. It helps you release that energy, whether it’s a bad energy or a good one.”

McCarter never really had to cook. “I married a man who knows how to cook,” she says.

Growing up, McCarter made appetizers. “You can’t really mess that up. I made cheese boards all the time. Or I would do shrimp cocktail and make it pretty.”

Her grandmother made her take etiquette classes. “They would teach us how to formally dine out, how to use your knife and fork, and how to put the napkin in your lap.”

As for working with food, she says, “I had no clue I’d be in this industry.”

McCarter majored in computer science at University of Tennessee at Chattanooga before switching to University of Memphis. “I was a big computer geek.” But she changed her major to marketing. A “Black woman in technology” wasn’t the norm. “We just weren’t very welcomed. It was mostly boys.”

McCarter began taking jobs in the food industry. “I fell in love with it.”

She got a job passing out samples at Costco and, later, helped open a Texas Roadhouse. After graduation, she worked as a marketing assistant at Yelp.

In 2016, McCarter became a “food-preneur.” She began her City Tasting Tours, walking tours of South Main restaurants. “We’d meet at the first restaurant and start eating and drinking and walking our way through the city. Of course, I was telling them about the past, present, and future of the city.”

About a dozen people participated in each tour. “We’d get the chef to come out and give the rundown.”

By the beginning of 2020, the tours were “running successfully. I had 15 or so restaurants signed up, and we did tours every day.” But, she says, “That stopped around March. Then we started doing virtual food tours.”

She and a videographer visited the restaurants. It was “basically like a mini TV clip. We would give them the link to the video and I’d deliver the food to them. Instead of walking around, they sat and did the tour in the comfort of their own home, but still got the experience of the food and learning about the city.”

That June, McCarter stopped the tours and began doing City Tasting Box. She had already launched Feast & Graze as a delivery service in 2019, working out of a tiny Midtown kitchen.

Through Downtown Memphis Commission’s Open on Main initiative, McCarter got a storefront on 55 South Main Street, where she opened Feast & Graze as a brick-and-mortar business last March. She comes up with cheese board ideas, and her chef, RaNeisha Myers, makes them. “I can make things in my head. I’m very creative that way,” she says.

“Definitely the future for me is expanding Feast & Graze. Doing some events every so often. We had our first pop-up Sunday brunch this past week. It was really successful.”

For Black Restaurant Week, she is making The Lunch Bundle. “You choose one of our artisan wraps, chips, and drink for $17.”

McCarter is a Black Restaurant Week fan. “We get to showcase different types of cuisine in Memphis. It’s uplifting to see your community out supporting each other.”

But, McCarter adds, “I definitely want people to see the level we are taking the cheese and charcuterie.”

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Memphis Black Restaurant Week Kicks off March 7th

This is the sixth year for Memphis Black Restaurant Week. The weeklong event encourages Black-owned businesses to offer dining deals that will bring in new customers and raise awareness. Eat. Empower. Engage.

I already see some of my favorites on the list. I also see some local spots that are new to me. If you look through the list, you might find yourself in the same sauce of a situation. Be adventurous.

Look through the list hungry, not hangry. Event coordinator Cynthia Daniels of Cynthia Daniels & Co. says that this year many restaurant specials will be ordered for curbside pick-up or through a delivery app. If you have an issue with delivery and you are hangry, you might be tempted to give the restaurant a bad rap. Instead, take up any delivery issues with the food delivery app.

Courtesy of Bala’s Bistro

Chicken Specialty from Bala’s Bistro

In addition, Daniels says that she knows the restaurant industry as a whole is in an upheaval right now. To keep the confusion to a minimum, blackrestaurantweek.com will post location updates.

“Every morning I’ll let you know who’s open that day and what time they’re open,” says Daniels. “It’ll be super easy. All you have to focus on is where you want to support and where you want to be eating.”

On the list of offerings, you’ll find traditional soul food, barbecue, and fried chicken, alongside sophisticated fusions and African cuisine. Try them all and get a taste of what our Black-owned Memphis restaurants have to offer.

Memphis Black Restaurant Week, for participating locations visit blackrestaurantweek.com, starts Sunday, Mar. 7, and continues through Mar. 13.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

How Chef Tam’s Peach Cobbler Nachos Broke the Internet

Chef Tam Patterson

When I reach out to Chef Tam Patterson of Chef Tam’s Underground Cafe about her notorious Peach Cobbler Nachos, she notes that my timing was good. Just that very day, she introduced a new dessert — apple pie nachos.

When she came to invent the peach cobbler nachos, she thought about her Texas background and about her love of peach cobbler. She decided to combine the two and solve a problem. She said that folks who like the peach cobbler crust would ask for extra crust, leaving her with a pan full of peaches.  She thought if she combined Texans’ love for nachos with the peach cobbler, she might have something good. She used cinnamon chips and her peach filling. She says her secret weapon is using pumpkin pie spice in lieu of the cinnamon.

She’s been serving her Peach Cobbler Nachos since the Underground Cafe opened in 2016.

Peach Cobbler Nachos, everybody!

About a month ago, they blew up on the internet.

I first got a glimpse of it on Twitter. For Chef Tam, all of this occurred on Facebook. She says a lady posted an image and claimed it was her idea.

“What am I supposed to say? I mean, imitation is the best form of flattery. And then she’s like, I came up with this, and I’m like, babe…,” says Patterson.

“I have no idea who she is, but she follows me on social media,” Patterson says. She notes that the image that this person used was an Underground Cafe house image used for Black Restaurant Week.

Chef Tam says her phone blew up, and folks reached out to her parents about it. She says her overall response was, if you want them, then come to Chef Tam’s

On May 9th, someone with the handle @baddie_bey posted an image, and it blew up on Twitter, with 9.5K retweets and 43.4K likes. But the tweet was news to Patterson.

How Chef Tam’s Peach Cobbler Nachos Broke the Internet

And that was that. Patterson says she heard from folks about it as far away as California.

Patterson says that she hasn’t seen a pick up in business since the Peach Cobbler incident, but it’s really hard to tell as the restaurant is always packed. She says that when folks see all the customers, check out her creative menu, and then catch a glimpse of her Peach Cobbler Nachos, they tend to be sold.

Things are going so well that Patterson is opening a second, larger restaurant on Union Downtown in the old Quetzal space, near Sun Studio and across the street from the former Commercial Appeal building.

The current Underground Cafe on Young will become a “tactical” location to service UberEats, Postmates, Door Dash, and the like.

Patterson says the new space is 5,000 square feet. It will have a full bar and a general store to sell her line of spices, T-shirts, and other merchandise.

As for those Apple Pie Nachos, Patterson may have another sensation on her hands. Her post about it on Instagram has more than 700 likes and 67 comments.

How Chef Tam’s Peach Cobbler Nachos Broke the Internet (2)