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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Makeda’s Downtown Location to Become the Butteriffic Bakery & Cafe

Tamika Heard has been in the family business for years, having first started working at the Makeda’s Cookies store on Airways Boulevard in 2003. But now, she’s ready to start a venture of her own — the Butteriffic Bakery & Cafe.

Makeda’s opened in 1999, named in honor of Makeda Hill, who lost her battle to leukemia at age 6. Heard’s parents, Pamela and Maurice Hill, took over the business in 2002.

Heard had been working as a youth minister for 10 years before joining the Makeda’s team. “The program I was in, the grant phased out, so I really needed a job,” she says. “My mom was like, ‘I can only pay you $4 an hour,’ and because I had my savings from the other position, I was like, ‘Okay, help the family business — I can do it.”

She spent her first years at Makeda’s learning the ropes. “I had to work my way up to the baking and the forking and all of that,” Heard says. “I could only wrap cookies and ring up customers the first two years. Then my mom showed me how to make cookies and the proper way to package and serve them.”

In 2005, Heard moved to the Raleigh LaGrange location, where she took on more responsibility. “They let me pretty much run that store,” she says. After about four years there, Heard “got the bright idea” to open her own Makeda’s in Midtown.

“It didn’t do well at all. I jumped the gun,” she says. “But after I failed miserably, my parents let me come back.” She went to run the Makeda’s in the Hickory Ridge Mall, where she stayed from 2011 to 2014. Then, she left the family business altogether and went to work for Nike. But, as it turned out, a corporate atmosphere wasn’t for her. “I hate punching the clock … working for other people,” she says.

The Hills received MEMshop approval for the Downtown Makeda’s location in 2015. The program creates partnerships to make use of vacant storefronts while building up local businesses and offers rental assistance, marketing services, and more. “We were making like $25-$50 a day [Downtown], and I was like, ‘Mom, let me come back and I’ll boost these sales and make you guys more visible,'” Heard says. “We’re still here today; definitely boosted the sales, and more visible to the point where I want to stay here and see what we can bring to this location even more.”

The rebranding of the location at 488 S. Second comes as the Hills move bulk production of Makeda’s cookies from there to a large warehouse to focus on distribution and service more grocery stores. “We got the contract for 350 more Kroger stores,” Heard says. “I already knew I wasn’t going to go to the warehouse. I’m not being defiant; I have to see customers. I would be miserable in the warehouse. I gotta be in the community.”

Will Heard’s Butteriffic Bakery & Cafe still serve the classics the community has grown to love — including the famous homemade butter cookies? “You butter believe it!” she says. “I’m actually going to amp up the butteriffic experience a little bit. But that’s a surprise.”

The cafe will serve coffee, including Ugly Mug’s Butter Moon. Heard’s goal is to become a barista, but for now they’ll start with basic coffee and slowly roll into cappuccinos and a more robust drink menu. Plans also include adding gluten-free, keto-friendly, and vegan items, as well as muffins, egg muffins, new pie flavors, and more.

“My parents just do cookies, and I understand that. That’s how they’ve grown,” she says. “This has to happen so I can grow. Under my parents, I’ll always be in my comfort zone, and there is no growth to be had in a comfort zone.”

The grand opening celebration for the Butteriffic Bakery & Cafe will be Saturday, March 6th, at 488 S. Second. The event will feature a sidewalk sale with local vendors, food trucks, Memphis Grindhouse Coffee, and live music in Army Park. For more info, find “A Butteriffic Grand Opening” on Facebook.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Makeda’s Cookies Celebrates 20 Years of Butterific Love

Lorna Field

Makeda’s celebrates 20 years.

On Saturday, September 21st, Makeda’s Cookies celebrated their 20th anniversary with a massive block party in the heart of historic Downtown Memphis with food, music, and lots of local vendors.

Makeda’s Cookies has been a Memphis institution for 20 years and is primarily known for their rich, delicious butter cookies — but the block party was just as much a celebration of Memphis as it was a celebration for the bakery itself. Just east of the National Civil Rights Museum, Makeda’s provided live entertainment from local musicians, including Tonya Dyson, D’Monet, and many others; and they also hosted a variety of local vendors such as Margie’s 901, Waterfall Bodyworks, Knockerball 901, and plenty more.

Makeda’s Cookies was first established in 1999, and current owners Pamela and Maurice Hill have been running the business since 2002.

“On Saturday, we saw lots of Memphis people come out and support us, and it was just amazing,” Maurice Hill says.

But it wasn’t just the locals who turned out for the event: The bakery was steadily packed with tourists and folks visiting from the outer neighborhoods and suburbs as well — some of whom had never heard of or been to Makeda’s before then.

Makeda’s celebrates 20 years.

For those who don’t already know the story, Makeda’s Cookies was named in honor of the original owners’ daughter, Makeda Hill — Pamela and Maurice Hill’s niece, who lost her battle to leukemia in 1997 at the age of 6 — with the hope that the bakery would keep her memory alive for years to come. And it has: Makeda’s butter cookies have become something of a confectionery legend in Memphis, with Makeda Hill’s smiling face proudly displayed on all of the signage and packaging.

It’s no wonder why so many people seemed eager to celebrate the bakery’s 20th anniversary last weekend, as Memphians love supporting local businesses almost as much as they love good food.

Was the block party a one-time-only event? Owner Maurice Hill says, “Oh no, I think we’re going to make it an annual event. We can’t wait to do this again!”