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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Chef Spencer McMillin to Launch Cookbook and New Website and Blog

Michael Donahue

Chef Spencer McMillin with chef Jonathan Magallanes from Los Tortugas at a Caritas dinner, where Magallanes was guest chef



Chef Spencer McMillin is about to release a new website and blog, which will launch his new cookbook.

As he refers to himself, “I’m just a busy body.”

Thesaltiestwords.com, which will include stories and recipes, also will be the launching pad for his upcoming The Caritas Cookbook: A Year in the Life With Recipes. Both are slated to be released in mid November.

“I write a lot and a lot of it is not publishable, but it’s stuff the general public will appreciate,” says McMillin, 50. “I’ve got a group of people who like to read the down-and-dirty stuff. The less-publishable things. I write off the top of my head.”

And, he says, “This is not Paula Deen.” He referred to his blog on a Facebook post as “the dreaded (and not for the easiest offended) blog.”

His first piece on “The Saltiest Words” blog will be Chasing Tony, which is about the “wilderness years” of his career. “Back in the early 2000s when I was between chef jobs and I was working at Bronte Bistro at Davis-Kidd Booksellers. I was kitchen manager. I was at a real low point in my life.”

That’s when he discovered the book, Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly, by chef Anthony Bourdain. “I would leave the kitchen and just go sit in the book section and read that book when I should have been working.”

He didn’t just read the book. “I reached out to Tony Bourdain and struck up a friendship.”

McMillin had written a 200-page book called The Food Fighter. “That was kind of my version of Kitchen Confidential. It spanned my career from 1983 to 2001.”

He got in touch with Bourdain on line. “I noticed Tony was a poster on a food message board, eGullet.com. He had just done a Q and A with fans and he was still posting on the board. He was interacting with fans and stuff, so I started interacting with him and he kind of took to the way I wrote. He identified with it.”

McMillin sent a copy of his book to Brasserie Les Halles restaurant, where Bourdain was working in New York at the time. “He wrote Kitchen Confidential and got real famous. He just got on A Cook’s Tour. But he wasn’t too famous to interact with fans.”

Bourdain sent him some tips, McMillin says. “He sent me a couple of emails of advice after he read it that I’ll never forget. One of the things he said was, ‘Write like you talk. Speak the truth.’”

He also told him, “Write about experiences.  Don’t write about writing. That’s pretentious.”

Bourdain got McMillin in touch with Michael Ruhlman. “He wrote about chefs. He wrote The Soul of a Chef, The Reach of a Chef, The Making of a Chef, and he was one of Bourdain’s favorite writers.”

McMillin sent Ruhlman a copy of a piece he wrote about his experiences at acclaimed restaurant, The French Laundry. Ruhlman was co-author of a French Laundry cookbook with the restaurant’s owner, Thomas Keller. “He ripped me a new asshole. He told me the voice is wrong, the tone is wrong, the pacing is wrong. He just kind of put me in my place. Which was kind of the best thing that could happen. To be a published writer, you have to listen to the good, the bad, and the ugly. His criticism made me assess where I was going. It helped unleash the writer I am today.”

McMillin changed his writing  style a bit. ”I took the testosterone out  of my writing as much as I could and tried to report factually. Initially, a lot of it I tried to mimic the way Tony wrote ‘Kitchen Confidential.’”

And, he says, “I found my voice, found my tone, reported factually. I didn’t create scenarios. One thing Ruhlman said was, ‘It seems like you’re trying to create a mystique about The French Laundry that isn’t there. You need to review it objectively.’”

Grains of Salt, which “plays on the title of the blog,” will be his second blog piece, McMillin says. “It’s all about ways to save the restaurant industry.”

It includes his experiences with “Feed the Frontlines Memphis,” an initiative co-founded by McMillin and his wife, Kristin, to “feed frontline warriors — nurses, doctors — to put revenue in the pocket of restaurants,” and “The Restaurant Phoenix Project,” a program put together by the McMillins and Bobby Maupin of “collaborative chef dinners to raise money for restaurants.”

The piece, without giving names, details “who’s being smart and who’s not being smart” in regards to restaurants operating during the pandemic.

It also will include, also without giving names, “restaurants that will not be here in six months because they refuse to budge” as far as changing during the pandemic.

During the pandemic, McMillin read 30 books by authors he admires, including Elmore Leonard, Nicholas Freeling, and George Orwell. “The main thing I get is honesty. I just write like I talk. The word ‘fuck’ comes into play. I think readers that I like to read are the people that write like they talk.  I’m not trying to be a highfalutin literary genius.

“I think my writing is essentially one’s life lived. And trying to do it as honestly as possible.”

Recipes will include some he and his wife gathered on a recent vacation. “We got out for five weeks and traveled around the South gathering recipes. I did a lot of cooking in the outer banks of North Carolina.”

Spencer and Kristin McMillin in Savannah, Georgia

Some of the recipes are geared toward people cooking during the pandemic, which includes the McMillins. “Being stuck out of the farm with a pantry full of ramen noodles, some moldering cilantro, a couple of onions, and a little bit of hoisin sauce. You make ‘compost bin ramen.’ Take rotting vegetables and throw them in the compost.”

McMillin told himself he would have his first published book by the time he was 50. He describes The Caritas Cookbook: A Year in the Life With Recipes as “a snapshot or a yearbook of an amazing year in my life.”

Mcmillan, who was executive chef of Caritas Community Center in Binghampton, says the cookbook is “not a historical piece. I didn’t write the history of Caritas. I wrote it as an interloper. A guy that came toward the end of it and cooks some amazing food with some amazing people. And we fed the homeless and supported restaurants. We put out a good vibe and we made the world a better place.”

Caritas,which means “a love of all people,” was the concept of Onie Johns, a “Germantown housewife that got disillusioned with life in the suburbs. And she had a desire to help people. She used to go to church in that neighborhood and see guys hanging out on the steps getting in trouble. She decided to move into the neighborhood and create a neighborhood center and cafe and help people.”

The cookbook includes stories and recipes. “I believe there are 12 chefs featured. All local. Ten local farms. That’s the theme of the book. We used as many local meat producers, vegetable growers, local chefs, as we could. It’s all about supporting the local economy and supporting the local community, whether it’s the underserved or the local culinary scene.”

Michael Donahue

Spencer McMillin with chef Rick Farmer at a Caritas dinner that featured Farmer as guest chef

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Spencer McMillin Steps Down as Caritas Chef de Cuisine. Matthew Schweitzer is New Chef De Cuisine.

MIchael Donahue

Kristin and Spencer McMillin

Michael Donahue

Matthew Schweitzer

Michael Donahue

Conrad Phillips

Spencer McMillin is stepping down November 18th as chef de cuisine of Caritas Community Center and Cafe. Matthew Schweitzer will be the new chef de cuisine.

McMillin says he will now “assume more of a mentoring role in café operations effective Monday November 18th.

“I will work with the new team to ensure continuity of the Caritas culinary and community missions, which are both to serve the highest quality food to those who can afford to pay and to those who can’t and to nurture the human spirit through meaningful interaction,” McMillin says.

“The reasons for this tough decision were numerous. I have severe tendonitis in my left arm which makes it difficult to give 100 percent and the pain has gotten incrementally worse over the course of the last few months. Unfortunately, my knees are not far behind.”

McMillin says he’s going to return to teaching part time at the Kemmons Wilson Culinary Institute. “Which is less taxing on my body and quite enjoyable.”

And, he says, “I am also currently in the middle of writing recipes and narrative for The Caritas Cookbook which I hope to have completed and for sale by January 2020. There will be stories, action photos and recipes.

“Additionally, I will still partner with my chef buddies for the Chef Partnership Dinner series and be a Walmart greeter of sorts at the café but my days of fighting daily battles in the Caritas kitchen (as documented in the Edible Memphis piece A Day In The Life at Caritas Village) are drawing to a close.

“My wife, Kristin (Caritas executive director) and I have chosen a capable successor in Chef Matthew Schweitzer and we look forward to seeing how his youthful energy and love of farm to table cooking takes the Caritas culinary mission to the next level. In that spirit, the Caritas menu will reflect the past with dishes Mac Edwards (former Caritas executive director) and I made popular and look toward the future with dishes that reflect Matthew’s philosophies and cooking style. Customers should expect the cuisine to be both familiar and exciting in the days and months to come.”

Schweitzer, 32, is excited about his new position. “If I wasn’t a chef, I would be a social worker,” he says. “I want to help people.”

He previously worked at restaurants, including Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen, Restaurant Iris, Interim, and The Beauty Shop Restaurant.

Schweitzer began working in the Caritas kitchen November 11th. He helped out at the Nov. 14th Chef Partnership Dinner, which featured McMillin and Kelley English from Restaurant Iris and The Second Line.

“We feed people not based on their ability to pay. So, if someone’s in need of a plate, they can come up and get a meal for free and it would be comparable to most fine dining restaurants in the city.”

On Schweitzer’s first day McMillin says, “I need you to make soup, an entree with two sides, a vegetable and starch.”

Schweitzer made a curried butternut squash soup, coq au vin (wine-braised chicken), with rigatoni and collard greens. “People loved it,” he says.

Schweitzer describes his style as “thought provoking. Definitely locally inspired. Utilizing what I have around me but putting a modern touch on it. The majority of everything we use is from the farmers. We have these really great relationships. And he (McMillin) is going to introduce me to these other farmers I don’t know and we’ll go from there.”

Conrad Phillips will become sous chef. “(He) is also a very skilled carpenter and has updated the cafe’s look in recent days with reclaimed wood,” McMillin says. “He’s also a hell of a cook. The two of those guys with little direction from me will kick the cuisine up a few notches.”

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Mac Edwards’ Side of the Caritas Story

Mac Edwards

Mac Edwards, who was terminated as executive director of Binghampton’s Caritas Community Center and Cafe on October 1st, is already looking for another job.

“I’m going to look,” Edwards says. “I’m not saying I won’t do something in the restaurant industry. I’m getting a little old to work nights, and my girlfriend has a real job. She works days.”

And, he says, “I’ve been sober 16 years. I’m going to poke around the treatment industry a little bit. I think I’d be pretty good at that. I’m really going to get after it on Monday.”

Edwards, 65, a veteran restaurateur who opened McEwen’s in 1997 and sold it in 2008, also owned Elegant Farmer (later renamed ‘The Farmer’), Brooks Pharm2Fork, and Chandelier in Jackson, Tennessee. He began working at Caritas Village on May 1, 2018.

He was preparing for a neighborhood event when he was let go by Caritas board chairman Blake Barber. “This happened on Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. We had a neighborhood thing in the front yard that night. It was the Neighborhood Night Out and we had one there. Blake Barber insisted on seeing me that night. He asked me if I wanted to resign and I said, ‘No.’ I was terminated. Basically, it just wasn’t working out. I wasn’t the right guy for the job, basically.

“They let me go and there were 75 people in the front yard, including all my employees, grilling hamburgers for the neighborhood. Kids doing chalk art and playing cornhole and putting on Halloween costumes. And here I am taking the walk of shame with all my shit in my arms — saying goodbye to all my employees.”

Says Edwards: “They just basically decided I wasn’t skilled enough in the nonprofit world. They knew the cafe was doing good and the wine dinners and stuff. They said they wanted to do more programming and that kind of stuff. But eight, nine months ago, we had somebody who was willing to be volunteer coordinator and try to find programming and they told her to pump the brakes and kill the whole thing.

“Here we started getting some programming and they pulled the plug. We’re in the black.


“I’m not your typical nonprofit guy. I’m not sure I fit the mold. I say ‘fuck’ too much. And it is a different world. They have their own language. It’s all about ‘measurables’ and ‘deliverables’ and ‘metrics.’ In all fairness to them, I’m not used to answering to people. I had to learn to do that.”

And, he says, “I just think it’s a total disconnect between me and the board; that was a lot of it. I’ll take responsibility for my part, but I don’t think it’s all on me.”