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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Bar Report: On the Regular

If there’s a bar where everybody knows your name, you’re probably an alcoholic — anonymous

That’s a riff on the old Cheers theme song, of course. And, of course, it’s not true. You are not an alcoholic — not you! — just because the bartender looks up when you arrive and starts pouring your favorite libation. You’re not an alcoholic just because everyone at the bar turns and shouts your name when you enter. You’re a regular, just like they are. You’re walking into your home away from home, your family away from family. Your special joint.

And that’s what this new monthly column, “Bar Report,” is going to be about — a look into Memphis bars and pubs and the culture surrounding them. Flyer staffers are going to take turns writing the column. We’ll be talking about all kinds of stuff: What are the best bars for first dates? What makes a good sports bar? How do you find a bar that’s age appropriate? Is there one thing that all good bartenders have in common?

We’ll be writing about drink trends, seasonal beverages, day drinking, historic bars, bar hopping, ethnic bars, dive bars, high-end dining bars, seasonal drinks — you name it, and we’re probably going to cover it.

I was discussing “regulars” with a bartender friend the other day and thought maybe that would be as good a topic as any with which to kick off this column. It’s one of the things that isn’t discussed much but seems obvious on reflection: how various establishments become venues for particular age groups — how “regulars” select their venue. One bar might draw baby boomers while the place two doors down the street is filled with millennials. The choice gets made based on many factors: the kind of food, the music, the décor, the noise level, the proximity to other places. A craft brewery will draw a different crowd than a wine bar or a cocktail-centric bar, obviously.

But the variations on a theme are almost endless: There are pickup bars, gay bars, wine bars, craft beer joints, live music clubs, dance clubs, after-hours bars, foodie bars, artisanal cocktail bars, Irish pubs, to name a few. Someone who’s out to meet strangers and drink themselves into a bed will go to a different kind of venue than the person who just wants a quiet joint where they can have a conversation with friends. A married couple in their 50s will want a different bar experience than two single women in their 30s.

One thing is certain, though: Regulars are the lifeblood of any drinking establishment. David Parks, who holds down the fort behind the bar at Alchemy, says “regulars represent 75 percent of my income, but it’s more than that. Some of them have become close friends — and friends with each other. A few even got married, with varying degrees of success.”

Justin Fox Burks

Allan Creasy

Allan Creasy is the bar manager at Celtic Crossing. He says regulars can make — or break — a bar: “If you walked into a bar, and it was perfect — had all your favorite drafts, had the televisions on exactly what you wanted to watch, there was a friendly bar staff — but if every person who started a conversation with you was an ass, you would stop going, eventually.

“Friendly regulars are worth their weight in gold,” he adds. “It’s impossible for me to chat with everyone and make drinks at the same time. A good regular is almost doing a part of my job for me, making the pub more of a home.”

Tyler Morgan and Justin Gerych man the bar at Cafe 1912. They will tell you the quiet backroom venue tends to draw a more mature crowd, seasoned Midtowners looking for decent food and friendly conversation.

On a recent night, when Morgan was pouring the drinks and the place was filled with regulars, a young couple walked in and took the last two seats at the bar. They were immediately peppered with friendly questions: “Where do you work?” “Where do you live?” “Do y’all like Midtown?” “How long have you been dating?” It was like they’d just come home from college and were dealing with nosy parents, probably not what they expected to encounter on a dinner date, but they endured the inquisition good-naturedly.

At one point, a geriatric-looking fellow — a regular, of course — stood up and adjusted his pants at the crotch.

“What are you doing, Richard?” asked his companion, slightly horrified.

“Adjusting my chemo bag and having another drink, goddammit.”

He then turned to the young couple and said, “I bet you two feel like you’ve just walked onto the set of Cocoon.”

Ah, regulars. Can’t live with ’em. Can’t live without ’em.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

National Burger Day, etc.

Katie McWeeney Powell

Frozen drinks at Celtic

Huey’s is celebrating National Burger Day Willy Wonka-ish style. On Saturday, May 28th, at all locations, guests whose burgers are adorned with a gold frill pick get their meal for free. 

Backyard Burgers on Goodman Road in Southaven is holding a burger-making contest on Monday, May 23rd, 4-6 p.m. Notable citizens make the burgers, and then customers vote on their favorites via a donation to No Kid Hungry.

Celtic Crossing just unveiled two new frozen drinks: Frozen Irish Coffee with ice cream, Irish whiskey coffee liqueur, and whipping cream; and the Redbull slushy with Red Bull, raspberry vodka, triple sec, and orange juice.

• Saddle Creek announced earlier this morning that Sur La Table, a very nice kitchenwares store, is opening in 2017.  

And now for a photo-dump … 

Donuts from the Donut Factory

Upside-down Pineapple Cake from the Sweet Cake Shop, the new place upstairs at Maciel’s. There’s a bar up there too, that’s set to open soon.

A crown at King Jerry Lawler’s Hall of Fame Bar & Grille. Lots to see here, folks.

The Chocoholic boozy shake at the Arcade, $7 during happy hour

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Margarita Festival Champ, and More Memphis Winners

The winner of the first-ever Memphis Margarita Festival was the Blue Monkey

Kendrea Collins

Congrats!

The day not only included margarita-swigging but also the cupid shuffle. So, in other words, it was perfect.

Pyramid Vodka has won yet another award. They recently took home the platinum in the vodka category at the 2015 SIP Awards

This is the third award that Pyramid has taken home in the less-than-a-year they’ve been in operation. Impressive. 

Pyramid scored silver at both the Denver International Spirits Competition and the Los Angeles International Spirits Competition, both in the vodka category. 

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Phillip Ashley Chocolates won the gold for “Most Unique for Best White Chocolate” at the International Chocolate Salon by TasteTV.

In other chocolate-covered news, Phillip Ashley just launched its 2015 Summer Collection inspired by cake and ice cream. Flavors include Red Velvet and carrot cakes and such ice creams as rum butter pecan and salted caramel gelato. 

Clearly, the best way to eat these chocolates is on top of cake a la mode. 

• Finally, a shout out to Celtic Crossing, which marked its 10th year anniversary weekend. They spruced up the place (new barstools, a re-done bar, and new furniture, etc.) for the occasion and went non-smoking. 

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Majestic Grille, Celtic Crossing Mark 10 Years

Patrick Reilly and DJ Naylor have beaten the odds. Ten years ago, each started a restaurant, and today, they’re going like gangbusters. Reilly is the owner and chef at the Majestic Grille on South Main. Naylor founded Celtic Crossing Irish Pub in Cooper-Young.

As it turns out, these two men share a lot more than an anniversary. Both grew up in Ireland, about two hours apart, and each is the 10th child in his large, Irish-Catholic family. Both came to Memphis by way of Boston and Orlando. Both married Americans, and today their kids are in the same class at school.

More to the point, each signed a second 10-year lease for their respective restuarants.

The Flyer recently caught up with them to talk about crossing the pond, tricycle-friendly dining, and why restaurants fail.

Justin Fox Burks

Patrick, Seamus, and Deni Reilly; Kayla, Jamie, and DJ Naylor

Reilly: It’s funny how our lives are kind of parallel. Do you remember how we met?

Naylor: Well, back in the day I consumed a fair amount of Guinness at Dan McGuinness, which is where we met. You would drift in at about 10:30 p.m. for a quick one. During your shift, I might add — isn’t that right?

Reilly: (Laughing) That’s very true. I used to have an old Nextel phone, and it never did work at Dan McGuinness. So if they were trying to get a hold of me, they would call John Moyles behind the bar.

Naylor: And here we are, 10 years later, and your son Seamus is riding his tricycle around the restaurant.

Reilly: (Laughing) I never thought I’d run a tricycle-friendly restaurant, but I do. (Pause) So how do you think you made it to 10 years?

Naylor: My thought — and this is where I fell out with some of my partners — was that we needed to take a portion of what we made and put it back in the restaurant. This idea that you always take the money out — I think a lot of restaurants fail because of that.

Reilly: That’s what people don’t realize. The bulk of restaurants don’t fail because they aren’t making good food. They fail because they don’t have enough cash. The truth is, there are months when, for whatever reason, you don’t make any money. And you can’t live through that if you don’t have cash reserves.

Naylor: If I were to ask you to look out over the next 10 years, what do you see?

Reilly: I’ve fielded offers to run other restaurants, but I’m reluctant. If I do another project, it has to be a step up. I’ve spent so much time and energy and emotion on the Majestic. If I did something new, it’d have to be just right. How about yourself?

Naylor: We’re looking to become more family-oriented. More of a restaurant, a place where families can come for lunch or brunch. Maybe not as reliant on that business that comes in after 11 p.m. on a Friday or a Saturday night. We’re also looking to become a better neighbor.

Reilly: That’s what I like about running a restaurant: It never gets old. It’s always changing, the parts are always moving.

Naylor: And when the day’s over, it’s over. You can have a big night, and it’s busy, it’s crazy. But at the end of the night, everybody goes home, everybody gets fed. And then the next day, you start all over again. It’s a blank canvas. It’s a new opportunity.

Categories
Cover Feature News

It Only Hurts When He Laughs

Mike Matthews is barely 60 years old, and what is that these days but the new 45? In any case, something about this idiosyncratic marvel of a TV newsman is peculiarly and perpetually young — but not in the usual cosmetic sense.

For there’s something old about him, too. And why not? Chronically overweight and formerly prone to an unhealthy self-indulgence, he’s taken more than a few batterings in recent years — an abrupt firing from his longtime station in late 2011, and, after two and a half years of re-establishing himself at a new television address, having to endure, successively, cancer and a heart attack, followed by a serious and unexpected circulatory problem resulting from what should have been a routine treatment.

***

After a lengthy convalescence from the latter, a runaway hematoma that ravaged his body tissue and kept him hospitalized and abed (something the cancer, a scalp lymphoma since radiated into remission, couldn’t do), Matthews is ready to resume his duties and is expected back on the job at WATV, Channel 24, next week.

As longtime fans and well-wishers, we wanted to cheer him on and sat down last Saturday afternoon with the Watchdog, as he is billed on TV for his aggressive and probing oversight of the local political and governmental universe. The venue was Celtic Crossing, the Cooper-Young establishment where Matthews has been both a fixture and a draw for the past several years. Long renowned for his tippling prowess, the Dog confined himself to a few glasses of water during our conversation, more or less on doctor’s orders. As we talked, he was continually being greeted with hearty “Welcome home!” greetings from customers and employees.

This native of the Boston area has been a Memphian since September 1997 — not quite 20 years— but in that length of time he’s become an authentic Memphian, residual New England Irish accent and all. Those who see him on TV or follow his tweets or read his entertaining Facebook posts — and, added up together, that’s a lot of us — have learned more about Memphis and its power alleys than they thought there was to know. 

And more about him, too, especially in the Facebook entries, that — unlike the tweets and the television reporting, which are faithful if distinctively nuanced reports on the body politic — are something rare indeed: obsessive blow-by-blow accounts in which the self-chronicler tells us everything that he’s doing (or that is being done to him), jot by jot, tittle by tittle, without being the least bit boring or off-putting. Over and over again, he turns out to be his own most interesting subject.

Many of us, in late September 2011, learned first from his Facebook page that Matthews had been fired by WREG-TV, News Channel 3, the station that, 14 years earlier, had given him the task of patrolling the local political and governmental waterfront — and that on-point nickname, The Watchdog, to go with it. The firing — actually, a non-renewal of his contract — was an astounding fact for many of us, who had long admired the Dog’s aggressive, street-smart, unabashed style of reporting. (The Flyer’s then-media critic, Jim Hanas, fascinated, dubbed it noir journalism.)

No blow-hair studio dandy, this guy. He had once — in his youth and early in his professional career — had more hair than all of the Kennedy brothers put together. As he put it in our chat, “I had some amazing hair. People would come from miles around to look at my hair. Little kids wanted to crawl around in it.”

The Mike Matthews who hit Memphis TV screens in 1997 at age 42 was a balding, portly presence, however — visually more like Broderick Crawford than Matthew Broderick. Often, especially out of doors, he wore a trenchcoat. “I was gaining a little weight at the time, and I couldn’t button my coat, so I threw the stupid coat over my shoulder. People reacted, so I just kept doing it.”

Social mores, FCC codes, and TV “best practices” being what they were, he couldn’t use the fat, rolled cigars he fancied as props, but they somehow seemed to be implicit  in the frames, anyhow.

Watching the Dog at a press conference was always a treat for other reporters. Suspenders, perpetually rumpled clothes, an ever-growing pot belly, and, ultimately, a hat (more about that anon): These were all part of his costumery, as he customarily beat other reporters to the punch and barked out the first question, as often as not the first of a series, prodding at some weak point in the subject’s façade, some cover-up in the presentation. As he described his modus operandi on Saturday, it was the best way he could find of serving Memphis:

“It’s a working-class city, and the people need somebody out there who’s trying to be their voice. You ask your questions for them. I always did. They don’t think the politicians give a damn about them. They don’t think the people in power care about them. So my job is to go talk to the mayor or whoever and to approach them with respect but with a directness. Folks deserve an answer, and that’s what you got the job for. I keep reminding them they’re public servants, that’s the term, and a lot of times these folks get in and they forget that entirely. It sounds corny, but that’s what I need to be doing, and that’s what I’m going to keep doing. I get real passionate about that.”

***

One of his favorite targets was Willie Herenton, the alpha-male mayor who had been in office for six years when Matthews got to town (following TV and radio stints in his native New England, and later in Columbia, South Carolina, and Charlotte, North Carolina). Herenton would serve another 12 years, during much of which time Hizzoner would often have to answer to the Watchdog.

“I always enjoyed the Herenton press conference. Some days he’d be mad at you and some days you were the greatest reporter who hit the earth,” recalled Matthews who went after the mayor hard on irregularities like those at the city’s Animal Shelter and Rape Crisis Center (both still potential problem areas under Herenton’s successor, Mayor A C Wharton).

And there was John Ford, the longtime former state senator from Memphis who was forever mired in controversy and who would eventually be convicted of bribery in the FBI’s Tennessee Waltz sting of 2005. The Watchdog gave the volatile Ford a wide berth, even while pressing him for answers.

“With somebody like him — with anybody, actually — if it got to the point where he said ‘no comment’ the third time, I would back off. He would easily get angry. I remember one day he was walking at a real fast clip. I’ve got my photographer and we’re running after him, and he won’t talk. I finally said, ‘Senator, unless you want to be responsible for me dying of a heart attack right now, you should stop and let me get in front of you. He stopped and said, ‘Okay, go ahead. Look at me and ask your questions.'”

As that incident suggests, the relationship of Matthews with the officials on his beat is generally one of mutual respect. (He regards both Herenton and Ford, whatever their flaws, as having been capable public servants who “did the job.”)

As for Herenton, “He was fiery, but the son of a gun, when I was out of work at Channel 3, and Channel 3 didn’t renew me, and I was needing a job, the guy who hired me at Channel 24, Pete Jacobus, was out one night and saw Herenton at Houston’s and says, ‘I’m thinking of hiring Mike Matthews,’ and Herenton says, ‘You gotta hire him, he’s a great reporter.'”

 ***

So what happened that Channel 3, for which he’d been a star performer, would let him go? Roll back through his voluminous Facebook posts, and it’s obvious that the non-renewal of his contract blindsided him. No premonition, no warning. 

“I don’t know what happened at Channel 3. I wish I did, but I don’t. I didn’t fit in with their future plans, I was told. I just don’t bad-mouth where I worked.” The station, which for years had languished at a seemingly permanent #2 to WMC-TV, Action News 5, had begun scoring number-one ratings at various time slots during his tenure there — a success rate, it should be said, that it continues to maintain. 

“I was shocked. I was. Really surprised,” Matthews said of his involuntary departure. “When stuff like this happens, it makes you realize: ‘Boy, I really liked that job.’

“There’s no job protection in broadcasting, none whatsoever, particularly in Tennessee, an at-will state,” the Dog mused on his bar stool. “A contract will keep you there for a while, but not that long. There’s no protection, and radio’s even tougher.” He was doing both genres in Charlotte, his immediate pre-Memphis venue, and admits to being fired there — maybe for expressing “liberal” attitudes on the radio talk show he was doing in that conservative neck of the woods. (For a while, he did a little moonlighting in Memphis radio, too, following shock jock Thaddeus Matthews at a Flinn Broadcasting station.)

One problem at Channel 3 may have been the Watchdog’s off-duty tweets. “Yeah, I got in trouble tweeting. A lot of double entendres. Not sophisticated humor, by any stretch. Early in the game they were borderline profane, and I was just knocking ’em out. I was told at the station, ‘Some of your tweets are in bad taste. You wouldn’t say some of that stuff on TV.’ I said, ‘I’d say it all.’ That might not have gone over well. I stopped. I really toned down.”

At Channel 24, where he landed in January 2012 after three months in broadcasting limbo, he’s once again a tweeter. “It drives people to our TV station. I try to put some personality into it still.”

***

At his new station, where copyright worries caused a temporary nickname change to “the Bulldog” (he has long since reverted to the “Watchdog” handle), Matthews enjoyed his reprieve and his return to the TV wars, and he resumed his former off-duty habits.

“Out there, drinking what you want to, eating what you want to, smoking cigars, you think you can’t be put down. You think you’re going to live forever. I did. All of a sudden, the cancer hit me in June.” 

He’d developed a pimple-like bump on top of his balding scalp, one that began to grow. Channel 24 photographer Whitney Gramling, who’d had her own bout with melanoma, warned him he needed to see a doctor about it. A doctor, after watching him on TV, called in to urge him to do the same thing. Ultimately, Matthews went to see a dermatologist, who did a biopsy and confirmed the presence of a malignancy that was soon diagnosed as a lymphoma.

“They got it in stage one, which is rare for a lymphoma,” recalled the Dog. The subsequent radiation therapy “knocked me for a loop. It was really tiring. There was a little nausea, but mostly I got exhausted.” But he stayed on the job, in the meantime, sporting the wide-brimmed hat — to hide the marks drawn on his scalp to guide the radiation therapist — that has since become an on-air trademark. “There were days when it was really hard ro focus on what I was doing. There were some days I had to take off. But for the most part I wanted to work. It sounds crazy, but I like what I’m doing.”

Inveterate self-chronicler that he is, Matthews kept his widening audience of fans and sympathizers informed of his medical progress on a daily basis via Facebook. And he kept on working.

“I  liked the job. I always have liked the job,” he said. “It’s what I want to do. Really, it’s all I’ve ever wanted. Memphis has been a great place for me, because it offers politics in a way you don’t see any other places. It’s a rough and tumble world, and it’s right out there for you to see, and there’s all kinds of things going on that are just underneath the surface.

“And the toughest thing was this year. Hell, on January 16th, when I was told I was having a heart attack, [Councilman Jim] Strickland had just announced he was running for mayor, and I was thinking, ‘Oh, this is going to be great here.’ With Strickland running, and at the time I was thinking that [Councilman] Harold Collins was going to announce in a couple of weeks. I didn’t know anything yet about [County Commissioner] Justin Ford and [Memphis Police Association President] Mike Williams, I just knew this was going to be a great year.

“So I feel I’ve knocked off the cancer It’s in remission, the doctors tell me, and on January 16th, I wake up at three o’clock in the morning. I was feeling panicky. I thought it was a panic attack.” And he had what felt like an onslaught of acid reflux. His first thought was to turn on the TV to calm himself down. But, as luck would have it, his cable system wasn’t working right. If it had been, he probably would never have left his building. But he drove down to the Walgreen’s nearest his Midtown apartment (“Walgreen’s is a very interesting place at three in the morning!”) and bought himself a little battery-powered radio to keep him early-morning company back in his apartment.

“I get in the car, with the radio. And, I don’t know what it is, but I feel strange.” So, on impulse, he drove to Methodist Hospital, where, at that early hour, “I had the best parking space.” Inside, at the emergency room’s admissions desk, he almost apologized for being there. “I said I may be overreacting. I may be making this up. But they took my blood pressure. It was 220 over 160, something bizarre I never heard of. They finished another test and said, ‘You’re having a heart attack right now.'”

The long and the short of it is that, after a lengthy wait, during which he “tried to find the best articles in People Magazines that were 10 years old,” he was admitted. The short part was that he was given a catherization. The long part is what came next, an unexpected post-catherizatron hematoma in the region of his thigh that begat complications so trying and virulent that the doctors stopped talking about his heart issue altogether.

“If this thing hadn’t happened, I’d have been in there for a day or two, tops, and out of there. But there was the hematoma, all this blood, and an infection. I had to have the dressings changed every morning. They thought of a skin graft. Another week they did a drain. In the third week, they did a catherization on the other side, put a stint in, and found blockage in another artery, and an aorta that was enlarged.”

In the meantime, the hematoma had destroyed muscle and nerve tissue. “I had developed this odor of decaying flesh, and there was another operation just trying to cut away two areas where there was lots of decay.”

A further complication was the fact that Matthews has Type 2 diabetes, “because I’m a fat bastard.” Once topping the scales at more than 300 pounds, he now, post-treatment, weighs in at a mere 270.

***

The bottom line is that he’s out now and ready to resume his reporting duties. His diet, both liquid and solid, is different. “Fish and vegetables, mainly. It’s gonna kill me, because I’m Irish — a red-meat-and-potatoes man. And I can’t eat any of that anymore. No cigars. No drink. Oh, once every now and then.” Never fear. He’s back to doing his teetotaling (or whatever) at Celtic Crossing and, starting March 16th — two months to the day from his heart attack — he’ll be back on the air.

Will he be the same old Watchdog? The relish with which he discusses the forthcoming mayoral race leaves little doubt on that score. “I’ve got to get going on it. There’s a lot of work I have to do. I’m like A C [incumbent Mayor A C Wharton]. Some days he used to look exhausted. But, once word got out that Strickland was thinking of running, he got rejuvenated. We’ve got a shot this year at getting the issues discussed. A lot of the candidates are going to have a shot, but I think it’ll come down to Wharton and Strickland.”

There’s no doubt that Matthews means it when he says, “I get my pleasure out of my job.” He told a story about the dissolution of his one and only marriage many years ago, early in his broadcasting career.

“My wife, who was fed up with my fixation on my work, asked me a hypothetical question: ‘If you had a son and a plane happened to crash on the day of your son’s first birthday party, keeping in mind he would never have another first birthday, which event would you spend your time at?’ I told her, ‘I’d have to go to the plane crash. I mean, it’s a plane crash!’ She never understood.”

The couple would remain childless and would divorce after a two-year run. There would never be a son, but there would, in a manner of speaking, be any number of “plane crashes,” especially in rowdy, working-class Memphis, which continually reminds him of the nitty-gritthy aspects of his native Boston.

“I like the job too well,” he says. Reminded that he’s become an institution here, he says, “An institution? I ought to be in an institution!”

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Taste of Cooper Young Thursday

poster.jpg

The Bouffants have a motto: “The higher the hair, the closer to God.” So it seems especially appropriate that the popular showband, with its ever-changing cast of big-voiced (and bigger-wigged) singers, should headline Thursday’s A Taste of Cooper Young. The annual party for Memphis foodies used to benefit the Memphis Literacy Council, but the event has been taken over by First Congregational Church, and proceeds go toward funding the progressive church’s various outreach ministries.

Starting at 5 p.m., participants can pick up wristband from First Congregational Church. The wristband entitles the wearer to a small dish, or “tasting,” at a dozen popular Cooper Young area restaurants all within walking distance of the church.

Participating restaurants and food-related businesses include Alchemy, Bar DKDC, The Beauty Shop, Cafe Ole, Celtic Crossing, Sweet Crass, Mulan, Strano, Stone Soup, Soul Fish, Green Cork, and Get Fresh.

The food tasting continues till 8:30 p.m. Meanwhile, saxophonist Pat Register will be performing in the corner gazebo and the Bouffants will play from 8 p.m.-9:30 p.m. in the sanctuary at First Congo, where a silent auction will also be conducted.

First Congo is a justice-minded church. Its outreach ministries range from traditional food ministries, to community gardens, to a “Blessed Bee” program that helps to repopulate devastated bee populations.

A Taste of Cooper-Young is Thursday, September 18th, 5:30-9 p.m., $50
tasteofcooperyoung.com

Categories
Cover Feature News

Cheers!

“We live in public” is the relatively new expression used to describe life in the digital age. It’s the paper umbrella in a heady cocktail of warnings about privacy and the loss of meaningful human contact, and, as long as there’s not a good game on the big screen, it’s exactly the kind of thing that can spark lively discussion in a “public house” where everybody knows your name and, thanks to the alcohol being served, at least a few of your secrets.  

Pubs have been popular R&R destinations since the prehistoric invention of beer goggles, and since that date, now lost to time and occasional bouts of over-consumption, a certain set of personality types have made a habit of frequenting their favorite watering holes on a more or less daily basis, at just about the same time, to order just about the same thing. These creatures of habit are known to all as “the regulars,” and who they are may surprise you. Or maybe it won’t surprise you at all. But in the spirit of “write what you know” this seemed like the perfect excuse to turn the Flyer‘s editorial staff loose on a subject near and dear to most of our hearts: bar life.

“Regulars are going to be different wherever you go,” says Cafe Keough owner Kevin Keough, who got his start in restaurants slinging drinks at bars like Automatic Slim’s and the Beauty Shop and who has poured many shots for this writer. “It can be like [the TV show] Cheers,” he says, allowing that in his time as a mixologist, he’s known a barfly or two, and at some level many of the quirky stereotypes about bar regulars are true enough. “But what you come to realize over time is that your regulars are really the normal ones.”

Every bar in town worth its margarita salt has its regulars, and this is by no means an attempt to cover all of them. But we think this eclectic sampling will cover the tab.

Justin Fox Burks

Hannah Duke and Ashley Edge at Felicia Suzanne’s

Felicia Suzanne’s

Jerome Shipp, expeditor and waiter at Felicia Suzanne’s for 10 years (“next to forever,” he says), points out the regulars at the restaurant’s Friday-only lunches. There’s the table in the back, that table at the side, those few out on the patio. … He turns, then points to a threesome at the bar.

Mike Ratcliff, Ashley Edge, and Hannah Duke work nearby at APG Office Furnishings. Ratcliff and Edge can pinpoint exactly when they became regulars. It was October. The occasion: Ratcliff’s birthday. They estimate they stop by for lunch every other week, citing the food and the service as they give a nod to bartender Bri Silvio.

Edge says her preferred drink is a glass of Pinot Grigio. Ratcliff says his is Chardonnay, at which Edge dramatically stage whispers, “That’s because they’re out of White Zinfandel.”

“Hah!” Ratcliff exclaims. As for Duke, she professes to being only a semi-regular. “She’s very disciplined,” Edge notes. “And poor,” Duke adds.

Justin Fox Burks

Part of the appeal of the Friday lunches are the 25-cent martinis. Shipp estimates they serve 100 of the drinks during Friday lunch. They come in a variety of options: either Burnett’s gin or vodka, straight-up or dirty, with orange or cranberry juice. The beauty of the Friday martinis is that they are one-ounce pours, so diners can indulge in more than one without getting too Mad Men.

Sitting at the end of the bar are Eiko Harris and Quiana Cox. They’re finishing up their lunches. “It’s a combination of the food and martinis,” Cox says, explaining the draw of Felicia Suzanne’s. Harris ordered the shrimp and grits; Cox opted for the catfish and fries. They shared an order of deviled eggs. As for those martinis, it’s with pineapple juice for Harris. Cox orders hers with orange juice.

Both of the women work in East Memphis. Harris is an attorney. Cox works for Hilton Worldwide. Cox says, “I come here whenever I’m off on Fridays.”

Susan Ellis

Felicia Suzanne’s, 80 Monroe (523-0877)

Justin Fox Burks

Phil Brown chats with Jackie, a fellow regular at Molly’s La Casita.

Molly’s La Casita

They’ve been pouring those famous margaritas at Molly’s La Casita since 1982, and the Midtown institution has a loyal gang of regulars who sidle up to the tiny, three-sided bar for conversation and libations.

“We probably have 50 people I would call regulars,” bartender James Ragghianti says. “There’s a group, for example, that shows up every Saturday, rain or shine, sometimes with 10 people, sometimes 20. I like my regulars,” he says, “because they tend to be unpretentious and comfortable to be around. No drama. I know their drink orders, and they know me.”

Jackie and Jasmine are two regulars who like to hit Molly’s on Monday. “I like this place because they know me and what I like. And I also like this crazy bartender,” Jackie says, smiling. Her drink of choice is the “Half and Half Margarita” — as in half frozen, half not frozen. “It’s for those who don’t want to have to wait for the alcohol to kick in,” she laughs.

But if you looked up the dictionary definition of a bar “regular,” it would probably have a picture of Phil Brown next to it. Brown, who’s now retired, has shown up every day at Molly’s for many, many years. Yes, every day. He’s such an institution that Molly’s has put a small nameplate on the bar at Phil’s seat.

Justin Fox Burks

“If someone’s sitting in his seat, Phil’s not happy,” Ragghianti says. “But he’ll wait til they leave, then move. He’s polite about it.”

It’s safe to say Phil is a Molly’s institution. “If Phil doesn’t show up,” Ragghianti says, “the bartender on duty will call the previous day’s bartender and ask if Phil said he wasn’t coming in today. If he doesn’t show up, we get worried.” That, my friends, is a regular.

Phil himself is an amiable sort of fellow, and he likes to tell the story of the woman who came up to him one night and told him how happy she was to learn he was alive. Seems she’d seen the nameplate on an earlier visit and deduced that Phil had died.

Nope. He’s very much alive, as is the feisty bar crowd at Molly’s.

Bruce VanWyngarden

Molly’s La Casita, 2006 Madison (726-1873)

Celtic Crossing

Listen closely to a gang of regulars at Celtic Crossing, and you’ll hear what gives the pub more Irish street cred than its perfectly poured pints of Guinness.

They huddle around two tables pushed together close to the bar, and their conversation and raucous laughter is punctuated with the undeniable musical accents of Ireland. Since Celtic Crossing opened in 2005, the Midtown pub has been home to this close-knit group hailing mostly from Éire but also from the U.S., Poland, and Belgium.

They’re found at their tables on certain weekdays during happy hour — drinking pints, sharing stories, making each other laugh — or laughing at each other. When all the members are present, their presence fills the bar with the good-natured rowdiness practiced in countless pubs across Ireland.

Seamus Loftus and Robert Cummins are usually in the thick of it on Mondays and some Sundays. The two own the Brass Door, downtown’s Irish pub that opened in 2011. But Midtown is home to them both, and, they say, Celtic Crossing “is our local.”

“I live about five minutes from here, and it’s where we come to get away from our pub,” Cummins says, with a laugh. “I like to come here and sit down with my pals and have a beer, shoot the breeze, and talk about the football games; that’s soccer games, you know.”

Loftus says the draw of Celtic Crossing is more than it being just generally Irish. He and the bar’s owner, D.J. Naylor, grew up in the same town, support the same football club, and are even related by marriage. The Brass Door is more like city pubs found in Dublin and Cork, he says, while Celtic Crossing is more typical of Ireland’s country pubs, which suits him just fine “because we’re country boys.”

One of the most recognizable regulars at Celtic Crossing is Mike Matthews. Yes, he has a singular presence on local television as the “WatchDog” on Channel 24. But at Celtic Crossing, he’s known by his booming voice, easy laughter, and ever-present cigar.

“I’ve had the opportunity to get to know the staff at Celtic over the years, and they really are my second family,” Matthews says. “Celtic is a place where I can talk with others or be alone with my thoughts and my cigars.”

Naylor can easily list his regulars and can easily point to their barstools. He says the connection for regulars is, simply, familiarity.  

“People are enamored with the idea that they know most of the people around them,” he says. “They also like to know the person who is serving them and that they know what they drink.”

“A great bar is a place that feels comfortable,” Matthews says, “and I feel comfortable at Celtic.” — Toby Sells

Celtic Crossing, 903 South Cooper (274-5151)

Bianca Phillips

Bartender Dan Taylor and Jae Wells at the Pumping Station

The Pumping Station

Growing up gay in the tiny town of Belle Eagle, Tennessee, Jae Wells says he “had a lot of bad feelings about who I was.” But at age 18, on a trip to Memphis with members of the blues band he belonged to, he discovered acceptance at a gay bar.

That was 28 years ago, and that bar was called the Pipeline and was advertised as a “leather bar.” But for the past 13 years, the small storefront at Poplar and Cleveland has operated as the Pumping Station and, in recent years, has attracted a diverse mix of gay men (most not wearing leather) and often their straight or lesbian friends.

Outside the bar, a rainbow flag lets patrons know the Pumping Station is a welcoming bar. Inside “The Pump,” as its regulars call it, panels of the kind of textured aluminum one might find on the bed of a pick-up truck hang on the walls. On the patio, there’s a legendary wooden treehouse that patrons can climb, and in a throwback to its leather bar beginnings, the bathrooms are separated by “master” and “slave” rather than the more traditional “men” and “women.”

“I come here for the clientele and the owners. [Owners] Robert and Steve are fantastic people, and they’re so committed to our community,” says Wells, who owns American Standard Foundation Repair in Cordova. “And the clientele are pool-playing, beer-drinking people. I own a construction company, so I like to hang out with those kind of people.”

Wells, who rarely misses a Monday night pool tournament at the Pump and usually stops by on Friday or Saturday nights, says he appreciates how diverse the clientele has become over the years.

“Last Friday night, there were 20 or 30 gay men in their 40s and about the same number of males in their 20s. And the rest were straight women, four or five straight couples, and some straight men here as part of a party for their friend,” Wells says. “They were all having such a blast. It was such a sign of the times. Nobody cared who was gay or straight. You wouldn’t have seen that 20 years ago.”

Memphis was home to nearly 10 gay bars a decade ago, but most have since shuttered their doors. The Pumping Station has survived the test of time. Owner Steve Murphy says the exodus of gay bars is a national trend that has much to do with those changing times Wells mentioned.

“The younger crowd doesn’t necessarily feel like they have to go to a gay bar anymore. They go hang out with their straight friends at the Blue Monkey or wherever, and then they end up bringing their straight friends in here,” Murphy says. “The dynamics of gay bars have changed a lot.”

Murphy welcomes the diversity, and the Pumping Station is adapting and making improvements. Wells’ construction company is helping to renovate the bar’s back room into a smoking lounge, and by May 1st, the front section of the bar will become non-smoking.

“You have to change with the times. You have to be open to whoever walks in the door,” Murphy says. “We’ve always been like that, but people haven’t always realized that.”

Bianca Phillips

The Pumping Station, 1382 Poplar (272-7600)

Rockhouse Live

Rockhouse Live is a homegrown music club, holding events throughout the week to keep regulars (and newcomers) busy — open-mic nights, karaoke, ladies’ night — and offers lots of live music on the weekends. It has only been open since August, but Rockhouse Live already has its crew of regulars, many of them holdovers from previous bars in the same building.

Owner Zach Bair says he opened Rockhouse Live because he didn’t see anything like it around Memphis; he touts the bar as having the largest stage in town, complete with a lounge area and a new patio.

“When I got here, I noticed that there was a lack of what I would call a ‘semi-upscale’ place in the area, with really good live music and really good food,” he says. “[Now,] we get a wide range of patrons in here — regulars who live in the neighborhood and fans who come to see bands.”

Despite the large stage and all the activities, Bair says he is going for a cozy environment. “I want them to feel like they’re in their living room and comfortable, like they’re at home, no matter what type of music is playing. We just want an environment where everybody feels welcome.”

Thomas, who did not want to give his last name, was pointed out by the bartenders and Bair as one of the Rockhouse Live regulars. He says the proximity to his home helped attract him initially.

“Being disabled, being in a wheelchair, it’s easy and convenient for me,” he says. “It’s nice that I can ride my wheelchair up here and get something to eat, have something to drink, and listen to good, live music.”

Thomas feels comfortable here.

“Everybody has their Cheers — that one place they like to go,” he says. “Sure, you go to other places and hang out, but you always go back to that one place. It’s that home that you have. You know everybody, and everybody knows you. It’s nice when you walk in the door and someone knows your name. Someone’s happy to see you. It just makes your day.” — Alexandra Pusateri

Rockhouse Live, 5709 Raleigh-LaGrange (386-7222)

Joe Boone

KT Bintz, Neil Heins, Al Bintz, ‘Andie Girl,’ and Lawrence Rathheim

Neil’s Music Room

Loyalty is the essence of the regular. Location is the essence of real estate. If both are true, Neil Heins has cultivated loyalty like a master. Neil’s Music Room (“Where the Fat Man Rocks”) on Quince is a relatively new location for a bar (and a fat man) with a storied history. At happy hour on Friday, there are few seats left among the boisterous regulars, some of whom have followed Neil’s across town from its old location at Madison and McLean and others who came from earlier iterations McNeil’s and Studebaker’s.

“We started at McNeil’s when it was on Union at Methodist Hospital,” shouts longtime regular Al Bintz. A woman yells into the din that most people working here now have migrated from the Madison location, which burned in 2011, causing the move to Quince in 2012.

“When we started hanging out there, our father was in the hospital,” says KT Bintz, Al’s brother and fellow regular. “We have a big family, and we’d take over the waiting room. So we took over Neil’s instead. It worked out for everybody.”

“Have you ever heard Neil sing?” asks Al. “Neil can sing his ass off. What I remember is that he used to get behind the bar, and he’d have a microphone.”

Al Bintz suggests that Neil sing for us. Neil in return suggests something terribly inappropriate to Bintz and merriment ensues. There is a plaque above the bar that reads, “No Shame Hall of Fame.” It is a fun place. The bartender prefers to be called Andie Girl. She made the trip from the Madison location and knows how to tame the chorus of graying wits.

Lawrence Rathheim is another longtime regular. He lives near the Quince location but was a frequent patron of the Madison bar.

“It’s just like Cheers, except instead of knowing your name, we’ve got your number,” Rathheim says. “I used to go to Madison all the time. I had a cousin who lived over at the Gilmore. We had a lot of fun. But it’s my neighborhood bar now. I’m not a wrestling fan, but I’ll come up here just to watch them watch wrestling.”

As Boston plays on the jukebox, the Bintz brothers renew their friendly assault on Neil.

“He would go broke if he were behind the bar,” Al says. “He’d start a drink from here.”

“He’d starve to death,” says KT. “He’d look like he was from Ethiopia. He had to hire somebody else.”

When asked for comment on the patrons who have been giving him a hard time, Neil sheepishly comes out from the kitchen to the bar area. The story he told next is not fit for publication in this (or really any) newspaper. But do yourself a favor: Go order a beer and ask Neil how he gained notoriety in Australia. — Joe Boone

Neil’s Music Room, 5727 Quince (682-2300)

Bar Guide…

Alchemy
Try the hand-crafted Hound Dog cocktail this spring at Alchemy. Featuring W.L. Weller bourbon and fresh peach with lemon, ginger, and mint, this drink is light and refreshing — a great way to enjoy bourbon in the warmer months.
940 S. Cooper • 726-4444 • alchemymemphis.com

Bardog Tavern
Other than a cowboy shot of Jameson, we get down to business with 10 craft brews on draft, the best bartenders around, and the city’s best happy hour. Taking a shot with your favorite bartenders gets any weekend festivities started right!
73 Monroe • 275-8752 • bardog.com  

Blind Bear Speakeasy
Feel swanky starting this spring and drink some Swanky Summer Sippers created by Colin Bergstrom, part owner of Blind Bear Speakeasy. This drink is ultra luxurious and includes Bombay Sapphire Gin, St. Germaine, muddled cucumbers, oranges, a sugar cube, Champagne, and juices, all served over ice in Blind Bear’s signature mason jars!  
119 S. Main • 417-8435
blindbearmemphis.com, @BlindBear901

The Cove
The Cove’s special springtime concoction is called the Dixie Sour, a Southern twist on the traditional Whiskey Sour, in which the Cove’s crack mixologists substitute American Born Dixie, sweet-tea moonshine, for bourbon, to create a refreshing springtime sip sure to make you pucker up and whistle the anthem of the region from which this cocktail derives its name.
2559 Broad • 730-0719 • thecovememphis.com

Dan McGuinness
Spring is here, and Dan McGuinness is serving up a popular, fresh, and delightful treat that’s always a favorite. Lynchburg Lemonade — lemon-lime soda, lemonade, and a shot of Jack Daniel’s — hits the spot.
4698 Spottswood • 761-3711
3964 Goodman in Southaven • (662) 890-7611
danmcguinness.com

Jack Magoo’s Sports Bar & Grill
Jack Magoo’s has the hottest spring specials. Tuesdays are Pint Nights with half-price appetizers and $2.50 drafts all night, 5 p.m. ’til close. And it’s $2 domestic longnecks during all sporting events.
2583 Broad • 746-9612

Lucchesi’s Beer Garden
Lucchesi’s Beer Garden is truly enjoying the seasonal transition with Time Traveler Strawberry Shandy. Come relax on our patio and sip on this delicious beer with flavors of strawberry shortcake, hints of vanilla and kiwi, and a refreshing lemonade finish. Happy drinking!
84 S. Reese • 458-5110 • beergardenmemphis.com

Molly’s La Casita
Molly’s has the ultimate spring drink. It’s our first-place award-winning margarita (Memphis Flyer readers poll 2013). Be sure to try our new low-calorie Nectar Girl Margarita if you are trying to keep your hot figure. Molly’s has an ice-cold one ready for you that is sure to please.
2006 Madison • 726-1873 • mollyslacasita.com

Mulan Asian Bistro
The Hong Kong Phooey cocktail at Mulan Asian Bistro is perfect for spring. It is a combination of vodka, lychee, green tea liqueur, and pineapple juice, topped off with a refreshing splash of Sprite.
2149 Young • 347-3962
2059 S. Houston Levee in Collierville • 850-5288
mulanasianbistro.net

Newby’s
Newby’s “World Famous EZ Shooter” was created by Too Tall Todd back in 1998: a shaker tin full of ice, 1.5 oz Premium Orange vodka, three parts cranberry juice, one part orange juice. Shake furiously, strain in shooter glasses, share amongst all your friends. All smiles, it’s EZ!
535 S. Highland • 452-8408 • newbysmemphis.com   

Pearl’s Oyster House
Coconut. Lime. Fresh. Quencher. Refreshment. Succulent. Tropical. Easy. Breezy. Summertime. Vacation. Sand. Sea. Hammocks. Bare feet. Sunshine. Suntans. Backyards. BBQs. Bonfires. Sprinklers. Friends. Family. Laughs. Love. More Laughs. Experience the taste of our original “Lime in the Coconut” cocktail — only at Pearl’s Oyster House.
299 S. Main • 522-9070 • pearlsoysterhouse.com

The Pumping Station
Try our new Blue Suede Shoes chilled drink, along with our new line of frozen cocktails. Keeping you cool for the upcoming summer. New lounge opening in May.
1382 Poplar • 272-7600 • thepumpingstationmemphis.com

Slider Inn
Grab a Lemon L.U.I., freshly squeezed lemonade with vodka, on our patio to bust through your workday woes. Kick it up with a little Grand Marnier or some fresh blueberries. The patio is bike- and dog-friendly, so bring your friends!
2117 Peabody • 725-1155 • facebook.com/SliderInn

Tug’s
Tug’s is ready for spring with specialty cocktails like the Watermelon Patch made with Absolut Cilantro, a little bit of watermelon liqueur, a splash of Sprite and a splash of lemonade served over muddled watermelon. Or try the Bluff City Cooler with guava rum, ginger ale, a couple dashes of bitters, and fresh-squeezed lime. Very refreshing!
51 Harbor Town Square • 260-3344 • tugsmemphis.com

Twilight Sky Terrace at the Madison Hotel
Our bartender Emily has created Blueberry Nilla, a refreshing blueberry and vanilla martini that is perfect for any evening. This fruitful drink has a touch of sweetness and cream to give it warmth that will delight any palate.
79 Madison • 333-1243 • twilightskyterrace.com

Westy’s Restaurant and Bar
Westy’s Restaurant and Bar, in the shadow of the Pyramid, has been a favorite local flavor for years. If you want a full bar AND great food, Westy’s is the place to be — 75-plus beers, lots of wines and spirits, happy hour daily from 4 to 7 p.m., and open late ’til 3 a.m. But whatever you eat or drink, don’t leave without having Jake’s Hot Fudge Pie, a sinful delight!
346 N. Main • 543-3278
westysmemphis.com

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Bar Guide

Alchemy

Game Days at Alchemy Memphis: Happy Hour with $1 off domestic beers and discounts on featured items from our specialty cocktail list. The game isn’t over until we say it is!

940 S. Cooper • 726-4444 alchemymemphis.com

Bardog Tavern

Ignore the cold in our cozy downtown bar, but don’t ignore the cold beer! $2.50 Buds and Bud Lights, $3 Yuengling drafts during every Tiger and Grizzlies game. The sound is on on the upstairs and downstairs TVs, including the 60-inch HDTV in the Underdog Room. Open for those brunch games starting at 11 a.m., Saturdays and Sundays.

73 Monroe • 275-8752 • bardog.com

Belle Diner 

Looking for a great new place to eat and have drinks before the game? Look no further than one of downtown’s newest restaurants, Belle Diner. With decades of bringing Memphis great food, the team of Roger Sapp, David Johnson, and Joe Ferguson have teamed up to bring an upscale Southern diner to downtown Memphis. Come in Game Day and try any appetizer prepared by Chef Johnson for only $8 and $1 off all drinks.

117 Union • 433-9851 facebook.com/BelleDinerMemphisTN

Blind Bear Speakeasy

Game Day specials start one hour before and last throughout every Griz and Tiger game: $2.50 Miller Lite, Miller High Life, and Coors Light bottles and $4 24-oz. Coors Light Griz cans! While you’re here, check out the new menus by Chef David Scott Walker, and be sure to mark your calendar for Bean’s Birthday Bash on October 25th and our Halloween Party on October 31st.

119 S. Main • 417-8435 blindbearmemphis.com

Celtic Crossing

Join us Monday nights at Celtic Crossing for the ultimate Game Day, featuring football, giant board games (Jenga, Cards Against Humanity, and lots more), and beer. Beginning Mondays at 5 p.m., all drafts are just $3.

903 S. Cooper • 274-5151 celticcrossingmemphis.com

Central BBQ

When Memphians want great barbecue and fun times, they head to their nearest Central BBQ location. Before Tiger and Grizzlies home games, visit the newest location just minutes away from the Forum and try one of our many draft beers featuring local microbreweries. For away games, come celebrate with other fans at the Summer or downtown locations, where there are plenty of large HDTVs.

4375 Summer • 767-4672


147 E. Butler • 672-7760


2249 Central • 272-9377


cbqmemphis.com

The Cove

The Cove offers too vast an array of expertly hand-crafted cocktails to single out just one as our “signature” concoction, but Town & CountrySouthern Living, and Urban Spoon proclaim our authentic Sazerac as the perfect accompaniment to a sultry summer evening. For more outstanding cocktail options, see thecovememphis.com. Come by the Cove after games for the best late-night eats and treats! 

2559 Broad • 730-0719


thecovememphis.com

Dan McGuinness

Dan McGuinness is your Game Day HQ with great specials for both college and pros: $3 pints and $9 pitchers of McGuinness Pub Ale, $11 buckets of longnecks. On Mondays, it’s 2-for-1 domestic beers and $3.95 burgers and fries.

4698 Spottswood • 761-3711 danmcguinnesspub.com

Dejavu Restaurant

Let the good times roll before and after Grizzlies and Tiger basketball games! The newest location at 51 S. Main is four minutes from FedExForum and is filled with all the extras you would expect in New Orleans. Check out the new bar and try some award-winning soul food and vegan/vegetarian cuisine. 

51 S. Main • 505-0212


dejavurestaurant.org 

Happy Mexican

Join us before, after, or during the game to watch with us! Happy Mexican has a Happy Hour for its award-winning margaritas Tuesday through Sunday 3 to 7 p.m. on the lime flavor only. Special pricing includes small for $4.25, medium for $6.99, or large for $8.99.

385 S. Second • 529-9991


6080 Primacy Parkway • 683-0000


7935 Winchester • 751-5353


happymexican.com

Hard Rock Café Memphis

Stop by Hard Rock Café Memphis on Friday Game Days for a Hard Rocking Happy Hour! Now featuring a new Happy Hour every Friday from 4 to 7 p.m. with a special “Bar Bites” menu. $2 domestic drafts; $3 import drafts; and $4 margaritas (bar area only).

315 Beale • 529-0007

Local Gastropub

Local has specials going on just about whenever there’s a game to watch. Happy Hour is Monday through Friday 4 to 7 p.m. Game Day specials run Monday (starting at 6:30 p.m.), Saturday (11 a.m.-6:30 p.m.), and Sunday (11 a.m.-11 p.m.) and include domestic beer buckets, five for $10, $25 table taps of draft, and small-plate food specials. Tuesday is half-off bottles of wine from 7 to 11 p.m. Wednesday is Pint Night with $2 off pints. Thursday is Ladies Night with $5 “tini’s” and tier-one wines. Join us Sunday for late-night Happy Hour starting at 11:30 p.m.

95 Main • 473-9573


2126 Madison in Overton Square


725-1845 • localgastropub.com

Los Comales Mexican Restaurant

Watch the game while enjoying our authentic Mexican food and unique drinks. Buy one margarita and get a second half-off every Monday and Thursday, and get $5 off any order over $20 when you mention our ad in the Flyer!

2860 S. Perkins • 369-0528 loscomalesrestaurant.com

Molly’s La Casita

Molly’s has the ultimate Game Day drink. It’s our first-place award-winning margarita (Memphis Flyer readers poll 2013). Be sure to try our new low-calorie Nectar Girl Margarita if you are trying to watch your darling figure. Molly’s has an ice-cold one ready for you that is sure to please.

2006 Madison • 726-1873 mollyslacasita.com

Mulan Asian Bistro

Sports and sushi are a great combination! Enjoy Mulan Asian Bistro’s Happy Hour for sushi and drinks from 3 to 6 p.m. daily. Try the Mulan Martini for only $7.95.

2149 Young • 347-3965


2059 S. Houston Levee • 850-5288


mulanbistro.net

Newby’s

Newby’s has all your Game Day specials. Monday is Ghost River $10 Beer Bust. On Tuesday, we have $2 burgers and beer. On Whiskey Wednesdays, it’s $3 whiskey drinks. The Always Happy Hour is $1 off bottle beers and mixed drinks every day ’til 9 p.m. Start early and stay late at Newby’s.

535 S. Highland • 452-8408 newbysmemphis.com

Paula and Raiford’s Disco

Come party after the game at Memphis’ best dance club! Paula and Raiford’s Disco is your one-stop shop for fun in downtown Memphis. Enjoy music, drinks, and dancing every Friday and Saturday night just minutes from FedExForum.

14 S. Second • 521-2494


paularaifords.com

Pearl’s Oyster House

Come watch the game with us! Happy Hour is Monday through Friday, 4 to 7 p.m. There are daily draft beer specials as well. Try the famous chargrilled oysters, only $1 each on Wednesdays. Pearl’s also features daily fresh fish specials and free parking too.

299 S. Main • 522-9070 pearlsoysterhouse.com

The Pumping Station

We have just the right stuff to enjoy your games every week. Friday Beer Busts: $3, Ghost River and Blue Moon $8. Sunday Beer Busts: PBR $5 and Ghost River and Blue Moon $9. Happy Hour specials all week long.

1382 Poplar • 272-7600 pumpingstationmemphis.com

The Slider Inn

Wow! During every Tiger and Grizzlies game, get your Bud and Bud Light longnecks for only $2.50. Come enjoy our great atmosphere and our heated deck this winter, complete with outdoor TV. It’s perfect for catching up with your Midtown friends. Who loves you, baby? We do.

2117 Peabody • 725-1155


thesliderinn.com

Tamp & Tap

Offering hand-poured coffees, sandwiches, and local beers all close to FedExForum, Tamp & Tap gives Game Day specials of 10 percent off your food purchase with the same-day ticket or stub.

122 Gayoso (Second and Main)


207-1053 • tampandtap.com

facebook.com/TampTap @tampandtap on Twitter

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Two at Five

We opened in a blaze of fire,” says Celtic Crossing owner and Ireland native D.J. Naylor, admitting that he wasn’t quite sure in 2005 if they were ready to operate. But despite a suffering economy, Cooper-Young’s Irish pub has managed to create and maintain a loyal following over the last five years.

“In all aspects, it’s been a project of growth,” Naylor says, adding that the pub has made significant improvements each year, from expanding the menu to renovating the restrooms. “If people are going to keep coming as regulars,” he says, “they need to see that their money is being used to make progress.”

The pub has been successful largely due to its devotion to traditional Irish fare, offering patrons a multicultural experience from corned beef boxty to bangers n’ mash and shepherd’s pie. And though there have been some unexpected turns — like the pub’s becoming a haven for soccer fans at game time — it’s remained true to their roots. “It’s about the food, and it’s about the music,” Naylor says. “It’s about having a good time and maintaining that authenticity.”

Celtic Crossing will celebrate its fifth anniversary with the four-day Oyster Festival, featuring a scotch tasting, oysters imported from Ireland, and local music along with the Prodigals, an Irish four-piece from New York. The fun starts Thursday, June 3rd. Visit celticcrossingmemphis.com for more information.

Celtic Crossing, 903 S. Cooper (274-5151)

celticcrossingmemphis.com

You might remember Shawn and Lana Danko‘s downtown restaurant by its original name, Big Foot Lodge. Though trademarking issues forced the 2008 switch to Kooky Canuck, the restaurant’s essence has remained the same.

“The new name fits us much better,” Lana Danko says. “My husband’s Canadian and a little crazy.”

That playful spirit is apparent in the restaurant, which offers eclectic favorites like poutine, a Canadian classic that combines french fries and gravy, and the daunting seven-and-a-half pound Kookamonga burger.

When they started in 2005, the couple wanted to create an experience that they hadn’t found since moving south of the border. “We wanted people to come in and feel like they weren’t in Memphis,” Danko says. A lodge-like atmosphere was exactly what they were looking for, and by combining Canadian fare with classics such as burgers and barbecue, backed up the ambience with a consistently good menu. “Our goal is to make different food and a lot of it for the price,” Danko says. “Everything’s made in-house and fresh, and we use local vendors and recipes from friends and family.”

Danko credits that welcoming atmosphere along with the unique experience their restaurant provides with keeping numbers up in a down economy.

“People are still going out to eat. They’re just thinking through their choices more,” she says. And with a newly trademarked name, plans to extend their retail line, and the beginnings of a few franchises, Kooky Canuck looks to keep expanding from here. “We’re always tasting new food, adding new items to the menu,” Danko says. “We’ve got a lot of things in the works.”

To celebrate their anniversary, Kooky Canuck will thank their regular customers with a private anniversary party on June 16th and will be giving away a $25 gift card every day this month on their website. Find more information at kookycanuck.com.

Kooky Canuck, 97 S. Second (578-9800)

kookycanuck.com

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Lunch, Anyone?

The last time Celtic Crossing owner D.J. Naylor visited Ireland, he feasted on stew at the home of a relative. He loved the richness and flavor of the sirloin, slowly cooked with parsley, onions, carrots, thyme, Worcestershire sauce, beef stock, and a hefty amount of Guinness ale. (Four pints, to be exact, in a pot of stew that makes 25 servings!)

“It was so good, I brought the recipe back,” Naylor says. “Now it’s the most Irish dish we have on menu.”

Stop by the pub in Cooper-Young for lunch on Thursdays, and the Guinness beef stew is only $5.95, one of two daily lunch specials along with a grilled chicken Cobb wrap (think Cobb salad in a spinach tortilla). On Fridays, the specials include a fish sandwich or Morais meatloaf served with peas, carrots, and mashed potatoes.

The $5.95 specials are offered Monday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. and change every day. “We want to keep the idea that our lunches are a very good value,” Naylor says. “You can eat lunch at Celtic Crossing, have a tea, and only spend $7 or $8.”

Like the Guinness beef stew, many of the specials are new to the menu. The Paddy melt on Mondays is seasoned beef smothered with caramelized onions and Munster cheese on Texas toast. On Tuesdays, the tenderloin sandwich piles thinly sliced tenderloin, demi-glaze, and cucumber-onion relish on a whole-wheat hoagie. There’s also the Celtic R.L.T., or rasher, lettuce, and tomato.

“Rasher is Irish bacon,” Naylor explains. “It is a lot like Canadian bacon but larger and very lean.”

Celtic Crossing, 903 S. Cooper (274-5151)

celticcrossingmemphis.com

Flyer senior editor John Branston stopped by Los Compadres the other night for dinner, and two days later at lunch, he was still talking about his meal. “It was good, and it only cost $7,” he said, flabbergasted at the price. “A $7 dinner on a Saturday night!”

A popular Mexican restaurant for many Midtowners, Los Compadres reopened a few weeks ago in a renovated storefront on Poplar Avenue about a mile east of its former location. “We had to move because the property was foreclosed,” explained waiter Tony Motta. “We spent two months getting this place ready.”

Securing a liquor license took time, because the new restaurant shares an intersection with East High School. Remodeling was time-intensive, too. Now the walls are apple green, a full bar stretches across the back of the restaurant, and an outdoor patio with tables and umbrellas is ready for warmer weather.

Los Compadres has added some new dishes as well, which are highlighted on the menu and well worth trying. The sopa de Camaron ($8) is a large, fragrant, and spicy bowl of shrimp, shredded cabbage, baby carrots, broccoli, cauliflower, and cilantro, served with lime and a wedge of avocado to turn down the heat. An appetizer called Choriqueso ($5.25) is equally delicious: a mound of chips topped with chopped chorizo, onions, tomatoes, jalapenos, cilantro, and just the right amount of queso blanco served sizzling hot in a cast-iron skillet.

The restaurant, open daily from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., also offers plenty of pork, seafood, and vegetarian dinners, a children’s menu for $3.75, and lunch specials ranging from $5 to $7.75. If you have trouble deciding what to order, go for the Los Compadres Special Dinner. It offers a little of everything for $10.95: chalupa, chile relleno, beef taco, enchilada, tamale, rice, and beans.

Los Compadres, 3295 Poplar, Suite 101 (458-5731)

Blame it on Facebook. That’s where Jimmy Whidden read a friend’s lament in early September about High Point Coffee closing at Poplar and Perkins.

“I told her to take the comment off her page, because I wanted to jump on it immediately,” Whidden said, laughing. “This is a great location. I knew a business could succeed.”

By Thanksgiving, Whidden had secured a lease for the building and reopened as Poplar Perk’N (how cute is that?), serving a menu of coffees, lattes, baked goods, apple cider, and smoothies.

A newbie to the coffee business — Whidden had been a sales manager for a local importer — he hired back the much-loved morning barista team of Bobby Marino and Brian Hansford. “Between the two of them, they have nine years of experience,” Whidden said. “They know everything about coffee.”

It was Marino and Hansford who taste-tested beans and steered Whidden toward Gusta Java, a fair-trade roaster in Jackson, Tennessee. “They are a small local roaster, and we loved the taste of the coffee,” Whidden said.

Business has been brisk from the get-go for this friendly, neighborhood spot, especially for hot chocolate and white mocha, a combination of espresso, white chocolate, and a little vanilla. “There’s something about white mocha that everybody loves,” said barista Bill Weatherly. “From grandmothers to firemen, it’s the universal favorite.”

Poplar Perk’N is open seven days a week: Monday through Thursday from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Friday from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Saturday from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.; and Sunday from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. And there’s one more plus: free WiFi.