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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Comeback Beverage Co.

Comeback Beverage Co. is “up and running,” says Hayes McPherson. “We officially moved into our new space roughly May 29th, and we started operations June 5th. That is, brewing our coffee sodas and also roasting our own coffee, as well.”

The impressive facility in the Pinch district, with its 160-gallon temperature brewing tanks, is at 354 North Main Street, right next door to Comeback Coffee, the comfortable coffee shop that Hayes, 28, and his wife Amy, 28, opened four years ago.

Comeback Beverage Co. is “four things in one,” Hayes says. “It is our headquarters for Comeback. It is our roasters. It is our coffee brewery.”

It also shares space with Amy’s plant shop, Golden Hour, which is set to open June 17th. It features an all-glass greenhouse, which is the front entrance to Comeback Beverage Co. “If you’re walking down North Main, it’s this beautiful all-glass greenhouse filled with beautiful green plants.”

With the new beverage facility, Hayes says, “We are essentially quadrupling our space.”

They began producing canned coffee soda in 2021 during the pandemic. “We started off in our kitchen and we were doing 100 cans at a time. And we were selling out in 30 minutes or an hour.”

They then moved the beverage business to a garage behind the coffee shop. “That allowed us to do 600 cans at a time.”

The new space “allows us easily to do four times that with new equipment coming in and the scope in general.”

It also fulfills part of Comeback Coffee’s mission, which is to give people “an opportunity to grow with us.”

Ethan McGaughy, who has helped them “every step of the way,” is now their “right-hand man,” helping brew, roast, and create recipes.

Hannah Sisson and Kelsey Taylor will “help us push this thing to a different level,” says Hayes, who wants Comeback beverages to be available “on the national stage.”

Comeback Beverage Co. currently makes two canned Comeback Coffee Sodas: Southern Style, which is lemon and thyme, and Field Day, which is strawberry and lime.

“We’ve got one coming up — pineapple cinnamon coffee soda — and a few up our sleeve as well.”

They’re able to test their coffee beverage ideas in their coffee shop by putting a coffee beverage on their special menu and testing its popularity. “Memphis is literally creating these drinks with us, in a way.”

Hayes and Amy launched their coffee soda with their first two flavors at the 2018 Grind City Coffee Xpo and introduced the cans at last year’s event. “We threw it on the bar last year. They got a really good reception.”

They knew from the overwhelming response they’d start making those two flavors as soon as they got in their new space.

“Because of the space we’re in, we have the capacity to play how we want to. And get to be creative with our offerings. So, it allows us to be who we are at our core, which is coffee lovers and coffee professionals. What we’ll do is make fun, interesting, tasty coffee drinks for our coffee shop.”

And, Hayes says, “The space and equipment we’ve got will also enable us to have cold black coffee. We pride ourselves on our flash chill coffee — how we make our cold brew coffee. It’s a special method that we believe holds all the good things of cold coffee, and coffee in general. And we’ll be canning that.”

Comeback has also partnered with Grind City Brewing Co. “We’re roasting the coffee for them for their coffee beer.”

Future Comeback Beverage Co. plans include making their own “flavored sparkling waters.”

As for the big picture, Hayes says, “The past two years we spent shaping out what this will look like. And, ultimately, what we want to do is be the Wiseacre for the coffee of Memphis.”

Like Wiseacre Brewing Company, which “put its beer on a national stage,” Hayes wants to do the same thing “for the coffee industry. Whether coffee sodas or canned flash chill or roasted coffee, when people think about Memphis, I want them to think about our coffee industry.”

“Memphis is known for barbecue, beer. I want them to think Memphis is also known for high-quality coffee.”

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

The Drinks of Summer

It’s that time of year when no one wants to admit that it’s too hot to sit on a patio and drink all day. Enter the drinks of summer.

Jameson Slushie

Slider Inn has an amazing patio — now with misters — and the absolute best way to enjoy it is with a Jameson Slushie (or two). The slushie consists of Barritt’s Ginger Beer, house-made lemonade, delicious Jameson Irish Whiskey, and bitters. Depending on the glass situation, it either gets served in a branded Mason jar or a pint glass. (The latter is obviously the better deal.) At $9 a pop, Slider is selling upwards of 300 each week — the hotter the weather, the higher the sales. They are very drinkable, probably too drinkable. I can’t imagine summer without them. I won’t!

Justin Fox Burks

Slider Inn’s Jameson Slushie

Frozen Lemonades

The newly opened Mac’s Burgers, which is out east in part of the former Dan McGuinness, is also selling freshly squeezed frozen lemonades — some with alcohol, some without. The virgin options include blueberry, strawberry, mango, peach, pomegranate, and pineapple — all made with freshly puréed fruit. Their spiked varieties ($8 to $11) include a Jameson Slush (sounds familiar!), Arnold Palmer Freeze (Tito’s Vodka, lemonade, and iced tea), and Frozen Bellinis (peach lemonade with an inverted champagne split).

Boozy Milkshakes

Staying cool downtown requires a boozy milkshake. Oshi has six to choose from, and they are also available without alcohol, but where’s the fun in that? Even the most lactose intolerant would be foolish to pass up the Kentucky Head Hunter. It’s made with bourbon, apple brandy, vanilla ice cream, and bacon dust. Yes, bacon dust! It mostly tastes like frosty bourbon, which is awesome if you consider how much bourbon it takes to outshine the ice cream. Other popular shakes are the Malt Shoppe (vanilla ice cream, malted milk balls, bourbon) and the Godzilla (crème de menthe, Godiva white chocolate, vanilla ice cream, Oreo pieces). They’re $10 a pop, $6 without booze.

Beer Floats

Beer drinkers need not feel left out. Hammer & Ale is serving beer floats ($6). Genius, right? There’s only one flavor of ice cream — vanilla — but the choice of beer is up to you. (There are 24 to choose from, however, a dark or a sweet beer is recommended.) So far the most popular picks are the Gotta Get Up To Get Down Coffee Milk Stout from Wiseacre and the Illusive Traveler Grapefruit Shandy. Now that they serve food, you could have a beer float for dessert or just have one as a treat between regular beers. (Mexican soda and ginger beer are also available for teetotalers.)

Justin Fox Burks

Hammer & Ale beer float with Wiseacre’s Gotta Get up to Get Down.

Coffee Soda

And because we need a different kind of buzz on occasion, City & State is now offering house-made carbonated coffee sodas. Say it with me: coffee soda. The first, the Hampliner, is a carbonated iced coffee with pomegranate syrup, fresh lime, and maraschino cherries to top it off ($4.75). The second, the Purist, is carbonated iced coffee with simple syrup, lime juice, and lime slice for garnish ($4). The Hampliner is rich but not too sweet. It feels decadent, which is what summer is all about. Beware, the Purist may give you a grown-up feeling since you’ll pat yourself on the back for being so smart and ordering it.