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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Kinfolk Is Now Open in Harbor Town

Cole Jeanes named his restaurant “Kinfolk” for several reasons.

The restaurant, which opens Wednesday, March 27th, is “based on a country kitchen,” says Jeanes, 34, chef/owner of the restaurant at 113 Harbor Town Square. “So, it’s a bunch of different things. But it means family and your blood. And when I think of food, that’s what I think about.”

Menu items include “Biscuits and Buns,” “Bowls,” and “Sweets.” One of the “Sweets” is “Banana Pudding Tiramisu,” which is made with coffee caramel, banana, and Moon Pie.

“Kinfolk” is a “Southern saying,” says Jeanes, who heard the word a lot when he was growing up. His father was from a small Mississippi town. “Those folks literally sat on their porch and shot squirrels out of the tree. They’re country country.”

In addition to evoking memories of going hunting and eating with his dad, “kinfolk” also evokes memories of his mother’s biscuits. “She made them and they were great. But I also liked the frozen ones she made.”

But more than the actual biscuits was the “great memory” of “sitting around” in the dining room or living room “eating sausage and biscuits.”

Jeanes, who was 12 years old when he lost his dad, says his “core” are the people in his life. “What I enjoyed with them most of the time was eating food. Going to Thanksgiving and being with all my cousins and all my aunts and uncles. Those were some of the best memories.”

As for that food, Jeanes says, “I grew up in the era of the South when Crock-Pots were big.” But, he says, “I love American cheese. I love Velveeta. I love frozen biscuits. I’m not knocking any of that stuff. I’m just trying to really do something that has a positive effect on not just this community, but the Earth in general.”

Biscuits were a big thing for Jeanes when he was in culinary school at the old L’Ecole Culinaire in Memphis. “I made them and put a little bit of herbs de Provence in there. Then I started adjusting it. Every time I made them I’d write it down and see what I didn’t like and what I liked and I went from there.”

Jeanes came up with his square biscuits, which he made with the folding method of building layers of dough with butter in between.

He included his biscuits in his first “Kinfolk” food stall in the old Puck Food Hall at 409 South Main. “I was the first tenant there.”

Two years ago, he began doing Kinfolk pop-ups at Comeback Coffee. “It was great. I sold out almost every weekend. I saw that there was a desire for us.”

That was a chance to “test the waters, get some data, see if it’s plausible to open a full space.”

He met his current business partners at the pop-ups. A buddy then told him about the Harbor Town location, which already had a new kitchen in it.

Jeanes still makes his biscuits, but he also serves a wide range of items. “You could only do so much at the coffee shop,” he says, adding, “Now it’s growing to, essentially, a fancier Waffle House.”

“The menu is based off of breakfast sandwiches you can either get on our buttermilk biscuits or on a milk bun with benne seeds.”

The breakfast sandwiches are served on an “egg plate. It has a French omelet on it or, basically, any two eggs you want. With grits or fries. Whatever side you like.”

He also serves rice bowls, including one that “literally has Japanese pickles in it.” It also includes Delta jasmine rice, crispy chicken thigh, chili crisp, jammy egg, and toasted benne seed. “There’s a thread that kind of goes through that menu that has Japanese and Scandinavian influences.”

Jeanes also serves “flattop griddle cakes,” but he uses oat flour instead of white flour “to give a gluten-free option.”

For now, Kinfolk, which is open Wednesdays through Sundays, is open for grab-and-go from 6 to 7 a.m. The full-breakfast menu is from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. The full lunch menu begins at 10:30 a.m.

The Harbor Town restaurant location is great for Jeanes and his kinfolk. “I can ride my bike here from my home,” he says. “My wife can literally walk up here with our kids.”

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Hungry Memphis

Kinfolk To Open Late March

Kinfolk is slated to fully open in late March at 113 Harbor Town Square.

The eagerly-awaited breakfast-lunch restaurant was conceived by chef/owner Cole Jeanes, 34. His square-cut biscuits or “cathead biscuits” are the centerpiece of the menu, which includes breakfast sandwiches, breakfast bowls, French omelets, steak and eggs and hash browns, oat pancakes, and other breakfast staples, including the MVP a.k.a. the “Most Valuable Plate.”

Kinfolk (Credit: Jordan Finney)
Kinfolk (Credit: Jordan Finney)
Kinfolk (Credit: Jordan Finney)

Jeanes and Natalie Lieberman of collect + curate came up with the interior design for the 1,500 square-foot restaurant. Jeanes knew what he wanted,  but Lieberman reined him in somewhat, or, as Jeanes says, helped him “bring it back a little bit.”

“I tend to take it a little too far and I didn’t really understand the cost of things,” he says. “She helped me be realistic.”

Kinfolk (Credit: Cole Jeanes)

He adds, “I knew what I wanted. I love Danish interior design. And I love Japanese simplicity and things like that. So, that still falls into this space as well. I just wanted really expensive wood.”

He also likes the esthetic of “joinery,” which is “no nails. Everything is held together through precision cutting and fitting. “But,” he adds, “I wanted all those things and I also wanted a Southern country diner. So, yeah, bring it back a little bit.”

The restaurant looks like a diner, Jeanes says. “Pieces we bring into it, little knick knacks and things we have in here, lean more toward the country side of things.”

Kinfolk (Credit: Cole Jeanes)
Kinfolk (Credit: Cole Jeanes)

For now, Kinfolk will be open for grab-and-go and coffee from 6 to 7 a.m. and the full breakfast menu from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Lunch will begin at 10:30 a.m., Jeanes says. He plans to eventually “work in a happy hour” from 4 to 8 p.m. “Our lunch menu and our key items will kind of carry over to that with our bar program.”

, Cole,Luca, and Courtney Jeanes. (Credit: Jordan Finney)
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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Etowah Dinner Series

Etowah was originally called “Etowah Hunt Club.”

But the only thing you’re going to hunt there is maybe a second helping of huckleberry compote.

The “Hunt Club” part of the name was a joke, says owner Josh Conley. Etowah actually features dinners four times a year hosted by Conley and Cole Jeanes, chef/owner of Kinfolk Memphis. The seasonal dinners feature top chefs from around the country.

“Etowah” is a Muscogee (Creek) Nation Native-American word that translates to “city” or “place,” Conley says.

Jordan Rainbolt, chef/owner of Native Root in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, will be the featured chef May 27th at The Ravine.

Conley and Jeanes held a couple of Etowah dinners in Arkansas, where Conley and his wife bought a home. But, he says, “The concept makes more sense in Memphis. Memphis is such a great city for food concepts. I’ve always loved Memphis and Memphians because they get really excited about cool stuff. And it’s such a supportive town.”

Conley, who has worked in and out of the food and beverage industry, says, “This is a passion project.”

The idea began several years ago when he and a friend planned to open a bar. “We wanted a place that was really devoted to seasonally-based cocktails.”

Then, he says, “We got really excited about this idea of drinking and eating with the seasons.”

That brick-and-mortar concept never got off the ground, but later, Conley and Jeanes talked “over a glass of wine one night. I started telling him about this thing I wanted to do.”

One of their first dinners was held in a soybean field. Others were held in a parking garage and an artist’s studio.

They ask the featured chef one question: “What does this season — the one we’re doing the dinner in — taste like to you?”

The dinners are “all centered around food memories.” So, for May, he asks, “What does May taste like? What does it smell like? What texture?”

The chef is asked to feature something “special to the particular place and time and season.”

The number of diners “depends on the space” and what the chef’s concept is. The one in May will seat “80 to 100 people,” Conley says. “They usually sell out pretty quickly.”

Jeanes doesn’t cook at the events. “I’m support for the kitchen and food side of this,” he says. “When they come in, I provide them with a kitchen and make sure they get everything taken care of.”

May is the perfect time for Rainbolt to be the featured Etowah chef, she says. It’s “probably my favorite month.”

It’s “the end of spring, not quite summer yet.”

It’s also perfect because of “the produce that’s available,” she says. Spring “sets the tone for the rest of the year. And it’s just this momentum of produce and flowers starting to peak.”

Her restaurant “focuses on regionality and locality but also highlights Indigenous foods that are from this part of the country and world. So, a lot of my menu highlights Appalachian with Indigenous ties or how they overlap.”

Her five-course Etowah menu will include a seared and roasted venison loin with a whiskey-washed tallow pan sauce that will be served with dandelion greens. Dessert will be a huckleberry compote with native blue corn crust.

Response for the Etowah dinners has been great, Jeanes says. “It’s just a great overall experience. It’s tailored to make people feel good. We’re being very hospitable. The food is great.”

This is a one-time-only dinner, Conley says. “It’s experiencing a chef in a different way than you normally would, even if you went to their restaurant.

“These menus are love letters. And this letter happens to be addressed to a season.”

Go to etowahdinnerseries.com to sign up for the upcoming Etowah dinner.

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Food & Drink Food Reviews

The Secret Smash Society

Shhhhh. It’s The Secret Smash Society.

It consists of three chefs: Harrison Downing, chef/sandwich artist at Greys Fine Cheese; Schuyler O’Brien, who is in culinary operations at City Silo Table + Pantry; and Cole Jeanes, chef/owner of Kinfolk restaurant.

They sell smash burgers at pop-ups, which are supposedly secret, but they’re not. They post the locations a few weeks in advance at The Secret Smash Society on Instagram. “The secret is where we’re going to be next,” Downing says.

The pop-ups usually are held at breweries or other places that don’t have a kitchen. They set up their flat-top and get to work.

A smash burger is just what it sounds like. “It’s a cheeseburger,” Jeanes says. “We do two patties, three ounces each. The smash comes from a burger press. You smash it until it’s completely flat. The idea is to get as much surface area as possible. It’s thin and crusty. It’s all about texture.”

“It’s a faster cook time,” Downing says. “The fat goes back in the meat ’cause it doesn’t have time to render out.”

Their beef is from Home Place Pastures in Como, Mississippi. “We use Martin’s potato roll,” Jeanes says. “It’s a four-inch roll.”

“We toast that,” Downing says. “It’s three-ounce patties with cheese, Kraft singles. Classy. It’s got to be Kraft singles.” The pickles have to be “on the bottom. I’m a big advocate of pickles, lettuce, tomato, and really finely shaved onion.”

They then add what they call their Daddy’s Sauce — “a burger sauce we make. Duke’s mayo-based sauce, ketchup, mustard, Worcestershire. It’s similar to a Big Mac sauce.”

Downing describes their smash burger as “a sophisticated Big Mac.” The hamburger comes with a bag of potato chips. But only one kind. “I’m a classic Lays man,” he says.

They don’t know of anybody else in Memphis doing a smash burger. “We just decided to hop into it.”

The first Secret Smash Society pop-up was at High Cotton Brewing Company. “We had a lot more people there than we expected,” Downing says. “And they were ready to go the second Cole threw that first piece of meat on the flat-top.

“It helped that we all cooked in kitchens before and were able to verbalize and not look up, keep our heads down, and keep going. Schuyler, being the experienced guy he is, talked us to where we were supposed to be. We would have been in rough waters if he wasn’t there.”

“I think we hit around 120 [burgers] ’cause we had a little meat left over,” Jeanes says. “We ran 120 to 150 in two hours, two patties each. My arm was pretty much numb by the time we got done.”

Using a burger press, they pressed “about 300 burger balls,” Downing says. “It’s a handheld piece of metal that’s flat. And you just make sure that it’s greased up.”

The first pop-up was a hit. “People really loved it. Within a week after, I had almost every brewery reaching out wanting us to do one there.”

They’d like to do pop-ups “ideally, once a month,” Downing says. They all have their own work schedules, but, he says, “I think we’re moving toward getting more on the books.”

The next pop-up will be September 4th at The Hill Country Boucherie at Home Place Pastures.

In addition to sharing a love of cooking, O’Brien and Jeanes are fathers of new baby boys. Downing and his wife are expecting a baby boy in October. “Right after our first one was when Luca was born,” says O’Brien, who refers to their shared experience of fatherhood and starting their smash burger pop-ups as “the battle of the babies. We’re learning how to do all this while we’re all living the dad life.”

“Schuyler went ahead and coined our new name as The Patty Daddies,” Downing says.

Find @thesecretsmashsociety on Instagram to book a pop-up.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Chef Cole Jeanes on growing up and the power of wood fires

Until he was 12, Cole Jeanes hunted with his dad.

“My father, Randy H. Jeanes, was a hunter, and that’s all I did,” says Jeanes, 27. “Deer, squirrel. We fished. Every season, we were doing something.”

They loaded up his dad’s 1987 Toyota pickup and headed to Ames Plantation in Somerville. Jeanes then helped his father, who was a member of the Memphis Fire Department, fry the game over a wood fire. “There’s nothing sexier to me than baking fat in a cast iron skillet.”

Those idyllic days with his dad ended before Jeanes hit his teenage years. “He passed away when I was 12. He made me who I am today. Only short days I had with him, but it’s set in stone.”

Jeanes is now owner of Amelia Mae, a catering business. He also cooks for and is the co-host with food blogger Jonathan Cooper of Le Youth Supper Club, a monthly dinner for young people.

It took him some time to get back into cooking after his father died, Jeanes says. “It changed me 100 percent. I went from an extroverted person, outgoing [to] quiet. I did not speak. I fell into a group of friends and partied too hard. From then, I started going away from where I was. I stopped hunting.”

Jeanes met his fiancée, Courtney Boyd, 12 years ago at a party. “I was able to talk and express myself.”

He slowly began to get back to his old self. In college, he lived on campus and cooked for himself and his roommates.

Jeanes also got back into grilling over wood fires. “I didn’t realize how therapeutic it was for me when I was doing it, but being by a grill and smelling smoke — if I could put it in a cologne bottle and spray it on me, I would. I love it so much. And I honestly think it’s attached to my father coming home from the fire department and smelling like burnt wood.”

Jeanes enrolled at L’Ecole Culinaire. “I like design and art, so plating, the colors, the contrasts, the textures, I love it so much.”

He did stints at Acre and Porcellino’s Craft Butcher. He started his own catering business after he began doing a monthly dinner for a group of doctors.

Jeanes named the business for his great-grandmother and his grandmother. His great-grandmother, Amelia Cannon, was an artist. “She painted landscapes and did ceramics.”

His grandmother, Dorothy Mae Jeanes, had “a decent-sized garden for the area. One of the fondest memories I have is shucking peas and corn.”

Coupled with his dad’s love for hunting and grilling, everything “comes together” in his cooking, Jeanes says.

Jeanes describes his style as “modern rustic.” “I like rustic-style plating. I don’t like constructed-looking, robotic plates. I want the ingredients to speak. Still be quality. Beautiful.”

Last June, he began the Le Youth dinners as a way for young people to network and discuss ideas. His four-course meals have included braised boar’s belly tamales and butter pecan crème brÛlée.

Jeanes wants to open his own restaurant in Arkansas. “I want rice fields where I can make my own sake.”

And, he says, “My goal is to own a restaurant that is nothing but wood fires.”

Jeanes loves to visit his mom in the country and drive around the back roads. “When I hear Chris Stapleton — he’s a new artist, but he sounds old — I’m in a 1987 Toyota pickup, and I’m with my dad and I’m going hunting. I just feel it.”