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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Making Waves

Scott Donnelly is the new chef at Currents. After working in Atlanta and a brief stint under Ben Vaughn at Grace, Donnelly is now applying his uncomplicated but refined style of cooking to the Currents menu.

“I would say the cuisine is in the same vein as before,” Donnelly says, “but it has my fingerprints all over it. It’s simpler, a little more pure with flavor profiles. Not a lot of heavy sauces.”

There are some outstanding additions to the appetizer list, including a house-made duck pastrami and a twice-baked goat-cheese soufflé with chili-spiked clover honey and herbed polenta cracker. As for entrées, Donnelly highlights a few dishes in particular.

“We have a beautiful double-cut pork chop with croissant apple and sausage bread pudding, roasted fall root vegetables, and a little bit of apple butter,” he says. “We’ve also got a duck confit tortellini served with wild-mushroom ragout, smoked bacon, and an aromatic broth. The chicken cassoulet is my take on the classic French cassoulet, which normally takes about six hours to cook. It’s a white-bean ragout with a confit of chicken legs and thighs and then topped off with bread crumbs and browned, and finished with a chicken breast and apple sausage.”

The menu will change with the seasons, which Donnelly notes is practically a requirement these days. “The last thing you want to do is sit down and eat a Caprese salad in January when the tomatoes are Styrofoam.”

Appetizers at Currents run from $8 to $14 and entrées from $19 to $28. They are open every day from 7 to 10 a.m. for breakfast and from 5 to 9 p.m. for dinner.

Currents at River Inn, 50 Harbor Town Square (260-3300)

Last month, Thai Bistro added a sushi menu to their authentic Thai offerings. At the request of multiple loyal patrons, owner Kimly Bun hired a sushi chef to craft a special menu with Thai influences.

“The sushi has more Thai flavor: coconut, curry sauce, stuff like that,” Bun says. “We incorporate our Muai Thai beef — a popular dish of rib-eye marinated Thai style — and we put that on the sushi. [There’s also] the Island Roll with fruit on top of the sushi roll and seasoned with coconut milk.”

Right now, there are about 15 to 20 rolls on the menu, but Bun eventually hopes to have 50. The rolls are priced between $7.95 and $10.95, but during happy hour, from 5 to 7 p.m. every day, there are $3 regular rolls and $2 nigiri.

Thai Bistro is open Monday through Thursday from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and 5 to 9 p.m.; Friday from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and 5 to 10 p.m.; Saturday from noon to 10 p.m.; and Sunday from noon to 9 p.m.

Thai Bistro, 1250 N. Germantown Pkwy. (755-6955)

Mr. Hill’s Southern Revue is now open at 149 Madison. This Southern-Creole restaurant takes the place of the former Market Cafe and has already made over the space with old hill-country knickknacks and a neat electric Piggly Wiggly sign.

As for the food, Mr. Hill’s offers certain Southern standards with interesting twists. The Voodoo Wings, for instance, are served in a pomegranate sweet chili sauce with a blue cheese yogurt dipping sauce, and the Down South Egg Rolls are made with smoked chicken, roasted red peppers, collard greens, and sweet corn with a peach marmalade dipping sauce. Smoked tomato soup and a grilled four-cheese sandwich, crawfish risotto, po’boys, and smoked chicken and andouille gumbo round out the menu.

Mr. Hill’s is open Monday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Mr. Hill’s Southern Revue, 149 Madison (922-5559)

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Serving Up Sunday

For those of you whose idea of a perfect Sunday doesn’t include cooking, here are a few new options:

At Sweet, the Exquisite Desserterie, brunch isn’t the usual eggs and pancakes.

“I asked customers and friends what they would like to see for brunch,” says Paula Pulido, the restaurant’s chef and owner. “Everybody wanted something different from the standard eggs Benedict, French toast, and Belgian waffles.”

Sweet’s “something different” includes an antipasti buffet to start and a dessert buffet to finish. In between, diners can nibble on fresh popovers with potato/leek soup, followed by a baby-greens salad, a mimosa “intermezzo,” and a choice of beef or vegetable en croute, all for $21.

Sunday brunch at Sweet is available from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Sweet, 938 S. Cooper (726-4300)

Currents, a fine-dining restaurant at the River Inn of Harbor Town, also recently started offering Sunday brunch. The more traditional items include cinnamon French toast, Monte Cristo with vanilla-stewed berries, Golden Apple pancakes, and a chèvre omelet with roasted mushrooms, artichokes, and heirloom tomatoes. Other dishes are pan-roasted Tasmanian salmon, grilled Nyman Ranch pork loin, saffron risotto with lobster, and grilled filet of beef.

Sunday brunch at Currents is available from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Currents, 50 Harbor Town Square
(260-3300)

If you want to grab a couple of friends for a relaxed, end-of-weekend dinner, try the Majestic Grille’s Sunday Suppers. One supper, served family-style, feeds four.

“This is something we have wanted to do for a while, and we thought the holidays would be a perfect time to try it out,” says Deni Reilly, who owns the restaurant with her husband Patrick, the Majestic’s chef.

The menu changes every week and typically includes home-cooking favorites with a twist, such as braised pork loin with roasted apples and cider and mashed root vegetables. The Sunday suppers are served during regular dinner hours and cost $60.

The Majestic Grille, 145 S. Main
(522-8555)

The Flying Fish is offering a “Preacher’s Special” to all oyster lovers. Every Sunday, all day, you can satisfy your oyster craving for 25 cents per oyster. If oysters aren’t your thing, the restaurant offers plenty of other seafood dishes, such as catfish, tilapia, snapper, salmon, and crawfish.

The Flying Fish, 105 S. Second
(522-8228)

Need a dash of culinary inspiration for your holiday cooking? Stop by Williams-Sonoma this month for free demonstrations, technique classes, and a taste of some of the store’s holiday favorites.

On Sunday, December 9th, discover the secrets to throwing an elegant holiday cocktail party. Demonstrations about the best cup of cocoa, holiday confections, easy desserts, gifts for the cook, festive drinks, super stocking stuffers, and more are offered almost every day throughout December from 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Call the store for a detailed scheduled.

Williams-Sonoma, 7615 W. Farmington (737-9990)

You have until Saturday, December 15th, to cast your vote in support of a local farmer, chef, restaurant, or food-related business or person for the Edible Communities 2007 Reader’s Choice Local Hero Award.

Edible Memphis, a quarterly magazine that debuted last spring, is one of 30 “Edible Community” publications around the United States that focus on local foods and farmers.

Each Edible Community will vote on its heroes, and the winners will be announced in January at the Edible Communities annual publisher’s dinner in Charleston, South Carolina. Winners will then appear in the spring 2008 issues.

Eligible locally for the award are the places and people featured in Edible Memphis throughout the year: Downing Hollow Farms (Lori Greene), Neola Farms (Michael Lenagar), Whitton Farms (Jill and Keith Forrester), Delta Grind (Georgeanne Ross), Tripp Country Ham (Charlie Tripp), Magevney Kitchen Garden, the Southern Food and Beverage Museum, Tom Singarella (baker), Jose Gutierrez (Encore), Karen Carrier (Automatic Slim’s, Beauty Shop), and Nancy Kistler (Entourage catering).

Go to ediblememphis.com to cast your vote.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Market Report

The River Inn of Harbor Town is the new kid on the block in the downtown hotel market. The 32,000-square-foot luxury boutique hotel is located at the corner of Harbor Town Square and Harbor Town Circle and offers 28 rooms and suites. The hotel also adds two new restaurants to Memphis’ dining scene.

Currents, River Inn’s fine-dining restaurant, opened the week of October 22nd, and Tug’s, the inn’s more casual alternative, is scheduled to open on November 7th. In charge of both restaurants is executive chef Brian Flanders.

Currents’ menu reads like fine dining at its best. Appetizers include foie gras torchon with muscat gelée, sour cherries, and salted pistachios and a black peppercorn-port wine syrup; duck confit risotto with butternut squash sage and roasted pumpkin-seed vinaigrette; and a frisée and watercress salad with honey-lavender vinaigrette, Berkshire blue cheese, spiced walnuts, and poached pears.

Entrées include Kurabuto pork trio; pan-roasted loup de mer with English pea-morel ragout, sunchoke mousseline, and truffle beurre blanc; and a grill section for steak lovers, offering beef tenderloin, New York strip loin, and Porterhouse steaks with à la carte side items.

Tug’s offers an array of salads, including roasted chicken, Caesar, and Nicoise. Among the sandwiches are a classic Reuben, a lobster BLT, the River Inn sirloin burger, and a grilled chicken wrap. For entrées, there’s jumbo lump crab cake, pan-seared salmon, pan-roasted Mississippi pond catfish, and meatloaf.

Currents (260-3300) is open daily for breakfast from 7 to 10 a.m. and dinner from 5 to 11 p.m. Tug’s (260-3344) opens daily at 11 a.m. and is open for breakfast at 7 a.m. on Saturday and Sunday.

The River Inn of Harbor Town, 50 Harbor Town Square (260-3333)

Looks like the Memphis Botanic Garden‘s farmers market, which ended its first season last week, will be returning.

“We had been thinking about offering a market out here for a while,” says Jana Gilbertson of the Botanic Garden. “Things started falling into place this summer when Melissa and Kjeld Petersen from Edible Memphis and Slow Food Memphis made us realize that there is a need for a market in the middle of the week.” The Botanic Garden is planning to bring back the market for the May-through-October season.

The downtown Memphis Farmers Market, which also has concluded its season, will mark its successful second year with Harvest Celebration, the market’s annual fund-raiser, on Sunday, November 4th.

This year, the market had more than 80 vendors (twice as many as last year) and expanded beyond the Central Station pavilion. Between May and October, more than 40,000 people shopped at the market, which added a wider range of certified organic products this season.

“The money we raise with this event, which is our only fund-raiser, goes toward our operating budget and to pay for such things as a part-time market manager, insurance, security, and advertising,” says Ellen Dolich, the market’s vendor committee chair. “We also need funds for future expansions. A lot of people don’t understand why we need donations. All of our board members are volunteers, most with full-time jobs. If it weren’t for them, there wouldn’t be a market. At one point, we would like to hire an executive director and full-time market manager, but that takes money.”

The event will feature food from local restaurants and live and silent auctions with more than 100 items, including a weekend getaway for two at the Alluvian Hotel in Greenwood, Mississippi, complete with a cooking class and tour of the Viking headquarters; a Thanksgiving dinner for eight prepared by Felicia Willett of Felicia Suzanne’s; and a cooking class and crash course in Japanese vegetables and ingredients with Umai chef/owner Ken Lumpkin.

Tickets for the event are $40. Tickets are available at the door or can be ordered by calling 575-0580.

Memphis Farmers Market Harvest Celebration, November 4th, 4 to 7 p.m., Central Station’s Hudson Hall, 545 S. Main