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David Grisanti’s on Main Opens October 10th in Collierville

David Grisanti’s on Main will open Tuesday, October 10th.

It’s not on Main Street in Memphis like his grandfather’s restaurant once was, but on Main Street in Collierville, Tennessee.

The restaurant, owned by chef David Grisanti and his wife, Robyn, is absolutely stunning.

It’s housed in the old P.O. Press Public House & Provisions restaurant space at 148 North Main Street, but it looks nothing like that restaurant, which closed in 2019.

Chandeliers and sconces are from Italy. Chairs are covered in merlot wine-colored fabric. The tin on the walls is gone. The walls are now painted “Emerald Gold” and “Natural Linen.” A wall made of stucco bricks divides the main dining room, which includes tables on one side and booths on the other.

The idea was to turn the space into “the style of a Tuscan building,” David says.

Robyn and David Grisanti at David Grisanti’s on Main (Credit: Michael Donahue)

A mural inside is taken from a photo of the home of David’s great-great grandfather, the late Eustachio Grisanti, in Valdottavo, Italy. The original photo includes David’s dad, the late John “Big John” Grisanti, owner of the iconic The Original John Grisanti’s Restaurant, which was on Airways Boulevard at Lamar Avenue.

David Grisanti’s on Main (Credit: Michael Donahue)
John “Big John” Grisanti at David Grisanti’s on Main (Credit: Michael Donahue)

A massive 10-foot-by-8 foot wine cabinet includes the legendary bottles (now empty) of wine Big John bought and auctioned off for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. One was purchased for $18,000 and the other, for $31,000, David says.

David Grisanti’s on Main (Credit: Michael Donahue)
David Grisanti’s on Main (Credit: Michael Donahue)
David Grisanti’s on Main (Credit: Michael Donahue)

David kept the bar pretty much as it was except to freshen up the trim. He also refurbished the six hanging light fixtures over the bar. He painted them black and punched holes in them to give them effect of looking like stars.

Diners will be able to learn a lot of the history of the Grisanti restaurants by just walking around the space. An oil painting on one wall was from Big John’s Airways restaurant. A framed segment of a 1950s-designed wallpaper from Grisanti’s on Main, which was owned by David’s grandfather, is in another frame along with a photo taken at the restaurant that shows the wallpaper.

David Grisanti’s on Main (Credit: Michael Donahue)
David Grisanti’s on Main (Credit: Michael Donahue)

A menu from Grisanti’s on Main reveals the days diners could order spaghetti for 75 cents and a steak for $5.

Grisanti’s on Main is bigger than his former restaurant at Sheffield Antique Mall, David says. His new restaurant seats 118 as opposed to 75.

“I’ve always wanted to have my own restaurant,” David says. “I wanted Tuscan style.”

And, he adds, “It goes with my style of food.”

David, who put in a spacious kitchen, says the menu will include the same items Big John served on Airways and David served when his restaurant was housed at Sheffield’s. Diners will see familiar items, including “Miss Mary’s Salad,” “Toasted Ravioli,” and “Elfo Special.” The red sauce for dishes, including the spaghetti and manicotti, will be the same passed-down Grisanti recipes. But David also will do specials as well as his own signature items, including his “famous prime rib.”

He’s also going to serve his popular sea bass as well as a lot of fish specials. “I love doing high-end fish,” he says.

David will offer gluten-free and vegetarian menu items as well as nut-free desserts.

Guests will dine to recordings of songs by classic Italian performers, including Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra.

Grisanti’s on Main will be open for dinner only on Tuesday through Saturday.

So, what would his dad think of David Grisanti’s on Main? “Looking down, I guess he’d be proud of us,” David says.

David Grisanti’s on Main (Credit: Michael Donahue)
David Grisanti’s on Main (Credit: Michael Donahue)
David Grisanti’s on Main (Credit: Michael Donahue)
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Hungry Memphis

David Grisanti’s on Main to Open in Collierville

David Grisanti will open his new restaurant, “David Grisanti’s on Main,” but it’s not Main Street, Memphis. It’s going to be on Main Street, Collierville.

The Italian restaurant, which will be located at 148 North Main Street, is slated to open in “two or three months,” says Grisanti, who is part of the Grisanti lineage of Memphis chefs. 

“My grandfather had the restaurant downtown and it was on Main, too,” Grisanti says, referring to downtown Memphis. David’s dad was the late restaurateur John “Big John” Grisanti.

As for the fare, Grisanti says, “I’m still going to do my traditional family recipes. I’m still going to do my fish. Still do my prime ribs and all that. And my olive, cheese, and prosciutto appetizer. A lot of people love manicotti.  And I’m still going to do my Elfo.” He added that he will also be doing a lot of fish specials.

Grisanti, who formerly had a restaurant at Sheffield Antiques Mall in Collierville, says,”I love Collierville. Everyone’s been great. That whole Sheffield mall was really a good start for me.”

His new restaurant will be bigger, seating 122, as opposed to about 75 people at Sheffield’s. And, he says,  “It’s going to have a bar.”

David and Robyn Grisanti
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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

David Grisanti’s Italian-style Patio Opens May 30th at His Restaurant



David Grisanti’s Italian Restaurant is about to become more Italian.

Ryan McCarty

Grisanti created an Italian-style patio at the rear of Sheffield Antiques Mall, where his Collierville restaurant is located. 

The patio is slated to open May 30th, Grisanti says.

Explaining where he got the idea to transform the space into an Italian patio, Grisanti says, “I went to Italy and there’s a bunch of patios. My wife and I love being outside eating dinner, Italy-style.”

The patio is “real shady. It’s not hot. It doesn’t get direct sun. It’s got six ceiling fans. All kinds of plants. Some of these plants come from Italy. I’m getting two more lemon trees. In Italy, all you see are lemon trees.”

Grisanti also has herbs and flowers on the patio.

Ryan McCarty

He also will feature classic recordings of Italian music by artists, including Dean Martin. He wants to offer live music in the future.

The area had been used for some of Sheffield’s outdoor furniture and garden accessories. “I thought, ‘You know what? I’m going to give it a try.’”

Grisanti plans to serve lunch and dinner on the patio. Because of the coronavirus, he’s setting up only five tables. For now, he’ll just utilize half of the 26-foot-by-51-foot space.

Ryan McCarty

His restaurant, which still is doing carryout, now features a dining room, but operates, for now, at 50 percent capacity.

Describing some of the patio fare, executive sous chef/kitchen manager Ryan McCarty says, “Everything that’s in season right now. Grab everything at [the] farmers market. I’m trying not to be super heavy. Fish dishes and charcuterie platter.

“Everybody’s going outside now more because of the coronavirus. People are enjoying the outside more.”

The dishes will be “super fresh food and stick within the season,” McCarty says. “We try to do everything as local as possible with all this stuff going on. If I see somebody on the Collierville square selling tomatoes, that’s where I’m going to get them.”

Ryan McCarty

Grilled swordfish with risotto and a basil caper beurre blanc with grilled asparagus from David Grisanti’s Italian Restaurant.

Tuscan bread, lasagna, and Italian spinach are his most popular carry-out items, Grisanti says. But he prefers the dining room service: “I want to get my people. Talk to my customers.”

The restaurant, which is closed Sundays, is open for lunch from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. the rest of the week and for dinner from 5 to 9 p.m. on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays.

Ryan McCarty

David Grisanti’s Italian Restaurant is at 684 West Poplar Avenue in Sheffield’s Antiques Mall in Collierville.

(901)-861-1777.