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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Dory Is Closing

Dory restaurant is closing. The restaurant at 716 West Brookhaven Circle is owned by executive chef David Krog and his wife, Amanda.

“June 29th. That will be our final service,” Amanda said. “We’ll have regular service up until then.”

“It’s been coming since the day we opened,” David said. They opened in 2021 during the pandemic. “We were brand new and unestablished and not on anybody’s radar, either. We didn’t get the honeymoon. These aren’t excuses. These are just what happened. There is no excuse. It was sad. The restaurant business is tough. For us, we didn’t make it.”

Amanda said,  “This decision was only final just within the past days. It’s not like we were, ‘Oh, let’s just throw in the towel and just get jobs.’”

They wanted to give their staff plenty of notice. David said they wanted to “make sure we leave with the same integrity we walked in the door with.”

David and Amanda will continue with the Nine Oat One Granola business. “We have that other business that’s still operating,” Amanda said.

But, she added, “What comes next has to be the right thing.”

David is working with chef Ben Vaughn on Sow Project, a non-profit that deals with community and farming. It teaches the about health sourcing and growing healthy food so young people can take that knowledge back to their communities, David says. 

“I have no idea what the universe has in store for me. I’ve had a very long career. I’ve been in the restaurant business since I was 15 years old. It is something that I’m still incredibly passionate about. I’m still passionate about local food and farmers we work with.”

David and Amanda planned to open Dory on April 2020, but the pandemic hit. In an earlier Memphis Flyer story Amanda said, “Construction and deliveries and all of that slowed down. By the time we were able to actually open the doors, capacities at restaurants were 25 percent and we couldn’t open the bar.”

A tasting menu seemed like the best idea when the restaurant opened in 2021. “There’s no tasting menu in a restaurant in Memphis,” David told the Flyer. “So, us opening one under the conditions that we did with very little research was kind of like winging it.”

Those six-course dinners included an amuse-bouche,  intermezzo sorbet, entree, dessert, and mignardise. But they only saw some people on special occasions or once a month.

They decided to change to an a la carte menu, which went into effect August, 2023. They also implemented a kid’s menu, which was designed by their daughter, Doris Marie.

According to the Dory web page, “Chef Dave Krog moved to Memphis in ’92, and soon began an apprenticeship under Lynn Kennedy at La Tourelle where he later became sous chef.”

It says he “went on  to be executive chef at Madidi in Clarksdale, Mississippi. This was the beginning of a career that would set him on the path to restaurant ownership and becoming a respected teacher and leader in the culinary community.”

Before opening Dory, Krog was executive chef at the old Interim Restaurant & Bar.

People will miss the atmosphere at Dory. As David told the Flyer, “As I grew older and started running kitchens in my early 20s, I understood how important it was to treat the people in our dining room literally like our guests.”

Diners were constantly telling him how warm Dory made them feel.  “And that’s pretty cool.” 

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

A Virtual White Tablecloth Dinner

Most people don’t want to return to sheltering in place, keeping their distance, and other things associated with the dark days of the pandemic. But Jo Anne Fusco found one thing from her lockdown days to be pretty cool: her virtual dinner she put together for a Thrive Memphis fundraiser in 2020. Now, she’s reviving it.

“April in Paris, A Virtual Dinner” will be held at 6:30 p.m., April 18th, via Zoom, says Fusco, Thrive’s executive director. The three-course meal will be crafted by chefs Erling Jensen of Erling Jensen: The Restaurant, David Krog of Dory, and Jimmy Gentry of The Lobbyist. So, you get three noted Memphis chefs preparing a dinner you can eat in your pajamas while sipping wine in the comfort of your home.

In other words: a virtual white tablecloth dinner experience.

Thrive Memphis, a nonprofit that provides recreational and social activities for people with intellectual disabilities, is known for food events, thanks to Fusco. She held chili contests for years when the organization was known as “The Exceptional Foundation of West Tennessee.”

Fusco later held farm-to-table dinners at the home of Brad and Dina Martin, Millstone Market, and Avon Acres. Jensen, Gentry, and chef Zach Thomason took part in dinners.

“I had the food donated. But we had to pay the staff. That wasn’t a problem, but we had to rent everything, rent dishes. We had to get wine glasses and silverware. … We made a lot of money, but it ate up a lot of our profits.”

Then Covid happened. “I got this idea: ‘Why don’t we do it virtual?’”

The four-course dinner was held in December 2020 and called “Home for the Holidays.” “We had a beautiful dinner. We packaged it in bags that James Davis donated. And we had the courses: the salad, the rolls, the butter, the entrees.”

Guests picked up the pre-cooked and packaged meals at Dory. “They just had to be heated. Some of the meat was on the rare side; if you wanted it more done, you cooked it a little longer.”

People then turned on Zoom and listened to Krog and Gentry discuss how they prepared each course. A sommelier talked about the wines.

Fusco came up with the theme for this virtual dinner. Since they already had the April date, Fusco said, “Oh, my God. Paris in April. Let’s do a French dinner.”

That also was a good excuse to put “Ooh la la!” on the invitations.

Krog is making salad Nicoise. “I haven’t had an opportunity to make this in a long time,” he says. “I felt it was a classic beginning to this meal.”

The salad is made with arugula, green beans, Nicoise olives, shallots, fingerling potatoes, lemon, olive oil, and hard-cooked egg, Krog says. He’s also making chocolate truffles and his Parker House rolls.

Jensen is making his classic beef bourguignon, which, he says, includes “beef, carrots, shallots, onions, celery, bay leaf, thyme, and red wine.”

For the dessert, Gentry is making Roquefort ganache tarts with tonka bean anglaise. The tarts include heavy cream, vanilla beans, white chocolate, trimoline, butter, dark rum, and cheese. “The anglaise is made the same way except we steep tonka beans in it,” says Gentry, who describes the dessert as “rich, decadent, not overly sweet.”

Taking part in the virtual dinner is easy, Fusco says. “We send out the Zoom link and you just follow.”

The last time they did the dinner “some followed, some watched it and turned off the volume” because they were with guests.

Dinners are to be picked up between 2 and 4 p.m. that afternoon at Dory at 716 West Brookhaven Circle. Zoom begins at 6:30 p.m.

Fusco, who hopes to make the virtual dinner an annual Thrive fundraiser, enjoys the camaraderie. She was in the kitchen with the chefs at the last Zoom dinner, which was in the kitchen at her home, where she held a dinner party.

But, she says, “The dinner is fun and it’s nice to have wonderful donors, but the money really goes to the kids. It doesn’t go to anything else. It goes to our participants.”

For more information on taking part in “April in Paris, A Virtual Dinner,” go to thrivemem.org.

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We Saw You

We Saw You: What I Had for Dinner at Friends and Family Night at Dory

I remember driving to Clarksdale, Mississippi, years ago to dine at the Madidi restaurant, because my old friend, David Krog, was executive chef.

He came into the dining room and asked me what I wanted to order. I said, “A steak, I guess.” He said, “No, you’re not. You’re going to get my lamb.”

Well, I hated lamb. But I did what he said. And it was over-the-top delicious. I can now eat lamb.

Well, Krog did it again last night. I’m not a big fan of scallops. But after trying his “Scallops and Mussels” at Dory, I’m a big fan of scallops. At least Krog’s scallops. The scallops come with herb risotto with citrus beurre blanc.

Krog and his wife, Amanda, are owners of Dory, where David is executive chef. They’ve just changed their menu from a tasting menu to a la carte. I visited the restaurant at a friends and family night August 2nd, before the menu change opens to the public tonight, August 3rd. Food people, including River Oaks chef Jose Gutierrez and his wife, Colleen DePete, were among the diners.

David and Amanda Krog at Dory friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Jose Gutierrez and Colleen DePete at Dory friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Be and Ali Manning at Dory friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Lee Anna and Jordan Beatty at Dory friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Savannah Lepisto, Gillian Lepisto, and Zach Thomason at Dory friends and family night (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Well, the food, in addition to the scallops, was phenomenal.

Just so you know what to expect from the first Dory a la carte menu, here’s what my sister and I ordered:

“Heirloom Tomatoes” — Tomato broth, tarragon, olive oil.

“Foie Gras” (and you get a lot of it.)

“Black Oyster Mushrooms” — Masa, day cheese, fried shallot, fermented onion powder.

“Red Fish” — saffron brodo, beans, garlic scape mostardo.

Red Fish at Dory friends and family dinner (Credit: Michael Donahue)

And I had to have Krog’s incredible Parker House rolls. I could eat those all day long.

Finally, we tried both the desserts on the menu: “Aerated Lemon Curd” — vanilla sponge, almond lace — and “Sweet Corn Mousse” — corn mousse, corn caramel, masa tuile, and masa sugar. That was so good I had to order another one.

Aerated Lemon Curd at Dory friends and family dinner (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Dory sous chef Cobi Pollan created the dessert, which uses all the parts of corn except the husks. Nick Zorbino the restaurant’s bar and beverage manager, used the husks to create a spirit-free cocktail called “Medieval Times.” The husks are charred over a yakitori grill and the burnt husks turn into syrup using raw sugar.

Sweet Corn Mousse at Dory friends and family dinner (Credit: Michael Donahue)

I did go through a pot, and a little more of another one, of Dr. Bean’s French Press coffee. Regular. And I still slept like a baby.

Dory is at 716 West Brookhaven Circle, (901) 310-4290. Walk-ins welcome. Reservations encouraged because it’s a small space.

Amanda Krog and her cousin, Alexis Grace, at Dory friends and family dinner (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Alex Franks at Dory friends and family dinner (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Glenn David Bland at Dory friends and family dinner (Credit: Michael Donahue)
We Saw You
Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

New Menu at Dory

Beginning August 3rd, diners will order from a menu at Dory. They used to have to wait and be surprised to see what they were getting for dinner. The menu was a secret.

“We are switching models to what we intended to open as: a regular old come in and order off a real menu — not a fixed menu,” says Amanda Krog, who, along with her husband, chef David Krog, are owners of the East Memphis restaurant.

“It’s an open menu,” David says. “There are 18 items on it.”

Selections include scallops and mussels with herb risotto and citrus beurre blanc, as well as a pork loin with smoked white bean puree, chimichurri, and charred onion.

David is partial to his mushroom appetizer. “It’s seared oyster mushrooms from Bluff City Fungi, masa from Delta Grind, farmer’s cheese we made ourselves here, fermented onion powder, and olive oil,” he says. “It’s my favorite thing on the menu. We have it in what would be the appetizer section. And everything about it is homey. Everything about it is comforting. And it was a dish I had in my head and it came out exactly like I pictured it.”

The menu will “move and change as the growers change,” David says. “The thing about Memphis and in this part of the South is that seasonal is our seasons. Sometimes they’re longer and sometimes they’re shorter. And, for us, if there are any gaps coming from our aggregate or the few farms that we get from consistently, we have to be able to pivot on that.”

And, he says, “I made a commitment to not use big ‘ag.’ So, we’re committed to a mission that is attached to humans that are doing this at a high level in small farms around here.”

Dory is “intentionally sourced,” David says. “Which doesn’t mean local for us. There’s a big difference between hyperlocal and I can only go 200 miles in either direction from us. The intention when we first started was [to buy] as close to the door as we possibly can. But if something grows out West, I have to find a farmer or a grower or a forager or whatever whose mission aligns with us.”

They planned to open April 2020, but the pandemic hit. “Construction and deliveries and all of that slowed down,” Amanda says. “By the time we were able to actually open the doors, capacities at restaurants were 25 percent and we couldn’t open the bar.”

A tasting menu seemed the best plan for the new restaurant. “There’s no tasting menu in a restaurant in Memphis,” David says. “So, us opening one under the conditions that we did with very little research was kind of like winging it.”

They served a six-course dinner that included an amuse-bouche, intermezzo sorbet, entrée, dessert, and mignardise.

“You got nine things in the perfect order that is also offset by each table,” Amanda says. “So, nobody is on the same course at the same time.”

They only saw some people on special occasions or once a month. “It kind of made having regulars and seeing your guests as frequently as another neighborhood restaurant impossible,” David says.

About six months ago they made the “official decision” to change to the à la carte menu.

Another change, which will be coming soon, is a kids menu. “First time in my career that I ever worked in a kitchen that has a kids menu. And Doris is writing it.”

Doris is their 6-year-old daughter. They asked her to come up with what she’d like to see on a children’s menu.

One thing that isn’t changing at Dory is the atmosphere. “As I grew older and started running kitchens in my early 20s, I understood how important it was to treat the people in our dining room literally like our guests,” David says. “Like guests in our home.”

Even when they didn’t know what was coming next on the menu, people were constantly telling them how warm Dory made them feel. “And that’s pretty cool.”

Dory is at 716 West Brookhaven Circle; (901) 310-4290.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Dory Restaurant’s Grand Opening Will be March 4th

Tiffany Brimhall and Ken Hall got a sneak peek at the new Dory restaurant.



Dory restaurant will hold its grand opening March 4th.

And get ready for a new dining concept in Memphis.

Unlike other restaurants, you don’t get a menu with a lot of options to mull over. Each menu, with the exception of  occasional subtle changes, will basically be the same for three weeks.

But you won’t be given a menu when you sit down. “We’re not putting out the menu to the people before they come,” says Amanda Krog, co-owner with her husband, chef David Krog. “They come in, sit down, they eat. We’ll honor dietary restrictions as long as we know in advance.

They will have wine pairings available at some point, Amanda says.

Amanda and David Krog at Dory

“We have wine by the bottle right now,” David says. “And into our grand opening month we will have a full bar and all that good stuff.”

The dinners, which are $95 each, will be similar to those Amanda and David held at their Gallery pop-up series. “We have this background, this history of tasting pop ups and doing that,” Amanda says. “ We thought ‘We’ll use that experience and do it here.’ First, we thought, ‘This is what we’re doing for a time.’ But, man, once we’ve gotten in there and got in that building, sat people down, it felt good and people are responding to it. And it’s just the way it’s going to be.”

“I’ve done a bunch of them,” David says. “In the dining rooms I was in charge of I’ve always done some sort of a tasting menu just between friends or people who came in and were indecisive. It’s something I’ve been passionate about my entire career.”

Dory is “the first 100 percent tasting menu restaurant in Memphis,” David says. “We think in the Memphis market, for whatever reason, it is time for us to do this. It’s time for Memphis to have an amenity like this.”

They recently have been holding an invite-only tasting series. That recent nine-course menu included redfish with pea shoots, mirepoix, and saffron broth; pork belly with collard greens, pureed turnips, and foie gras powder; and a frozen custard with an almond lace cookie roasted apple, caramel, and Amanda’s Nine Oat One Granola.

Amanda Krog

Dory restaurant

“We’ve had a couple of people that have already been in three times,” Amanda says. “They’ve eaten the same thing. It might be a tiny little tweak on something or, ‘Let’s change this out.’”

The menu could be “totally different at the beginning of the run than it is at the end. I’m sure David will be making several subtle changes.”

But the menu will completely change every three weeks. They are asking diners to trust them with a dinner with nine courses, including the amuse-bouche, the sorbet, and the mignardise (a bite size dessert).

“We have an incredible kitchen staff,” David says. “There are three other humans in that kitchen with me who are brilliant in their own right. These young people are sharp. So,  I am in the position now in my own kitchen to just throw out concepts: ‘Hey, this is what is all in my brain.’ And we work through it together.

Amanda Krog

Dory general manager Nichole Wages, server Amy Davis, bartender Zach Bryant, and beverage director Rusty Prudhon.

“I’ve been writing menus for 30 years. This gives me an opportunity to add other people’s visions into the concepts that I have come up with. And it’s beautiful. It’s just a cool process. It’s an amazing way to teach and learn at the same time.”

Dory’s cooks and chefs will execute a special four-course surprise tasting menu that will change weekly for $55 on Monday nights. “A completely different menu that the sous chef and the rest of our staff are writing on their own, with very little oversight from me,” David says. “I want them to create a menu they’re proud of on Monday nights.”

Amanda Krog

Dory line cook Brandon Burke, sous chef Alex Switzer, pastry chef Jasmine Bippus, executive chef David Krog, and Alex Green.

David and Amanda also want the Monday night dinners to be “industry appreciation nights.”

“Most of our restaurant people can’t do a middle of the week or a weekend ’cause they’re working,” David says. “So, Monday nights are usually chefs’ and cooks’ days off. This gives a great reason to come spend it with us.”

“The details are everything” at Dory, David says. “The wine list is constantly moving and the dishes are constantly evolving, the service is refining. Every little thing we’re doing every single day there is to try to be the best that we can possible be.”

That goes for the paintings on the wall. “March 20th is the first day of spring,” Amanda says. “And Anna Holt is bringing all her pretty flowers to hang on the dining room wall,”

They will move Shelley Fleishman’s paintings, which currently are in the dining room, to the bar and lounge area. “The dining room will be bursting with flowers in the spring.”

Beginning Feb. 27th, you can book a reservation for Dory at dorymemphis.com.



Dory is at 716 West Brookhaven Circle, (901) 310- 4290.

Amanda Krog

Dory Restaurant

Amanda Krog

Dory restaurant

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Dory Now is Open for Take-out. But Dine-in — Not Yet



Frank Chin

David Krog, Amanda Krog, and chef de cuisine Zach Thomason at Dory.

Gastronomes will have to wait a little longer to sit at the sleek white oak tables and the black granite bar at Dory.

They can’t dine in, but they can dine.

“We’re just doing to-go right now,” says Amanda Krog, who, along with her husband, chef David Krog, are owners of the restaurant at 716 West Brookhaven Circle.

Dory

“Our take-out is geared more to family style. It’s the stuff we eat at home. Chicken dinner is David’s favorite meal to eat at home. A whole roasted chicken, mashed potatoes, and there has to be some bread. That’s on the menu now.”

Also included are pork tenderloin and sides, beef bourguignon with mashed potatoes and “things like that,” Amanda says. Everything except the chicken is cooled, but, she says, “We have re-heat instructions for everything.”

And everything is in “oven-safe” packaging. “Take it home, pop it in the oven.”

A family favorite — chicken dinner — is on Dory’s take-out menu.

Pick-up times for now are between 4 to 6 p.m Tuesday through Friday, but beginning January 11th, meals can be picked up at the same time Monday through Saturday.

They had hoped to open on New Year’s Eve, but they have to wait for their liquor license, Amanda says.

Describing the menu when the restaurant opens for dine-in, David said in a recent interview, “We’re Southern first. We’re almost 100 percent local farms on produce. So, Southern, definitely, but we are playing with some of the techniques here. I think the past few years personally I have grown more as a cook than I have in the past 10. Just because of having the opportunity to do our pop-ups (Gallery) and put whatever I want on the plate. Nobody was telling me what I should be cooking or even suggesting, for that matter.

“This was Amanda’s and my concept. So, I just cooked, and I cooked what I wanted to and what I could get locally. And designed dishes around some modern technique here, but we still operate in classic French technique. Where I come from.”

The Krogs are ready for the time when people can walk inside the restaurant and sit down at those white oak tables and at the black granite bar. “I can’t wait for them to be there all the time,” Amanda says.

Note: Online orders at dorymemphis.com are a day or more in advance, but if you would like to place an order for day of pickup, call the restaurant at 901-310-4290 by 1 p.m. that day.

Dory

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Oat to Joy: Amanda Krog’s Nine Oat One Granola

Dial Nine Oat One if you want to reach Amanda Krog’s granola hotline of granola products.

Krog makes Annye Lee’s Nine Oat One granola and chocolate-covered granola, which she now sells at various locations, including the Agricenter Farmers Market and Tamboli’s Pasta & Pizza restaurant.

She makes her granola products in her kitchen with the assistance of her daughter, Doris.

Amanda Krog and her Nine Oat One granola

“I love granola,” she says. “But everything that I kept buying, the front of them read ‘healthy,’ but they were still packed with sugar and sodium. At the time, I had cut out sugar and processed foods, trying to eat as clean as possible.”

Granola is “oats and nuts and dried fruits mixed together,” she says. “The first time I made it, I just made it from stuff we had from the house: oats, pecans, pumpkin seeds, honey, almond butter, some cinnamon spice. There are different kinds of oats in there.”

She got in the habit of making granola “and keeping it in the house,” she says. “I’d give a bag or two away to people when they came over.”

People began asking her for the recipe. She thought, “I wonder if anybody else is interested in this?”

She put some of her granola on Facebook. “I sold 20 bags that day.”

Her husband, chef David Krog, is the reason she came up with the chocolate granola, which is called Those Chocolate Things. He gets busy and “needs something he can just shove into his mouth right then,” Amanda says. “So having some oats and some chocolate, it’s a good power bite.”

Doris came up with the name Those Chocolate Things, Amanda says. “Because that’s what she calls them: ‘Can I have one of those chocolate things?'”

Amanda and David are slated to open their eagerly awaited restaurant, Dory, in a month and a half or so. “We’re opening a restaurant, so [the granola] was really just a side thing. If it could get me to the beach, that would be great. We had these delays with the restaurant, and the world is kind of scary right now. Being something that caught on really quickly, this is generating some income. It’s good for the family.”

Her friend Gillian Lepisto, with Phrizbie Design, designed the packaging color scheme, inspired by objects on the Krog’s fireplace mantle.

Amanda’s mother, Laura Gentry, suggested the name Annye Lee. The restaurant was named after David’s grandmother, Doris Marie Krog, so she said they should name the granola after Amanda’s grandmother, Annye Lee Mitchell.

“Since I’ve probably never taken a suggestion from my mom in my life, I decided this was a good place to start. But, also, my mom is going to be doing sales. We would love to get into grocery stores and things like that. So we have decided to partner, and she is a co-owner of Nine Oat One.”

Amanda gets all her prep work done on Sunday and then cooks the granola on Monday. “Doris loves to help us in the kitchen, playing around with different granola and stuff. And I let her mix the big bowl.”

David helps, too. “David and I late-night it after Doris goes to sleep and get everything bagged up, sealed up.”

He also does the delivering, Amanda says. “I’m probably about to switch from once-a-week delivery to either twice or a couple of days after you order. It’s getting to where I have enough orders I need to split it into two. So far this week, I have made 80 packages of granola and maybe 100 Those Chocolate Things.”

The granola comes in 4-, 8-, and 16-ounce bags.

Amanda already is planning to broaden her Nine Oat One product line. “At Christmas time, I did one with cranberries, pistachios, and candied pecans. I think I want to try that again at the holidays.”

To order Nine Oat One granola, go to nineoatone.myshopify.com.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Next Door’s Zach Thomason on sobering up and buckling down on cooking

Zach Thomason knew exactly what he wanted to be when he grew up.

Sort of.

“When I was seven years old, I told my dad, ‘I want to be a Northern Italian chef, a rock star, or a doctor,'” says Thomason, 31.

Cooking was appealing. “It looked like magic. There was that science. It just popped out of a pan. I put in these ingredients, and it just developed into something really cool.”

Thomason, now a chef at Next Door Eatery, wanted to go to cooking school, but his dad nixed the idea. So, Thomason studied creative writing at the University of Tennessee in Chattanooga. He and his brother, Ben. who lived with him, worked in the kitchen at a local restaurant.

One night, Thomason covered a shift for his brother. “I was sending him these texts like, ‘Where are you? I’ve got stuff at school to do. This is ridiculous.’ I’m starting to freak out and there’s just something going on in my stomach that said, ‘Something’s off.'”

He began calling hospitals. “I finally got in touch with the Police Department and I said, ‘Sir, is Ben Thomason in your custody?’ He says, ‘Yes, sir, he is.’ And I say, ‘Well, may I speak to him?’ He said, ‘No, sir, you can’t.’ I said, ‘Well, has he been arrested?’ He said, ‘No, sir.’ I said, ‘Well, if he hasn’t been arrested and he’s in your custody I have the right to speak to him.’ He said, ‘Son, your brother is dead.'”

Thomason was stunned. “My brother borrowed my car in order to go get some dope. And on his way back, he flipped the car over the interstate and killed himself.”

He grabbed a bottle of Jameson from the bar. “My knee-jerk reaction at the time was to drink. I took it to the back dock, and it was on. It was not pretty, and it continued for a good while to come.”

Thomason continued to work at the restaurant. “I learned how to do the dance in the kitchen at that place. There is a dance when everything is working right. It’s this orchestrated movement. There’s no bumping into each other. You know what everyone is doing. It’s really beautiful.”

But, he said, “Problem was I learned this dance and I learned how to work drunk.”

He hopped around restaurants in different cities. “I think it started out as this desire to fill my brother’s shoes because he seemed to be going in this direction at a young age.”

But he “grew really passionate about it.”

Thomason went through homeless periods. “Living out of the back of a car, losing the car, living in a tent in Nashville.”

He felt “destined for death. But there was something — God, whatever, the great cosmic muffin in the sky — deemed there’s something better for me out there than what I was doing.”

Thomason went into recovery and, with his fiance, moved to Memphis. David Krog, who was executive chef at Interim, said he’d give him a job if he remained sober for six months.

“That kitchen was run as ‘We are good people first, and that’s how we are going to behave. As good people and caring people.’ I’d grown used to seeing these very cut-throat environments and sabotaging and backstabbing. I was only six months sober after years and years of drug abuse. My hands still shook. I had these people who were willing to be nurturing. They were probably getting very frustrated with me, but they nurtured me to a point where I can do things now. I can take care of myself.”

After Krog left the restaurant, Thomason went to work at the Gray Canary. He moved to Next Door, so he could work a daytime shift to spend more time with his fiance and her daughter.

“Eventually, I could want to open a pizza place. But, at the same token, I really am an artist. David has been teaching us how to do this tweezer food and make things very pretty. One day, whether it be with him or on my own, I would like to be a part of opening a restaurant that is geared toward very, very small, tight, pretty palate-encompassing plates.”

Wherever he lands, Thomason wants the kitchen to be like Interim’s when he worked there. “Be a part of a kitchen again where there is this genuine sense of care that we have for one another. It was really astonishing the way that everyone treated one another and was connected with one another. I don’t even see it outside in the real world on a normal basis let alone in a high-intensity kitchen. If I can manage to be a part of something like that again, I would do that in a heartbeat.”

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Krog leaves Interim

Chef David Krog leaves Interim Restaurant.

David Krog has left Interim Restaurant, where he was executive chef, to pursue other interests.
Krog, 43, who was executive chef at the restaurant for two years, opened the old Madidi restaurant in Clarksdale. He also worked with chefs Erling Jensen and Jason Severs during his 25 year culinary career. Krog was the subject of a July 2017 Flyer cover story.
As for plans, Krog said opening his own restaurant could happen in the foreseeable future.

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Cover Feature News

Kitchen Confidential

David Krog looked up to the chefs when he was a busboy.

“They were so proficient at their craft, a craft that I knew nothing about but definitely wanted to,” he says. “I wanted to be a part of that pirate group of bad boys.”

Ten years later, Krog was a chef at high-profile restaurants. He prepared intricate dishes such as foie gras torchon — even though he’d already drunk six beers and a pint of Jack Daniel’s. “You know what kept me alive in those kitchens all those years? Just straight muscle memory,” he says. “My brain wasn’t firing correctly.”

His career peaks included being chosen by actor Morgan Freeman to open the old Madidi restaurant in 1999 in Clarksdale, Mississippi. His lows included having seizures in the kitchen because he hadn’t had a drink for three hours.

Krog, 43, who is three-and-a-half years sober, now creates French-inspired Southern cuisine as executive chef of Interim Restaurant. He will be a participating chef in the Memphis Food & Wine Festival October 14th at Memphis Botanic Garden.

“We were very excited to add him to the roster,” says Nancy Kistler, the festival’s event planner, director, and one of the founders. “I think he brings a lot of talent. The dish that he’s going to prepare for the festival is going to be crazy good.”

Krog was born in Tampa, Florida, and says he was “pretty wild” as a kid. He hated school and loved the outdoors and skateboarding. “I had a lot going on in my head,” he says. “I just couldn’t sit very well. I still don’t sit well, which is a good thing.”

More than just muscle memory — Chef David Krog keeps his cool and serves up “pretty food” as the executive chef at Interim Restaurant.

He fell in love with the kitchen while pouring water at an Italian restaurant. “I took a pay cut from water boy to become a dishwasher. And from doing the dishes, they let you cut onions. And on and on.”

In 1992, Krog moved to Memphis, where most of his family lived. He worked at a couple of restaurants before enrolling at the Memphis Culinary Academy. After he graduated, Krog landed a job at the legendary La Tourelle restaurant, where he worked for two-and-a-half years.

Then, in 1999, Freeman, who often ate at La Tourelle, called Krog and asked if he wanted to help open Madidi. “It was a life-changing money offer,” Krog remembers, “and it was a life-changing career opportunity.”

Before taking the job, Krog talked to Bill Luckett, Freeman’s business partner at Madidi, on the phone. “I told him that I had 26 hours of tattoo work. My ears were stretched 9/16ths, and I had nine piercings. I didn’t think that I wanted to drive an hour and 15 minutes for him to look at me and tell me that this was not going to happen.”

Krog got the job. “I was way over my head.” But, he adds, “I was too ignorant to be scared.”

Krog began experimenting with drugs when he lived in Clarksdale.

“That was the beginning,” he says. “That was where I had no guidance. I was the executive chef of this restaurant. I’ve got everyone in the world telling me I’m this badass and all of this, and I was just drinking heavily.”

Krog just drank beer at that point. He drank a lot of it, but he continued to excel at his craft. “I was pulling it off,” he remembers. “I was getting great reviews.”

Then, after a hernia operation, he became hooked on painkillers. “They were Lortabs,” he says. “I could afford them, and the source was there.”

Krog never worried about getting in trouble for his substance abuse. “I used to always say, ‘When you’re talented, people always afford your habits.'”

He eventually went into rehab, but his drinking and his opioid abuse continued. “I was drinking back then from the time I woke up until the time I went to bed.”

Then Krog began making management mistakes. “Not that any 27-year-old makes the best decisions anyway,” he says. “But you couple in all the booze and my ego and it was destined to come crumbling down.”

He ended up quitting his job at Madidi in 2003: “I left because my ego and my addiction were all wrapped up into this bad thing, which didn’t get any better.”

Says Luckett: “David was the most talented, pure chef we ever had.”

Krog then worked at restaurants in Oxford, Mississippi, before returning to Memphis in 2005, where he got a job working for chef/owner Jason Severs at Bari Ristorante.

Then, during a party at a friend’s house, Krog tried heroin for the first time. After that, he says, “I just drank and did drugs — low dosage — all day long.”

His habits didn’t stop him from cooking and creating dishes. “I was on heroin,” he says. “If the dosage was right, I was at my creative peak. Or at least I thought I was. But it just was not going to work. My lifestyle was not going to work for [Severs].”

Krog went to a psychiatrist because of his opioid abuse. “I ended up on suboxone, which is a drug they give you to come off of heroin,” he says.

He then landed a job as executive chef at The Tennessean, a Collierville restaurant housed in train cars, but his troubles followed him. “I had some ups and downs there. I drank too much on a couple of occasions.” When that restaurant went out of business, Krog took a job at a country club. He drank six beers before work, a 32-ounce beer on his way to work, and whatever he could sneak during work.

“I drank at work. I had to,” he says. “If I didn’t, I would have seizures.” The seizures, which happened if he didn’t have a drink every three hours, often left him unconscious on the floor with his tongue and lip bloody.

Then, in 2010, Krog got a phone call from Erling Jensen, chef/owner of Erling Jensen: The Restaurant. He said, ‘You don’t work where you work anymore.'”

Krog met with Jensen. “He said, ‘How is your drugs?’ And I said, ‘I’ve been clean since ’09.’ Which was the truth. And he said, ‘How is your booze?’ And I said, ‘On my own time.’ Which was a complete lie.”

Jensen knew he was lying, Krog says. “You can’t hide it. But he hired me.”

Working in Jensen’s kitchen was hard work. “It sucks when you’re drunk, half-drunk, and everything. But I was able to maintain some level with him because I really wanted to be there. I was a fan of his food. I felt that the food that he put out was honest. Even drunk, I was smart enough to pay attention to what this man was doing because I wanted to get this from him. So, I think of Erling’s as a finishing school for me on a lot of levels.”

And Krog says, “He saw something in me that I had lost a long time ago. He would call me out for stinking like booze. And I would blame it on the night before, knowing that I drank three beers before I got to work. And he would sometimes bust me drinking kitchen wine.”

But Jensen kept Krog. “He kept letting me get higher in the ranks,” Krog says. “I think part of his thinking was the more responsibility that he gave me, the better I would be. But I could only do that for a little while.”

Krog didn’t get better. “I was so sick and physically addicted to alcohol that I had seizures at Erling’s.” But, he says, “I was also tough as nails. And I think Erling liked that about me. I was not afraid to go to work. I was on time.”

Over the next three years, Jensen whispered in his ear, “He’d say, ‘You need to do some soul searching,'” Krog remembers. “Or he’d pull me aside and tell me to straighten up: ‘You’ve got to watch your drinking. Your lifestyle.'” By this time, Krog was drinking 18 beers and two pints of Jack Daniel’s a day. “It took so much work for me to stay level. I’d get up to pee, and I’d have to take a shot of Jack Daniel’s to go back to sleep.”

Everything came to a head at the restaurant. “Erling fired me after a shift for drinking on the job. He was more pissed at me than I’ve ever seen in any man.”

Jensen told Krog to get out. “I was so angry with him. I rolled up my knives, and I didn’t say anything. I didn’t leave with a bang. I went straight to the beer store.”

Krog hit rock bottom. Krog had met his future wife, Amanda, at a bar. She was also an alcoholic. He had a violent seizure while they were driving to Thanksgiving dinner at his mother’s house. “We had to have booze delivered to the car.”

Amanda went to a treatment center. Krog got a job at an after-hours bar. “Inside of me, I really wanted to get sober, but I didn’t know how.”

After her treatment, Amanda “came out and she’s fresh. She’s beautiful. She looks better than ever. And I’m like, ‘I want that. I want that right there. I don’t know how to get that, but I want that.'”

Amanda drove Krog to a detox center.

“They medically detoxed me,” he says. “They give you medicine so you don’t have seizures.” He was free to leave, but he stayed to finish the treatment. “I wanted to be better. I wanted my craft back. I wanted the respect.”

Krog hasn’t had a drink since March 9, 2014. His last drink was “the last shot of Burnett’s blue top vodka in the parking lot on my way to detox. I’m an alcoholic. True alcoholic. It’s a chemical thing. And if I’m not, I will not try to test that.”

Chef Mac Edwards asked Krog to work sauté at his Farmer restaurant. Krog told him, “I don’t want to be around the kitchen. I’ll drink. I’ll do drugs. That’s what I do. That’s what that place does to me.”

Edwards said, “You’ll be here at 2 Saturday.”

“He had all the faith in me that I would be able to step right in there and be okay,” Krog remembers. But he was terrified: “All that drunken muscle memory was gone. I couldn’t do what I had done for 20 years. I was re-learning how to hold my knife.” After six months, Krog’s friend, chef Duncan Aiken, told him he should call Jason Dallas, who was executive chef at Interim. “He said, ‘You guys would get along. You both have similar styles. You both put out pretty food.’

“Well, I hadn’t put out pretty food in a long time. In my head I could do these things. But I could not execute them.”

Krog met with Dallas. “I said, ‘I am an alcoholic. I don’t drink. And I don’t do drugs. And I have only not drank and not done drugs for six months.'”

Dallas hired him.

“When I first got here, I looked like I was scared to death,” Krog says. “This kitchen can be intimidating.” But Dallas let him grow “as fast as I wanted to.”

Amanda and David lost their first child, who died at 28 weeks old. “We lost a baby in sobriety, and we’re together. We just got stronger and stronger and stronger.” Krog saw Jensen for the first time at the baby’s funeral. “He said, ‘You should be damn proud of yourself.'”

A little over a year ago, Krog became Interim’s executive chef. He hires as many young line cooks as he can, “teaching lifestyle, integrity — being the same person here as you are out there. And trying to get them before they get to a point where booze and drugs look really good.”

Last September, he and Amanda were married. In May, they had a baby girl, Doris Marie.

“At a year sober, I went and had my physical,” Krog says. “My liver count came back perfect. Kidney function perfect. Blood sugar perfect.”

He bought a home in East Memphis. “I don’t want to go to another city. My wife is here. My family is here.” He says he wants to be part of the upswing of the Memphis culinary scene.

“David was always a joy to work with in the kitchen,” says Dallas, now sous chef at Cru, a French restaurant in Moreland Hills, Ohio. “I look back at some of the great times in the kitchen together. It’s been incredible to watch him grow.”

Jensen recommended Krog for the Memphis Wine & Food Festival. He admires Krog’s “intensity in the kitchen” and his “attention to details.” And, Jensen says, “I value his his friendship a whole, whole lot. He’s a straight-up guy. Honest. Hard working. I’m very proud of him.”

“The future is bright,” Krog says. “But it’s contingent upon me doing what it takes not to drink. Because if I drink, as they say, my entire life could fit in a shot glass.”