Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Chris Mosby is an Artist When it Comes to Desserts

Chris Mosby made his first cheesecake when he was 14.

It was for his mother. And it was a disaster. “I overcooked it so bad,” Mosby says. “The milk solids and fat had separated. It split and cracked on the top. It was just terrible.”

His mom just said, “Thank you,” Mosby says. She didn’t eat it. “Thank you, Jesus. I think she’d be sick if she did.”

Now pastry chef at Hen House Wine Bar, Mosby, 26, a native Memphian, began cooking simple dishes when he was 8. “My mom helped at first. And once I started getting stuff down, I started branching out and doing other stuff.

Michaela Dockery

Chris Mosby

“To me, cooking is pure creation. You take whatever and make it into anything. There’s no defining lines. I’m the type of guy who wants to rewrite the book on reinventing the wheel. So if I can find a different way to do something, I’m going to do it ’cause it’s just fun.”

Mosby also enjoyed art — until he saw the piece he entered in a high school show. “The teacher made adjustments to my work. I didn’t like this.”

He was livid. “I was thinking, ‘This could never happen in a kitchen.’ ‘Cause the worst thing to do with a dish when it’s done is for someone else to put some hot sauce on it or something.”

Mosby decided to focus on cooking. He went to work at Rafferty’s, where he rose from host to server to bartender to cook. He got a shot at making desserts after he moved to Old Venice Pizza Co. (now Venice Kitchen). “One of the owners was saying how he didn’t like the desserts they were getting, so I was like, ‘Hey. If you’re not happy with the desserts, I could come in and make something. If you like it, I could come in on Sunday and put it on the buffet.’

“So I did cinnamon rolls. And they went bananas: ‘This is the best cinnamon roll we ever had. We’ll do this on Sunday.'”

They then let him make whatever buffet desserts he wanted to make.”I went crazy,” Mosby says. “I made donuts, scones, Danishes. After a couple of months, I ended up doing cheesecakes.”

He also worked at Firebirds Wood Fired Grill in Bartlett. The restaurant, which is part of a chain, had its own mini cheesecakes, but Mosby added his touch. “Normally, you’d just put it on a plate, put some whipped cream and a mint leaf on it, and send it out. I thought that was boring.”

Mosby began decorating the cheesecake plates. “I’d get different sauces and fruits and do all kinds of different designs. I wasn’t making the cheesecake, but I was doing stuff other people can’t.”

He began working at Hen House in January, but not as the pastry chef. That changed after executive chef Matthew Schweitzer asked him to embellish one of their desserts. “We had a strawberry cake. He said, ‘Hey. I need a strawberry compote on this cake. Can you do it for me?'” Mosby took sugar, lemon juice, and strawberries and cooked them until the strawberries broke down. It passed the test.

But Mosby came full circle with his desserts when Schweitzer asked him to make a cheesecake for Hen House co-owner Michaela Dockery’s upcoming birthday. “It was funny,” he says. “I had literally just perfected my cheesecake for Mother’s Day. I made cheesecake for my mom.”

He made his “most basic cheesecake” for Dockery. “The original recipe. Just cream cheese with a little bit of lemon juice and lemon zest as acid to make it fresh. The crust is nutmeg, cinnamon, and cloves. Spiced.” Dockery loved it. Hen House now offers Mosby’s chocolate cheesecake on the menu.

But getting back to Mosby’s mom. How did she like that cheesecake he made her for Mother’s Day — more than 10 years after he made that first cheesecake for her?

“She said it was great.”

Hen House Wine Bar is at 679 S. Mendenhall; (901) 499-5436.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Germantown Commissary’s Banana Pudding

It’s safe to say that Germantown Commissary is known for their fantastic BBQ, but their big secret is that their desserts are equally amazing. From lemon icebox pie to coconut cake, I’ve heard mumblings of how everything is a must-try. The biggest talk revolved around the homemade banana pudding ($2.50).

All I could think of when I tried the banana pudding for the first time was, oh my gosh… creamy amazingness! Is amazingness even a word? Who cares! The banana pudding was thick and not runny, just how it should be. The vanilla wafers are soft and melt in your mouth. The wafer becomes soggy and doesn’t dry out on your tongue! The hint of vanilla from the wafers goes perfectly together with the sweetness of the big slices of banana that sneak up on your spoon. The whipped cream on top was light and airy.

Do yourself a favor. The next time you hit up Germantown Commissary, make sure you don’t skip dessert!

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

On the Job

The Peabody’s Capriccio Grill has hired Brian Barrow to be its new chef de cuisine. Barrow, a California native, began his cooking career in his late 20s after leaving his family’s construction business. He attended Johnson & Wales University’s College of Culinary Arts in Miami and stayed in Florida after graduation to work for the Ambassador Hotel in Fort Lauderdale and Do & Co International Event Catering.

As executive chef for all of Do & Co’s domestic operations, Barrow was responsible for a staff of 138 that catered events in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Miami. Barrow soon built a reputation for being able to shape any kitchen into an efficient operation that consistently turns out great food.

At Capriccio, Barrow will be cooking up prime steaks and chops, and he’ll be starting a series of quarterly wine dinners.

Capriccio Grill, 149 Union (529-4199)

Sheri McKelvie is the new pastry chef at the Inn at Hunt Phelan.

McKelvie, who worked for the now-defunct City Bread bakery, started La Morinda, her own wholesale bakery, two years ago. She supplied European-style crusty breads to area restaurants, including the Majestic Grille and the Inn at Hunt Phelan as well as local coffee shops and delis. Stephen Hassinger, who heads Hunt Phelan’s kitchen, plans on having McKelvie bake at least some of Hunt Phelan’s breads but wants her to focus on pastries first. The position was vacated by Heather Ries, who has taken a position as personal chef to a local food entrepreneur.

The Inn at Hunt Phelan, 533 Beale (525-8225)

The Viking Cooking School is offering two not-so-everyday classes in April.

The Essential Wine Series, starting on April 2nd, is a six-week course designed for the wine lover who wants to learn more. The series was developed for Viking by Karen MacNeil, chairwoman of the wine department at the Culinary Institute of America in Napa Valley, star of the PBS series Wine, Food & Friends, and author of the award-winning Wine Bible. The first two-hour session focuses on wine tasting — what you should look for in a wine, how to know if a wine tastes the way it should, what makes great wine great, etc. The next five sessions focus on specific wines: crisp and aromatic whites, elegant and earthy reds, as well as sparkling and dessert wines.

The price for the class, including a copy of The Wine Bible and a wine aroma wheel, is $399.

Roland Mesnier, former executive pastry chef at the White House, will be at Viking on April 13th for a demonstration class about presidential desserts.

Mesnier grew up one of nine children in a small village (population 140) in France. He began his culinary career at age 14 in a French pastry shop and traveled extensively to learn recipes and techniques from other countries. During his career, he has worked at pastry shops in Germany and at hotels, such as the Savoy in London, Georges V in Paris, and the Princess Hotel International in Bermuda. In 1979, first lady Rosalyn Carter recruited Mesnier from the Homestead Resort in Hot Springs, Virginia. His career at the White House spanned 25 years.

During his years at the White House, he worked endless hours, one time making 1,500 cookies without assistance and another time preparing half a ton of fruitcake, also by himself. When he retired in the summer of 2004, Mesnier had created hundreds of desserts for state dinners, teas, parties, and receptions, without ever making the same dessert twice.

The price for the demonstration class, which runs from 6:30 to 9 p.m. on April 19th, is $79.

For more information on both classes, visit vikingcookingschool.com.

Viking Cooking School, 1215 Ridgeway (763-3747)

Back by popular demand are the Saturday-morning cooking classes at River Oaks Restaurant. Chef Benjamin Vaughn and local guest chefs will focus on preparations that can easily be re-created at home. In the first class on April 7th, students will learn the culinary basics, a course that will continue the following week with the next level. Then it’s classes on sushi, elegant and easy desserts, shopping like a chef, knife skills, tapas and martinis, and the ultimate spring dinner party.

Classes are $30; lunch included. Reservations are required. River Oaks Restaurant, 5871 Poplar (683-9305)