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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Cafe Keough Turns 10

Cafe Keough is celebrating its 10th birthday.

And some people still pronounce it “Cafe Cough,” says owner Kevin Keough.

“The ‘g-h’ on the end screws everybody up,” says Keough, 55.

But over the past decade, the breakfast-and-lunch Downtown cafe, which actually is pronounced “KEE-oh,” has been a haven for Downtowners wanting a pick-me-up cappuccino or boozy coffee drink, an in-house baked cookie, or French onion soup.

Keough didn’t set out to open a cafe and then find a location. “I kind of find a spot and wonder what would be a good fit in the area.”

He already appreciated good food. A native of Collierville, Tennessee, Keough says, “Growing up on a small farm gives you a work ethic for sure. And you would eat food that was pretty damn fresh.”

Eating at a fast food restaurant back then was a “treat,” but fast food tasted “wrong” to him.

Keough was a short order cook at the old Lou’s Place on Front Street before going to work for Karen Carrier when she owned Automatic Slim’s. “She hired me as bar manager. And then I went from bar manager to general manager. We became partners and owners of the Beauty Shop Restaurant.”

But Keough was ready for another project. “I always kind of wanted to do a cafe concept. And I wanted to get away from the white tablecloth concept.”

He wanted “a worker-style cafe as opposed to a white tablecloth higher-end space.”

His friend, Henry Grosvenor, who owns the building, showed him the space at 12 South Main Street. “It was a shell. Nothing in there.”

Keough did some of the renovation work for the cafe, which has a 23-foot ceiling and 16-by-4-foot windows. “I painted the whole place. I laid these tiles.”

He knew the type of eating-drinking establishment he wanted to open. “I wanted to do a French cafe, but sometimes when people do French-style restaurants, they make it a little too French. Almost like the concept of what they think it is.”

That would be “lots of brass and tufted brasseries and those kinds of things.”

Keough wanted a “quieter version” of that. “I wanted to balance it out with something that actually made it look like it came from Memphis or the South.”

Customers tell him Cafe Keough feels like a lot of places, ranging from New Orleans to Argentina. “I’ve had tourists come in and say, ‘Oh, this is very similar to something you would see in Vienna or different parts of Europe.’”

And that’s fine with Keough. “It has the feel of an Old World cafe without being an Old World cafe.”

Keough, who didn’t have a lot of money to buy high-end antiques, over time bought things, like the large art nouveau lady statue on the bar, that gave the right feel to the cafe.

The restroom doors came from an old Methodist church in Memphis. The chairs were in the old Spaghetti Warehouse. And he bought the converted gas chandeliers from a former antiques dealer who lived in the building.

The slotted wood banquette benches, which he had made, resemble benches he’d seen in a cafe as well as in Memphis trolleys.

Keough began serving paninis after buying a massive used panini press from the old Deliberate Literate bookstore. He also did crêpes at first. “It was supposed to be like New Orleans food. I wanted to get away from that fried food. Greasy. I wanted to do something a little bit more healthy and not so heavy.”

In 2019, Keough opened Bar Keough at 247 South Cooper. He wants the bar to look like the 1912 building it’s housed in, but with modern elements. It has a turn-of-the-century tin pressed ceiling. “But I’ve got a Formica bar.”

It wasn’t difficult to come up with the name Bar Keough. But Cafe Keough was another matter. Keough considered other names, including Commerce Cafe and Main Street Cafe, but those names were already taken.

Cafe Keough was perfect. “It’s a hard name to pronounce, so it makes you have to question if you’re saying it right. And you have to remember it. Sort of.”

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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.

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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 & Wine Food & Drink

The Secret Smash Society’s Patty Daddys

The Secret Smash Society returns March 5th to cook its mouth wateringly-good smash burgers.

And you’d better get there early because the event, held this time at High Cotton Brewing Company, usually is, well, a smash.

Their last public event was in September at Wiseacre Brewing Company. “We sold out in two-and-a-half hours,” says Harrison Downing, who makes up the team alongside Schuyler O’Brien and Cole Jeanes.

And, he says, “That was the most burgers we did. Close to 300.”

“People were lining up an hour before we opened,” O’Brien adds.

But, Downing adds, “The line moves fast because the burgers are cooked fast.”

They own all their equipment, so setting up and packing down is a snap. “If we wanted to do one tomorrow we could probably make it happen. There’s not much planning. We’ve got it down to a science.”

Burger lovers don’t get a lot of notice about their events. “That’s kind of why we play on the ‘secret’ thing,” Downing says, adding, “We don’t post much on social media until it’s about to get going.”

They don’t like to hold the events too often. But, O’Brien says, “It’s not like we’re just sitting around making people suffer. We have so much other shit going on. When it works, it works, and we make it happen. That’s as regular as we can get it for us.”

O’Brien is City Silo Table + Pantry’s food and beverage director, Downing is chef/sandwich artist at Greys Fine Cheese, and Jeanes is chef/owner of Kinfolk restaurant, consultant and private chef with Jeanes Hospitality, a partner with Josh Conley in the Etowah Hunt Club dinner series, and a partner with Kyle Taylor, James Lancaster, and Tyler Porter of Bloodhound Provisions.

“I love doing it because I get to cook with Schuyler and Harrison,” Jeanes says. “We don’t get to cook often at all.”

And, he says, “When we are together I don’t have to ask them to do something. They already know the next step I need to take. If I’m busy, they know what to do. It’s like a dance, basically. If you’re dancing with a partner who doesn’t know how to dance it’s very cluttered and messy, but if you’re dancing with someone who is good, it’s very smooth.”

Using a burger press, they smash together two three-ounce patties until they’re completely flat. The burgers cook quickly. The fat goes back into the meat because it doesn’t have time to render out.

“Patty Daddys” is The Secret Smash Society’s nickname. All three chefs are new fathers. Hudson Downing is four months old, Finley O’Brien is one year old, and Luca Jeanes is 16 months old.

Their last Secret Smash Society event, a private one, was pretty hectic, Downing says. “My wife went into labor that day.”

They had to switch all their equipment, which was in Downing’s truck, to O’Brien’s Pathfinder. “I had to trade vehicles and head to the hospital.”

Downing’s new baby is one reason they haven’t held a Secret Smash Society event in a while. “We wanted to give Harry time to take in fatherhood and all,” O’Brien says, adding, “We gave him paternity leave.”

The Secret Smash Society can do other things besides make smash burgers. They were among the chefs who had to create a dish out of a piece of pig at the Hill Country Boucherie and Blues Picnic last September in Como, Mississippi. The event was held at Home Place Pastures, which is where The Secret Smash Society chefs get the beef for their smash burgers. The pig part, whether it’s the cheek, tongue, or something else, is determined by a drawing. “They literally draw your name out of a hat,” O’Brien says.

The Secret Smash Society chefs had to make something out of a pig heart. So, they came up with a Japanese-style yakitori skewer.

And, out of 17 or so chefs, O’Brien says, “We took first place.”

The Secret Smash Society will cook burgers from 2 p.m. until sell out, March 5th, at High Cotton Brewing Company at 598 Monroe.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Meet the Elwood’s Shack Park’s “Sauce Boss”

If you don’t know him already, meet Reuben Skahill, the new “sauce boss”/managing partner at the upcoming Elwood’s Shack Park, which is slated to open in March, at 4040 Park Avenue.

Skahill, 30, co-founder of the Memphis Sandwich Clique and the old Clique HQ, will help cook at Elwood’s if need be, but he insists he’s not a chef.

“I just love food,” Skahill says. “I’m just so passionate. I feel like it’s a testament. If you really like something, if you just go for it 110 percent, you don’t have to be an expert.”

A native of Beverly, Massachusetts, Skahill says, “I lived in a Kosher household, so I had traditional Jewish food. Like chicken cutlets and matzo ball soup.

“I was a ‘competitive eater.’ I have two younger twin siblings. There was always food.”

And there was a strategy involved when sitting down at the table: “You get the biggest piece and you finish first, you get more.”

Skahill’s family moved to Memphis in 2004 after his dad, an air traffic controller, was reassigned. The move was “an incredible culture shock. In the best of ways.”

As a 12-year-old, Skahill had “never experienced the flavors” of the South.

He ate pig for the first time at a sleepover. “His mom made breakfast in the morning and we didn’t tell her we were keeping Kosher.”

And? “I don’t want to disrespect my religion, but it was amazing.”

He continued to experiment. “I felt like I had to make up for lost time. I did enjoy the freedom of these new options: fried chicken, spices, in general.”

Skahill, who prefers brisket over pork barbecue, still keeps a Kosher diet with some items.

He got his first food-related job at 16. “I opened up the Holy Cow at the Memphis Jewish Community Center. It was just like a poolside grill.”

He and a friend served Kosher items, including chicken shawarma and Kosher hot dogs. “I was the register for the most part and he was the griller. And sometimes we would switch.”

Skahill moved to other restaurant jobs, including Amerigo Italian Restaurant, where he worked as a bartender. He ate “everything on the menu” at least once at Amerigo.

In 2019, Skahill “started getting into the nuances of sandwiches.” He co-founded Memphis Sandwich Clique, a Facebook group. “We would just encourage anyone to post sandwiches they like. Tasty things someone could get from a local place that doesn’t advertise.”

Skahill, who no longer is with the group, says, “We found an overwhelmingly zealous audience for sandwiches of all types.”

As for how many sandwiches they posted during the two years he was with the group, Skahill says, “I’m not exaggerating. Over 500,000 posts of sandwiches.”

That led to co-founding Clique HQ, a “sandwich speakeasy” in East Memphis. “That was our online pick up-only sandwich deli restaurant.”

He was working for Memphis Capital when Elwood’s Shack owner Tim Bednarski asked him to come to work for him at the restaurant’s second location. “Tim has been a huge supporter of me and things I have done over the last four or five years. I’ve been a huge Elwood’s fan forever. It changed my life. I had never had a smoked anything.”

Skahill fell in love with Elwood’s Caribbean jerk wings. “Everything on this menu is gold.”

In his new job, Skahill says, “I’ll be in charge of operations for the front and the back of the house.”

He’ll help with cooking, but, he says, “Food wise, I’m helping create our high-end coffee bar menu.”

Skahill is excited about the new place. “Being close to the University of Memphis and being close to the new developments that are going on such as the renovation of the Audubon golf course and Leftwich Tennis Center. And just being a part of the revitalization of the whole neighborhood.

“Anybody I’ve ever met in Memphis has either lived in or partied in or had some crazy experiences in the neighborhood.”

Now, Skahill says he wants to “try and get everybody back in the neighborhood and get some good food.”

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Eating Healthy at Mosa

I stopped at Mosa Asian Bistro because I wanted Rainbow Panang Curry, one of my favorites. But I didn’t want it with fried chicken or fried shrimp.

That’s when I was told I could get it with grilled salmon.

Salmon?

It’s now one of my favorite dishes.

It also comes with tofu, but I’m going to stick with the salmon.

I asked Michelle Pao-Levine, daughter of chef/owner Eddie Pao, how the salmon came about. Customers “wanted to eat a healthier and lighter version, so we had to really think about how we can offer this dish with a seafood portion, but not have it be fried,” says Pao-Levine, who, along with her brother, Alex Pao, is a managing partner at Mosa.

“We, actually, used to offer it with a grouper or halibut. A white flaky fish. And we used to fry it. We’d put it in a batter almost like fish and chips. The same batter you’d use for chicken and shrimp.”

But customers wanted something healthier. “People who like to eat fish always asked us if we could offer a non-fried version of the fish. But a cod or a halibut non-fried, if we were to sear it in a wok, it would just flake up. It wasn’t firm enough of a fish meat. Using a salmon filet really works great because we can either put it in a panini press and cook it that way or put it in a wok. Either way it’s caramelized and seared all the way through.

“We discovered salmon, the flavor of a salmon filet, took to the Rainbow Panang sauce. Other types of fish didn’t seem to as much. When you pour all the sauce over a white fish, it almost drowns it. But when a piece of salmon is put with it, it stays nice and just delicious.”

This is not a skimpy portion. “It’s a whole filet of salmon. It’s not cut up in chunks.”

The sauce includes “freshly-squeezed citrus, coconut curry, panang curry, lime leaves. Lemongrass is in there.”

Pao-Levine wouldn’t tell me the secret ingredient that makes it sweet. “That’s one ingredient I’m not going to mention.

“I can literally just eat the sauce with the rice. It’s that kind of sauce. A lot of people ask me for extra rice ’cause they love that sauce so much.”

Mosa offers other healthy options. Customers can substitute grilled or sautéed chicken or shrimp in Rainbow Panang Curry and other dishes. “Basically, that dish can be made lighter and healthier, and I think we can please all different palates.”

The restaurant’s classic Szechuan Chicken also can be adapted for those “who don’t want the protein in it to be grilled or fried.”

Typically, the protein, whether it’s chicken, meat, or shrimp, is “going to be fried and then tossed and cooked with a sauce and the veggies.”

But they can “sauté the grilled chicken, shrimp, or beef. We can do it all.”

And, Levine says, “Certain dishes we can steam the veggies and our protein and put the sauce on the side.”

They also can also reduce the sauce in dishes, including their Pad Thai noodle dish or a broccoli with garlic sauce and chicken dish. “Asking for lighter sauce reduces the salt by half, but you still get the flavor. And you’re cutting down on your sodium and sugar.”

They also adapt their Su Chai Vegetables stir fry. “Like a vegetable medley stir fried, cooked in a light, white garlic sauce. We can take that and put the sauce on the side. So, almost any of our stir fries can be steamed with sauce on the side.”

Pao-Levine eats at Mosa every day she works. “I’ve been at the restaurant over 15 years. The way I eat is to cut down on my sauce.

“We make amazing sauces. That’s what Eddie does best. He makes over 27 sauces at this restaurant. It’s about enjoying the sauces. And I think people like coming to us because we can cook vegetables and make them delicious because we have so many delicious sauces. But you can still eat healthier.”

Mosa Asian Bistro is at 850 South White Station Road; (901) 683-8889.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Longshot Isn’t Your Average Sports Bar

Has Longshot stopped evolving?

Not by a long shot.

The restaurant in the ARRIVE Memphis hotel has gone from serving homemade sausage and small plates to what executive chef David Todd calls “refined, approachable bar food.”

“We re-did the menu with some internationally influenced entrees. Some sandwiches. Some appetizers. Things like that.”

And, Todd adds, “As of January 1st, we’re open seven days a week. And we got lunch on Saturdays and Sundays.”

Longshot had its share of stops and starts after it first opened in November of 2019. “We opened about five or six months before the pandemic hit. The whole hotel. We tried to do the whole to-go food. What everybody did.”

It closed around April. “We opened for a few weeks around late June, early July. That would have been 2020.”

The restaurant was only open for a few weeks. “We had some people test positive for Covid.”

Longshot re-opened for the third time in April 2021. And stayed open. Todd kept a few items from the old menu but added more. Also, during those times the restaurant was open, Todd saw how “different food worked in the space.”

The restaurant had a definite culinary direction in the beginning. “When we first opened, we had nine different house-made sausages. We had small plates. It was really cool.”

But that “wasn’t robust and diverse enough to really capture a lot of repeat business.”

“One thing I’ve learned over the years opening restaurants, is you definitely pick your vision and your direction. Go down the path you want to go. But as you’re going down that path, you learn what customers are responding to and what the space dictates.”

Longshot “went to a more robust, sandwich-oriented food menu. It covered more ground.”

Todd refers to his Longshot fare as “inspired, elevated bar food. And that means there are still burgers and chicken sandwiches, and I’ve got nachos on the menu.”

But he also includes items like Tuna Poke Nachos. “Raw tuna marinated in soy and different spices.” And Pollo Asado Nachos — a “marinated chicken thigh I roast. And we chop that off and make nachos with a house-made queso.”

“We’ve got vegetarian options. We’ve got a Smoked Mushroom and Shishito Philly. And then we’ve got a KFC [Korean Fried Chicken] Sandwich on the menu. We did a Diner Burger, a fun take on a classic burger. There’s a crispy duck entree. A short rib entree.”

Last year, Todd also took over the pizza program upstairs at Hustle & Dough. He “rounded out that menu” a little bit. “I added a curry cauliflower dip, a quinoa salad.”

His philosophy was the same as for Longshot: “Lean into traditional things that people connect to and they enjoy. And they might be presented to you in an international way.”

Longshot can be referred to as a sports bar, but it’s not a typical sports bar, Todd says. “You got the shuffleboard tables in there, so when it’s busy it’s going to lend itself to a festive kind of fun, energetic atmosphere. So, it’s not quite like a sit-down dinner place.”

Todd adds, “If you’re in there having a sit-down dinner, you wouldn’t feel like a fish out of water. But if you want play shuffleboard and drink some beer, you’re not going to feel like a fish out of water, either. It’s like a melting pot space in there on some levels.”

Longshot and Hustle & Dough are in ARRIVE Memphis at 477 South Main Street.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Staks Pancake Kitchen Signs Second Franchise Agreement, Eyes More Locations

Expect to see a couple more pancake kitchens in the near future. Staks Pancake Kitchen announced today that it had secured an additional Shelby County location in Collierville, via a second franchise agreement with local entrepreneur Nick Bolander.

“We are excited about expanding the Staks brand with Nick,” says Brice Bailey, owner of Staks Pancake Kitchen. “Nick brings a great energy to the brand and we look forward to seeing Staks grow locally
and serving Collierville and more.”

The Collierville Staks is set to open later this year, with Bolander looking at potential locations along the Poplar corridor and creating the largest Staks to date. Beyond Tennessee, he is also set to open a franchise in Omaha, Nebraska.

“Growing up working in restaurants, I have always wanted to own one and teach my kids the service industry,” Bolander says. “When the opportunity to bring our favorite brunch spot to Collierville came about, we absolutely could not pass it up. Staks’ passion using locally sourced ingredients and embracing fair trade practices is something we share and the difference you taste when you eat at Staks. We are looking forward to supporting our community with pride in the products and excellent customer service to be provided.”

The upscale, fast-casual breakfast and lunch restaurant originally opened in 2015, and currently has three local locations in Memphis, Germantown, and Southaven, Mississippi.

Last year, Bailey announced the restaurant’s plans to franchise the Staks brand in 10 new locations, the first of which would be in Atlanta.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Hyatt Centric’s CIMAS Hires New Executive Chef

Something’s cooking over at the Hyatt Centric. The Beale Street hotel recently announced that a new executive chef will be taking the helm at its signature restaurant, CIMAS. Chef Adam Arencibia will assume leadership duties over the Hyatt Centric’s dining program and help lead the restaurant in a new direction.

CIMAS opened its doors alongside the hotel last year and boasted a large menu featuring a synthesis of Southern staples alongside South and Central American influences. And alongside its accompanying rooftop bar, Beck & Call, it has become a hotspot for hungry Memphians and tourists alike. But for now, the change in leadership won’t affect the current menu too much, which means favorites like the bluff mushroom quesadilla, breakfast tacos, and chilaquiles verdes are here to stay.

“The framework on the current menus was curated by chefs that do great work in their craft, so not much work needs to be done to improve it, if any,” says Arencibia. “We want to continue to focus on freshness of items, working with local growers, farmers and craftsmen to produce the highest quality we can offer to our current and future guests. Though, with the change of season comes some menu changes, and we’re excited to work on recipes that highlight spring and summer.”

Arencibia has been enthused by cooking since childhood, watching his mom dash around the kitchen and whip up new meals almost every day. But his early passion for the kitchen had to compete with his fascination for Top Gun. “I could recite it verbatim and wanted to become a pilot in some capacity,” he laughs, “but quickly figured out that neither school nor math were for me!” 

Instead, the rush of the kitchen and a fast-paced environment provided plenty of thrills. The Las Vegas native worked his way up to some of the biggest hotels in the city, working alongside top professionals like three-star Michelin chef Jöel Robuchon. “I learned a great deal about discipline and dedication for the ingredients we used and what the farmers or ranchers did to get them to us,” he says. “The attention to detail, processes and technique they taught me still run in my veins today. I also worked with Chef Michael Mina, where I learned a new vision of the same dedication to ingredients, but done in a new way of presentation and production.

“Mina’s culinary team is composed of incredibly talented people that are always raising the bar as to what’s next and what can be done better. I’ve always loved that way of cooking, even if something is working, I’m always thinking of how to make it better!”

For Arencibia, who moved to Memphis in 2021 as an executive chef partner at the Capital Grille, the decision to join Hyatt was an easy one. The move provided plenty of opportunity for growth, and he felt it was the best environment where he would have freedom to improve his craft. And a new direction at CIMAS means he’ll soon have the chance to do so. “Exciting things are coming,” he says. “My lips are sealed for now, but I know we’re eager to let Memphians know about the changes to come.”

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Hungry Memphis

Whiskey, Spice, and Everything Nice

A synthesis of old and new have come together for something great. Old Dominick Distillery and New Wing Order will have everyone getting sauced with their newest collaboration. Well, in a manner of speaking, at least.

The two companies have been working in tandem for months on a new Maple Bourbon sauce that combines the flavors of both franchises. It’s now a permanent fixture on the New Wing Order menu, but bottled versions of the new sauce can be bought from local vendors starting next week.

The partnership came about from the food truck’s weekly appearances at Yorkshire Liquors. “They challenged us to make a bourbon-infused sauce,” says New Wing Order co-founder Cole Forrest. “We made that into a monthly special and it really took off. And after a few months, the guys at Old Dominick reached out and asked if we’d be interested in using a local product.”

After a few meetings, they decided to create a sauce based around the distillery’s Huling Station Straight Bourbon. Forrest says it’s reminiscent of a barbecue sauce, but with a hint of chipotle. The recipe also calls for real maple syrup. Like the rest of their sauces, everything is made from scratch.

“You also definitely do pick up on that Huling Station bourbon,” he says. “But it’s subtle. “You’ll know it’s there, but it won’t hit you over the head. You’ll get a nice little kick from it, but it’s not like you’re taking a shot,” he laughs. “We plan to sell it online too, alongside our award-winning Memphis Buffalo Sauce.”

New Wing Order’s and Old Dominick’s Maple Bourbon sauce. (Credit: New Wing Order)