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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Belle Meade Social to Open in East Memphis

Anyone need an extra order of Parmesan truffle fries for the table? The upcoming Belle Meade Social has you covered, alongside plenty of other refined American favorites.

Named for the surrounding residential neighborhood, Belle Meade Social plans to open this spring at 518 Perkins Extended. The menu aims to deliver contemporary and elevated takes on classic American cuisine; look out for the Belle Meade burger, a spicy tuna stack, Asian chopped salad, and brick chicken.

Founding partners Jules Jordan and Paul Stephens are leading the effort alongside executive chef Eric Ingraham, who most recently has worked with Pimento’s for the better part of a decade. “We’re excited to add to the energy of the Poplar-Perkins corridor and serve as a destination for everyday yet upscale dining,” said Jordan in a statement. “Whether for business lunch, happy hour, a special occasion, or family dinner, we’re creating a space that can authentically serve as everyone’s neighborhood spot.”

Belle Meade Social will feature lunch, dinner, and late-night dining. The Garden Room can accomodate fine dining for a nice evening meal, while the expansive bar is perfect for a more casual night out. Meanwhile, the Tuckahoe Room is available for private receptions and cocktails.

More info, such as the full menu and hours, will be available closer to opening, so stay tuned.

The Brick Chicken (top) is one of Belle Meade Social’s featured dishes. (Credit: DCA)
Steak Noodle Salad (Credit: DCA)
Tuna Salad (Credit: DCA)
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News News Feature

Shop Local: East Memphis

This holiday season, we’re asking readers to support local and consider these and others for their gift-giving needs.

Bluff City Toffee

Stephanie Upshaw turned her candy-making hobby into a business in 2016 and creates made-from-scratch treats for Memphians to savor. We love the classic Milk Chocolate Pecan Toffee ($10.95/4 oz.). Available at the Bluff City Toffee storefront (5160 Sanderlin #5), Buster’s Liquors & Wines, High Point Grocery, and other local retail locations, as well as bluffcitytoffee.com.

Novel

Novel offers a book for every taste, including the latest cookbook by local authors Justin Fox Burks and Amy Lawrence. You don’t have to be an herbivore to enjoy Vegetarian Cooking for Two: 80 Perfectly Portioned Recipes for Healthy Eating ($16.99). The dishes are easy to make, with simple ingredients and instructions that don’t require the skills, equipment, or time of a professional chef. Visit Novel at 387 Perkins Extended or novelmemphis.com.

Cotton Row Uniques

With home decor, apparel, artwork, antiques, bath and body products, pet toys, and so much more, this is a one-stop-shop for your gift-list needs. We think these honeycomb planters, available in three sizes ($14.50-$24.95), are adorable — and perfect for those with green thumbs. Visit Cotton Row Uniques at 4615 Poplar, Suite 3, or cottonrowuniques.com.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Hen House Wine Bar Set to Open this Month in East Memphis

Michaela Dockery wants you to feel at home at Hen House Wine Bar, a new restaurant slated to open at the end of January at 679 South Mendenhall Road.

And she means literally at home.

The 2,700-square-foot restaurant, which she owns with her husband, Dr. Dee Dockery, is “an extension of our living room,” Michaela says. “We love to host. We love to cook for our friends and family. I love to wine them, put drinks in their hands. And this is an extension of what we do at home.

Courtesy Hen House Wine Bar

Dee and Michaela Dockery

“It’s an experience more than anything. You’re walking in a place where you’re going to be well taken care of, wined and dined. You feel that intimate experience where you are the focus when you walk in. The space is upscale, but we wanted a relaxed environment. And that’s what you’re getting. You’re getting top food and drinks, but you’re getting them in a relaxed environment.”

The restaurant is furnished with couches, comfortable chairs, and low coffee tables.

Describing the Bubble Room, a special room for before- or after-dinner drinks or special occasions, Michaela says, “When I walk into that room it feels like I am in my own ‘girl cave.’ It’s just really moody.”

Instead of “stock the bar,” Michaela asked guests to “stock the wall” in the Bubble Room. “Friends and family have been bringing prints to put on that wall.”

The Bubble Room backs up to the wine cellar, so that wall, which is glass, is dubbed the Sparkling Wall, because guests can see the labels on the champagne bottles.

Courtesy Hen House Wine Bar

On another wall hangs a floral design by Anna Katherine Colomb of TCB Co. “I told her I love rainbows. I love muted colors. I love all-natural, organic outdoor materials. So she created this stunning kind of muted rainbow of dried flowers and leaves and branches on that wall.”

Michaela and Dee enlarged the kitchen to accommodate the growing menu. “I basically know everybody at Home Depot by now.”

The restaurant, manned by executive chef Matthew Schweizer, will serve a full menu. “When we first decided to do this, we were only going to have cheese boards, charcuterie, dessert, things like that.”

Now, she says, “Me being from California and my husband, Dee, growing up here, I wanted to marry the two backgrounds. So we have a lot of a Southern California type of vibe with our food and kind of elevated Southern. And it’s really married beautifully.”

Friends and family have raved about their shrimp and grits. “I’ve eaten shrimp and grits in about every spot in New Orleans and nothing has topped what Matt has done. I dream about it.”

Their signature Hen House chicken sandwich is another favorite. “It’s a really nice-sized piece of brined chicken served on brioche.”

Schweizer’s white sauce tops the chicken. “It’s a pretty big meal in itself and it’s absolutely delicious.”

The wine cellar will include Flocking Fabulous rosé, sauvignon blanc, and a red blend. Michaela collaborated on the wines with a California winemaker.

Bartender Tony Nguyen created a variety of cocktails, including the Hound Dog, a bourbon drink he describes as “a boozy whiskey-forward cocktail that is slightly nutty with orange and soft caramel notes.”

Nguyen created a special cocktail as a surprise for Dee, who is an interventional spine physician at Campbell Clinic. Nguyen describes the drink as “an Amaro-forward cocktail with slight apple notes and a little salinity on the palate and faint licorice notes that dance with bright lemon aromas on the nose.”

The drink, Coach Rex, was named after Dee’s dad, the late Memphis State University football coach Rex Dockery.

Hen House Wine Bar was slated to open in October, but the date had to be pushed back because of COVID-19 restrictions.

Michaela can’t wait for food and drink lovers to roost at Hen House Wine Bar. “I feel like a zombie, but it’s good. That means we’re working hard.”

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Torchy’s Tacos Brings Tex-Mex to Town Next Year

Courtesy Torchy’s Tacos

Memphis Flyer’s Taco Week may be well in the rearview mirror, but that doesn’t mean we can’t continue to celebrate the traditional Mexican dish. But each state has its own spin on what makes for a good taco, and Torchy’s Tacos are bringing its Tex-Mex approach to Tennessee for the first time.

The Austin, Texas-based “fast casual taco brand” has a wide variety of street-style options on its menu, built around chicken, carnitas, barbacoa, sausage, beef, salmon, and plenty of other interesting twists. For those with dietary restrictions, there’s a separate gluten-conscious menu. Torchy’s also keeps things fresh through a rotating Taco of the Month, with November’s Chili Wagon, for example, comprising “New Mexico red chile stewed chicken with fried poblano strip, onion, avocado sauce, fresh cilantro, and a lime wedge served on a corn tortilla.”

I texted my sister, a current Dallas resident, for her thoughts. “It’s good! A bit trendier than your average taco chain,” she said. “Their street corn is really good, and so is the green chile queso.”

Torchy’s Tacos recently signed a lease for 711 S. Mendenhall Road in East Memphis, and is set to open in either the spring or summer of 2021. (There are plans to bring further locations to Tennessee in the future, as well.) That’s a long way off, but there are plenty of excellent local taco joints to try in the meantime.



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News News Blog

Raymond James Wins Tax Break to Move From Downtown

Raymond James

A company that saw record-setting, multi-billion-dollar revenues and record-setting, multi-million profits in 2018, won’t have to pay full taxes for its new operations in Memphis over the next eight years.

Raymond James Financial won a $3.2 million payment-in-lieu-of-taxes (PILOT) deal from the Memphis and Shelby County Economic Development Growth Engine (EDGE) Wednesday for a project to move its Memphis operation from Downtown to East Memphis.

The vote was unanimously approved by EDGE board members, with two members recusing themselves from the vote. The vote came after zero debate on the deal and only a few questions from one board member.

The broker-dealer firm will have its full tax bill partially forgiven here over the next eight years for a $23.6 million project in East Memphis. That project would add 100 employees here and yield more than $5.8 million in local taxes over the term of the agreement, according to the company.

EDGE president Reid Dulberger said the properties Raymond James will move into now yield about $670,000 each year in real and personal property taxes for the city. During the eight-year course of the PILOT, the properties will yield $805,000, which Dulberger characterized as a “tidy increase for the city and county.” Once the PILOT term is finished, the property will yield $1.1 million in taxes annually, Dulberber said in his short remarks to introduce the project to the EDGE board Wednesday.

With the PILOT in hand, the Memphis facility will expand, providing service for the Private Capital Group, Equity Capital Markets, Fixed Income Markets, and maintaining a portion of the company’s back office operations.

The company said it needs to leave the iconic, step-roofed building in Downtown Memphis for a new location in East Memphis. Raymond James officials would not give any timeline as to when the 705 employees in the tower now will leave for the space in East Memphis.

Worth Morgan, the recently re-elected Memphis City Council member, hold the council’s non-voting seat on the EDGE board. He said while it’s hard to see companies leave Downtown Memphis, he doesn’t lose sleep over the future of the Raymond James tower the way he does over properties like 100 N Main.

“Because of the deterioration of its Downtown facility, Raymond James has signed two leases to relocate its operations into a 250,000 square feet in two buildings located in East Memphis,” reads the firm’s application to EDGE. “The leases are contingent on EDGE’s approval of our PILOT application. If approved, Raymond James will add at 100 jobs at these East Memphis locations.”
[pullquote-1] Those jobs would come with a an average salary of nearly $64,000, far north of the $40,400 salaries targeted by EDGE. More than half of those new jobs would be operations clerks with annual salaries of $50,000 and a benefits and incentive package worth $20,000. Thirty-five asset management clerks would earn the same package.

An operations manager could earn a package worth $152,000 annually. An asset manager supervisor could earn $154,000.

Each year, the company would pay nearly $8 million in wages and benefits to all of its employees here, according to its application.

Raymond James is based in St. Petersburg, Florida. In 2012, Raymond James and Memphis-based Morgan Keegan merged to form “one of the country’s largest independent full-service wealth management and investment banking firms not headquartered on Wall Street,” according to the Raymond James website.
[pullquote-2] The company posted “record annual net revenues of $7.27 billion” in its 2018 fiscal year, according financial reports. In 2018, the company also posted “record annual net income [or profits] of $856.7 million.” It’s total return on equity during the year was 14.4 percent.

[pdf-1] “Our focus on attracting and retaining client-centric financial advisors and providing them with industry-leading tools and resources continues to produce record results,” Raymond James Financial chairman and CEO Paul Reilly, said in a statement at the time. “It is especially gratifying to deliver shareholders an attractive return on equity in fiscal 2018, particularly given our strong capital position and the significant investments we made during the year.”