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Cover Feature Food & Drink News

Burger Bonanza: Celebrating Burger Week with 10 Bluff City Burgers

Everybody loves Burger Week. At least, everyone on the Flyer editorial team certainly seems downright hungry to devour a burger (and write about the experience) for this annual cover story.

And why shouldn’t they be? Hamburgers are the black T-shirt of American cuisine — they go with almost everything. Whatever your palate, you can dress them up or down to your taste, even eschewing the meat if that’s what floats your burger boat (and as 20 percent of this story’s samplings do). This roundup of 10 Bluff City burgers runs the gamut, from the classic to the most gourmet of garnishes.

Whet your appetite with these helpings of hamburger, and then see page 17 for a full list of the Burger Week specials available around town. In the meantime, if, like Frank Zappa and The Mothers of Invention, you find yourself “Cruisin’ for Burgers,” we hope this list will be your burgerific guide.

The Bishop Burger at Bishop
Bishop, inside Central Station Hotel at 545 South Main, feels both familiar and otherworldly: You’re in the heart of historic Memphis, but with a French twist. A light Eurodisco take on Françoise Hardy’s “Le Temps De L’Amour” echoes through the room when the burger enters, buttered brioche buns gleaming, a steak knife plunged into the center, and all else is forgotten. Much care has gone into this creation, which some food-savvy friends have dubbed the best burger in town.

The double patties are made with beef from Evans Farms, blended with filet and short rib trimmings, topped with cheddar cheese and “all natural, humane” bacon from Niman Ranch. And then there are the enhancements: a B1 sauce, “a play on A1 sauce,” essentially a red wine and butter demi-glace incorporating more bits of filet, and a tomato aioli. The latter is made with tomatoes fermented for several days in the Bishop kitchen, adding a subtle tartness to the profile.

If you opt for pommes frites, try them with the garlic and dijon aioli, which takes the French penchant for mayonnaise with fries and throws a mustardy bite into the proceedings. Merveilleuse! — Alex Greene

Bishop, 545 S. Main Street #111

Steakhouse Burger at RP Tracks (Photo: Shara Clark)

Steakhouse Burger at RP Tracks
“Proud loser of the Best Burger in Memphis award for what, 30 years now?” That’s the text on an advertisement RP Tracks ran in this publication a few months back, poking fun at the fact that they’ve never made it to the top in the Flyer’s Best of Memphis “Best Burger” category. That may well be true, but their burgers are the business.

The standard RP Burger is a good go-to if you’re looking for a classic (8-oz. Angus patty and your choice of cheese, alongside a setup of lettuce, tomato, onion, and pickles), but don’t stop there. The bacon cheddar and jalapeño burgers are both solid choices, but — being a fungi fanatic — I opt for the steakhouse. A thick, juicy beef patty is topped with grilled red onions and mushrooms, covered with melted Gouda shreds, and sandwiched in a potato bun. You can add the fixings to it, if you’d like, but with or without the extras, you’re gonna need to take a tip from Guy Fieri and do “the Hunch” — cradle it from underneath to hold it all together, tilt your head to the side, and open wide to get all that goodness in one bite. Any of Tracks’ burgers can be made with a Beyond Burger veggie patty, and they’re served with hand-cut fries. I go for the tots because that’s how I roll. — Shara Clark

RP Tracks, 3547 Walker Avenue

The Fye Junt at Plant Based Heat (Photo: Samuel X. Cicci)

The Fye Junt at Plant Based Heat
It’s fire, fire, everywhere with one of Plant Based Heat’s signature burgers. The new vegan restaurant by Ralph Johnson brings in all the traditional flavors of Southern cooking, just without the meat. For burger time, I emerged slightly singed, but none the worse for wear, after diving into the Fye Junt burger.

The Beyond Meat patty is simply the canvas for the firestorm to come. Jalapeño peppers? Check. Vegan pepper jack cheese and spicy mayo? Absolutely. But instead of a simply overwhelming heat wave, PBH’s secret sauce, coupled with Memphis Sweet Heat BBQ sauce, brings the spice back down to a manageable level just before things get out of hand. For good measure, toss in fresh spinach, tomato, and caramelized onions.

The Fye Junt fresh off the grill sure feels like messy and greasy goodness, with a texture akin to biting into a regular ol’ beef patty. Even if you’re a devout carnivore, like me, the Fye Junt will satisfy, I promise. Just maybe make sure there’s a glass of water nearby. For it’s all in the name: The Fye Junt truly brings plant-based heat. — Samuel X. Cicci

Plant Based Heat, 669 S. Highland Street

Ostrich Burger at Off the Hoof (Photo: Julie Ray)

Ostrich Burger at Off the Hoof
I’d heard about two great places for a burger in Arlington — Off the Hoof and Slingshot Charlie’s. I planned to try both and the best burger would get a write-up. By default Off the Hoof won the competition. Slingshot Charlie’s was shuttered for the week so that the owner and staff could celebrate the Fourth of July. Don’t fret, Charlie should be slinging shots by the time you read this.

At Off the Hoof, I had planned to have the $5 house burger. But then I saw the “Big Game” menu. I had to go there. It boasted buffalo, elk, wild boar, ostrich, and venison burgers. I was informed that fresh ostrich meat was shipped in on Tuesdays and Fridays. This tasty trek was on a Friday. Score.

I made a mistake. It tasted like beef. I expected more. There were some interesting sides ordered — Frito Pie (Fritos corn chips, chili, and cheese) and Freta Fries (hand-cut battered fries with feta cheese and buffalo sauce).

I wish I’d tried the $5 burger. The place was full of regulars. You don’t get regulars with a $19 ostrich burger that tastes like beef. Google informed me that ostrich was a lot healthier than beef and an ostrich looks like Big Bird.

My apologies to Sesame Street, but I took that as a win. — Julie Ray

Off the Hoof, 12013 US-70, Arlington, Tennessee

Mr. Good Burger at Roxie’s Grocery (Photo: Chris McCoy)

Mr. Good Burger at Roxie’s Grocery
“I hope you don’t have any work to do this afternoon.”

I’m standing next to Daris Leatherwood, chef and owner of the Sum Light Bistro food truck. We’re in line at Roxie’s Grocery, waiting for our orders. The cooks are presiding over a full griddle. It’s lunchtime, and we’re behind a big order destined for workers at nearby St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. Roxie’s is an Uptown landmark, the kind of place where you take time to talk to your neighbors. Leatherwood’s been telling me about launching his food truck when he asks what I ordered. I’m getting the Mr. Good Burger, the H-bomb of the Bluff City burger scene. I tell him I’ve got to write about it once I’ve eaten it. “You’re gonna have to take a nap,” he says.

The Mr. Good Burger comes wrapped in a foil package that’s bigger than both my fists — and I’m a bass player with long fingers. It’s a double bacon cheeseburger with all the trimmings, but that generic description doesn’t convey the sheer magnitude of this classic. The four strips of super-thick bacon are bent double and inserted between the patties. I have to unhinge my jaw to take the first bite and blast off to carnivore heaven. They call it “Mr. Good Burger” for a reason. This is the Platonic ideal of the two-patty griddle burger, a mixed-meat masterpiece.

Now I’ve got to lay down. The things I do for journalism … — Chris McCoy

Roxie’s Grocery, 520 N. 3rd Street

The Bshop Wagyu Burger at the Beauty Shop (Photo: Jon W. sparks)

The Bshop Wagyu Burger at the Beauty Shop

My burger of choice, the Bshop Wagyu Burger at the Beauty Shop, is daunting, understandably pricey, and a thing of wonder. The $12 delight comes with a tasty special sauce, lettuce, tomato, cheese, pickles, and onions. I ordered bacon, avocado, and mushrooms on top of that (75 cents each) because I could. Cheeses available are American (my choice), cheddar, pimento cheese, provolone, and gruyère. And you can get an egg in the mix for another buck.

Once you’ve outfitted it, you’ll find it difficult to deploy in the traditional way. There is a top and bottom torta roll, but everything in the middle makes it difficult to chomp without dislocating a jaw, so you may want to have utensils at the ready. Still, going at the mushrooms with fingers or the avocado with a fork doesn’t diminish the pleasure in the slightest. The beef is sublime and the veggies are yummy. It is fairly typical of what you get at the Beauty Shop — or any of Karen Carrier’s eateries — in bringing forth the freshest ingredients and splendidly prepared dishes. — Jon W. Sparks

The Beauty Shop, 966 S. Cooper Street

Firecracker Burger at Clancy’s Cafe (Photo: Michael Donahue)

Firecracker Burger at Clancy’s Cafe

I can’t resist saying the Firecracker Burger at Clancy’s Cafe bursts with flavor. But it really does. It’s delicious.

But I won’t say “explode” because it’s not one of those so-hot-it’s-inedible food items.

“It is two 8-ounce patties, ground beef, that’s stuffed with our homemade pimento cheese and pickled jalapeños,” says Tyler Clancy, owner of the Red Banks, Mississippi restaurant.

“And then we fry the burger, of course. It’s on a toasted sourdough bun with our hand-breaded onion rings. The onion rings are on the burger. And then we do our in-house queso cheese dip on all of it.”

The burger is just one of those things that was so good it stayed around. “This was like a Fourth of July special probably five, six years ago. It had great success. People really liked it. It eventually made its way on the menu.”

And, again, this isn’t some fiery burger that will make you run for water. “I would just describe it as more of a mild to medium heat. The jalapeños aren’t very hot. So it’s more of a spiciness than it is a real tongue-burner.” — Michael Donahue

Clancy’s Cafe, Hwy. 178 West, Red Banks, Mississippi

Chipotle Black Bean Burger at Evelyn & Olive (Photo: Abigail Morici)

Chipotle Black Bean Burger at Evelyn & Olive
As a Catholic, I’ve made my fair share of mandatory confessions, but this is, perhaps, my most embarrassing one yet: I tried my first burger in 2019, not as a curious toddler but as a semi-functioning 20-year-old picky-eater. It was a veggie burger on a certain local college campus, where my options were limited, my standards sinking, my expectations low, and, man, that burger was sinfully bad. Thankfully, I had the wherewithal not to give up just yet on expanding my palate, and I tried the Chipotle Black Bean Burger at Evelyn & Olive. And hallelujah, what a delight!

The ciabatta bun is lightly toasted, and the black bean patty, topped with tomato and lettuce, has just the right amount of crisp. But the mango-barbecue sauce is the real star of the show with a smoky but sweet flavor. Plus, the dish came with a side, so I also devoured some fried plantains, which mmmm, I could snack on all day and night and the next morning, too. Overall, the black bean burger is pretty simple compared to the other Jamaican and Southern dishes on the menu, but Evelyn & Olive can never disappoint. — Abigail Morici

Evelyn & Olive, 630 Madison Avenue

No.1 Farm Burger at Farm Burger (Photo: Courtesy Farm Burger)

No. 1 Farm Burger at Farm Burger
The eponymous sandwich at Farm Burger in Crosstown Concourse is exactly what you’d want something called a “farm burger” to be — fat, juicy, but tight enough in its bun to be easily managed by hand. Cooked to your order (I like mine medium well), the patty I had was topped with cheddar and a generous layer of caramelized onions and marinated in the establishment’s “f.b. sauce” (mayonnaise, garlic, and a touch of chili were some of the recognizable components). The bun encasing all these goodies was an integral part of the package, as well, its breaded halves neither melted on nor floppily separate.

The burger, which is served in a basket, can be further customized more or less to the customer’s taste, and a variety of sides is available. I was happy enough with the basic Farm Burger as normally prepared, but I was curious enough about what was billed as “pimento cheese fries” to give that menu item a try. It turned out to be a delectable (and generously proportioned) selection of french fries smothered in melted pimento cheese and crowned with sliced jalapeños. Forks are available. You can eat as many of the peppers — or as few — as you choose. It may depend on what your drink choice is; mine was a glass of a refreshingly light pilsner beer. Standard teas and soft drinks can be had as well. — Jackson Baker

Farm Burger, 1350 Concourse Avenue #175

Assassin Burger at Wally Hatchet’s (Photo: Toby Sells)

Assassin Burger at Wally Hatchet’s
Drive east past the Malco Summer Drive-In, cross the Wolf River, pass Golf and Games, and drive past the Shoney’s graveyard of Summer and Sycamore View. Find self-control enough to pass Elena’s Taco Shop, cross Elmore Road, and you’ll find Wally Hatchet’s, nestled in a strip mall with a how-can-this-still-be-Memphis address.

The lunch-rush crowd was finishing up as I entered. Customer graffiti covered the walls in between colorful prints of Hank Jr., Merle Haggard, and the like. The aesthetic was NASCAR-dad man-cave with a collage of art (like a painted board that reads “rock me baby”), a dented piece of a race car, a giant Harley-Davidson sign, and a toilet-roll holder shaped like a revolver. One wall was dedicated to military veterans.

Given the drive, I wanted the wildest burger Wally Hatchet’s had to offer. The Assassin Burger was tasty but mild, given an ingredient list that included pepper jack cheese, grilled jalapeños, and pepper sauce that tasted an awful lot like A1.

Wally Hatchet’s won’t become my next burger obsession. But, if you’re out that way, give it a try. — Toby Sells

Wally Hatchet’s, 6439 Summer Avenue

Categories
Cover Feature News

Taco Time! Eleven Memphians Share Their Favorite Local Tacos

Ah, tacos. Who doesn’t love ’em? A hard shell or a soft corn or flour tortilla can be the perfect, handheld vessel for any number of fillings. With the simplest of ingredients (black beans, lettuce, tomatoes) to the more unique (lamb, goat), local restaurants are making some damn-good, flavor-packed delights. We’ve asked a few folks to share their favorites. Read on, and you’ll see why every day can be Taco Tuesday in Memphis.

Fried Fish and Shrimp Tacos at Elena’s Taco Shop

Kim Vodicka — poet

This is tough because, though I love the tacos at pretty much any hole-in-the-wall restaurant or busted-ass taco truck on Summer Avenue, I wanna say Elena’s is my fave just because it stands out the most. It’s a totally different thing because it’s beach tacos, but like wow the fried fish and shrimp are excellent, especially if you get decadent and combine the two on one taco.

Jesse Davis

Their tacos remind me of the ones I had on tour in San Diego a few years ago, which were exceptional.

Maybe the best part of the whole thing is they have, like, 17,000 sauces to choose from. Pre-virus, they would set the sauces out on their own little buffet-like setup, and that’s really what made me fall madly in love. I am a fool for some sauce.

Elena’s Taco Shop is at 6105 Summer Avenue; 417-7915

Justin Fox Burks

Juan’s Tacos with Black Beans at Global Café

Justin Fox Burks — cookbook author, food blogger, photographer

There’s no magic tricks, no smoke, and no mirrors involved in this straightforward dish, and with just five ingredients, there’s nowhere to hide. Juan’s Tacos ($8.95 for four vegan tacos) feature perfectly seasoned vegan black beans inside a double layer of super-soft corn tortillas. These stellar tacos are topped with spicy house-made tomatillo salsa, red onion, and fresh cilantro. Ask them to add avocado because … avocado.

Don’t sleep on the fried plantains and a side of rice to round out your meal. If you want something “wow” to wash it all down, you can’t beat The Messy MangoRita (also a Juan specialty), which features a whole dang mango doused in hot sauce as a garnish. And hey, it’s all vegan, too!

I’m the Chubby Vegetarian, and I approve this taco.

Global Café is at 1350 Concourse Avenue, Suite 157; 512-6890

El Mero Taco/Facebook

Fried Chicken Taco at El Mero Taco

Cristina McCarter — owner, City Tasting Tours

My favorite taco is the fried chicken taco from El Mero Taco. It’s the combo of juicy fried chicken and that damn queso with that pop of fresh jalapeño pepper for me. It’s tacos like that that I will randomly crave. You know it’s good if you drive to the ‘Dova for it. But they are in my neighborhood a lot, too. So I’ll grab a six pack of beer while picking up my tacos and brisket quesadilla. Now I want a taco!

El Mero Taco is at 8100 Macon Station #102, Cordova, or elmerotaco.com/foodtruck; 308-1661

Enrique Reyes with the asada taco from La Guadalupana

Asada Taco at La Guadalupana

Enrique Reyes — Mexican wrestling promoter

The asada taco at La Guadalupana Mexican restaurant is Enrique Reyes’ favorite taco when he and his wife go out to eat.

“La Guadalapuna is my favorite restaurant,” says Reyes, who organizes La Lucha Libre wrestling matches in Memphis, as well as makes the colorful masks worn by wrestlers. “The food is so delicious there.”

He likes to eat at home. “My girl cooks for me, but when she doesn’t cook, I go straight to La Guadalupana … once a week, something like that.”

Carne asada, Mexican steak, is his favorite dish there, but if Reyes orders a taco, it’s the asada taco, which is “just steak and onions and cilantro.” He puts guacamole on top, “’cause that makes the difference in the flavor.”

Asked how many he eats at a time, Reyes says, “Really, only four. You order with guacamole, it makes it a little bigger. I don’t eat too much. I’m good with four tacos.”

And Reyes doesn’t use any utensils when he eats tacos. “Just pick it up like a real Mexican. You never eat tacos with a fork.” — Michael Donahue

La Guadalupana is at 4818 Summer Avenue; 685-6857

Colin Butler

Al Pastor Taco at Picosos

Colin Butler — DJ for Big Ass Truck, radio DJ on WYXR at Crosstown Concourse

I’m partial to the tacos al pastor at Picosos. Pastor, I think it means “shepherd’s style.” Basically, they grill that pork on a spit, like gyro meat, and they slice it off. It’s based on lamb shawarma brought by Lebanese immigrants to Mexico. So some of the spices used in al pastor include coriander, hot pepper corns, cumin, chiles, garlic. They marinate the meat in that and then they pile it up on a spit and it rotates and cooks.

They hand-make their own corn tortillas there. And they use double tortillas. They stuff that full of meat, and then use chopped onion, cilantro, and jalapeño, which is typical for street tacos.

Between the homemade tortillas, doubled, the flavor of the meat, and the fresh toppings, to me, they’re the best tacos in town. It comes with your typical red salsa, a badass salsa verde, and more of a smoky, kind of chili-based sauce. They’ll give you all three if you ask for them.

It’s super simple. They’ll give you a small bowl of limes, too. And I always ask for crema, like sour cream but different. I like the way the sour cream contrasts with the more acidic stuff.

Picosos is at 3937 Summer Avenue; 323-7003

Katrina Coleman

Chorizo Taco at Tacos El Gordo

Katrina Coleman — comedian

I haven’t left my house much, lately. Working from home, I depend on my husband to bring treasures from the Outside. One day, he came home with five street tacos from Tacos El Gordo. The beef and chicken were good, but Memphis, THE CHORIZO.

On Madison, the lot of the Marathon has an orange box on wheels. I been sleepin’ on it.

Grilled corn tortillas filled with meat, onions, and cilantro. Served with cucumber and carrot slices that are pickled so lightly, it seems as if they heard of the concept once in a dream. The red chile sauce is good, but the green will light you up like Montag himself decided you were obscene. The sausage inside is perfectly seasoned. Tossed on the grill with the onions, the texture of the tortilla and minimal crisp of the meat makes such a delightful chewing experience that one might consider that no other food has ever been good.

If you haven’t been, I have to say: WAKE UP, SHEEPLE. Treat yourself to the only chorizo ever to be perfect.

Tacos El Gordo is at 1675 Madison Avenue; 801-0936

Bianca Phillips

Black Bean Tacos at Evelyn & Olive

Black Bean Tacos at Evelyn & Olive

Bianca Phillips — communications coordinator, Crosstown Arts

This year has been a wild one, and if there was ever a time to make sure you’re putting the cleanest, most wholesome food into your body, it’s now. Greasy comfort food may be calling, but whole-food, plant-based options will provide the nutrition you need to keep your immune system strong.

Lucky for you, the black bean tacos at Evelyn & Olive are both healthy and comforting. They’re like the taco equivalent of a grandma hug, which you can’t get right now thanks to social distancing, so accept a hug in the form of a vegan taco instead. Two crispy taco shells are generously stuffed with seasoned black beans, sautéed tofu, crunchy cabbage slaw, and sweet-and-tangy kiwi salsa. They’re served with sides of fluffy Jamaican rice and peas and cool, refreshing cucumber-tomato salad.

Evelyn & Olive is open for dine-in or takeout, and when you order to-go, they thoughtfully package all the taco components separately so you can avoid the dreaded soggy takeout taco. Build your own tacos at home, queue up Bob Marley’s “Three Little Birds,” and enjoy with a stiff Jamaican rum punch for maximum comfort effect.

Evelyn & Olive is at 630 Madison Avenue; 748-5422

Julie Ray

Goat Taco at La Guadalupana

Noelia Garcia — associate artistic director at New Ballet Ensemble and School

Happy goats perform dramatic joyous dances to the glee of onlookers — much like the fancy footwork of a Spanish dancer. Perhaps the secret to Noelia Garcia’s dance superpowers is the $2.75 goat taco at La Guadalupana.

Garcia is the associate artistic director at New Ballet Ensemble and School who studied Spanish dance and flamenco at the Institut del Theatre i Dansa de Barcelona. She lived and worked in Spain, performed throughout Europe, in China, Israel, and the Philippines, and was a founding member of Barcelona’s Increpacion Danza company before landing in Memphis nearly 20 years ago. Her favorite taco is a heaping pile of perfectly seasoned goat meat on two soft corn tortillas topped with onions and cilantro. The meat of this beast has the tender juicy texture of a pot roast with a delightful tangy taste.

Try it. Ewe’ll like it. — Julie Ray

La Guadalupana is at 4818 Summer and 8075 Cordova Road; 685-6857

Laura Jean Hocking

Al Pastor Taco at El Burrito Express

Al Pastor Taco at El Burrito Express

Laura Jean Hocking — filmmaker

“For so long, I thought tacos only had hard shells, and had cheese and sour cream in them,” says filmmaker Laura Jean Hocking. “But a street taco, or a food truck taco, is all about the quality of the protein. It’s this little showcase for meat or chicken or fish with accents, instead of gloppy, Americanized crap all over it.”

Hocking’s favorite Memphis taco truck is El Burrito Express. Ubalto Guzman started the business six years ago. “I used to be a contractor,” he says. “We moved from California to Memphis to get into the food business. This is a family business. It’s me and my wife, son, and daughter.”

Laura Jean Hocking

An El Burrito Express taco plate includes five tacos with your choice of meat. Hocking’s favorite is al pastor, marinated pork said to descend from shawarma brought to Mexico by 19th century Lebanese immigrants.

“I like al pastor because I’m a big pineapple fan. I love the subtleness of the pineapple in pastor. It’s very savory and juicy. It’s a new discovery for me. I had never had pastor until we went to L.A. in September 2019. Generally, I’m a pescatarian, but when I run into meat products that are very good, like a Soul Burger or some Bar-B-Q Shop glazed ribs, I’ll have them. Now, pastor is on the list because life is short.” — Chris McCoy

El Burrito Express is at 1675 Madison Avenue; 428-9626

Samuel X. Cicci

Smoked Brisket Taco at Elwood’s Shack

Cara Greenstein — food and lifestyle blogger

Stretching or, as I would argue, elevating the definition of a “taco,” Elwood’s Shack delivers a singular sensation you simply can’t miss on its menu: the smoked brisket taco.

Upon placing in the pizza oven, a single flour tortilla puffs into a pillowy yet crispy foundation for an unconventional combination of delicate field greens (no shredded iceberg to be found here), sliced avocado, pico de gallo, shredded mozzarella, and creamy horseradish. A generous portion of smoked brisket, a perfected in-house recipe that takes center stage across Elwood’s menu, brings this open-faced phenomenon back to its barbecue Memphis roots.

If you ask how many tacos come in an order at the counter, don’t be underwhelmed when they tell you “one.” One taco from the Shack is just right.

Elwood’s Shack is at 4523 Summer Avenue; 761-9898

Jon W. Sparks

Barbacoa Lamb Taco at Tortilleria La Unica

The workers of R.E. Michel Company — HVAC distributors

Tortilleria La Unica recently moved across the street to its new home at 5015 Summer in a one-time Wendy’s. It still has the Mexican fare that made it popular, particularly among the working people out in that area. Among those is the crew at R.E. Michel Company, a distributor of HVAC equipment. One of the bunch is Dave Godbout, a self-described Destroyer of Tacos who is particularly fond of La Unica’s offerings. A recent lunch spread at the warehouse had half a dozen varieties from chicken to beef to lamb to pork.

“It’s a perfect combination of food,” Godbout says. “You’ve got salsa with tomatoes that has lycopene in it. You’ve got cilantro, which is good for detoxifying. You got a little bit of fat, a little bit of protein, a lot of carbs. It’s the perfect street food, and especially in our area, it’s the most readily available food you can get.”

“I love tacos, Americanized, authentic, it doesn’t matter,” says manager James Hoffman. “I didn’t even like cilantro until I got older and now I love it more and more. And we do a lot of business in the Hispanic community and they send us tacos from their local taco truck all the time. Man, this lamb taco is really good!” — Jon W. Sparks

Tortilleria La Unica is at 5015 Summer Avenue; 685-0097

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Changes at Interim and Evelyn & Olive.

David Todd, the newish chef of Interim, has a tattoo of a hamburger and hotdog robbing a bank. To him, it means “grub life,” as if to say this path is inevitable. He also has another tattoo of a cat DJing and spinning a pizza, so there’s that too.

But back to that “grub life” thing, Todd says he’s spent the last 22 years (he’s 40) working in various restaurants — both high- and low-end — all around town. He was recommended to the Interim job by the restaurant’s former chef David Krog.

Photographs by Justin Fox Burks

David Todd

“I told [the owners] I absolutely, 100 percent can do this job. They had heard good things,” he says. “We had a conversation about food, my vision of food. It went from there.”

Todd, who’s been at Interim now about three months, says it took some time for his culinary vision to gel, but maturity and sobriety helped him focus on the number one thing for him: flavor.

Todd says he’s got the taste version of photographic memory, so he can match up flavors of things he’s eaten sometimes years apart.

Interim’s new Duck BBQ sandwich

It’s helped him punch up Interim’s menu, with such dishes as the Duck BBQ sandwich, with duck confit, golden raisin barbecue sauce, kale slaw, and a pretzel bun. “It’s Memphis in a nutshell,” he says. “It’s fancy, but it’s barbecue.”

Interim’s new Braised Short Rib

Another Todd original is the Braised Short Rib with sweet potato, carrot puree, haricot vert, honey-thyme demi-glace.

A couple dishes he didn’t touch were the Mac & Cheese Casserole and the Crispy Gulf Oysters. That was part of the owner’s edict to stabilize and reconnect. Meaning, Todd brought consistency to the restaurant. For example, that beloved Mac & Cheese did not have a set recipe. He created one. As far as reconnecting, Todd vowed to make his existing customers happy, while energizing his new customers.

He also had to connect with his new staff. He was well aware he was the third chef at Interim in a year. “You have to treat people with respect, put in the hours,” he says.

One staffer he turned to was pastry chef Franck Oysel, whom he calls Interim’s biggest asset and a great sounding board. Todd consulted with Oysel on the menu. Oysel dissuaded him from certain items and convinced him to bring back mussels. Todd’s flourish was to serve those mussels in a coconut curry.

Todd is giving his all into this latest gig. “For me,” he says, “it’s like cracking my chest open and putting my heart out there.”

Interim, 5040 Sanderlin, (818-0821), interimrestaurant.com

When Wayne Lumsden transferred from New York to Memphis for his job, he really didn’t know too much about the city. In fact, he was expecting mountains. But, soon enough, Lumsden, a Jamaican native, settled in and founded the Caribbean Association of Memphis.

His fellow Jamaicans like the dishes at Evelyn & Olive, though they felt they could use some tuning up. That’s what Lumsden has been doing since he took over ownership at the restaurant from Tony Hall and Vicki Newsum in June. He owns the restaurant with his wife, Caroline.

Fans (like me) shouldn’t worry too much. The menu is the same. That terrific Rasta Pasta is still there, as are the popular oxtails and grilled jerk shrimp. Lumsden defines the menu as “American/Jamaican.”

Lumsden says he’s been tweaking the spices and working on the method of cooking to make the meals a bit more authentic. He says Jamaican cooking is mostly stovetop. “It’s stuff we ate as a kid,” he says.

Some of the true Jamaican fare he plans on offering soon: coconut steamed salmon and Caribbean fried chicken. For winter, he’s really going to up the game. “You wouldn’t believe,” he says, as he describes soups with chicken feet and goat’s head.

Lumsden says he’s got a regular clientele from the Evelyn & Olive regulars; he’d like to build on that. He’s using the restaurant’s original menu, making it more authentic. “Your favorite things got better,” he says.

Evelyn & Olive, 630 Madison, (748-5422) evelynandolive.com

Categories
Cover Feature News

Tour De Tacos

Sometimes the stars align and forces larger than us reveal themselves and a light bulb goes off and we know: It’s time for a taco-themed cover story.

Last Thursday, the world celebrated National Taco Day. Just a day earlier, an escaped emu named “Taco” went looking for a mate and brought traffic to a halt in Cape Canaveral.

That’s kismet enough for us.

So without further ado, here are some of our favorite tacos in town. The Flyer staff covered everything from breakfast tacos to fish tacos, vegan tacos to eyeball tacos, tacos wrapped in corn tortillas to tacos wrapped in Doritos. It’s taco time.

ChicharrÓnes Taco at Los Comales

I never gave my first chicharrónes taco a fighting chance, purely on the basis of its weird texture. Chicharrónes are fried pork rinds, and I’d assumed that the taco filling would be crunchy just like the convenience store staple. I was wrong and didn’t like the surprise chewy pudding texture. By the time I spied chicharrÓnes on the menu at Los Comales, however, I was better informed and knew what I was getting into.

Chicharrónes are popular all over Latin America, and every region prepares its skins a little differently. At Los Comales, the tacos de chicharrónes ($1.75) are like intense pork-flavored crème brûlée on dense corn tortillas with chopped white onions and cilantro. It’s great with all the house salsas, but I like it best with just the tiniest dollop of the El Yucateco XXXtra-Hot Habanero sauce. There’s a bottle on every table and cold beer on tap should the fires rage out of control. — Chris Davis

Los Comales, 4774 Summer, 683-9530

“Nasty Bits” Taco at Tacos Borolas

Tacos Borolas on American Way near Getwell isn’t the sort of place you go to fill up on nacho chips. Tacos Borolas is the kind of tiny mom-and-pop taqueria you visit when you’re in the mood to mainline authentic Mexican flavors.

“I was hoping to try something unusual,” I said to my server, who had many suggestions for tacos she didn’t think I’d order. The next thing I knew I was being served a steaming plate of tacos ($1.85 each) stuffed with meats I couldn’t easily identify. Thankfully, everything was chopped and beautifully cooked: brains, head, and eyeballs.

I’ve never been a fan of brains but can’t deny that the gray matter at Tacos Borolas was delicious. The texture was slightly denser than scrambled eggs and the metallic aftertaste that usually puts me off was minimal. After a plain first bite to find out what the brains tasted like on their own, I doused the taco with salsa verde and smothered it all in onions, cilantro, and radishes.

The corn tortillas at Tacos Borolas are slightly smaller than I’m accustomed to, which made the offal on my plate less intimidating. But if the head tacos had been served in a wrapper the size of a frisbee I wouldn’t have complained a bit. Anybody who thinks loin is the most tender and flavorful part of a cow should think again. Head meat may sound gross and it may not be easy to retrieve, but it’s completely worth the risk and extra effort. And it’s fantastic with all the house salsas.

When it comes to tacos, I’ve always preferred things like chorizo, stewed goat (chivo), and spicy al pastor. But the eyes have it. I’m surprised to report that tacos de ojos — eyeball tacos — may be my new favorite. Yes, the texture is odd, but if you can make yourself forget you’re holding a childhood nightmare in your hand, you’ll be rewarded with a rich, buttery, intensely beefy flavor that you can’t get from any other cut of meat. It’s even better laced with Tacos Borolas’ extra hot and slightly bitter red sauce.

If all of this sounds completely nasty, be aware that Tacos Borolas also serves a variety of less extreme tacos. The spicy pork is always an excellent choice. On the weekends you can dine in or buy your tacos from their sidewalk stand. Bonus: Panadería La Ilusion is next door, and for 82 cents you can get a gorgeous slab of bread pudding topped with strawberry or pineapple. For a more authentic experience, you’ll have to go to Mexico City. Or Summer Avenue at least. — CD

Tacos Borolas, 4273 American Way, 791-4379

Machaca Taco at Elena’s Taco Shop

Kowabonga, dudes! Surf’s up in Bartlett.

Elena’s Taco Shop sits at one end of a newish, mini-commercial strip building at the corner of Summer and Raleigh-LaGrange. The interior is clean, freshly painted, and decorated with California surf posters and pictures. It’s not a funky Mexican restaurant but rather a Southern take on the typical seashore taco stand.

I tried the fish taco and the shrimp taco, and both were very good. The seafood was cooked in a crisp batter and piled with a fresh cabbage mix and pico de gallo and Elena’s “secret sauce.” But my mission for this story was to try a breakfast taco, so I also ordered the machaca plate — a scrumptious blend of scrambled eggs, shredded beef, tomatoes, and onions in two soft taco shells. They came with sides of beans, tortilla chips, and rice and set me back a very reasonable $6.49. Of the eight sauces available, I picked the “mild” San Francisco. Good stuff. If I lived in Bartlett, Elena’s would be a regular stop. — Bruce VanWyngarden

Elena’s Taco Shop, 6105 Summer, 417-7915

Discada Jarocha Taco at Tacos Los Jarochos

Memphis is late to the taco truck game, but Tacos Los Jarochos is helping us catch up, one authentic taco at a time. Not long ago, this moveable feast was but a wee taco trailer at Summer and Perkins; now it’s a true taco truck, camped out on Summer near Mendenhall every day from 3 p.m. until about 10 p.m. While I happen to believe the enduring value of a taco is in its portable nature, if you like to kick back while you eat, there are a few tables for dining al fresco in the parking lot. Everything is tasty here (and everyone speaks Spanish, which is never a bad sign when you’re looking for tacos), but why not try their signature Discada Jarocha taco, made with steak, ham, bacon, chorizo, onion, and jalapeño. Top it with one of their five salsas, fresh sliced cucumbers and radishes, or have it plain and savor the simple combination of fresh corn tortilla and savory meats. At $1.75 a pop, you can try both variations. Just don’t miss out on this roadside gem. — Hannah Sayle

Tacos Los Jarochos, Summer and Mendenhall, 314-5735

Cheese Steak Taco at El Toro Loco

El Toro Loco’s cheese steak tacos left my mouth begging for an encore when I finished. Three corn tortillas come covered with small, savory chunks of steak, drizzled with a delightful white cheese sauce, and topped with onion and cilantro. It comes served with sour cream, pico de gallo, tomatillo sauce, and refried beans, but I ordered a side of diced tomatoes and lettuce to complete the dish. Biting into one of these delicacies revealed a beautiful combination of tender meat, fresh veggies, cheese, and sauciness. I finished the dish and thought to myself, Damn, that was the best $7.50 I’ve spent in a while.

— Louis Goggans

El Toro Loco, 2617 Poplar, 458-4414

Asada Taco at Caminos de Michoacan

A colorful, cozy shop on Macon Road, Caminos de Michoacan offers a particularly good take on authentic tacos. All the traditional meat options — pastor, asada, chorizo, carnitas, etc. — are on the menu, and all I’ve sampled are top-notch, though I particularly like the asada and pastor ($1.80), the latter of which included grilled onion on my last trip. In addition to the standard topping of chopped cilantro and onion and lime wedges on the side, Caminos de Michoacan tacos include a smattering of radish spears, which add color, crunch, and freshness, and a side of grilled green onion bulbs. But it’s the before-and-after that really sets Caminos de Michoacan apart. In addition to the standard chips and red salsa, meals here also start with a generous portion of extra-spicy tomatillo salsa, which can be balanced by a tall glass of their on-tap horchata. And, in addition to a taqueria, Caminos de Michoacan is also a bakery — a panadería — with an entire self-service wall that beckons with cookies, muffins, donuts, torta rolls, churros, and other pastries. — Chris Herrington

Caminos de Michoacan, 3896 Macon, 458-5550

Pastor Taco at Mike’s Express

Just two doors down from Caminos de Michoacan is perhaps one of the city’s most unexpectedly good taco haunts. This cramped, cinder-block quickie mart has a taco bar in the back, which also serves quesadillas, tortas, and other variations of Mexican finger food. The tacos here find a nice middle ground between traditional and what we think of as Americanized, with the basic construction — doubled soft corn tortillas, traditional meats, onions and cilantro — embellished with shredded lettuce, a slice of tomato, and grated queso blanco. Mike’s Express is a great place to get tacos to go, but you can also grab a Jarritos soda from the cold case and eat there, with two four-top tables and two four-seat bars surrounded by racks of snack foods and household goods. Two big tacos and a soda will set you back $5.50 before tax. This is what “fast food” should be. — CH

Mike’s Express, 3874 Macon, 323-6927

Black Bean Taco at Evelyn & Olive

This taco should actually be called the Magical Savory Tofu & Black Bean Taco from Heaven. Because that’s what it is. “Black Bean Taco” sounds a little boresville, but this Jamaican-style vegan taco is the furthest thing from dull. For starters, the crispy taco shell is extra-large, making it the perfect vessel for a hearty serving of its mouth-watering filling. That filling is made extra special by the addition of marinated, sautéed, crumbled tofu. The tofu has been frozen, thawed, and then cooked, lending it a meaty texture. It’s combined with seasoned black beans and then topped with a tangy cabbage slaw. Atop the slaw is a sweet-and-savory kiwi salsa. All the flavors combined make for one tasty-as-hell, meat-free taco. If you’re lucky, the oil from the tofu and beans will soak through the bottom of the taco shell as you’re eating, creating a still-crispy but sinfully delicious last bite. The dish is served with Jamaican-style rice and peas for a little healthy balance. $7.95. — Bianca Phillips

Evelyn & Olive, 630 Madison, 748-5422

Doritos Locos Taco at Taco Bell

KFC may have trademarked “Finger Lickin’ Good,” but how else would anyone describe the crazy-good Doritos Locos Taco from Taco Bell? After just one bite, you’ll have enough UT-orange crumbs left on your fingers for an afternoon snack. On the inside are your basic Taco Bell ingredients: beef, tomatoes, lettuce, cheese, and sour cream. But Taco Bell said adios to its boring corn shells and packs all this into a crunchy Dorito shell. It’s so special that it’s even encased in a cardboard sleeve that encourages munchers to “celebrate the awesomeness.” The craziest thing about this combo is: Why didn’t anyone think of it before? And when will the Cool Ranch version hit Memphis? — Michael Finger

Goat Taco at La Guadalupana

One thing you’re not going to get at a drive-through is a goat taco; another is a tongue taco. I tried one of each as take-home breakfast entrées from La Guadalupana. At $2 apiece, both were seriously meaty (shredded) and served in a soft taco shell with a minced green-and-onion filling. The experience was more like eating a wrap than a Norte Americano-style taco, and the sauces — I tried mild and spicy — were agreeably subtle. The décor of the place is no-nonsense formica-top, and, at breakfast time on Monday, service was quick and courteous — a pleasant surprise.

Jackson Baker

La Guadalupana, 4818 Summer, 685-6857,

Chorizo Taco at El Palmar

El Palmar is well known for its authentic and hard-to-find menu items, so it was difficult to order strictly from the à la carte menu. The chorizo taco, in all its glory, was what I finally settled on — three of them to be exact.

El Palmar serves its chorizo in traditional Mexican fashion, using minced (not pulled) pork sausage and pork fat seasoned with chili pepper and salt. The chorizo is served in a corn tortilla and garnished with piles of onion and cilantro. I recommend using a fork, because trying to keep the mountain of chorizo, onion, and cilantro in the tiny taco shell quickly proved to be impossible.

Instead, the dish is served with multiple wedges of lime, which should be squeezed onto the taco to counter the dry texture of the meat. If you’re feeling adventurous, spoon out both kinds of the homemade salsa onto the chorizo tacos. It’s like an authentic way of “Going Bold” Del Taco style. Wash it all down with a modestly priced Pacifico and you’ve got a hell of meal, all for under $10.

Chris Shaw

El Palmar, 4069 Summer, 323-0363

Fish Taco at Las Tortugas Deli Mexicana

The tacos come four to a plate, with avocado, shredded lettuce, marinated cucumber slices, salsa, chips, and a mildly hot guacamole on plastic trays. The price ranges from $10.95 for fish (red snapper or tilapia) and slow-roasted chicken to $18 for steak. Sounds like a lot of food, but the soft tacos are gone in three or four bites, so it’s pricey. The selling point is that everything is homemade. The fish (looked and tasted like tilapia) comes in small filets, not in small pieces, like the chicken. It’s a tasty enough meal for those with a modest appetite who find themselves close to Germantown. — John Branston

Las Tortugas Deli Mexicana, 1215 S. Germantown, 751-1200

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Salt & Pepper Shrimp at Evelyn & Olive

There’s an unwritten rule at Evelyn & Olive, downtown’s Jamaican and Southern-style restaurant and wine bar: Everything tastes better with a little Boom Boom sauce. Made from chili peppers, garlic, mayonnaise, tomato, and pickle, it’s a cross between traditional hot sauce and remoulade. Not too spicy and full of flavor, it definitely makes every dish sing a little louder. My favorite pairing is with the Salt & Pepper Shrimp. Very lightly breaded and fried, the crispy white shrimp serve as the perfect vehicle for the Boom Boom sauce. Listed as a starter, the Salt & Pepper Shrimp is a great way to start the meal with friends. However, the generous serving can also make a great entrée, if, like me, you find it hard to share.