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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Good Groceries Market & Cafe Is Taking Off

Good Groceries Market & Cafe is good news for foodies.

The business, owned by Leah and Chad Getchel, is open from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday through Friday. It’s at 585 South Cooper, where Mo’Bay Beignet Co. previously was located and, before that, a Muddy’s Bake Shop.

“Our grand opening was on July 7th,” Leah says “We had two bands. We had Real Good Dog Rescue. We had the Compost Fairy there. … We adopted out three dogs that day, which was awesome.”

It probably goes without saying, “We love the community,” Leah says.

They began their Good Groceries Mobile Diner food truck during the pandemic. Chad had been chef de cuisine at River Oaks Restaurant. Leah was a personal chef and also did catering. “The food truck is still running. We never stopped. We started that in 2020.”

But, she says, “The food truck is too small to do all the food that we do.”

It was time for a brick-and-mortar. “We needed a commercial kitchen.”

So, Good Groceries now offers breakfast between 7 and 10 a.m. “And that includes a continental breakfast bar, so people can come in and do the breakfast bar or have to-order items.”

The continental breakfast bar includes sage-roasted potatoes, scrambled eggs, gravy, and choice of beef or duck sausage. “And we have all our bread items — biscuits, muffins, sometimes croissants.”

Their brick-and-mortar fare is “the same as the food truck menu.” They offer items, including the duck confit sandwiches, the smoked brisket BLT sandwiches, a crispy tofu sandwich, and salmon burger.

Their grab-and-go items are offered all day. “We have premade sandwiches, salads, soups, and take-home make-and-bake-and-eat meals — grab-and-go meals, family-style.”

She describes their menu as “to some degree seasonal, but fairly standard.”

They include gluten-free items because of her health issues, Leah says. “Just about everything is gluten-free.”

People who have to eat gluten-free won’t have to “feel like they’re singled out: ‘Oh, I have to eat from the sides menu.’ Because that’s what I have to do.”

Regular and gluten-free desserts are also featured. Depending on the day, these may include brownies, chess and other pies, and cakes, including Leah’s butter crumble cake and three-layer chocolate cake. “And Chad’s making ice cream. He started that just after we opened. He makes the mix himself and he uses the commercial ice cream maker.”

The Getchels began their first wine pairing dinner August 29th at Good Groceries, and Good Groceries still caters. “We’re doing intimate birthday parties to big parties.” They can do off-site or in-house events.

The name “Good Groceries” came from her former fiancé, Leah says. After he tasted dinners she made for him, he said, “These are some good groceries.”

When she told that to Chad 20 years later, he said, “Oh, that’s good. That’s got potential.”

Now, the name is used for their food truck, cafe, and sauces, which they make. “Mango, pesto, the green tomato relish. And we sell them in the shop.”

They also make their own teas and lemonades, including lavender lemonade made with fresh lavender.

The location between Peabody Avenue and Central Avenue is the perfect spot for what the Getchels want to do. “We’ve got a good mix of neighbors that are like us: parents with kids and folks who just want to come and hang out and play. There’s a big yard out there.”

They also offer “kid-friendly” menu items.

The couple’s 6-year-old twins — Albert and Oscar — also take advantage of the yard. Leah wants to instigate some outdoor events, including movies, this fall. “And just have kids come out and sit and watch and play and do whatever.”

Good Groceries has already become a neighborhood spot. “There are several offices and things around there. We have someone who comes in almost every day from the dialysis center. It’s a nice break for folks who just want to come in. We have some people who come in and study until we close.”

Leah describes the cafe/market as a “homestyle kind of business. And it’s not so mainstream.”

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Elevated Diner Fare at Good Groceries Mobile Diner

Take a chef de cuisine from a fine dining restaurant, add a former personal chef/catering company executive chef, and what do you get?

Good Groceries Mobile Diner.

“My husband is the chef de cuisine at River Oaks Restaurant. Chad Getchel,” says Leah Roberts Getchel. “In 1999, I became a certified personal chef.”

She worked a corporate job at AutoZone for almost nine years before becoming an executive chef for Cotton Bowl Catering. She returned to the corporate world, where her jobs included working for FedEx, Hilton, and St. Jude.

But, she says, “When COVID hit, I lost my corporate job.” Wondering what she was going to do next, Leah thought, “Go back to the food world.”

She and Chad, who was laid off for three months from the restaurant, originally thought about starting a food truck to service corporate offices that lease space and don’t have company cafeterias.

They bought a food truck, which they equipped with a 36-inch stove, flattop, and burners before the lockdown. “People were still going to the offices for the most part. We thought this would be over. Shortly after that, nobody went to work. The offices were empty.”

They noticed more people were patronizing food trucks, so they began serving the general public at farmers markets and neighborhoods. But, she says, “It took a little time for people to adapt to our menu because it’s a little bit more of a high-end restaurant-style menu, not your typical food truck fare.”

Instead of pork, they serve duck because the pork industry is “just riddled with problems,” including inhumane treatment of pigs, Leah says. “We started playing with ducks and made duck breakfast sausage. You can’t tell the difference between it and a pork sausage.”

They serve the Barbecue Duck Sammy — pulled duck with tangy barbecue sauce, cole slaw, and sliced pickles on brioche bread. Their Duck Confit sandwich is slow-cooked duck with mango chutney and a medium-fried egg on toasted brioche. “Egg yolk is my favorite sauce,” she says.

Here Chicky Chicky is marinated chicken on a toasted ciabatta bun with mayonnaise, lettuce, and tomato. “We also have the fresh (vegan and nut-free) pesto, lemon juice, olive oil, and melted Provolone.”

Realizing they went “a little too crazy on the duck,” they added a house-made salmon burger with mango chutney and jerk seasoning. They only serve pork if it’s “local and certified humane.”

They call themselves a “mobile diner” because they take traditional diner foods “and elevate them.”

Chad, who works part-time at Good Groceries Mobile Diner when he’s not at River Oaks, is leaving the restaurant in May to work full-time at the food truck. “I really love it,” Chad says. “It’s a lot of freedom. You get to do whatever you want as long as somebody is going to buy it.”

Born in Lansing, Michigan, Chad began cooking early. “I remember asking my mom if I could make an experiment. I’d go into the kitchen and put a whole bunch of random stuff in a frying pan. I ruined a whole bunch of pans when I was five or six.”

Since he played guitar in bands, Chad worked in kitchens because the hours were flexible. Realizing he wasn’t going to make a living playing music, he went the cooking route and went to cooking school at Sullivan University in Lexington, Kentucky.

A Downtown brick-and-mortar restaurant is in the planning stages for Good Groceries Mobile Diner, Leah says. “We’re not making a move on that until September. But, later down the road, we’d love to have a restaurant and keep up with the food truck. It’s a lot of fun.”

To find out where Good Groceries Mobile Diner will be during the week, go to eatgoodgroceries.com or their Facebook page.