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Food & Drink Food Reviews

The Secret Smash Society

Shhhhh. It’s The Secret Smash Society.

It consists of three chefs: Harrison Downing, chef/sandwich artist at Greys Fine Cheese; Schuyler O’Brien, who is in culinary operations at City Silo Table + Pantry; and Cole Jeanes, chef/owner of Kinfolk restaurant.

They sell smash burgers at pop-ups, which are supposedly secret, but they’re not. They post the locations a few weeks in advance at The Secret Smash Society on Instagram. “The secret is where we’re going to be next,” Downing says.

The pop-ups usually are held at breweries or other places that don’t have a kitchen. They set up their flat-top and get to work.

A smash burger is just what it sounds like. “It’s a cheeseburger,” Jeanes says. “We do two patties, three ounces each. The smash comes from a burger press. You smash it until it’s completely flat. The idea is to get as much surface area as possible. It’s thin and crusty. It’s all about texture.”

“It’s a faster cook time,” Downing says. “The fat goes back in the meat ’cause it doesn’t have time to render out.”

Their beef is from Home Place Pastures in Como, Mississippi. “We use Martin’s potato roll,” Jeanes says. “It’s a four-inch roll.”

“We toast that,” Downing says. “It’s three-ounce patties with cheese, Kraft singles. Classy. It’s got to be Kraft singles.” The pickles have to be “on the bottom. I’m a big advocate of pickles, lettuce, tomato, and really finely shaved onion.”

They then add what they call their Daddy’s Sauce — “a burger sauce we make. Duke’s mayo-based sauce, ketchup, mustard, Worcestershire. It’s similar to a Big Mac sauce.”

Downing describes their smash burger as “a sophisticated Big Mac.” The hamburger comes with a bag of potato chips. But only one kind. “I’m a classic Lays man,” he says.

They don’t know of anybody else in Memphis doing a smash burger. “We just decided to hop into it.”

The first Secret Smash Society pop-up was at High Cotton Brewing Company. “We had a lot more people there than we expected,” Downing says. “And they were ready to go the second Cole threw that first piece of meat on the flat-top.

“It helped that we all cooked in kitchens before and were able to verbalize and not look up, keep our heads down, and keep going. Schuyler, being the experienced guy he is, talked us to where we were supposed to be. We would have been in rough waters if he wasn’t there.”

“I think we hit around 120 [burgers] ’cause we had a little meat left over,” Jeanes says. “We ran 120 to 150 in two hours, two patties each. My arm was pretty much numb by the time we got done.”

Using a burger press, they pressed “about 300 burger balls,” Downing says. “It’s a handheld piece of metal that’s flat. And you just make sure that it’s greased up.”

The first pop-up was a hit. “People really loved it. Within a week after, I had almost every brewery reaching out wanting us to do one there.”

They’d like to do pop-ups “ideally, once a month,” Downing says. They all have their own work schedules, but, he says, “I think we’re moving toward getting more on the books.”

The next pop-up will be September 4th at The Hill Country Boucherie at Home Place Pastures.

In addition to sharing a love of cooking, O’Brien and Jeanes are fathers of new baby boys. Downing and his wife are expecting a baby boy in October. “Right after our first one was when Luca was born,” says O’Brien, who refers to their shared experience of fatherhood and starting their smash burger pop-ups as “the battle of the babies. We’re learning how to do all this while we’re all living the dad life.”

“Schuyler went ahead and coined our new name as The Patty Daddies,” Downing says.

Find @thesecretsmashsociety on Instagram to book a pop-up.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Greys Cheese & Entertaining, Where “Cheesy” is a Compliment

Harrison Downing’s first cooking attempt involved cheese.

“When I was super young, my mom would let me microwave cheese sandwiches,” says Downing, 30. “Probably the only thing she would let me cook. It’s still my guilty pleasure to this day.”

Now the chef at Greys Fine Cheese & Entertaining, Downing’s sandwiches are more elaborate. A recent “Sandwich Saturday” creation was made with cotto salami, pepperoni, finocchiona, fennel, and Der Scharfe, a raw milk cheese.

“Learning about a bunch of cheeses” is one of the benefits of his job at Greys, owned by Jackie Mau and Kurt Mullican.

Mullican, aka “Cheesemonger Kurt,” “walks up to me every five seconds and hands me a piece of cheese,” Downing says.

He “gets a cheese scraper and just scrapes off a little piece,” describes the texture and how long it’s been aged, and says, “Here. Take a sip of this wine with it.”

Sommelier Bradley Sharp pairs the wine with the cheese.

Mullican also showed Downing how to properly eat cheese. “You warm it up in your hands, in between your palms, because cheese is supposed to be eaten at room temperature. You get all the flavor profiles out of it.”

A native Memphian, Downing says, “My mom was an amazing cook. She sparked my love for cooking. I’d hang out with her. We always bonded and cooked together.”

They listened to James Taylor, Carole King, as well as country artists while she cooked. “She’s a cheesy country lady.”

Realizing college wasn’t for him, Downing eventually got a job at Jim’s Place Grille in Collierville, where he began as an expediter. “That’s when I fell in love with it — watching those guys on the grill. Watching the food come out really made me want to be on that side of the kitchen.”

Under chef Nick Acosta’s tutelage, Downing rose to sous-chef before leaving the restaurant four years later.

Schuyler O’Brien helped him get a job as a lead cook at Hog Wild Pit BBQ. But Downing was laid off when the pandemic hit. To “kill time,” he and his wife picked peaches and blueberries at Jones Orchard, and Downing made jam to sell and give away.

A friend told him about Greys. “I got linked up with Kurt to help him organize his menu and do all that. Right when we talked on the phone, me and Kurt really hit it off. We knew it was going to be a good chemistry.”

Downing originally was just going to make jams and cheese boards until he told Mullican, “I can build a couple of small plates. Based off of a cheese.

“Like I have a ricotta dish, a feta dish. And people who don’t want to just eat meat and cheese, they can have a salad option. That blossomed to my obsession with all these sandwich creations. ‘Why not try to put a couple of sandwiches on the menu?’”

And, he says, “It blew up.”

“Gabagool” is made of gabagool meat, house-made spicy pickles, Brie, and raspberry coulis. “Then I smash it on the sandwich press so it’s super hard. It comes out melting hot, spicy, and sweet with the raspberry.”

For Sandwich Saturday, Downing makes a limited number of sandwiches that sell out between an hour and a half to two hours after the shop opens, he says. “I don’t tell anybody what I’m doing until Friday at lunch.”

He describes the sandwiches as “all very wild.”

“The challenge is to find a cheese I like and make something with it. These cheeses are so crazy when you taste them, it just sparks something in my head: ‘I can put this with this and it will taste like it should go with whatever.’

“I have all these cheeses from all over the world to play with that Kurt brings in.”

Downing, nicknamed “Chef Harry,” says he probably used “American Kraft Singles” on those microwave sandwiches he made as a kid. His mother used “just like basics, jack cheddars and Parmesan and things like that. All of the things that will make Kurt’s skin crawl.”

Greys Fine Cheese & Entertaining is at 709 Mendenhall Road; (901) 529-7046.

Categories
Uncategorized We Saw You

Partiers Get Sneak Peek at Grey’s Cheese, which opens May 18th

Grey’s Fine Cheeses will open May 18th, but guests at the May 16th soft opening of Jackie Mau’s and Kurt Mullican’s new shop at 709 South Mendenhall were among the first to see the beautifully designed space and taste equally beautiful charcuterie boards loaded with meat and cheese.

Grey’s will feature cheese cut to order and already made or custom-made cheese boards. And they will teach people who are bit squeamish when it comes to cheese about how to pair cheese with wine and food. They also will feature weekly menu items, including cheese plates and food specials. Customers can dine inside or on the patio.

“It felt amazing seeing how everyone there had contributed to our vision of Grey’s, from our very first customers and all those who participated in the building project,” Jackie says. “Kurt and I wanted to show our gratitude together in making our dream come true.” 

Asked how he felt about seeing their shop come together, Mullican says, “It was a pretty humbling moment. Ever since I was a kid I wanted a place to get great cheese and unique product. And to see that we created all this, it was incredible.”

Adds Jackie,  “Kurt and I wanted to show our gratitude tother in making our dream come true. And we can’t wait to host our Memphis turophiles.”

(Photos by Michael Donahue) Jackie Mau and Kurt Mullican of Grey’s Fine Cheeses

Remarking on cheese made to resemble Monet paintings, Avon Pathak says, “You wouldn’t want to cut that. It’s too pretty to eat.”

Pathak knows “pretty.” Owner of Domus Interiors, Pathak was the interior designer of Grey’s.

“They had visited some fromageries in Paris,” Pathak says. “And when they came to me they said, ‘We want to achieve that.’ When I did some research, they all seemed to be ‘of the Earth’ and had been there since the dawn of the time. A lot of wood, a lot of great use of shelving, and a lot of great areas for display.”

Pathak visited France a couple of years ago, but she also did online research of European fromageries, including some in Paris and Italy. “Those all are very timeless looking.”

But, she says, “I wanted to bring theirs into this century, and give it a very modern kick.”

Avni Pathak was interior designer of Grey’s Fine Cheeses

She “used the concept” of the Grey’s logo color. “And that’s the blue you see everywhere.”

Pathak, who has a bachelor’s degree in interior design, also learned visual merchandising from working for several years for a luxury goods company. So, she also stocked the shelves at Grey’s. “It has to be arranged beautifully because you are a high-end specialty store. You are not a grocery store.”

And, she says, “They have the most divine products.”

Grey’s Fine Cheeses

Pathak and Matthew Wrage, owner of CityWood, collaborated on the design of the tables, bar, and shelving, all of which Wrage built. “Oh, my gosh, he is such a passionate craftsman. We collaborated so perfectly with this. He just felt what I wanted to do. And for a designer, that is a dream team. It was my design and he ran with it.”

Says Wrage: “She came to me with a digital rendering of what it is she wanted and I took her digital rendering and designed and built it. If we took her digital rendering and compared it to what we got, it’s spot on.”

Matthew Wrage and Kirsten Cannon

The dramatic 10-and-a-half foot bar is made of “two slabs from one magnolia tree,” Wrage says. “And then we did what — in our world — is called an ‘epoxy river.’ So, there is a mossy, smoky gray river that runs between the two slabs. It’s all in the a style that is happening right now. A lot of epoxy rivers are happening now. They wanted to do a very large specialty piece of an epoxy river dining serving area there.”

The shelving is made with iron and hickory and pecan wood. “The tables are also live edge pecan from locally-sourced trees,” Wrage says. 

The iron was made at Iron & Design, which is owned by Wrage and Zach Shoe.

Wrage, who attended with Kirsten Cannon, also was impressed when he entered the shop during the party. “It was beautiful. It was such and amazing spread. And they did such a great job on visual presentation of the whole place.”

Downing’s cheese and charcuterie boards fell under the category of “too beautiful to eat.” And, for a while, it seemed like guests were afraid to touch them, but, after someone got the ball rolling, cheese and meat began to disappear.

One of Downing’s cheeseboards included 24-month aged Mimolette French cheese, 12-month old raw milk, Manchebo DOP, Beemster young goat Gouda, Beecher’s Reserve four-year old clothbound cheddar. The charcuterie board included Bresaola, Capicola, and duck prosciutto. House ferments were sour pickles and spicy mustard. His dishes included whipped Bellwether sheep’s milk ricotta with lemon, pickled berries, brioche toast, and torn herbs. Another dish was house-made naan bread with handmade feta from Meredith dairy in Australia, cherry tomato confit,  arugula and walnut pesto.

Wine was Pasqua pinot noir.

Harrison and Leigh Downing

Kenya Arquello with Pamapas Floral did the flowers. She attended with her husband, Oseas.

Oseas and Kenya Arquello
Anneliese and Dr. Arie Szatkowski were among the guests at the Grey’s Fine Cheeses soft opening.

Grey’s is part of Williamsburg Village, which is comprised of “Southeast and Southwest parcels of Mendendahll from the Half Shell down to Gus’s and (across the street) Southall all the way down to the Torchy’s,” says Jonathan Aur with the developer, Boyle Investment Co.

Jonathan and Brittany Aur

Asked what he thought about what Mau and Mullican did with the approximately 1,300-square-foot-space, Aur says, “I think they nailed it. The vision they described to me eight months ago when we started this process and then walking into this space Sunday was pretty wild because it was almost transformative from the conversation to reality. It was really neat. The details, the layout, the product, everything, was just beyond what we could have imagined.”