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Food & Wine Food & Drink

A look back at 2017 food news

2017 was looking to make me a liar. In last year’s “Look Ahead” story, I had several places set to open that just barely made it this year. They include: Sunrise, the biscuit-centered breakfast place from Central BBQ’s Craig Blondis and Roger Sapp and Sweet Grass’ Ryan Trimm, which opened in late November; the food hall South Main Market, which held a grand opening on December 2nd with an opening roster of promising eateries; and the Liquor Store, from the same folks as City & State, which opened in November.

One of the bigger food stories was related to the opening of the Crosstown Concourse building. Mama Gaia was the first out of the gate in early spring. They were followed by French Truck Coffee, Farm Burger, Next Door Eatery, MemPops, So Nuts, Curb Market, and I Love Juice Bar. I frequent the place and pay — gasp! — $11 for a small smoothie from the Juice Bar at least once a week.

Closing down and moving on: The first location of LYFE Kitchen in East Memphis closed in the fall. The second, in the Chisca downtown, closed for a short while and reopened as a reinvented space with a new menu and new decor. Also seeing new life were Brass Door and the Riverfront Grill (now the Front Porch), both forced into shape by Deni and Patrick Reilly of the Majestic Grill. The much-beloved Elwood’s Shack was closed for several months after a fire in December. It reopened in March.

Happy news: The Cosmic Coconut was turned into the City Silo, a vegan-forward space with several great, thoughtful dishes. The oldie but goodie Front Street Deli changed owners and reopened with a John Grisham-themed menu.

Elwood Shack

Sunrise

More milestones: Beauty Shop marked its 15th year with beehives and 1997 prices. Jim’s Grill, the longtime place for graduate lunches and Mother’s Day brunches, closed for good after an attempt at a revival by Alex Grisanti. Other Memphis favorites, the Peanut Shoppe on Summer closed earlier this month after 58 years and Spaghetti Warehouse closed after 30 years in downtown.

A few things found life beyond the confines of this column. Let’s start with Meddlesome and its cheekily named 201 Hoplar IPA, which a lot of folks found problematic, while the vast majority really loved the name-play. (Also, the IPA is really good.) Another hit was the video by Michael Donahue of the “Pie Lady” Katherine Perry. Perry made her caramel pie and a few others and found an enrapt audience. That video had more than one million (!) views. David Scott of Dave’s Bagels is, how do we put it???, super-hot. And folks like his freshly made, truly excellent bagels, too. You can find them pretty much everywhere.

After pouring millions into the old 19th Century Club building to open the restaurant Izakaya, the owners quickly reconsidered the rather unfocused approach, reopening as the chiefly Japanese and quite good Red Fish. The popular food truck Sushi Jimmi found new life in a brick and mortar space on Poplar. The same goes for Riko’s Kickin’ Chicken, which opened on Madison near Cleveland. Lucky Cat gathered quite a following for its pop-ups before settling on a space at the corner of Cooper and Peabody.

Nobody knows trouble like Taylor Berger. His grand vision for shipping crates serving as a venue was almost quashed as the some of the campus of Railgarten did not have proper inspection. It was all eventually worked out, and now the place serves as a happy meeting ground for young folks looking for fun.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Izakaya to Close

Izakaya, Facebook

Izakaya will close on Saturday, according to a press release issued by reps of chef Jimmy Gentry. 
From the release:

Chef Jimmy Gentry announced today he will no longer oversee the kitchen at Izakaya restaurant, located in the former 19th Century Club building at 1433 Union Avenue. Izakaya owners Shon and Dan Lin announced tonight the restaurant will cease operations on April 22, 2017 as they do not have the capital to continue operations of the fine dining restaurant. They are seeking alternatives for the historic building.

“I am completely shocked by this announcement as I had signed a multi-year agreement and had great aspirations for the grandeur of the fully-restored historic building,” said Chef Gentry. “We implemented standards of excellence for the operations and were making great headway under my team’s creativity and management. However, after only two months, the decision was made to close which, unfortunately, is out of my control.”

Izakaya opened in early January in the historic 19th Century Club building. The owners Shon and Dana Lin spent millions renovating the building. Gentry was hired to revamp the restaurant’s sprawling menu.

According to the Commercial Appeal, the restaurant will reopen as Red Fish Bistro, which the Lins also own.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Jimmy Gentry takes charge of Cafe Brooks and Izakaya

Once he graduated with a culinary degree from Johnson and Wales in South Carolina, Jimmy Gentry began to make a name for himself in Memphis.

He served as executive chef at Erling Jensen: The Restaurant, which was named “Best Restaurant” by local polls including The Memphis Flyer‘s Best of Memphis, and he presented at the James Beard House in New York. He ran several restaurants and opened one, Magnolia: A Delta Grille, during a tenure in Tunica, until taking an instructional position at L’École Culinaire.

He wanted something of his own, though, and that turned into the visionary catering company Paradox Catering and Consulting, which he opened in 2010 with business partner and fellow casino culinary employee Alia Hogan.

One of their regular clients was the Brooks Museum, which has become quite the trendsetter for happening events, especially when food oriented.

Meanwhile, in early 2016, the long-standing Brushmark closed its doors while the Brooks continued its renovations and prepared for its year-long centennial celebration.

Brooks administrators weren’t sure what they were going to do to replace the beloved Brushmark until it dawned on them.

“We really liked [Jimmy’s] art, the art of his food,” says Karen Davis, public relations specialist for the Brooks. “We thought it would be a good fit for everybody.”

And in mid-January, Café Brooks by Paradox opened to reveal a rustic, but modern, upscale fast-casual dining experience just off the museum’s rotunda.

“[The Brooks] approached us, and we were thrilled,” Hogan says. “It was a natural fit.”

The menu is described as “a unique take on classics.”

Take the Reuben. Gentry and team pickle their own corned beef and cut it in-house, then they top it with Korean cabbage and serve it on a pretzel bun ($10).

Their Caesar salad comes with arugula rather than Romaine lettuce and is topped with a special Asian fish sauce vinaigrette ($7).

“We use day-old croissants for our croutons,” Hogan says.

One of their top-sellers is the Grown Up Grilled Cheese, using house-made pimento and cheese with bacon served on French bread ($10).

They offer daily specials, a soup of the day (I had the lentil and kale in coconut milk with curry and sort of quit listening to them while I was eating it), weekly grits dishes, and burger specials.

“We try to use as many local products as possible,” Hogan says, serving local grits, Claybrook Farms burgers, and seasonal vegetables.

That includes coffee — Reverb drip and espresso drinks — and beer, with one local brewery on tap at a time.

They also have wine on tap, one red and one white, and all of their pastries, including bread, cookies, muffins, biscotti, and fruit galettes, are made fresh in-house.

Future plans include debuting a brunch on Mother’s Day and hopefully doing some special events during the Levitt Shell season.

The decor was planned by the Brooks, with massive pieces of local wood used for tables and countertops, designer-inspired seating, and artwork and other ornamentation echoing exhibits in the museum.

Currently, fabrics inspired by Yinka Shonibare MBE’s “Rage of the Ballet Gods” exhibit hang on the walls and wrap throw pillows.

“We plan on rotating the art to match whatever we have going on,” Davis says.

For Gentry and Hogan, the Brooks venture does not mean putting an end to their other ventures and activities. They will continue running their catering business and continue to offer their Underground supper club, pop-up dining experiences that take place at off-the-wall locations and are announced only two days before.

And recently Gentry took the executive chef position at Izakaya.

“We know where we need to improve, and we have a better feel of what diners want,” Hogan says. “Jimmy is there to take care of getting the food to match the Japanese-French fusion they want it to be.”

After debuting some of his ideas on Valentine’s Day, including Miso Butter Oysters, Smoke Pork Belly with pear purée and black garlic reduction, Jidori Chicken with celeriac purée and foie gras sauce, and Crisp Salmon with red curry, avocado, coconut, and arugula, he hopes to have the menu he wants in place by March.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

At Izakaya, steak and sushi in a swank setting.

In 2013 the Lins had a plan for the historic building at 1433 Union. Then the people spoke.

The restaurateur couple had every intention to tear down the beautiful beaux arts/colonial revival mansion that once housed the philanthropic women’s group the Nineteenth Century Club when they bought it at auction, but after protests and legal cases, they listened.

“They held numerous talks on what to do that was best for the city and decided to keep the building and renovate it and turn it into a fine dining steakhouse,” says the Lins’ manager, John Lee.

A fine choice they made, indeed.

The Lins turned the 16,000-square-foot building into arguably one of the most beautiful eateries in town — Izakaya.

With a double cantilever grand staircase, a wall of stained glass, ornate fireplaces in every room, coffered ceilings, elaborate molding, and mahogany as the primary wood species throughout, Izakaya is a grand dame that will turn heads again and again.

The Lins, who also run two Redfish Sushi Asian Bistros, New Hunan, and Kublai Khan, brought in Looney Ricks Kiss to help design the renovation project and Archer Custom Builders as general contractor.

“Our contractor [Hans Bauer] said you can not replicate this building,” Lee says. “We tried to keep everything as original as possible.”

The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The downstairs is divided into various dining rooms, each guided by the original design work, with a sushi bar in the main dining room and a small bar in the back. The second floor offers a large bar that flanks the entire north half with room for live music on the east end, as well as multiple private lounge rooms along the south.

They put to use the built-in shelving system, turning them into lockers for a wine locker program, in which clients pay an annual fee for the restaurant to house 10 bottles of fine wine for them at a discounted purchase price and for access to special VIP wine-tasting events.

There is a conference room available, and the building comes ready-made with a large front porch prepped for a patio come spring.

Izakaya’s chef, Minh Nguyen, who is known for serving as executive sushi chef at the popular sushi joint, Rain, in Cordova, as well as cooking at YaYa’s in Little Rock, has created a menu to match the building’s grandeur.

“We have an exclusive sushi menu that no one else offers in town,” Shon Lin says.

Fatty tuna, blue marlin, sea urchin, and multiple varieties of caviar are a few of the more specialty types of fish that will show up on the menu.

As it is a steakhouse, their eight-ounce filet mignon clocks in at $60 and their 24-ounce porterhouse steak is $65. All steaks are Japanese Wagyu beef.

They offer rack of lamb ($45), surf and turf and king and turf (market price), several pasta dishes, and pan-roasted sea bass with jumbo lump crab, edamame pods, sweet pepper, roasted garlic, and shallots in a citrus beurre blanc ($42).

A la carte items include lobster risotto ($12), Tabasco onion rings ($5), and three-cheese mac and cheese ($8), and the dessert menu is a long list of Tuxedo Creme Brûlée, Classic Napoleon, and Sorbet Trio.

The wine list boasts 106 wines, and in the large upstairs bar, patrons can’t mistake the centerpiece behind the bar — a bottle of Louis XIII Cognac.

“It is world-known,” Lee says. “It is one of the most exclusive Cognacs in the world. When you order a shot, it comes with table-side service in white gloves. No one can touch it.”

All in all, the Lins spent $4.8 million on the building, including the $500,000 purchase price.

“We were about $1.2 million over budget,” Lee says.

Izakaya, open Sunday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Friday and Saturday, 11 to 1 a.m. 1433 Union, 454-3926, izakayamemphis.com.